The old people I knew in the South would often warn us children, “You don’t believe fat meat is greasy!” Their point, in case you don’t speak Southern, was that we were acting like we didn’t believe in consequences. Not believing fat meat is greasy was like, say, not believing adults promising to punish our misbehavior would follow through.
Among the consequences of his term was the U.S.’ high Covid death rate (at least compared with Europe) as Trump abdicated his responsibility as a leader
We see a collective disbelief that fat meat’s greasy from people trusting Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump to lead a “Make America Healthy Again” movement. Among the direst consequences of his term in office was the U.S.’ high Covid death rate (at least compared with Europe) as Trump abdicated his responsibility as a leader and deceived the public as the most serious health crisis in a century unfolded. (He did find time to send Covid-testing kits to Russian President Vladimir Putin, though.)
Trump was hazardous to this country’s health when he was president, and you’d be a fool to believe he wouldn’t be every bit as hazardous if he were elected again.
Consider his endorsement of quackery, his embrace of snake-oil treatments and anti-vaccine partisans, such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The president of the United States lending credence to the idea that drugs used to treat malaria and lupus would cure Covid helped cement the idea that being conservative means not believing data or embracing the scientific method. (It also put at risk the lives of lupus patients who couldn’t get their needed drugs.)
Trump’s joining forces with RFK Jr., perhaps the country’s best-known disparager of vaccines — and saying he’d consider giving Kennedy a role in a second Trump administration — is a promise to keep inflicting harm upon the public’s health.
Trump’s Sunday rally at Madison Square Garden was problematic for reasons other than the racism on display. It was there that Trump said he’d let Kennedy “go wild on health.” At a previous rally, Trump said: “Let’s go, Bobby. You gonna make us healthy, Bobby?”
Though Trump deserves credit for Operation Warp Speed, which fast-tracked Covid vaccines into existence, many of his core supporters don’t credit him for it; they blame him for it, and so he’s mostly stopped taking credit for his administration’s single greatest achievement.
His fear of losing the “I did my own research” vote led him to make the horrible promise that he would “not give one penny to any school that has a vaccine mandate.” Already — in evidence that suggests that Republicans’ antagonism toward vaccines is contagious — the proportion of children who entered kindergarten without the recommended complement of vaccinations was the highest it has ever been during the 2023-24 school year. And public health officials have been sounding the alarm that this new and unwarranted outrage at vaccines is helping resurrect once-vanquished diseases.








