Former President Barack Obama announced in a tweet on Sunday that he tested positive for Covid-19.
I just tested positive for COVID. I’ve had a scratchy throat for a couple days, but am feeling fine otherwise. Michelle and I are grateful to be vaccinated and boosted, and she has tested negative.
— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) March 13, 2022
It’s a reminder to get vaccinated if you haven’t already, even as cases go down.
Fortunately, Obama is vaccinated. But his announcement should serve as a reminder to Americans that the pandemic — despite widespread and persistent ignorance on the matter — is not over. We may wish to be done with Covid, but Covid is not done with us.
More than a year after the first vaccines became available, millions of Americans still haven’t received their shots. And as much as vaccine opponents have sought to frame the choice not to get vaccinated as a personal one, we know such a decision comes at a cost that reaches far and wide — on both a human level and a financial one. The roughly 1,000 Covid-related deaths per day in the United States are proof of this.
Despite lawmakers across the political spectrum encouraging our return to prepandemic routines as if Covid were never around, the world is telling us normalcy is farther away than we tend to think.








