When I have constituents respond to my emails about vaccine distribution with angry notes about the virus being a joke and not worthy of their concern, I just think about the people who have worked so hard to mislead them.
And how many of them are in Congress.
Pretending a global pandemic isn't worthy of concern isn't a notion you arrive at on your own.
It takes a concerted effort by people who *fully understand* that they are being deceptive.
And lots of these folks are elected officials who should exist to *do the opposite thing.*
And if your elected official is planning on spending tomorrow objecting to the clear outcome of an election, then I'm talking about that guy, too.
Because this is a reality-detachment thing now.
I just don't understand the ethical willingness to knowingly mislead people.
Incidentally, I reply to every one of those emails.
And here's what I write:
"I'm sorry, but you have been deeply misled. Please do some of your own reading on this. Just use Google and take a few minutes. Pick a number of sources. This is all very real."
And, if that happens to be you and you're still reading:
We love you, we want you to be healthy, we want the people around you to be healthy, we want all of this to end as quickly as humanly possible, and please start doing your own reading from...
non-political sources that have actual editors and standards where people would get fired for being wrong, not blogs or memes.
This is all very real and we're counting on your help to end it.
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We lost far more Americans to Covid in December than we lost in the entire Vietnam War.
And as we start January, all of our state's Covid numbers are moving swiftly in the wrong direction.
The most troubling metric is our positive test percentage, which just hit a record.
This metric is important because it controls for the amount of tests we're giving.
So for the people who say, "Sure, there are more positive tests, but that's just because we're testing more people," we've got this metric to determine just how prevalent the virus is.
There was a brief moment in September where we fell below 5% and we were starting to feel better about things. Sec. Cohen said she really wanted us below 2%.
It’s deeply strange that our country isn’t getting an address from the Oval Office about
-> what we’re facing
-> what we must do to protect each other
-> what victory in the face of tragedy looks like
This is the moment those addresses are made for.
So we must lead ourselves
We are suffering from daily catastrophe.
The fact that it’s happening largely out of view, in isolation, without smoke or fire or explosions or captivating video, is precisely why we need leaders who can speak to this moment and keep our consciences awake and our spines steeled.
We are not going to normalize mass, preventable, daily tragedy.
We are not going to accept the permission being offered to us by national leadership to be indifferent to unimaginable suffering.
We are going to care about people we’ve never met and lead ourselves through this.
This week, North Carolina got 85,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine.
Next week, that will drop to 60,000.
Some of you saw the headlines about Pfizer vaccine shipments being reduced, for reasons that are still unclear. That appears to have happened across the board.
So, while we were originally expecting to get another 85,000 Pfizer doses, now it looks closer to 60,000.
But that doesn’t apply to the Moderna vaccine.
Next week, our state will be getting 175,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine - which just became FDA-approved last night.
In 2012, I learned that I was positive for the BRCA1 gene. This is a condition that significantly increases a person’s chance of developing breast cancer. My grandmothers, my aunt, and my mom all developed – and survived – breast cancer. 1/4
Over the years I worked with doctors to closely monitor my health and look for any early signs of cancer. While none had developed, I decided in January 2017 to have a preventative double mastectomy to reduce the risk and bring peace of mind to our family. 2/4
This post is my small way to support any women or men who are facing a similar health decision. Health care can be deeply personal, but we all know it's also a major part of our current political debate. 3/4