Jab-happy TV covid doctor and former Planned Parenthood director Leanna Wen is still hanging around and offering unwanted advice on when to get your next jab. But in an encouraging development, it seems her advice is much more nuanced now. This week she even published an op-ed in the Washington Post headlined, āA rare mosquito-borne illness is resulting in curfews ā and controversy.ā
Some local health officials have come up with their latest germaphobic obsession: mosquito lockdowns. Wen noted that, after one guy died from eastern equine encephalitis, several New England towns issued voluntary curfews, and at least one closed its public parks from dusk to dawn. It wasnāt clear whether they filled the skate parks with construction sand.
But astonishingly, Dr. Wen began her piece āand maybe Iām reading this wrongā intensely critical of public health officials:
I would have said they still donāt have a strong grasp on strategies, but as I said, Iām no quibbler. The TV doctor disclosed that in 2019, six people in Massachusetts died from EEE, but nobody imposed lockdowns back then.
Wen carefully avoided answering the question, but āand this was the important partā she fairly described both sides of the argument, maybe even leaning into the this is dumb side of the controversy.
Of course, the answer is āno lockdowns,ā since protecting people from natural hazards has never been, and is not the governmentās job. Sure, tell folks that mosquitos carry infectious diseases. But expect citizens in a representative Republic to evaluate their own risks, and either stay home or go to the park if they want to.
This nannyism is getting out of hand.
Wen didnāt mention it, but I think it is also fair to note how some of these local officials giddily lock down for a single EEE death but are strangely unconcerned with the myocarditis epidemic. Weird.
How the hell do these people get out of bed in the morning
Some local health officials have come up with their latest germaphobic obsession: mosquito lockdowns. Wen noted that, after one guy died from eastern equine encephalitis, several New England towns issued voluntary curfews, and at least one closed its public parks from dusk to dawn. It wasnāt clear whether they filled the skate parks with construction sand.
But astonishingly, Dr. Wen began her piece āand maybe Iām reading this wrongā intensely critical of public health officials:
I would have said they still donāt have a strong grasp on strategies, but as I said, Iām no quibbler. The TV doctor disclosed that in 2019, six people in Massachusetts died from EEE, but nobody imposed lockdowns back then.
Wen carefully avoided answering the question, but āand this was the important partā she fairly described both sides of the argument, maybe even leaning into the this is dumb side of the controversy.
Of course, the answer is āno lockdowns,ā since protecting people from natural hazards has never been, and is not the governmentās job. Sure, tell folks that mosquitos carry infectious diseases. But expect citizens in a representative Republic to evaluate their own risks, and either stay home or go to the park if they want to.
This nannyism is getting out of hand.
Wen didnāt mention it, but I think it is also fair to note how some of these local officials giddily lock down for a single EEE death but are strangely unconcerned with the myocarditis epidemic. Weird.
āļø LAUGHING INFECTIONS ā Saturday, September 7, 2024 ā C&C NEWS š¦
Boeing spaceship is back; mosquito lockdowns surprisingly questioned; Hunter pleads guilty; Trump sentencing schedule change; Georgia shooting update; DOJ declares war on influencers; more.
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How the hell do these people get out of bed in the morning