It’s Foolhardy to Indulge Idiots Who Flunked Arithmetic and Science
By David Cay
Johnston, DCReport Editor-in-Chief
The arrival of effective Covid
vaccines has revealed a grave failure in American education. Copyright: Mike Marland
Tens of millions
of Americans, the ones who say they will never get vaccinated because there’s
no need or because they don’t trust the vaccines somehow made it through years
of mandatory schooling without learning numbers.
That they failed grammar school
‘rithmetic is obvious if you ask two questions:
- How many unvaccinated Americans has Covid killed?
- How many vaccinated Americans has Covid killed?
The answers: 577,000 and 74.
That’s 7,800 unvaccinated people
dying for each one who was vaccinated.
And what of infectious cases? The
latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention count is 32,472,201 Americans
infected of whom just 5,800 were vaccinated. Only 396 of those vaccinated yet
sick required hospitalization.
No vaccine is totally effective,
especially not at first. When I was a boy in the 1950s about 160,000 people a
year, mostly children, contracted polio. More than a thousand died each year.
Then we got the polio vaccines. First came the dead virus Salk vaccine in 1955
and then in 1961 the much more effective Sabin vaccine which used a weakened
but living poliovirus.
Back then some polio
cases were associated with vaccination mostly because one
manufacturer had poor quality controls. That’s an argument for rigorous
regulation and inspection backed up by severe punishments like prison time for
owners and managers who play cheapskates on safety. It’s not an argument for
avoiding vaccines.
The polio vaccines worked although
the United States approved the Sabin vaccine only after the Soviet Union
allowed it to be administered to children in then Communist Russia.
Parents today have no idea about the
universal pre-1955 fear among parents that their babies would end up in iron
lungs or worse. The last time a new polio case originated in America was 1979.
Few Deaths Among Vaccinated
As for the current pandemic, death
is rare among people who are fully vaccinated. That means up to two shots and
two weeks out from the date of the last shot. Covid deaths will become even
rarer going forward, provided that vaccination becomes near-universal.
And yet 10s of millions of Americans
believe—with absolutely no basis in verifiable fact—that the Covid vaccines are
riskier than going without.
Rampant innumeracy helps explain the
insane news that almost one in five healthcare workers doesn’t plan to get
vaccinated, as The
Washington Post reported in March. Almost a third of
Massachusetts State Police have not been vaccinated, and say they don’t plan to
be, either.
Ditto for thousands of
healthcare workers in North Carolina hospitals. To
persuade all state employees to get vaccinated, Maryland pays $100 but
does not punish those who refuse.
Consider what a friend paraphrased
this week: A doorman at her Manhattan apartment said he thought his risk was
higher if he got vaccinated.
Here’s the other side of the story
if 10s of millions never get vaccinated:
The coronavirus will keep spreading
to new human hosts. It randomly will mutate until a new variant proves even
more infectious than the viruses circulating now, which will likely spark
another pandemic, putting us all back into lockdown.
Virus Runs Rampant
Oh, wait, that’s already happening
with pernicious new variants in Brazil, Britain and South Africa. Look at the
contagion gone wild in India where a lack of beds, supplies and oxygen means
hospitals turn away people.
Sorry, you’re just going to die
because Prime Minister Narendra Modi failed to prepare for a pandemic even
after seeing Donald Trump’s lethally incompetent pandemic mismanagement in
America.
Now imagine a new coronavirus
variant with characteristics like MERS, the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.
In the past decade, it’s only infected about 2,600 people—a third of them died.
MERS is still around. It’s just been contained, which is what vaccination is
supposed to do with Covid.
A mutated virus that kills not fewer
than 2% of those infected, as with Covid, but 33 percent of those infected,
would devastate American society for decades.
It would mean death on the scale of
the recurring Black Death pandemics that ravaged Europe for three centuries
killing a third of the populace. Had that been the mortality rate for Covid,
more than 11 million Americans would be dead.
Viruses don’t respect borders,
beliefs or governments. They operate on the same principle as cancer
cells—growth for the sake of growth, even though they kill the host and thus
their own colonies.
Thoughtless as the coronavirus is,
it moves around the globe efficiently, carried to every corner of Earth by
human hosts in jetliners. And that means we need universal global vaccination
because people in India are dying from this virus and its variants are a threat
to people in Indiana.
Wealthy Nations Need to Step Up
At two shots per person that’s close
to 16 billion doses, though it may well be that half as many will do the trick
because we don’t all live in packed modern urban areas.
That will cost a fortune and yet we
as Americans have a direct interest, just as do residents of other wealthy countries,
in paying to vaccinate people in poor countries because it’s for our own
well-being, our own protection.
This global cost brings us back to
innumeracy. How did 10s of millions of our fellow Americans get high school
diplomas without grasping simple issues about numbers?
Students, which of these is more?
577,000 or 74?
Aw, gee, teacher, I can’t tell
the difference.
How do people like the quarter of
New York City cops who have not been vaccinated even get hired for a job that
requires critical thinking skills, while distinguishing between 577,000 and 74
is pretty basic? (This may help explain why we have so many bad shootings by
police; too little emphasis during hiring on critical mental skills.)
Surely the public schools—as well as
private and parochial schools that are supposed to meet government standards—
are failing to teach about numbers and about the basics of science in a
meaningful way.
Stupid Republican
We have numerous members of
Congress, Republicans all it turns out, who are proudly anti-science or
scientific illiterates. They are so ill-informed they don’t know the difference between “climate” and
“weather” and evidently don’t want to learn, either.
Such ignorance is found across
America. Some people
moronically believe that science is just another religion.
Then there are the fools who teach
the absurd notion
that people and dinosaurs coexisted.
Innumeracy would be less common but
for a decision by PBS more than four decades ago to cancel The Electric
Company, the daily kids show about numbers and their relationships. It
lasted for only 780 episodes over six seasons.
The Electric Company died because there were no puppets, toys and related merch
to sell to kids, unlike Sesame Street, which lasted 51 seasons on
public television before moving to HBO, making it unavailable to millions of
children whose parents can’t afford the pay-TV service.
If only someone had created the Sign
family of puppets—Equals, Plus, Minus and all their symbolic cousins. Then
maybe the total numbers from puppet sales would have multiplied into enough
funds to cover production costs, adding up to a positive product, namely more
Americans learning their numbers and relationships between numbers.
There are, of course, other factors
influencing those saying no to vaccination.
Religious Foolishness
Some hold mystical beliefs, like the
Ohio woman on CNN who
said she would never get infected nor would those around her because she was
“covered in the blood of Jesus Christ.” Some anti-mask and anti-social distancing
pastors insisted that Covid
was no danger, punishment
for fornication or other nonsense—only to die from the disease.
Then there are the lies posed as
questions by Tucker Carlson of Fox, who falsely says officials won’t answer
questions about vaccination, questions that have been answered without
hesitation both broadly and in fine detail. Some Trumpers see vaccination as
supporting President Joe Biden, oblivious that Donald Trump and Melania
got vaccinated in secret
even though he had the disease and recovered.
And then there are the crazy and
incoherent QAnon-type conspiracy theorists who spread the silly lie that Big
Brother plants tracking agents in the vaccine. Can we recognize and discuss
mass paranoia, per the many DCReport essays
by Dr. Bandy X. Lee?
In California, Orange County
Supervisor Don Wagner asked Dr. Clayton Chau, the county’s chief public health
officer, about trackers in the vaccines. Dr. Chau laughed openly.
Later Wagner said
that laughing was what he wanted because he was trying to
persuade some constituents that the idea of a tracker in the vaccines is loony.
Taking the supervisor at his word, I
think he’s on to something. The smart response to anyone who says the vaccine
is riskier than not is to laugh—loudly, openly and heartily. That’s not taking
away their free speech; it’s using our free speech to respond with the derision
their idiocy deserves.
We have good reason to mock and shame
these people by calling them out for what they are: stupid, uneducated, fools;
children posing as adults; selfish little spirits who care only about
themselves and not their neighbors.
We should make them social pariahs
because they are endangering us all by needlessly increasing the risk of a new
pandemic or a deadly future wave of the current Covid crisis.