Joel Wertheimer Has Good News
Joel Wertheimer is an attorney and former Obama official I do not know. I don’t follow him on Twitter. I don’t use Twitter, so I don’t follow anyone on the platform.
Judging him by his optimistic post about COVID deaths last week, it appears that he is one of those polished Obama centrists (with a black and white headshot, even). who feels that people like me, who mask, get vaccinated and avoid indoor public places, are just as bad as those who spread lies about SARS-CoV-2, oppose vaccines, and downplay the pandemic while their peers die. I could be incorrect. But let’s dive into his tweet.
First, a disclaimer: The lack of engagement in his post below is an indication that we’re all done with the pandemic. I acknowledge that. But the pandemic is not done with us. And that is why I feel this urge to point out the ludicrousness of his tweet, which was re-tweeted by the usually outstanding Chris Hayes.
Here is the tweet, since I don’t think Hayes re-tweeted the others:
Objectively, this is good news. I wouldn’t call it great. But it is good. It shows the winter wave of COVID-19 cases is ending. There’s just one small thing. Some states have stopped reporting COVID-19 deaths to the CDC, beginning with Iowa. Now I am not saying that Iowa is hiding hundreds of deaths from the chart above. But the CDC reporting is no longer any good.
I have resisted and resisted this throughout the pandemic, but I now admit that we can no longer think of the US fighting the pandemic as a single nation. The war against the virus started regionally, expanded nationally, but quickly broke-up again into regions, and then states. In the vast American west, big counties show us the COVID flare-ups. Fine. I will stay in my lane going forward, which is New York State.
So let’s have a look at New York State. My state reports weekly deaths to the CDC, but doesn’t post a summary for the public on its COVID dashboard. Instead, that data is available in the DIY open source data section of the site. Now I’m not saying that I don’t have the patience to create my own report. Wait, I am saying that.
So in lieu of new deaths, the only thing we New Yorkers can easily see is daily hospitalizations, which is a great metric. As of yesterday (April 26), New York state had 72 patients in ICUs and under 800 hospitalized with COVID, with the vast majority of those patients in New York City.
And this too, is objectively good news. New York state hasn’t had fewer than 100 patients in the ICU since July 2021. This is a near record low. But it’s accurate and relevant to point out that before the pandemic, if we saw 72 patients in state ICUs with Influenza in April, we would say that this is a harsh flu season.
But this brings me to Wertheimer’s next tweet. And this is what got me fuming:
He’s absolutely correct about one thing. People should not be looking at testing numbers at this point. There’s no blanket testing being done. For example, patients going in for surgery are no longer tested. So we should focus on the hospitalizations. But is it “just getting better”? That’s where I have a problem.
And the simple explanation of the problem I have is this. It’s April. It shouldn't be this bad in April - unless there’s a pandemic going on. There is, right?
So going back to the CDC dashboard, which is incomplete and therefore inaccurate, it reports that last week, the US saw 1160 COVID-19 deaths. In any recent pre-pandemic year this century, that would be regarded as a very high number of deaths from a viral respiratory illness. And that is why we can’t scientifically declare the pandemic over in the US.
Here’s what I often think about. What if we settle where we are currently? What if the US officially loses 1100 people each week, and New York state has between 50 and 80 people in ICUs now through December? Well, we know what would come next. There would be a winter surge of infections, hospitalizations and deaths from January through March 2024. We would see a repeat of late 2022 and the whole of 2023.
My writing this does not mean that I want the pandemic to go on forever. I am not cheering for the virus. And I am not denying that fewer people are dying. I saw what 5,000 ICU patients in New York City looks like a little more than 3 years ago. I know things are better. But what if this is as good as it gets going forward? What if July 2021 and the summer of 2023 are brief brushes with a COVID-free nation? What if the really big drops in deaths only happen in summertime? What if, for only a few weeks each summer, we get close to a definitive end of the pandemic, and then it revs up again?
Before the pandemic, COVID-19 wasn’t a cause of death. We can agree on that, right?
So what exactly is Wertheimer saying in the next tweet?
How can any scientist, doctor, public health professional or policymaker be satisfied with COVID-19 settling to become the third leading cause of death? Let’s suppose, in an alternate history, we were dealing with COVID-19 for decades. It would still present as a big problem each winter when Americans socialize indoors. We would have elected leaders and scientists telling us to get vaccinated each fall to reduce the risk of death. How many Americans recognized that and got a booster last fall? Oh, about 18%, plus or minus. We went from nearly 80% vaccinated in early 2021 to under 20% vaccinated for the winter of 2023. Like a film that sees a huge drop in box office revenue in its second week, the vaccines are no longer desired. And now the US is stuck in this unnecessary vulnerable position with people socializing indoors each winter, assuming they never have to get another shot for this disease. They are done with it. Wertheimer added:
Correct! And I think Wertheimer knows this, but 80,000 respiratory infection deaths per year would, in normal times, be the worst flu season since the 1910s. However, this is the pandemic that we’re done with. We’re over it. Don’t wanna read or hear about it. We’re done. Which brings me to a tweet under his I didn’t want to cite, but now I’m angry:
[In my Martin Scorsese voice] NoNoNoNoNo.
There’s no equivalency between people like me, who advocate masking, avoid dining indoors, and promote booster shots, and the hordes of troublemakers, liars, grifters, domestic terrorists and conspiracy cultists who claim that masks make people sick, vaccines kill people, and COVID deaths are wildly exaggerated.
I think Joel Wertheimer knows that. He didn’t like nor agree with that reply to one of his COVID tweets. But then again, I did start this post with the assumption that Wertheimer is tired of people like me who remind him that we’re still in a pandemic, and maybe it’s not a good idea to drink and dine indoors in bars and restaurants. YOLO and stuff, but this disease sucks. If if you catch it more than once, there’s a really good chance it will ruin your health as you age. It’s an exotic animal disease, people.
In conclusion, what we've been seeing for the last 1152 days or so is a massive struggle over the seriousness of this pandemic. From the start -from the very start- we have not been at war with a virus, but at war with ourselves. (The scientists, of course are at war with viruses, so I am setting them aside for a moment.) The majority knew the disease was scary, deadly and something to be avoided. And the studies and data are proving that pro-science side to be correct. The other side, a loud, occasionally violent minority, has been yelling that the pandemic isn’t so bad, or isn’t real.
But something terrible happened. Over time, the majority stopped defending their position. They began to give-in to the cries, shouts and threats from the minority. They reluctantly re-opened the restaurants and the theaters. Then they gave-in to the demands to stop promoting mask wearing. And then they did the unthinkable. They stopped promoting the vaccines. They just gave-up and made themselves move past the pandemic. And that’s how we saw the current vaccination rate plummet by 60 points. A cultural war with real life and death consequences was fought and the anti-science minority won. Sound familiar? This is precisely how the minority is winning in taking away rights to bodily autonomy and free speech in schools. It is also how the minority got us to stop trying to prevent our environmental catastrophe. They yelled us out of the room.
The pandemic will have long lasting effects on humanity. Just today, the WHO acknowledged that data shows that as many as 10% of people who survived COVID-19 develop long-term chronic conditions, which will almost certainly shorten lifespans, harm economies, and put a lot of strain on the global healthcare and health sciences industry. And this will go on for decades.
But, sure. Yes, Twitter user Loaf Management, we who follow the science are just as bad as those who claimed that the pandemic was being exaggerated, embellished and used to scare the public for whatever reasons the anti-semitic conspiracy cultists could think of.