OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
What to Do With Our Covid Rage
Illustration
by Joan Wong
By Sarah
Smarsh
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/07/opinion/sunday/covid-unvaccinated-anger.html
Ms. Smarsh
is the author of “Heartland: A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke In the
Richest Country on Earth.”
In the
spring, I received my Covid-19 vaccination shots from county health workers in
an old building on the main street of a tiny Kansas town. My first dose came
from a quiet nurse wearing a plastic visor over his N-95 mask and a leather
cowboy belt with ornate metal inlays. My second dose came from a smiling older
woman who, when I reported with vague concern that I had experienced strong side
effects from the first shot, patted me on the shoulder and said, “It’s better
than a tube down your throat, hon.”
Fellow
county residents waited their turn in muddy boots and faded work jackets while
the April wind stirred their fields of early wheat. There was corn to plant,
but they had found time to make long drives to what was then the only
vaccination site in 500 square miles. Our ages, politics and backgrounds
varied, but we were mostly white, rural people who wanted to live.
Today, the
wheat has been harvested and the corn is high, but still roughly one in three
people approved for the vaccine across the country has not yet received — in
many cases, has willfully refused — a single dose.
Abetted by
that slow rollout, Covid-19 has resurged. Following a short, beautiful moment
of relaxed precautions while cases were down at the start of summer, we again
don masks, change plans and worry about how to keep ourselves and our loved
ones safe. Vaccination rates are on the rise as the hesitant become less so,
but the coronavirus will likely be with us indefinitely. How does one process
this brutal reality?
Many
vaccinated Americans are tired, disgusted and eager to assign blame. Public
health experts and government officials, including some Republicans, have
shifted from sensitive prodding to firm condemnation of those forgoing
vaccination. Private conversations among the inoculated take an even less
diplomatic turn: “We were so close, and these stupid, unvaccinated jerks ruined
it for the rest of us.”
Fatigue and
outrage are appropriate emotions, considering all that has been lost to
Covid-19: lives, jobs, experiences, money, physical and mental health. But
those feelings, if not properly channeled, can themselves take a heavy toll.
What do we do with our anger?
*
I am a
progressive woman who resides in a conservative state. I am on record in this
fractured political era as a proponent of maintaining connection across gulfs
of understanding, with the caveat that this civic burden falls to people whose
social privileges allow them to engage safely with “the other side.” But
seeking to understand dangerous behaviors and beliefs is quite different than
permitting them. I myself, by many accounts an amiable person, once yelled at a
truck stop full of unmasked people to read the sign on the goddamn door.
Fury —
collective, generational, political, cultural, individual — is utterly familiar
to me, more so than the happy serenity of my current life. I was a child in
poverty during the 1980s “farm crisis,” when federal policies favoring big
corporations devastated rural communities. Everywhere I turned, something was
dying: the local grocery store, the family farm, the cancer victims whose water
supply contained agricultural runoff. There was joy in my family, but there was
also addiction, abuse and neglect that drew from a deep well of justifiable
rage and sorrow.
Anger is a
contagious energy that jumps quickly from one person to the next. It will seize
your mind and body as its host. If allowed to explode, it will hurt others. If
allowed to implode, it will hurt you. I had to learn early how to transmute it
for the sake of my own survival. I found that it can be the source of a
powerful alchemy. If we are up to the task, it could help us create something
good together.
That
alchemy begins with awareness. Are we justified in our indignation? Do we have
the facts? If we do not understand the problem, our feelings are untethered
from reality. Untethered anger tends to be unproductive and selfish, delighting
our own egos rather than directing us toward necessary action.
So when you
are ready — and if you are never ready, whether because you mourn a loved one’s
death or your own altered future, I won’t judge — let us hold our rage in our
hands and look closely to see what it contains.
*
Our
national conversation has reached the point where many Americans are done with
any and all excuses offered by the unvaccinated. Some of the inoculated are not
just self-righteous but downright venomous, arguing on social media that
hospitals should refuse to admit unvaccinated Covid-19 patients, calling them
trash and wishing them a painful death. Residents of blue America have
pronounced this a red-America problem. “Our state did a great job fighting the
pandemic,” one person tweeted. “Our reward? The mouth-breathing
knuckle-draggers in adjacent red states flooded their hospitals and spilled
over into ours.”
Old
political resentments have found a new outlet in the fraught vaccine debate.
“I’ve been pissed off since Reagan was elected,” another Twitter user quipped
in a thread parsing the emotions of the vaccinated. Exhausted, despairing minds
find comfort in turning complex realities into simple, opposing categories. The
noble, upstanding vaccinated American and the selfish, stupid, unvaccinated
one. The good liberal citizen and the far-right anti-vaxxer.
Available
images reinforce these notions. A vocal contingent of conservatives appear at
meetings holding hypocritical signs about liberty, on the Internet sharing
memes about liberal sheep, on the nightly news spitting on public health
officials. They command attention, and their share of the unvaccinated will
increase as more persuadable people get their shots. But they are not yet the
overwhelming majority of the vaccine reluctant. A study of survey results from
March showed that 16 percent of eligible Americans refused the vaccine because
of skepticism about the pandemic, marked by a belief in at least one conspiracy
theory. The same study found that a higher number, some 22 percent, hadn’t
gotten vaccinated because of concerns about cost, safety or systems that
previously did them wrong. Millions more, of course, are children under 12 and
those disqualified by underlying health conditions.
My white,
working-class family contains liberal women and men who have been vaccinated;
liberal men who have not for fear of losing a day of work to side effects;
conservative men who refuse under the influence of disinformation; liberal
women and men who have delayed for fear of the for-profit health care industry;
and conservative women who are considering getting their first dose. My
grandmother — a former Bernie Sanders voter, a childhood polio survivor and a
strong compulsory vaccination proponent — was the first among us to get a shot.
I cringe
when I see the rampant stereotypes on social media painting the unvaccinated as
rural white folks, by now a frequent scapegoat for our country’s ills.
“Spreadnecks,” I’ve seen them newly termed (as in, “rednecks” spreading the
virus). Never mind that, per the C.D.C., the daily case rates in urban and
nonmetropolitan areas closely track one another.
This
archetypal bumpkin villain of post-Trump America has long received too much
credit in a country where Trumpism thrives in affluent, white urban communities
bursting with college degrees. In handling the pandemic, such misdirection of
attention keeps us from what we should be doing: trying to reach the vast group
of people who might choose vaccination if barriers to access and knowledge were
removed.
*
One
overlooked barrier, as ever in this country, is socioeconomic class. Polls
conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation earlier this year found that
working-class people — white, Black, Hispanic, Democrat, Republican — were less
likely to be vaccinated. Vaccination rates for Black and white college
graduates, meanwhile, were almost identical. The so-called “uneducated” of all
races and backgrounds are hampered not by a lack of good sense but by a lack of
money and power. Their education status keeps their income low, and income predicts
insurance status. When the highly contagious Delta variant was taking hold,
uninsured Americans had the lowest vaccination rate of 22 subgroups examined by
Kaiser.
Having gone
without health insurance for much of my life, I can attest that the experience
does not promote trust in the health care system, better known to the uninsured
as a crippling source of debt than a helpful provider of cures. The Center for
Economic and Policy Research found that states with higher rates of insured
people generally have higher vaccination rates. People of color are
disproportionately uninsured, as conditions of class — poverty and lack of
education — intersect with systemic racism. Nonetheless, myriad news stories
investigating the vaccination divide fail to mention the words class, education
or income once.
The longer
we spend furious at the bad actors among us, the further we move from the
truth: That many unvaccinated people are scared just like us, and that with the
right help and information, they would sit down next to nurses and pull up
their sleeves. We must instead turn our anger into actions that help our cause.
We can
demand public-health mandates, political blowback be damned. We can communicate
with the cost-anxious and wait-and-see people who remain open-minded despite
skepticism wrought by a lifetime of disadvantage. We can do good deeds to
negate harmful ones, like donating money to a nonprofit health clinic when we
see anti-science protesters on the sidewalk or in the news. We can also, in my
opinion, occasionally tell those protesters to screw off, if it gets us to our
next moment of grace. (I didn’t say I was enlightened.)
Most
importantly, we can direct our rage not at lost individuals but at systems of
power that made our grim national death count the only plausible outcome. Is it
so shocking that a caste-based society that exalts individualism and
prioritizes profit above wellness — one of the only industrialized nations
without universal health care — would fail to rise to the challenges of a collective
health crisis?
Despite our
failings of national character, Americans were the fortunate few at the front
of an eight-billion-person line, saved by stockpiles of quickly developed
vaccines that poor countries around the world have struggled to access. We were
among the first of our entire species invited to receive a tremendous feat of
modern science into our blood — a choice that hundreds of thousands of Covid-19
victims, who died before vaccines were available to them, did not live to make.
Those of us who get the vaccines, current data tells us, will almost certainly
survive this pandemic and even a lifetime of seasonal, endemic Covid-19
outbreaks.
Maintaining
that perspective can be hard when staying healthy requires keeping track of
case counts, changing guidelines, the science of booster shots and the safety
rankings of face masks. So when all else fails, if your anger at “the
unvaccinated” feels unbearable, focus less on those whose actions are beyond
your control. Remember how you felt last spring, at a city stadium or a
suburban pharmacy or a rural community building, when you got a shot. How will
you remember its blessing? What will you do with the life that it saved?
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