Wake up America, it's profits over people to some

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by DaFunkJunkie
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As the coronavirus death toll continues to rise in the United States, Americans have been told by conservative pundits, politicians and — more importantly — President Donald Trump Donald John TrumpWith VP pick, Biden can't play small ball in a long ball world Coronavirus hits defense contractor jobs Wake up America, your country doesn't value your life MORE that it’s time to loosen federal guidelines on social distancing to “open up” the economy by Easter Sunday.

Health officials — including Dr. Anthony Fauci who directs the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases — have warned that encouraging people to go back to work would devastate efforts to slow the spread of the lethal virus.

Part of the problem is that these health officials seem to think that Trump and the rest of the talking heads making these public declarations don’t know that they’re putting peoples’ lives at risk.

They know. They just don’t care.

When Texas’ Republican lieutenant governor Dan Patrick suggested that the elderly go back to work to save the economy, he knew they’d be risking their lives to do so. “Those of us who are 70 plus, we’ll take care of ourselves. But don’t sacrifice the country,” said Patrick, pretending as if he’d actually put himself in harm’s way to go back to work.

It’s clear that Patrick knows of the dangers associated with sending the country’s seniors to work, but wants to push them to do so anyway. Why? Because ensuring his investment portfolio doesn’t suffer from the pandemic takes priority over all those people’s lives.

Later, conservative commentator Britt Hume argued that Patrick’s statements were “entirely reasonable.” Hume also told Tucker Carlson Tucker CarlsonWake up America, your country doesn't value your life Tucker Carlson: Biden won't be the Democratic nominee, Andrew Cuomo 'most likely' O'Rourke slams Texas official who suggested grandparents risk their lives for economy during pandemic MORE, “that the utter collapse of the country's economy, which many think will happen if this goes on much longer, is an intolerable result."

Then there was Glenn Beck, who does his BlazeTV show from what appears to be a secluded underground bunker void of any human interaction that could put his precious life at risk. He joined the chorus of greedy right-wing talking heads by saying “all of us who are over 50 [should] go in and keep this economy going and working.”

“Even if we all get sick, I'd rather die than kill the country," Beck continued. It’s laughable if anyone believes that Beck — who does his show in a coronavirus-free safe space — would genuinely risk contracting the virus in order to “save the economy.” But Beck, much like all the other conservatives cited, do show that they’re fully aware that returning to work puts one’s life in grave danger.

What’s even more terrifying is that Donald Trump, who is unfortunately tasked with leading the country through the pandemic, believes that the only solution to save our lives is worse than the virus itself.

“We can’t have the cure be worse than the problem,” Trump told reporters at a briefing. “We have to open our country because that causes problems that, in my opinion, could be far bigger problems,” he later tweeted.

In other words, according to the president of the United States, hurting the economy is a far bigger problem than millions of Americans potentially losing their lives.

The federal government’s response to this crisis is riddled with death and heartbreaking examples of corporate greed. The latest victim of our broken system was a 17-year-old coronavirus patient in California, who was turned away at urgent care because he didn’t have health insurance. He later went into cardiac arrest and died.

The U.S. currently has 27 million uninsured Americans, and that number is about to rise significantly now that more than 3.3 million Americans have filed for unemployment due to coronavirus-related layoff and firings.

But over the last year, while the popularity of a single-payer health care system was proven popular among Americans in study after study, corporate media insisted that voters absolutely loved their employer-provided health insurance and didn’t want to lose it in return for something more stable and robust like "Medicare for All."

This is profit-driven America, and it’s time we acknowledge that the way our system is structured demonstrates how little your life really means when someone can make a buck. The sooner we acknowledge the truth, the sooner we can decide what we want to do to change it.

Ana Kasparian is a host and executive producer of The Young Turks on TYT.

pr0g3ny on March 29th, 2020 at 13:17 UTC »

The generation that trump is from (and the appeal to when America was “great” that his campaign makes) is basically the 50s, 60s and 70s.

During this time the US national health service watched people suffer of syphilis for decades while having a cure. The CIA kidnapped people off the street and have them insanely high doses of LSD and made them mind control research participants against their will. We waged a fundamentally immoral war where around 2 million civilians died. We spied on, wages psychological war and occasionally killed US citizens who fought against the status quo. These aren’t exceptions - they were the rule.

A major difference between then and now is that then labor was actually strong in the US. So the “them” that we could be criminal against was black people in Alabama, college students and prisoners, people in other countries and dissidents but your W2 factory worker had it okay (good benefits, pension, rising wages) and the government didn’t fuck with him.

Now we live in a globalized world and labor is weak (basically all gains to the economy since Reagan have gone to capital and labor has not gotten any of the growth). If you’re a W2 worker now you get the same treatment as a “them”. You’re no different to the system than someone in India or China who makes a dollar an hour or a black person in Alabama or a civilian in Vietnam.

So I don’t know. America never really gave a shit about lots of people’s lives - they just don’t give a shit about a bigger percentage now is the only change I see.

WeYoung on March 29th, 2020 at 12:36 UTC »

Learned that 6-10 years ago when people were repeatedly outraged by the ACA having the audacity to give people health insurance.

Very eye-opening thing for 18-22 year old me to learn since I got over my naivety quickly.

Tuxmando on March 29th, 2020 at 12:23 UTC »

When has it ever?

We literally had a civil war that killed a million people in an attempt to keep some of us slaves.