World

Undeserved national tragedy—Over 1 mln COVID-19 deaths in the U.S.



The U.S. boasts the world’s richest medical resources and best healthcare capacity, yet it has seen
one million Americans lose their lives to the COVID-19 pandemic within 27 months. The failure
of the U.S. policy responses to COVID-19 has revealed the hypocrisy of the human rights in the
U.S.


“Today, we mark a tragic milestone: one million American lives lost to COVID-19,” U.S.
President Joe Biden said in a prerecorded video speech delivered to the Global COVID-19
Summit on May 12.


As the COVID-19 death toll in the U.S. reached one million, all sectors of society have expressed
grief over the loss of lives in the pandemic in various ways. The Washington National Cathedral in
Washington D.C. rang its bell 1,000 times for 90 minutes in the twilight, once for every 1,000
people who have died from the virus. The toll should also be a reminder to the U.S. government.


When faced with a pandemic unseen in a century, only by putting people and their lives first and
truly respecting every life can countries respect and protect human rights to the greatest extent.
However, American politicians didn’t take effective countermeasures, which caused the country’s
COVID-19 cases and deaths to rank first in the world for a long period of time.


What American people remember about the epidemic in the past over two years is grief from not
being able to say goodbyes to their beloved ones for one last time, fear when nursing homes
reported a huge amount of COVID-19 deaths, and sadness when over 200,000 children were
orphaned because of the pandemic.


COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. have almost doubled the country’s death tolls from World War I
and World War II combined, and are equivalent to the population of San Jose, California, the tenth
largest U.S. city.


“Each one of those numbers represents a grandparent or a spouse or someone with their own
unique story that we’ve lost”, according to an article published on ABC News.


“This unthinkable tragedy will forever appear in the history books,” the article quoted John
Brownstein, Ph.D. an epidemiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital.


Looking back at how the U.S. has ended up a loser in the fight against COVID-19, people can see
clearly that a major reason is that American politicians stubbornly prioritize their political
interests. To guarantee their votes, American politicians deliberately downplayed the risk of the
virus.


Their remarks, such as Omicron variant is just a big flu, and COVID-19 mortality rate is very low,
and the virus will miraculously disappear, will always remind American people just how
indifferent the politicians have been to life amid the epidemic.


From nucleic acid testing, wearing masks to maintaining social distance, from the allocation of
medical strategic reserves, the formulation of emergency relief bills to the promotion of
vaccination, the two major political parties in the U.S. have been criticizing, vetoing, and
confronting each other, and the federal and local governments have been acting in their own ways
and restraining each other. The overall situation of America’s anti-pandemic response has been
messed up by the political calculations of various parties.

The so-called human rights preached by some American politicians are nothing more than a
mirage to the American people trapped in the epidemic.


Another major reason why the U.S. failed to contain the epidemic is it has put short-term
economic interests and capital interests above public health security and people’s life and health.
It was reported that the White House Coronavirus Task Force and the U.S. National Security
Council prepared an anti-epidemic response memo in February 2020, which clearly recommended
a series of strict measures to control the spread of the virus.


But U.S. policymakers immediately rejected the memo after learning that relevant measures could
cause the U.S. stock market to crash.


In the eyes of some American politicians, the interests of capital are placed at a much higher
position than the people’s right to life and health. No wonder they made such a ridiculous remark
that old people “should volunteer to die to save the economy.”


Deborah Birx, former coordinator with the White House Coronavirus Task Force, confessed in her
new book that the U.S. could have drastically reduced the death toll with better leadership, but the
opposite has happened.


People’s right to life and health differs because of their skin color, age and wealth—this is the
truth about U.S. style human rights exposed by the epidemic.


A research conducted by an American university showed that the epidemic has caused the average
life expectancy of African Americans and Latinos in the U.S. to drop by 2.1 years and 3.05 years,
respectively, much higher than the 0.68-year decline in the average life expectancy of the white
people.


A reporter with the Associated Press found, after analyzing data, that among the one million
deaths from the coronavirus in the U.S., three out of every four deaths were people 65 and older.
COVID-19 death rates in poor counties in the U.S. were almost double those in rich counties; the
300 counties with the highest death rates have a poverty rate of 45 percent on average, pointed out
A Poor People’s Pandemic Report released by the Poor People’s Campaign.


When asked about a clear lack of fairness in U.S. epidemic prevention and control, then U.S.
President Donald Trump said “Perhaps that’s the story of life,” which reflects social Darwinism
deeply rooted in American values.


In a society with a hierarchical concept of the value of human life, it is easy to accept the loss of
groups such as the elderly and ethnic minorities, said Debra Furr-Holden, an epidemiologist at the
Michigan State University.


Protection of human rights shouldn’t be a slogan, but should be reflected in concrete actions.
Recently, the numbers of new infections and hospitalizations in the U.S. have risen again. In the
face of the still severe epidemic situation, if American politicians really care about human rights,
they should earnestly learn from the painful lessons of the one million deaths and safeguard the
people’s right to life and health.


(Zhong Sheng is a pen name often used by People’s Daily to express its views on foreign policy
and international affairs.)

Related Posts

Leave a Comment

This News Site uses cookies to improve reading experience. We assume this is OK but if not, please do opt-out. Accept Read More