Georgia's reopening is a high-stakes public health bet -- and will likely please Trump

Discussion in 'Politics' started by gwb-trading, Apr 21, 2020.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Georgia's reopening is a high-stakes public health bet -- and will likely please Trump
    https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/21/politics/donald-trump-georgia-coronavirus-economy/index.html

    Georgia's fervently pro-Trump governor's early breakout from a coronavirus shutdown is stirring fears of a deadly new wave of infections and warnings that he is derelict in his duty and acting on political motives.

    Republican Gov. Brian Kemp plans to open nail salons, massage therapists, bowling allies and gyms from Friday. Restaurants and movie theaters come back on line statewide next Monday.

    The move, which is even more aggressive than President Donald Trump's optimistic call for a May 1 reopening, came after a week in which total US pandemic deaths doubled to more than 42,000. There is also no genuine sign that the Peach State's duel with the virus is anywhere near over. Kemp acted as fellow southern states South Carolina and Tennessee also announced plans to ease some social distancing measures.

    The reopening decision is not just a huge risk for Kemp but the most aggressive leap by a US political leader to the reopening side of the conundrum that balances vicious job losses against shutdowns meant to suppress the virus as quickly as possible.

    It's a wager with the health and ultimately the lives of many Georgia citizens and potentially the frontline medical workers who will treat newly infected patients that Kemp admitted will catch the disease.

    It also appears to flout the logic of epidemiology and warnings by the top government infectious diseases specialist Dr. Anthony Fauci, who was absent from the White House briefing Monday, that "there is still a long way to go" in battling the pandemic.

    There is so far no vaccine or proven therapy for coronavirus, which can cause serious and fatal respiratory collapses in some patients, especially those who are elderly or have comprised immune systems. That's why aggressive social distancing is the only way to check the pathogen's spread.

    Kemp's berth on the Trump train and the President's repeated agitating for the national economy to open quickly raises questions about whether Georgia's move is politically motivated.

    It raises the prospect that Trump's hoped-for "beautiful puzzle" of state-by-state economic reopening could proceed on partisan rather than public health grounds.

    Some states such as New York, Massachusetts and Michigan, which have Democratic governors, are currently approaching or just past peak infections. But there is no guarantee that more rural, Republican states will not become hotspots in future. And Kemp's move will also begin to fracture the remarkable national respect for social distancing that has alleviated some fears of ventilator shortages and dangerously overcrowded hospitals.

    Opening comes against fraught political backdrop

    Kemp laid his bet amid a cacophony of calls by opinion hosts on Fox News and other networks for a reopening of the economy that is vital to Trump's hopes of winning a second term.

    Meanwhile, Trump has been offering encouragement to conservative activists who staged a series of protests across the country against stay-at-home requirements that they say infringe on basic American freedoms. State governors are beginning to worry that the protests could act as petri dishes for the virus to widen its spread.

    Kemp's decision also appears to fly in the face of evidence from foreign states and territories such as Singapore and Hong Kong, and the city of Harbin in China, which saw coronavirus infections quickly erupt after social distancing restrictions were lifted or when residents returned from abroad.

    Yet if Georgia manages to stave off a disaster, the state could become a blueprint for other areas that choose to live with a certain level of infections -- and by extension, deaths -- in order to alleviate the devastating toll on the economy that has shed more than 20 million jobs in a month.

    If Kemp is forced to reintroduce social distancing measures though, his failure could deal a devastating blow to national reopening hopes and the desire of every American who is confined to their homes to a way out of lockdown misery.

    "I think this is the right approach at the right time. It's not just throwing the keys back to these business owners," Kemp said, but admitted his move could cause more infections.

    "We're probably going to have to see our cases continue to go up, but we're a lot better prepared for that now than we were over a month ago," he said, claiming Georgia had sufficient hospital beds, testing and knowledge to control the virus.

    But Van Johnson, Savannah's Democratic mayor, told CNN's Erin Burnett that the decision "blows our minds."

    "I am beyond disturbed. In my mind, it's reckless. Our reality here in Savannah is our numbers are still going up," Johnson said.

    Stacey Abrams, who lost to Kemp in a controversial 2018 gubernatorial election and is a possible Democratic vice presidential pick, slammed the reopening as "dangerously incompetent" on Twitter.
    Former George W. Bush administration adviser and renowned cardiologist Dr. Jonathan Reiner warned that Kemp's decision was "a dereliction of duty ... this crisis has not abated in that state."

    Reiner said that the positivity rate of those tested in Georgia was an "enormous 23%." In Germany, which has had a widespread testing program and began a cautious reopening of small shops and business Monday, the positivity rate of a higher per capital testing level is 7%.

    "In Georgia, the virus is still very, very active and this behavior is frankly reckless," he said on CNN.

    (More at above url)
     
  2. Someone has to be first and we should all hope they have a successful roll out. That said, opening gyms, massage parlors, nail salons and the like is unnecessarily reckless. These type businesses being part of phase one is not well thought out. They should in fact be the last places to open. A cynical bastard like myself might almost think they're planning to fail. Why is anyone's guess.
     
    gwb-trading, jem and Cuddles like this.
  3. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    High stakes bet proving good so far. Stay tuned.
     
  4. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    "Proving good so far". Governor Kemp faked the COVID-19 to show that cases were declining. The only thing saving the state from a horrible disaster is that most people are still staying at home (as urged by their cities and towns) since they don't trust the governor.

    Opinion: Georgia’s coronavirus data made reopening look safe. The numbers were a lie
    https://www.latimes.com/opinion/sto...numbers-reopening-manipulated-data-brian-kemp
     
  5. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Yes, he certainly screwed the pooch on the data. Whether it was intentionally faked or not, you can't prove either way - although your narrative insists you lean in one direction.

    But the numbers aren't going up like you claimed they would.
     
    CaptainObvious and jem like this.
  6. jem

    jem

    And right now if the new cases and deaths stats are accurate... the trend is amazingly down.

    https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-daily-status-report

    And the lockdown doomers favorite target for venom... Sweden's stats are down trending too. It makes no sense given what the doomers are preaching.
     
  7. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Nothing has been corrected yet in Georgia.
     
  8. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    CDC and GOP states are cooking the numbers, it's been clear for 2 wks now
     
  9. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

  10. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    So now the CDC decided to switch for the other narrative and is slanting the numbers the other way?

    You people are literally nuts.
     
    #10     May 19, 2020