Must-read instant history of the pandemic by @lawrence_wright: newyorker.com/magazine/2021/…
The quote that sticks with me is from Matt Pottinger on "the fading art of leadership.” It’s not a failure of one party or another; it’s more of a generational decline of good judgment.
“The élites think it’s all about expertise,” he said. It’s important to have experts, but they aren’t always right: they can be “hampered by their own orthodoxies, their own egos, their own narrow approach to the world.”
Pottinger went on, “You need broad-minded leaders who know how to hold people accountable, who know how to delegate, who know a good chain of command, and know how to make hard judgments.”
The great strength of this piece is that it doesn't simplify the story by pinning all the blame on Trump. The full extent of the CDC's disastrous bungling of early testing is laid bare, as is the inter-agency feuding, and the mistakes made at the state level.
But in the end one is left with a feeling of revulsion at the way Trump went from insouciance to idiocy to malevolence: deliberately making matters worse. I defy anyone to read this piece and not be disgusted by his pathologically solipsistic conduct.

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More from @nfergus

30 Nov 20
We are living through a monetary revolution so multifaceted that few of us comprehend its full extent. And Bitcoin is winning it: bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
This article also contains, to my knowledge, the first reference in financial journalism to @Doug_D_Stuart's brilliant, Booker-winning novel "Shuggie Bain," which everyone should read. bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
The crux of the argument is that Bitcoin is not only scarce but (as Wences Casares argues) sovereign. “No one can change a transaction in the Bitcoin blockchain and no one can keep the Bitcoin blockchain from accepting new transactions.” bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
Read 4 tweets
11 Nov 20
Each Remembrance Day / Veterans Day takes us another step away from the events of November 11, 1918; each generation finds it a little bit harder to imagine what it was like to be caught up, as my grandfather John Ferguson was, in what came to be the First World War. Image
This year's pandemic has reminded us that the "Spanish" influenza of 1918-19 was a key part of the war's ghastly culmination. It may have originated in a US army base (Fort Riley, Kansas, the site of Camp Funston) but it soon spread throughout the world, killing 40-50 m. people.
Writing The Pity of War more than 20 years ago, I was intrigued by the possibility that the war had not only caused the war, by facilitating its spread via camps and troop ships, but had also helped to end it, by contributing to the German collapse.
Read 6 tweets
8 Jul 20
While I am on the subject of free speech, it's worth reading the deranged attempt to "cancel" @sapinker signed by 575 members of "The Linguistics Community" and sent to the Linguistic Society of America: docs.google.com/document/u/1/d…
At first I thought this was a parody. But no. The letter - demanding that Pinker be removed from the LSA's list of distinguished academic fellows because of six old tweets - exemplifies the toxic mentality that is so widespread in universities today.
The best rebuttal is here whyevolutionistrue.com/2020/07/05/the… but there are links to others here: motherjones.com/recharge/2020/…
Read 4 tweets
8 Jul 20
After the virtue-signaling opening paragraph, there's nothing I disagree with in the @Harpers "Letter on Justice and Open Debate." It's good to see so many prominent liberal intellectuals standing up for free speech: harpers.org/a-letter-on-ju… 1/13
So well done to @thomaschattwill for putting it together. The hostile reaction to it on the intolerant left has revealed just how necessary it was: nytimes.com/2020/07/07/art… 2/13
But as I looked down the list of signatories, I found myself wondering where all these people were when it was conservative intellectuals who were getting "canceled." Because this problem pre-dates 2020, let's face it. 3/13
Read 13 tweets
27 Jun 20
Because of course the @washingtonpost never, ever downplayed the risk of COVID-19. "Conservative media misinformation may have intensified the severity of the pandemic." washingtonpost.com/business/2020/…
No, it wasn't just @seanhannity who dismissed the threat of a pandemic back in January and February. Let's also remember this February 3 gem from the @washingtonpost : washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/0…
Read 10 tweets
7 Jun 20
My debut for @bopinion is now live: bloomberg.com/opinion/articl… Why 1968 is the wrong analogy for understanding 2020. 1/6
"For years, I have confidently said that 1968 was much worse than the present. But could it be the other way around — not in terms of standards of living or rates of violence, but in terms of politics and the perceptions that shape it?" 2/6
"History shows that pandemics all too often exacerbate existing social tensions between classes and ethnic groups." 3/6
Read 6 tweets

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