The injustice & violence suffered by Asian Americans in the pandemic is a major theme of #COVIDCalls. Here are some episodes that might serve as an explainer, & will introduce you to some brilliant researchers/activists. Starting w/@vgshaw & @_sujanee pscp.tv/USofDisaster/1…
4. On March 9, 2021 I talked w/@irpinaingiro & @prof_erikalee and you can catch that broadcast right here. I hope you will watch, share, & teach these discussions w/such dedicated researchers & activists. pscp.tv/USofDisaster/1…
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This headline is disgusting. The story focuses on poll numbers & the unemployment rate to say a strategy of COVID denialism worked in FL. In fact, 32,597 people have died in FL, & the piece doesn't even break stats down by age/race. @alexjgoldstein politico.com/newsletters/po…
2. I'm only posting it as a caution that horse race politics journalism is going to start declaring COVID "winners and losers" among Presidential aspirants--and that should be called out for the callous, misleading hackery it is.
Anti-Before-COVID-Nostalgia announcement: Americans love to mark time by disasters without stopping long (if at all) to ask “why did that terrible thing happen anyway?”
2. In fact if you count war as a disaster—which I definitely do—most of the US history timeline is just demarcating one disaster from another. You might think we’d be better at investigation, forensics, historical thinking.
3. I’m thinking about time and disaster a lot because the will-to-closure on COVID is strong. And it’s heartbreaking. The “Before COVID” is how we got here.
Chip Roy embodies the American culture of disaster denialism--deeply rooted in racism and the rejection of history. He is the poster boy of a disaster nihilism that damages the possibility for disaster justice. texastribune.org/2019/05/24/us-…
At what point in the 1918 pandemic or WWII did people say “we won’t be going back to normal”? I’m fascinated by that moment-when the disaster becomes indecipherable from daily life. We are in COVID life now, even more once the schools reopen-then-close. Few surprises left now.
2. All of my grandparents talked about the depression and the war as if it was still a sort of daily reality to the ends of their lives. Of course they did-it was not only the trauma of doing without and constant fear. That time reordered their lives entirely.
3. I grew up in the reality of their disasters. The policies, the values, the memories. The trumpet that hung on my grandfather’s wall that he played in bands during the war. The lives they lived before that time could only ever be seen through the prism of that time of disaster.
This fight between Trump and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer offers insight into how Trump uses disaster as a partisan tool, and in this case as a re-election strategy. cnn.com/2020/03/26/pol…
2. As of now 12 states have received major disaster declarations for COVID-19 and there will be more on the way. Michigan will certainly be among them. You can follow the declarations for yourself here on the (very bad) @fema website. fema.gov/disasters
3. So what's happening with Trump and Whitmer? If you aren't familiar with the disaster declaration process just carve out an hour and read the Stafford Act OR you could take a short-cut and just read Title IV. fema.gov/media-library-…
Many thousands have died worldwide from COVID-19 and many thousands more (hoping for 5, not 6 or 7 figures) over the coming months. This is a human disaster on a scale seen recently in the 2010 Haiti earthquake and the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
2. Of course we focus on the dead, we must. But we must also listen to the survivors. Interviews with people who've survived COVID-19 reveal a surprising range of experiences.
3. One thing they certainly all share, and share with their families and friends, is the fear and stress of wondering "do I have it? will I get really sick, how will it affect my family? will I die?"