So, as we approach what would normally be summer pool season, here's a short analogy about pooping and accountability.
What happens next? Everybody clears the pool. That's the initial step to protect people from the poop.
But it's not the end of the story.
Then they have to shock the pool with chlorine to kill off bacteria.
And then everyone waits half and hour or so til it's safe to swim again. cdc.gov/healthywater/s…
No one can go back in. The poop is still there. Limbo.
Whose fault is it that it's not safe to go back in the water? Who is accountable?
Or do you focus on the staff whose job it is to clean up the poop?
And what would you think if the staff started saying - look, just get back in. Be a warrior.
The answer is pretty obvious.
And the President, rather than fix the mess, is urging everyone back into the pool regardless and saying the *real* problem is those people who think the pool's not safe yet. They must hate the pool, etc.
The President's whole play here is to distract from his failure to fix the mess by focusing the country's attention on people who don't want to swim in a pooped-in pool.
He wants you to believe they're saying you should never go back in.
But NO ONE is saying "never go back in the pool." They're saying - please clean out the poop first.
And if you're frustrated that we can't, please hold the right folks accountable. The problem isn't the people saying we need to reopen *safely*.
It's the people saying needn't bother with that part.
Telling people to just be warriors and go back in the pool isn't just reckless, it also *won't work*. Maybe a few hardy souls will take their chances.
But those who can will opt out.
katz.substack.com/p/theres-still…
Similarly, governors lifting restrictions won't yield economic recovery until a critical mass of people feel that reopening is safe.
Instead, do what all other pools in town are doing and clean up the 💩.