Good morning. President Biden, speaking from the White House, reaches for a little optimism. |
| A child attending online classes at a Y.M.C.A. in Los Angeles last month.Patrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
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Hope as a public-health tool |
The early coronavirus mistakes were mostly mistakes of excessive optimism. Many scientists, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, did not immediately grasp the threat. Neither did we in the media. President Donald Trump made the extreme version of this mistake, with a series of false statements minimizing the problem. Some politicians continue to show undue optimism, ending mask mandates and allowing full restaurants. |
But overoptimism isn’t the only type of error in public health. Pessimism can also do damage. And at our current stage in the pandemic — as the United States finishes its first year of life dominated by Covid-19 — pessimism has become as much of a problem as optimism. |
Thousands of schools remain closed, to children’s detriment, even though epidemiologists say that many can safely open. Irrationally negative talk about the vaccines has fed hesitation about getting them. The widespread notion that normal life won’t return anytime this year — if ever — has caused some people to give up on social distancing and mask wearing. They seem to be saying: What’s the point? |
Difficult truths can sometimes be a vital public-health tool. But so can optimism. Optimism can help people to get through tough times and make sacrifices, in the belief that better days are ahead. |
In a White House address last night, President Biden tried to balance realism and hope. He began with a somber recitation of Covid’s costs, including job loss, loneliness, canceled gatherings, missed time in school and, most of all, death. At one point, he reached into his jacket pocket and removed a card — which he always carries, he said — with the current American death toll printed on it. The past year, he said, had been one “filled with the loss of life and the loss of living for all of us.” |
Yet when it came time for Biden to tell Americans what he wanted them to do — to wear masks, maintain social distancing and get vaccinated — he did not use darkness as motivation. He used July 4. |
“If we do all this, if we do our part, if we do this together, by July the 4th, there’s a good chance you, your families and friends, will be able to get together in your backyard or in your neighborhood and have a cookout or a barbecue and celebrate Independence Day,” he said, standing alone at a podium in the White House’s East Room. “Finding light in the darkness is a very American thing to do.” |
The speech included plenty of caveats, about virus variants, uncertainty and more. Biden’s political strategy on the virus is clearly to underpromise so he can overdeliver. But that’s part of what made the July 4 vision memorable. Even Biden, with all of his caution, seems to grasp the power of hopefulness at this moment. |
After 12 months of a pandemic, it’s hard to inspire people to action with only grim warnings of all that could still go wrong. People need to know the full picture, both bad and good. They need a source of motivation beyond fear. |
“Over a year ago, no one could have imagined what we were about to go through,” Biden said. “But now we’re coming through it.” |
- Biden directed states to make all adult Americans eligible to receive a Covid vaccine by May 1.
- He announced several new actions to speed up vaccinations, including the use of dentists, veterinarians, medical students and others to give the shots.
- He condemned hate crimes against Asian-Americans, who he said have been “attacked, harassed, blamed and scapegoated” during the pandemic. “It’s wrong, it’s un-American, and it must stop.”
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Go deeper: On his Times Opinion podcast, Ezra Klein talks with Dr. Ashish Jha of Brown University about the tensions between pandemic optimism and pessimism. Ezra suggests that some politicians, especially in liberal parts of the country, are undermining their own pandemic response by being so negative: “They’re not giving people a way out of this they can hold on to.” |
Follow-up: A Covid mystery |
| By The New York Times | Sources: Health agencies and hospitals, C.I.A. World Factbook |
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Obesity can cause multiple health problems, including making it harder to breathe, as Dr. David L. Katz told me, and oxygen deprivation has been a common Covid symptom. A paper by Dr. Jennifer Lighter of New York University and other researchers found that obesity increased the risk of hospitalization among Covid patients. |
It’s a particularly intriguing possibility because it could help explain why Africa and Asia have suffered fewer deaths than not only high-income countries but also Latin American countries. Latin Americans, like Europeans and U.S. residents, are heavier on average than Africans or Asians. |
| An AstraZeneca vaccination in Madrid this week.Bernat Armangue/Associated Press |
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| President Biden addresses the nation from the White House.Doug Mills/The New York Times |
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| Beth Moore, shown in 2018, left the Southern Baptist denomination, partly because of its embrace of Donald Trump.Emily McFarlan Miller/Religion News Service, via Associated Press |
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Lives Lived: Lou Ottens and his team at Philips, the Dutch electronics company, introduced the cassette tape in 1963 as a way to play music in a portable fashion. The invention revolutionized the music business. He died at 94. |
What happened at ‘Reply All’? |
The four-part series “The Test Kitchen” — a production of the popular Gimlet Media podcast “Reply All” — was supposed to tell the story about workplace racism at the food magazine Bon Appétit. |
Halfway through the series, it was overshadowed by a story about Gimlet’s own culture. Former Gimlet employees accused the show of hypocrisy, saying its host, Sruthi Pinnamaneni, and her editor, P.J. Vogt, contributed to the kinds of workplace conditions that they aimed to expose. |
Eric Eddings, a former employee, wrote on Twitter about a “toxic dynamic” at the company. Both Pinnamaneni and Vogt, along with some other Gimlet executives, had been critical of unionization efforts at Gimlet. Among other things, the union sought to address accusations of racial inequity at the company, Katherine Rosman and Reggie Ugwu write in The Times. (Gimlet executives declined to comment for the Times article.) |
Gimlet’s story isn’t unique, Nicholas Quah writes in Vulture. “There were very few Black employees at the company,” Quah writes, “and the ones who were there had the kind of experiences that made them feel their perspectives were trivialized.” |
| Evan Sung for The New York Times |
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A drone went bowling. A Hollywood veteran said the resulting video “adds to the language and vocabulary of cinema.” |
The Grammys are on Sunday: Trevor Noah will host, almost two dozen stars will perform, and the Weeknd is boycotting the awards. |
The Morning now includes a bonus game from the team that creates Spelling Bee and the Crossword. The current game is Ditloids. The answers to yesterday’s: “9 = I. in a B.G.” meant innings in a baseball game, “10 = V. of a Q or Z in S.” meant the value of a Q or Z in Scrabble and “11 = What the A. goes to in ‘T.I.S.T.’” meant what the amp goes to in “This is Spinal Tap.” |
12 = S. of the C.Z. 13 = B.D. 14 = L. in a S. |
The pangram from yesterday’s Spelling Bee was expletive. Here is today’s puzzle — or you can play online. |
Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you Monday. — David |
P.S. Elizabeth Kennedy will be The Times’s next White House editor. She comes from the The Associated Press, where she worked in New Jersey, Nairobi and elsewhere. |
On Part 2 of “Odessa,” a Texas high school tries to bring back football during the pandemic. (There’s no new episode of “The Daily” today.) |
Lalena Fisher, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com. |
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