Opinion
Unmasked: When Identity Politics Turns Deadly
Will Republican politicians kill some Texans to own
the libs?
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
March 4,
2021
Relieving
yourself in public is illegal in every state. I assume that few readers are
surprised to hear this; I also assume that many readers wonder why I feel the
need to bring up this distasteful subject. But bear with me: There’s a moral
here, and it’s one that has disturbing implications for our nation’s future.
Although we
take these restrictions for granted, they can sometimes be inconvenient, as
anyone out and about after having had too many cups of coffee can attest. But
the inconvenience is trivial, and the case for such rules is compelling, both
in terms of protecting public health and as a way to avoid causing public
offense. And as far as I know there aren’t angry political activists, let alone
armed protesters, demanding the right to do their business wherever they want.
Which
brings me to my actual subject: face mask requirements in a pandemic.
Wearing a
mask in public, like holding it in for a few minutes, is slightly inconvenient,
but hardly a major burden. And the case for imposing that mild burden in a
pandemic is overwhelming. The coronavirus variants that cause Covid-19 are
spread largely by airborne droplets, and wearing masks drastically reduces the
variants’ spread.
So not
wearing a mask is an act of reckless endangerment, not so much of yourself —
although masks appear to provide some protection to the wearer — as of other
people. Covering our faces while the pandemic lasts would appear to be simple
good citizenship, not to mention an act of basic human decency.
Yet Texas
and Mississippi have just ended their statewide mask requirements.
President
Biden has criticized these moves, accusing the states’ Republican leaders of
“Neanderthal thinking.” But he’s probably being unfair — to the Neanderthals.
We don’t know much about our extinct hominid relatives, but we have no reason
to believe that their political scene, if they had one, was dominated by the
mixture of spite and pettiness that now rules American conservatism.
Let’s start
with the objective realities.
We’ve made
a lot of progress against the pandemic over the past couple of months. But the
danger is far from over. There are still substantially more Americans
hospitalized with Covid-19 now than there were, say, last June, when many
states were rushing to reopen and Mike Pence, the vice president then, was
assuring us that there wouldn’t be a second wave. Roughly 400,000 deaths later,
we know how that worked out.
It’s true
that there is now a bright light at the end of the tunnel: The development of
effective vaccines has been miraculously fast, and the actual pace of
vaccinations is rapidly accelerating. But this good news should make us more
willing, not less, to endure inconvenience now: At this point we’re talking
about only a few more months of vigilance, not a long slog with no end in
sight.
And keeping
infections down over the next few months will also help rule out a potential
epidemiological nightmare, in which new, vaccine-resistant variants evolve
before we get the existing variants under control.
So what’s
motivating the rush to unmask? It’s not economics. As I said, the costs of
mask-wearing are trivial. And basic economics tells us that people should have
incentives to take into account costs they impose on others; if potentially
exposing those you meet to a deadly disease isn’t an “externality,” I don’t
know what is.
Furthermore,
a resurgent pandemic would do more to damage growth and job creation, in Texas
and elsewhere, than almost anything else I can think of.
Of course,
we know what’s actually going on here: politics. Refusing to wear a mask has
become a badge of political identity, a barefaced declaration that you reject
liberal values like civic responsibility and belief in science. (Those didn’t
used to be liberal values, but that’s what they are in America 2021.)
This medical
version of identity politics seems to trump everything, up to and including
belief in the sacred rights of property owners. When organizers at the recent
Conservative Political Action Conference asked attendees to wear masks — not as
a matter of policy, but simply to abide by the rules of the hotel hosting the
meeting — they were met by boos and cries of “Freedom!” Do people shriek about
rights when they see a shop sign declaring, “No shoes, no shirt, no service”?
But
arguably we shouldn’t be surprised. These days conservatives don’t seem to care
about anything except identity politics, often expressed over the pettiest of
issues. Democrats appear to be on the verge of enacting a huge relief bill that
embodies many progressive policy priorities. But the Republican response has
been remarkably low energy, and right-wing media are obsessed with the
(falsely) alleged plot to make Mr. Potato Head gender-neutral.
Unfortunately,
identity politics can do a lot of harm when it gets in the way of dealing with
real problems. I don’t know how many people will die unnecessarily because the
governor of Texas has decided that ignoring the science and ending the mask
requirement is a good way to own the libs. But the number won’t be zero.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a Distinguished
Professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman


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