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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsInside Trump's coronavirus meltdown.What went wrong in the president's first real crisis -- and what
it means for the US. Financial Times (brutal)
When the history is written of how America handled the global eras first real pandemic, March 6 will leap out of the timeline. That was the day Donald Trump visited the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. His foray to the worlds best disease research body was meant to showcase that America had everything under control. It came midway between the time he was still denying the coronavirus posed a threat and the moment he said he had always known it could ravage America.
. . .
The CDC has been plagued by mishap and error throughout the crisis. The agency spent weeks trying to develop a jinxed test when it could simply have imported WHO-approved kits from Germany, which has been making them since late January. The CDC has been missing in action, says a former senior adviser in the Trump White House. Because of the CDCs errors, we did not have a true picture of the spread of the disease.
Here again, though, Trumps stamp is clear. It was Trump who chose Robert Redfield to head the CDC in spite of widespread warnings about the former military officers controversial record. Redfield led the Pentagons response to HIV-Aids in the 1980s. It involved isolating suspected soldiers in so-called HIV Hotels. Many who tested positive were dishonourably discharged. Some committed suicide.
A devout catholic, Redfield saw Aids as the product of an immoral society. For many years, he championed a much-hyped remedy that was discredited in tests. That debacle led to his removal from the job in 1994.
Redfield is about the worst person you could think of to be heading the CDC at this time, says Laurie Garrett, a Pulitzer Prize-winning science journalist who has reported on epidemics. He lets his prejudices interfere with the science, which you cannot afford during a pandemic.
One of the CDCs constraints was to insist on developing its own test rather than import a foreign one. Dr Anthony Fauci the infectious disease expert and now household name is widely known to loathe Redfield, and vice versa. That meant the CDC and Faucis National Institutes of Health were not on the same page. The last thing you need is scientists fighting with each other in the middle of an epidemic, says Dr Kenneth Bernard, who set up a previous White House pandemic unit in 2004, which was scrapped under Barack Obama and later revived after Ebola struck in 2014.
https://www.ft.com/content/97dc7de6-940b-11ea-abcd-371e24b679ed
Journeyman
(15,042 posts)Grokenstein
(5,727 posts)True, but Redfield sounds like a pretty shitty excuse for a scientist.
South Korea, which has a population density nearly 15 times greater and is next door to China, has lost a total of 259 lives to the disease. There have been days when America has lost 10 times that number.
Damn, that's one way of putting it.
callous taoboy
(4,590 posts)SunSeeker
(51,745 posts)Hamlette
(15,412 posts)"all the best people"
Even the still you posted, Redfield appears to be doing what Trump loves best, kissing his arse.
SunSeeker
(51,745 posts)Response to Hamlette (Reply #5)
SunSeeker This message was self-deleted by its author.