A COVID Statistic That is Beyond Meaningless
Apparently, a new Republican talking point has dropped:
Under Joe Biden, more people died WITH Covid in 2021 than 2020, in spite of THREE vaccines that weren’t available in 2020 and FIVE (bogus) vaccine mandates issued by Joe Biden in 2021.https://t.co/YK1IzbjhVi
— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) November 22, 2021
The Wall Street Journal also got the memo:
Covid deaths this year have now surpassed the toll in 2020 with 350,000 since Inauguration Day. It would seem that Mr. Biden has done no better than Donald Trump in defeating Covid despite the benefit of vaccines, better therapies, and more clinical experience. The left politicized Covid by holding Mr. Trump responsible for a disease that was always going to be hard to defeat.
As has National Review.
This is a family site so I will refrain from the explosion of expletives I would like to unleash on this. But let’s just say that this statistic is incredibly deceptive. Even if weren’t, it would be utterly meaningless. And even if it were not meaningless, coming as it does from Republicans, it is an offensive end-zone celebration of their own destructive polices and the body count it has piled up.
Let’s break it down.
There have not, in fact, been more COVID-19 deaths under Joe Biden than under Donald Trump. Eventually, we will probably pass that grim milestone. But at the present rate of death, that will not happen for another 2-3 months. What they have done is compared 2021 deaths to 2020. But Joe Biden has not been President for the entirety of 2020. He took office on January 20th.
And that matters because of the second point. When Joe Biden came into office, we were literally right at the peak of the winter wave of infections that began in the fall of 2020 shortly after Donald Trump resumed rallies and hosted a super spreader event in the White House. Of the nearly 400,000 who have died since January 20, nearly half were in the tail of that wave. I don’t know anyone on Earth who expected COVID-19 deaths to suddenly drop to zero the day Biden came into office.
But now you see both the dishonesty and the meaninglessness of this stat. During the first three weeks of January, we were having the equivalent of a 9/11 every day. By counting deaths from January 1 to January 20 in Biden’s “column” instead of Trump’s, these weasels are able to shift a whopping 60,000 deaths in the blame game.1
Now, has Joe Biden’s response to the pandemic been perfect? Of course not. But it’s been better than Trump’s. We’ve put actual scientists back into advisory positions and listened to their advice. Biden hasn’t run out and started telling people not to fear the virus or mocked anyone for wearing a mask. He’s enacted a vaccine mandate which has caused vaccinations to resurge over the last few months. There are criticisms I would lob: elites not wearing masks and going to social events while the rest of us are supposed to follow the rules is a big problem. But having an Administration that can stay on message — even if that message is sometimes garbled — has been an improvement.
And I would say that, up until mid-summer, the results spoke for themselves. Vaccinations rates have been decent, if not great. And by July, it was looking like the pandemic was fading. But then two things happened.
First, the delta variant emerged. This variant was massively more infectious than the dominant 2020 variant. And it began to wreak havoc in unvaccinated populations. Even now, as the wave recedes from its breakout in Southern states and washes over the rest of the country, we are looking largely at a pandemic of the unvaccinated.
But the second point is why this blame game with Biden crosses me as so offensive. Because as the winter wave receded, Republicans made a choice. They decided that they were going to oppose almost all pandemic mitigations. With governors in Florida, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas leading the way, they banned masks in schools. They refused to enact any social distancing measures. They screamed that vaccine mandates were unconstitutional and filed lawsuits until they found a partisan court that would side with them. And almost all of the anti-vaxx hysteria and lies have been on the Right wing.
The WSJ editorial, in particular, is a giant rotten load of hypocritical nonsense. They blame the “left” for politicizing the pandemic. But that elides that, when this pandemic began, there was broad agreement on what needed to be done. It was Republicans who decided to turn on masks and vaccine mandates for political gain. It was Trump who started tweeting out things like “Liberate Michigan!” and mocking his opponent for wearing a mask. It is Republicans calling for the head of Anthony Fauci and anyone else who says thing they don’t want to hear. Moreover, the WSJ editorial page itself has run full op-eds on hair-brained lab leak conspiracy theories. They have run numerous op-eds supporting the Great Barrington nonsense, including anti-vax editorials from the GBD authors themselves. And they want to blame Biden for the new surge? Give me a break.
Now, I don’t think the Republicans intended to kill people. I think they figured that the stunning success of the vaccines meant they could have their cake and eat it too — scream about how mask and vaccine mandates were tyranny while masks and vaccines made the virus fade away. The receding wave meant they could pontificate and fundraise and portray Democrats as evil without consequence. But they didn’t count on an explosive variant emerging that would ravage their own communities. Even now, as the variant moves into bluer states, it is still strongly tracing the red-blue divide at the county level. Michigan, for example, is seeing caseloads not seen in a year2. But those cases are heavily concentrated in areas with low vaccination rates. And also, not coincidentally, areas that supported Trump in 2020.
In short, while it may not have been their intention, the Republicans have done everything they could to make the pandemic worse. And now they want to blame Joe Biden for it. Seen in this light, the recent spate of “Biden’s killed more than Trump” op-eds and tweets is not a lament.
It’s a boast.
- This is somewhat similar to what Republicans did in 2009, when they lamented soaring unemployment claims and high unemployment rates under Obama as though these things were unrelated to the 2008 financial crash. While handing your successor a turd sandwich and then complaining that the sandwich has turds in it is standard operating procedure in politics, that doesn’t make it right. And, in this case, it’s actually dangerous.
- Although deaths are half of what they were in the last wave.
You can’t shame people who have no shame. Though I agree 100% with your analysis.Report
Fascism corrupts by politicizing everything, even emergency response.
For the Republicans, Covid was is, and always will be first and foremost a political PR problem/ opportunity to be managed/ exploited.Report
Lies and damn lies…Report
Sure the laying of deaths at the foot of the president during a pandemic is kinda dumb and only dumb people would do that.
The critique of Biden – which I’ll make here well before it becomes obvious 20/20 hindsight – is that his team has been too slow to adjust to the fact that we *aren’t* running downhill to herd immunity like we thought in March/April 2020.
What the Biden team hasn’t done is change the FDA so that we can handle the variants better… we’re not positioned for Moderna/Pfizer 2.0 upgrade boosters… we’re still too slow to address new drugs/treatments and nothing has been done to pre-scale production… worse the FDA has been pulling back lots of different Emergency Use Authorizations and is reversing course to BAU. Testing, Rapid Testing, Home Testing is a complete patchwork of hit/miss. The CDC is, amazingly, still a communications train-wreck.
So as we move from pandemic to endemic, the death tolls aren’t the fault of a president in the midst of ubiquitous free vaccines (nor are the ubiquitous free vaccines a Biden admin achievement, if we must be fair); the test comes when/if we spike back into a pandemic situation with death spirals among the vaccinated. And there? I have the above concerns that we haven’t taken this time to reposition. *That* will be on the Biden Admin (may it never come to pass).
The blindspot with Biden – which is baked into the Biden cake – is that he’s 100% Washington institutionalist… so his agenda will always be more funding, but not reform. That’s who he is. So I know the FDA and CDC and NIH will get more money, but they will spend it as they know how to spend it. Rules are rules, regulations are regulations…
It is possible the Biden Admin is clawing, hacking and hewing new paths, but search on the topics and the tumultuous intertube winds blow quiet. Unless OTC Monograph Reform (Cares Act) is the thing we’ve been waiting for. But fair enough… maybe wheels within wheels are turning out of sight. Hopefully we never need to test the hypothesis. But if we do… I’ll be here to say, we squandered 2-yrs on kabuki-masking.Report
How fast do you want to react? Are you willing to really accept the trade-offs imbedded in that change of pace?
I ask because the FDA and CDC went from zero to EUAs on adult vaccines in about 5 months, which in FDA Time is a record. Then they went from EUA to full authorized in under 6 months – again really really fast. They went from zero to EUA for the Covid Treatment Pill in about 4 months. All those represent a good balance between emergent need and processes to maintain human safety ( you do recall that a good many conservative commentators – including here – use that fast time line as a reason to NOT get vaxxed).
As to pre-scaling production – we spent $1 Billion under Trump to pre-scale vax production and its attendant R&D. What you are talking about would be billions more. DO you think Senate Republicans would support that if Biden introduced it tomorrow?Report
The pivot from “PEOPLE ARE DYING!” to “well, you have to understand…” and back and back again lessens the impact of both points, no matter how true they might be.Report
Its not a pivot. Both things cane be and are true simultaneously. People are dying – and to date it’s been increasingly unvaccinated people. It is also true that the FDA and CDC have moved with unheard of speed to address vaccines and treatments. They did so because they were told to do so, and because Congress authorized enough funds for the initial vaccine development that the private companies who do that work agreed to put other stuff aside and hustle.Report
Start your stopwatch right now, on Dec-1st.
We have a new version of Covid (Omicron) which the CEO of Moderna says should be expected to be vaccine resistant.
We’re hearing from the FDA that they’re working with Moderna to make a new vaccine. Moderna says it will take a few months (like 2-4).
Modena and Pfizer have shown that their technology works(*), one assumes they didn’t fire all the scientists who made it a year ago, one assumes everyone has learned stuff and will be better/faster this time.
If the FDA approves Vaccine-2(**) in less time then Biden and his crew are doing great. If next year in December we’re still waiting it will be because Trump did a better job at that.
(*) Not including Johnson and Johnson. Their science worked but they dropped the ball repeatedly at handing it over to the engineers on the production line.
(**) Real Name TBD.Report
“How fast do you want to react? Are you willing to really accept the trade-offs imbedded in that change of pace?”
Faster.
Yes.
Part of the point of faster is that approving a new type of vaccine mRNA, should *also* carry a re-assessment of the approval process and requirements for mRNA v.1.2 or 2.0 — that’s a big part of an Executive push to create a new model with appropriate safeguards.
Global Pandemic is the trade-off we’re making. We’re never going for Covid-0 or dealing with chronic issues… we’re trading risk for risk. And risk management/calculations will change over time.
If anything, treating Covid like a disease that we’re trying to cure rather than a risk we’ll looking to mitigate is probably the meta-failure of our general policy/approach.Report
As you might recall, Obama was being blamed for the recession even before he was inaugurated, because of course business investment was down with one of them about to be president.Report
I like how the Tweet, while attacking Biden, also can’t let go of the conspiracy theory that Covid deaths were being artificially and intentionally inflated (e.g., dying “with Covid” and dying “from Covid).
THESE NUMBERS THAT CAN’T BE TRUSTED SHOW WHAT A MONSTER BIDEN IS!!!Report
But doesn’t this article do the same thing? It says, “But let’s just say that this statistic is incredibly deceptive. Even if weren’t, it would be utterly meaningless.” And it’s not wrong to do that, to say to an opponent that even if I grant his terms, he still doesn’t prove what he wanted to.Report
The article says, “The number is unreliable and useless.”
The Tweet says the opposite: “The number is unreliable BUT we’ll use it to bludgeon our opponent.”Report