Factually! with Adam Conover - A Coronavirus Update with Dr. Ashish Jha
Episode Date: November 18, 2020The COVID-19 pandemic is worsening across the country, so past guest Dr. Ashish Jha is returning with more answers to Adam’s questions. They discuss what the scientific community has learne...d about Covid-19 since March, what we now understand to be safe and unsafe, the government’s failures, why certain activities are safer than you may think, and the light at the end of the tunnel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello, everyone. Welcome to Factually. I'm Adam Conover. And you know what? With the election here in the old U.S. of A., it's been a little while since we've talked about the coronavirus.
So let's check back in. The pandemic has been with us since March, and it's now November.
It's been a long time. And let me tell you, things are going badly. As I'm reading this,
And let me tell you, things are going badly.
As I'm reading this, yesterday, over 143,000 Americans tested positive for the virus, the highest ever.
And nearly 1,900 people died yesterday, the highest number since May. You know, we've all been talking about when this is all over.
You've heard that phrase.
But right now, the trend lines are moving in the other direction.
Things are not getting towards over. Things are getting towards still going on and in fact,
much, much worse. Now, we do have better treatments for the virus and the hope of a vaccine
is finally on the horizon. But the pandemic is still spreading faster and harder than it ever
has before. And it's for that reason that a lot of people are looking around and wondering,
why did we ever end the lockdown?
What are all these people doing at the restaurants?
Oh, my cousin had a wedding.
You know, I saw, did you see the sports game?
There were people in the stands.
Why aren't they staying inside like me?
That's what everybody's shouting at their televisions. Well, you know, it's I understand that to a certain extent. We
have this bizarre, disjointed patchwork of pandemic rules across the country right now.
So it's reasonable to ask, well, if things are so bad, why don't we just get back into that
lockdown state? But here's the thing that misses the point, because the problem with lockdowns
is that they are inherently temporary. There's simply a limited amount of time that you can
keep people inside doing nothing before they say, fuck you. I can't take this anymore. I got to
leave the house. Quite literally, there are certain jobs that cannot be done remotely for that period
of time. There are certain sectors of the economy that we need that will grind to a halt. There's just you can't do this shit forever. OK. And the truth is the lockdown
was never meant to be indefinite, nor was it meant to be until we could develop a vaccine. That, too,
would take way too long. The actual point of the lockdown, if you talk to public health experts,
was simply to buy us time to coordinate a national response.
What we needed to do during the lockdown was to massively ramp up testing and to install a huge
contact tracing system so that when the numbers of infected people got low enough because of the
lockdown, we could start tracing every time one person infected another and make sure that everyone
they came into contact with quarantined until they were no longer a danger. Again, the lockdown was simply to buy us time to
get that response ready. And plenty of countries around the world did it and it worked. But we here
in America did not. Despite the federal government's massive resources, it didn't even make that plan, let alone execute it.
And unfortunately, to a large extent, we kind of missed the window on contact tracing.
In many parts of the country, there is so much uncontrolled community spread that contact tracers aren't even able to figure out where outbreaks begin anymore.
There's just COVID everywhere.
You can't trace the ocean
when you're standing in the middle of it. So all this is to say that while social distancing and
mask wearing remains very, very important, we were never going to be able to solve the pandemic
through individual actions that we police by yelling at our cousins. It needed to be a nationwide mobilization that we simply did not
make. And the entire debate about lockdowns, should we lock back down again? Should we not
lock down? That is somewhat beside the point because the entire point of the lockdown was
just to buy time for this nationwide effort that we did not make. And now it looks to me like we are in a very, very difficult spot
to find out just how difficult and what we need to do to dig our way out of it. Let's talk to
someone who really knows the science. We had him on the show at the beginning of the pandemic.
It was one of our highest rated episodes ever because everyone was so hungry for reliable,
factual information on the pandemic
and what the future looked like. So we thought this was the perfect time to bring him in to give
us an update on the present and future of this pandemic. Now, I do want to make a really quick
proviso before we get to this interview. We recorded it about a week ago. And during our
conversation, I asked Dr. Jha about my Thanksgiving plans and what he
thought of them. And he said, oh, those don't sound too bad. In the intervening week, the news
has gotten even worse. And we have decided in my family to cancel our Thanksgiving plans. We're
going to have a nice, safe Thanksgiving at home. And you know what? I'm not going to tell you what
to do. But if you decide to do the same thing, I approve of that decision. But, you know what? I'm not going to tell you what to do, but if you decide to do the same thing, I approve of that decision. But you know, I understand this is a confusing, frightening time,
and it's so hard to figure out the right thing to do. So that is why it is so wonderful to hear
from folks like Dr. Jha. So without further ado, let's get to the interview with Dr. Ashish Jha.
Ashish, thank you so much for joining us again. Thank you for having me back.
Well, so we last talked in March
as the very beginning of the pandemic.
I believe we had been in lockdown for about a week, maybe.
It was our most popular episode ever.
Might still take that cake
because people were so desperate for information.
And actually people said to me,
oh, this episode made me feel better,
helped me understand everything that was going on better. It was a real gift to our listenership,
I think. And so I wanted to have you back to catch up on what's been going on with the COVID-19
pandemic. At the time, you were, you know, I think your views were pretty stark, but you also said,
hey, we can do this. We know what to do. We need to have the lockdown to buy ourselves time to do all the other things we know we need to do.
Have we done the things that you felt we needed to do?
Yeah, so not so much.
Not as much as we should have.
Some places have.
So we were, obviously, we stayed in lockdown for a little while and really did bring case numbers down.
But then we opened up a little too fast. We had across large chunks of the country
over the summer, as you know, a surge of cases, in fact, hospitalizations and deaths. And things
got again better by the end of the summer. And now, you know, here we are beginning of November
and things are looking really bad. We're identifying about 100,000 new infections a day.
About 1,000 people a day are dying from this disease.
And all of us who are looking at the data
are feeling like the next couple of months
may be the hardest months of the whole pandemic.
And so it's a little bleak.
And I think there are things we can do to make it better.
And most importantly, I think 2021 will be much better. And as we get through the winter into
the spring, a lot of things are going to get much better. So we have light at the end of the tunnel.
But boy, we have some couple of hard months ahead, Adam.
But boy, we have some couple of hard months ahead at it.
And why is that? I mean, so talking about the lockdowns, you said we opened up a little bit too fast.
I certainly agree. We opened up too fast in Los Angeles and paid the price and cases spiked and, you know, it was really rough.
And I would certainly say that in terms of different states and individual people's behavior, there's there's a lot of ground to make up there. But I believe this is something you said to us before. This is not something that we can treat with just lockdowns. And there's been this obsessive focus on should we open, should we not
open, the end. And I remember hearing at the beginning so much stuff about contact tracing
and all these other measures that we should be taking. And what happened to them?
You know, we have learned so much about this virus
since we last talked in March.
And the big things that we've learned
is that the virus really spreads
when large numbers of people gather indoors
for extended periods of time and nobody's wearing a mask.
That's like ground zero for how the virus spreads.
And so if you think about that
and you apply that to like restaurants,
restaurants, you're not wearing a mask mostly because you're eating. Bars are a disaster for
this virus. Where people really get into trouble often is like home gatherings. You bring a bunch
of friends over, people have drinks, people have meals. It feels very social and maybe it's eight
or 10 people, but one of them might have the virus, no symptoms, and boom, five days later, 10 people are infected. So those are the risky things. And
if we can control the risky things, we don't have to do lockdowns. Like we can keep much of our
economy and our lives going. Like I think we can keep schools relatively open. I think we can,
you can walk into a bookstore. If everybody's wearing a mask, it's pretty safe, especially if there's like reasonable ventilation and it's not like a super
packed bookstore. So I really don't think we need to be talking about lockdowns. We shouldn't be
doing it. We can get through this if we're smart. The problem is that we're not willing to give up
those three, four things that we need to give up. Right. And so then like things are getting
bad. Yeah. Well, let's talk about those things. I want to ask what else we should be doing
nationally, but in terms of those things, we don't want to give up, you know, people seeing
their friends is like, I think for a lot of people feels like the smallest little allowance
you can give yourself,
you know,
Hey,
like,
and you know, my,
my girlfriend was talking about,
she's like,
you know,
it feels like all my friends are saying they're in a pod and they're not
really in a pod or there's,
or the,
I'm in a pod of my friends in a pod.
We can get together.
And it's like,
but you're not really in a pod.
And then you're getting,
you don't know who those people have seen,
you know,
like,
Oh,
we're all in pods.
So let's all get a cabin for the weekend. And then we'll all be in a pod together it's like doesn't
sound like you're in a pod at all at that point right and we're personally like me and her are
personally trying to decide right now you know what do we do for the holidays yeah you know i
go back and forth between you know her father's very old this is not worth it like let's just
skip we can not have thanksgiving for once in our fucking
lives and it'll be okay and the other hand it's like uh well hold on a second what if we go and
we get a hotel and then we just have thanksgiving outside and we don't go indoors it's a five hour
drive but you know we'll we'll stop and pee on the side of the road and not go in any gas stations
and you know what do we and those are the choices that are facing people.
And those are choices that it feels like
are very hard for us as individuals to make,
especially because we don't seem to have
any huge messaging about it.
The government is not out there
pumping the airwaves with ads
saying here's what to do this holiday.
So what do you think about that?
Yeah, this is a huge part of the problem.
Like there is so much confusion
about what is safe and not safe.
And there's been,
so that it feels like everything is not safe. And then people say, screw it, I'm going to do
everything. And like, that's, so for instance, on your example, I come, first of all, I completely
agree. Seeing friends is like hugely important. I have been seeing friends and spending time with
people who are not in my pod for months, but I don't do it indoors and I don't do it without wearing a mask.
And so what that means is that I go for walks with people and I wear a mask and that's totally
safe.
Now I've had friends over, we sit in the backyard, we sit about 10 feet apart, and then we don't
wear a mask and we have a drink together.
And that's totally cool.
It's not like the ideal and it's gonna get harder in New England
as the weather gets colder.
But the point is like, don't not see your friends.
You can do it.
You just can't do it in the same way.
In the example around seeing people in the holidays,
first of all, like, okay, to do that five hour drive,
like you can go into a gas station to pee,
like just make sure you're wearing a mask
and don't like lick anything on the surface.
That's something I would have told you like a year ago,
like don't lick stuff in the bathroom. Right. And like, wash your hands.
But again, a year ago, I would have told you to wash your hands anyway.
And this time, like, please really wash your hands. Yeah.
But if you're willing to like do that and wear a mask,
like nothing about going to a bathroom.
So this is the kind of thing where like, you don't have to make this that much harder. Now, elderly relative, would I go sit inside for six hours and have a normal Thanksgiving? I wouldn't. Could you sit outside and see them?
Like that'd be lovely. You should feel free to do that. You know, maybe avoid the prolonged hugs.
But like this, there's some minor modifications.
It's the next three, four months are really going to be the hardest.
I do think in early 21, we'll start seeing a vaccine rollout.
I do think things will start getting better.
Like, let's just not blow it on this holiday season.
If you treat it as a normal holiday, it's going to be bad.
If you're willing to make some moderate
moderate modifications i think we can get through it okay that's really good advice uh but i want to
ask again just coming back to my earlier point i've been struck by how there hasn't even been
consistent like government messaging on this you know like for instance if you if you just think
about like world war ii posters loose links loose lips sink ships like just shit this, you know, like for instance, if you, if you just think about like world war two posters, loose links, loose lips, sink ships, like just shit like that, you know,
Hey, conserve rubber. That's the sort of thing that government's been great at,
you know, since 1900. And just this kind of message you just told me, uh, it's not on TV.
You know, I, I watched, uh, should have been every between every world series inning, you know?
Um, my girlfriend was like, hold on a second.
Why is there no app?
Why didn't the government make an app of some kind?
Where is just like it feels like there's a lot of basic stuff that could be done that is unrelated to the lockdown itself or the vaccine that is missing.
And I'm wondering if you feel similarly and what else should we be doing from a public
health perspective that we're not? Absolutely. So there are two sets of related issues. I mean,
number one is what we should have been getting the whole time is a daily briefing from a senior
scientist at the CDC who could have been answering, who could have been explaining what's going on
and answering people's questions like the question you just asked me, Adam. Like, that should have been happening every single day. Instead, we got
these like long political speeches from the president. Like, this just has not been helpful.
So those press conferences eventually ended up going away. But we still don't hear from the CDC.
The whole point of the CDC is to guide the American people in a pandemic like this. So it's a huge part of
the problem. And then when there is no CDC guidance, what happens isn't that, oh, there's
no guidance. Then people step in with misinformation, right? So then people just start making stuff up
and you start seeing all this stuff about, oh, it's just the flu. It's no big deal at all. And
all the other misinformation that spreads because, you know, when you have a vacuum of information, other people will step in to fill it.
That's where we are right now.
And there's also been the new information that we've learned has been irregularly rolled out.
Like I think about the sort of sea change we had between the focus on surfaces where at the beginning it was
like hey we got to sanitize our doorknobs like that was one of the main things that people were
saying uh i remember being at work and like the building literally started sending around guys to
scrub the doorknobs twice a day uh and now we know it took months but now we know that aerosols are
the big issue and like you said that means the main thing is not sharing air with
people in an indoor place that's unventilated for a long period of time um and that's like a whole
sea change and most people don't know that happened like again i'm uh i've talked about
this in the show many times i'm in comedy i'm i'm i wish i could do stand-up comedy and there's all
these clubs that are opening and they're saying well we've got everybody six feet apart and we're wiping down the tables because that's what we were told in March.
And it's but it's like, no, it's fucking November now. If you've got an audience of people inside the end, you're creating a super spreader event.
And and so there isn't even an update on the new science that we know it to.
So people are like all over the place in terms of what month their safety precautions are in.
This is, again, where daily consistent messaging from the CDC would have been so incredibly helpful.
The sheer number of like schools that are not open where I'm talking to somebody and the superintendent, I'm like, why?
And they're like, well, we can't get the deep cleaning company.
I'm like, what is deep cleaning?
What are you guys doing?
There's a thing called deep cleaning that people are doing because they're still focused on surfaces.
There's no deep cleaning.
Just get some freaking Lysol wipes and just wipe them down every once in a while at the end of the day,
like the way you would normally. Maybe be a little extra, but like surfaces are not a major source of spread. It's all about air. And that message still hasn't gotten across. And then there are
people who, then the other side is there's a bunch of people who say, well, you used to tell us that
masks didn't matter and it was all surfaces. And now you've switched.
How can I trust you?
And I'm like, well, that's actually how science works.
We learn new stuff.
And then we tell you to change what you're doing because we've learned.
We didn't know a lot back in March.
It was a new virus.
We know a lot more.
We should do what we know.
Well, I want to press you on schools a little bit.
You said a couple of times you feel most schools should be open, but I'm having a little bit of cognitive dissonance there because schools.
OK, hold on a second. That's a lot of kids and they're in an enclosed space for a long period of time.
That's basically the definition of what a school is.
Schools were invented so that they could get kids into a small space away from parents for a little while.
So so what am I missing there?
Yeah, no, it's a great question.
So if you and I were talking over the summer, I would have said to you that I'm pretty concerned
about opening a lot of schools, especially in places with high levels of transmission.
And I still am a little. But what has happened is there was a debate among the public health
experts about two sets of issues. If everybody's wearing a mask, does that help a little or a lot?
And the second question was, how much do kids transmit to adults? Okay, those were the two
big questions. And the data that's coming in over the last couple of months, and I have
changed my views because the data is coming in. And the data data says kids don't seem to transmit that much to adults.
They can transmit to each other, but they don't, especially younger kids, kids under the age of 10.
Second is almost all the data suggests that if everybody's wearing a mask, it's pretty safe.
Now, could it be that in a, like, would I want to have assembly hall with all the kids packed?
No, like that's a bad idea.
Right.
So there's stuff that you have to do.
And I do think schools need to work on ventilation.
And like ventilation can literally be open the freaking window.
You can open the window.
So people are like, oh, do I need a fan in there?
Or a Merv 15.
I'm like a window.
Right.
Open the window.
I don't know what MERV that is.
I just know that you're opening the window.
And so if place, and then they're like, well, okay,
it's hard to open windows in like North Dakota right now
because it's cold.
I'm like, I get that.
And so there are places where you have to do some modifications,
crank up the heat.
Maybe you won't be the most energy efficient this fall.
Spread kids out a little bit
so they're not super packed together.
But the evidence right now is
that when schools have opened, we have not seen spread, certainly not among younger kids.
And so it does go against a little bit the large numbers of people gathered indoors for long
periods of time. I think it's because it's children primarily, adults are there, but not as many.
And second, that everybody's wearing a mask.
Those are the key things.
And do we have any idea why children don't seem to transmit it to adults?
Because I think of children as being the most infectious things on the planet.
I never want to touch a kid.
And so they're all sticky and there's always shit coming out of their noses.
So why would that be?
Do we have any idea?
So there's a lot of debate on this.
And the biggest thing, basically, that people have argued is it's really just about kids are.
And again, this is going to sound funny, but obviously kids exhale less air, just amount of virus they will put out, smaller lungs.
less air, just amount of virus they will put out, smaller lungs. This is why I wouldn't apply this to a 17-year-old who might have the brain of a child, but they've got the body of an adult.
That is the problem with 17-year-olds.
Right? So I have a 15-year-old and she's terrific. But the point is, she is not an adult by brain,
but by her physically, she's the same size as my wife, right?
Yeah. Okay.
So I don't
think of the 15 year old as being any lower risk. Part of it is smaller amount of Eric being
and then also they're just physically lower down to the ground. And there really is like,
there's a sense of like the airflow issues are different. That's what we're seeing.
That's what we're seeing pretty consistently that younger kids don't seem to transmit a lot to adults.
It's not zero, but then you throw in mask wearing.
And if everybody's wearing a mask, it really we're just we're not seeing cases spread in schools where that have opened.
And we've had a lot of schools now open for several months.
Got it. What about what about public transportation? Do you have any opinion about that generally?
Is that is that a big vector?
I think we were super worried about this in March and April in New York and May. I don't, I think the latest data again says, I'm going to sound like a broken record if everybody's
wearing a mask and I wouldn't want to do the New York city rush hour in the old days where
the subways got super packed. Right. So we can avoid that, keep some of the windows open,
et cetera. I think it's probably pretty safe. I would not, I'd be okay with getting on a bus
in Boston and traveling. Okay. Maybe I'll start thinking about getting back on a bus in LA then.
That's how I get around it. I've barely been taking them. So that's really good to hear.
Okay. I really want to ask you about the world
picture uh for covid but we gotta take a really quick break we'll be right back with dr ashish
okay we're back uh so i want to ask you about the international picture.
One thing I've seen from some people who I would characterize as, you know, coronavirus denialists, right?
The kind of people who make a lot of homemade graphs and shove them in your face and say, explain my graph.
Is that there are countries that we used to say we're doing a great job, you know, like countries
in Europe that, oh, they've got a much better handle on it, which is frankly what Americans
always say about Europe. We say like, oh, my God, the Europeans are so great at everything and we
suck. But now we're seeing new outbreaks in a lot of places where there's a lot of mask wearing and
where the the government maybe had a more aggressive response than we did. And I'm curious if you've got any overall picture on why that might be either about
specific countries or globally what we're seeing with the pandemic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So let's talk about Western Europe, because we do often say, oh, if we only could do what
the Europeans do.
I always there's a couple of points.
I mean, first thing to always remember is that Europe is not a country.
And what I mean by that, without being I'm not just being a smart of points. The first thing to always remember is that Europe is not a country. What I mean by that, I'm just being a smart aleck, what I mean is that the European countries
have been a bit different from each other. They've all seen big outbreaks in the last few weeks,
but some of them are doing much better than others. Let's talk about what has happened in
Europe over the last four or five months. They had large outbreaks
in February, March, April. They really suppressed their virus. So by the end of May, you had very
low levels of virus across much of Western Europe. Then they opened up and basically acted like it
was all over. People went on holiday. All the pubs in London started getting filled.
Everything opened up, like all the way.
And sure enough, by early August, you started seeing increases in cases.
And this is where I have to say I got it wrong.
I assumed that the European countries would look at that and say, case numbers are rising.
We got to do something.
And instead of
doing that, some of them, so Germany reacted aggressively. But UK, France, Spain, basically,
were like, ah, it's no big deal. It won't, it won't hit us again. Well, they're about to go
into lockdown, because they essentially ignored the virus for two months. And what I got wrong was I just assumed
that they would act more responsibly when the case number started rising, and they let it go for a
long period of time. And Germany, because it is part of Europe, and there is so much travel back
and forth with other countries, is starting to see large spikes as well. So even though I think
in general, they've had a much more sensible policy, they haven't been able to pull it off.
And they don't
have universal mask wearing. There's a lot of places, certainly over the summer, there was very
little mask wearing in lots of places. So I think they've got to do the same things that we're doing.
And I used to point to Europe as like the shiny example of what we should do. And let me tell you,
that's not working out so well. I will say one other
thing, though. There are a bunch of countries that are doing a fabulous job. And those are
mostly East Asian countries, New Zealand, Australia. They did not let their foot off the
brake. When they've had outbreaks, they didn't ignore it for two months. And case numbers across
most of the Asian continent, certainly East Asia, New Zealand, Australia, are very, very low.
Yeah, I mean, if it weren't for that, it would almost make me question.
You know, when we started this and talking to you really gave me this feeling.
I was like, oh, man, a competent government really can figure this out.
You do a limited lockdown. You do contact tracing. You do all the public health measures you need.
And we really can do it. We know how to do it and we can implement it. And the way things have gone here and in Europe, it starts to make me think, wait, is human government equal to the task of dealing with this solve this problem? Are our political organizations capable of it?
I think we're moving in the right direction, but it's you know, we're still perhaps an open question on climate change.
And I have that wonder about about coronavirus.
You know, again, if the if the best examples have have faded a bit, how I mean, are you do you ever feel pessimistic about it in that way?
Or do you say, hey, you know, Taiwan is doing great and we it's not even now. And people say, well, is it something about East Asians? I'm like, I don't think so. Cause New Zealand and Australia are not East Asians. So I do think
it's doable, but guess what? It's like, you have to have sustained effort. You can't just like
do it for a little while and then say, okay, I'm tired. The pandemic is over. I want it to be over.
I'm going to move on. Like you can't move on until you have widespread vaccinations.
Like the virus is going to stick around. It, the virus doesn't get tired.
But that thing about like,
we want to move on is to me such a human impulse, you know, like I've,
I have this argument with people where they say, Oh my gosh,
people are, are hanging out with their friends and they're going,
going for the holidays. And like, don't they know the virus is still out there?
They need to keep staying inside, you know, and like we are.
And I say, well, you know, we've been doing this since March and you can't do it for that long.
Like we had a really serious lockdown in the U.S. for like three months.
And then people started to be like, I can't fucking do this anymore.
And yeah, you can't do it anymore. And yeah, you can't do it anymore. And you always, I believe you described
the lockdown as a chance to stall until we can get all those measures in place. And that's the,
that's the issue is that we're missing those other measures. I don't have, I'm not leading
to a question. That's just, let me make, let me just build on that though. Exactly right. And,
and the problem was that what all of us said back in April and May is, let's use this time to build a fabulous testing and tracing infrastructure.
Yes.
Where you had widespread testing available, where every time somebody was found to be infected, you could trace their contacts.
You could test them.
You could isolate people who were infected.
That's how you keep the virus levels very low.
That's what South Korea has done.
What South Korea has pulled off is their society is largely open. People are not in lockdowns. You can go to cafes.
Things are working pretty well. Every time they have an outbreak and they continue to have them,
they just, they send in the SWAT team. They get, you know, tens of thousands of people get tested
immediately. They identify everybody who's infected and isolate them. And then the, and
then every outbreak comes to an end. Like that's how you do it.
That's how you keep going.
We just haven't done that.
And so if you don't have that,
and then you still don't have people reliably wearing masks,
then you are where we are, which is like, it's a slog.
And I think we're all tired of the slog.
I think we want something better.
We haven't done what it would require for us to have better. So now we've got to get through
the next few months. It's wild, man. I mean, I even remember seeing stuff at the beginning,
like, uh, you know, I, I started, I read technical papers about here's how you could do secure
contract tracing using people's phones, where the phones would handshake when they got close together in an anonymous
way that still let,
you know,
let you do contact tracing.
And then you could build a system where once someone gets a positive test,
they go say,
Hey,
I got positive on my phone.
And then it anonymously alerts everyone who was in contact with that person
says you were in contact with someone.
And I was looking at that going,
okay,
great.
Like technically you can do it in a way that would be safe and secure.
We only have two major phone operating system vendors in the country, both of whom are Tim Cook and whoever's running that part of Google, I think would be open to making that happen. And you just need someone to get them in a room and do it. And it never happened. Like, no one ever made that phone call. No one ever put that program into place. I'm just complaining now.
Let me ask you a question.
Unless you have a thought on that.
I do.
No, both of those companies, both Google and Apple were totally happy to do it.
They started building out solutions.
The problem was you ultimately need a partner in probably the federal government that says, let's do this together.
Let's make sure the privacy stuff is well controlled. And then let's go sell it to the American people of why we're doing this
and how we're doing it. And we're going to keep it. And there was never a partner in the federal
government who was really willing to help. And that has been a consistent pattern, is that the
federal government has largely just not been interested in trying to tackle the disease.
And so you can have the best of intentions among companies and technical solutions.
But without a federal partner, we can't make it work.
I mean, I think you said the entire I think that's the entire interview right there contained a line.
The federal government has not been interested in fighting the disease is basically, uh, that's,
that's what I was working my way towards. You put it so bluntly. Um, let's talk about a little bit
more of the medical side. Uh, herd immunity is a phrase we've been hearing a lot. Uh, tell me your
view on that. Like, uh, you know, I, I know that from, you know, why I would tell people to get a
flu shot every year. We want to build up our herd immunity. Now we hear it in a different context,
which is people are usually saying,
let's all just get the disease
and then we'll all have antibodies
and it won't be able to find purchase anymore.
Is that something that makes sense for coronavirus?
And if not, why not?
Yeah, so herd immunity is one of those ideas
that sounds really good,
but the moment you start thinking about
what it would take to get there, it's a disaster.
And so here's why.
So there's disagreement about how many people would need to get infected, but most people think it's somewhere between 60 and 70 percent.
60 to 70 percent of Americans getting infected is, let's say, 200 million Americans.
And right now, officially, about 9 million Americans have
gotten infected. But we think it's probably, the real number is probably much higher than that.
But even if it's like 50 million, let's say five times as many people, we've had 200,000 deaths
with the number of infections. We're going to have to have like another million Americans die
if we try this strategy. Like, that's crazy. And imagine we say, all right, well,
what's a million Americans dying? We're going to let a million Americans die. It would still be a
bad idea because at 60% to 70%, herd immunity doesn't mean the virus goes away. It means that
the virus, every time it takes off, can't sustain itself and will peter out. You'll continue to see little
outbreaks during a herd immunity. And then of course, over time, like immunity might wane.
We don't know how long immunity lasts. It might last six months, it might last a year.
So then we'll do it again every year. Like, no, I don't want to keep doing it. So lots of people
will die and it won't work. Other than that, it's a great idea.
So the much better strategy is protect people for the next three to six months. We'll have vaccines. They're coming. I promise. We're going to have vaccines in 2021. I think we're gonna
have a couple of them authorized in the next month or so. And when we have widespread vaccinations,
then we get people immune. And that's a different form
of herd immunity. But you don't have to kill people to do it. And it's totally fine to get
people revaccinated once a year if the immunity only lasts a year, right? That's not a big deal.
So the key here is we want to get to immunity through vaccines, not by having people get
infected. Yeah, I mean, people say, people who are making this argument often say,
hey, you know, people will die from the economy being poor
because of the lockdowns, or that's bad.
You know, the economy is also part of our quality of life,
which is true, but also those people tend to take into account
the economic hit that we would take
from millions of Americans dying.
Like when a hundredth of your population
dies in a year, that's not good for your economy either. Right. Like what I've said to people is
like, once you start getting hospitals overwhelmed, once you start seeing large numbers of people
dying, like people just are not going to be that interested in like, yeah, let's go out to a bar.
Like it just, it's, it will dampen people's interest in engaging economically.
And by the way, that's not a theory. We see this. So, right now, we're seeing in places that are
having really big outbreaks, even though often states are not curtailing indoor dining,
reservations in restaurants is falling substantially. And you can see that in the
open table data.
Well, people are just like, things are really bad.
I don't think I need to go out to dinner, right?
I'll do takeout.
So people will vote with their own feet.
And so, look, absolutely true that shutting down the economy has huge costs.
But I've just made the case we don't have to shut down the economy.
Like we can do like 80% of what you were doing before.
You just can't go to a nightclub right now. Like no nightclubs, no bars, no large indoor gatherings, but everything else
should be relatively okay. So I think we can get there, but what people want is they want
everything back. We're in the middle of the biggest pandemic in a century. We can't get
everything back. Not right now. We're not going to be a little bit patient for some of those things.
Do you have any fear when it comes to vaccines that we get the vaccines and they're a little
less effective than we think or the virus mutates in a way?
I'm not up on the science of how much it might mutate.
Maybe it gets around the vaccine and, you know, our expectations are too high for the
vaccines and et cetera. around the vaccine and, you know, we, our expectations are too high for the vaccines
and et cetera. I do think our expectations are too high, but I'm not worried about mutation.
So let's talk about what I think is likely. I think the first generation of vaccines will
probably give us 70, maybe if we're lucky, 80% protection. So not a hundred percent protection,
right? But that's huge if everybody gets it.
That's the thing, right? So if like two-thirds of Americans get it and 70% or 80% protection,
it'll make a massive difference. Like it will bring the levels of virus in the community
way, way down. And that means that the things that we think of as kind of medium risk right now
will become pretty low risk, like indoor dining. But things that are super high risk right now, like going to a Broadway show,
packed theater, small indoor space, nobody wears masks or nobody did a year ago.
Like that probably isn't going to be possible even with the first generation of vaccine.
Oh no, you're talking about standup comedy shows too.
even with the first generation of vaccine.
Oh no, you're talking about standup comedy shows too.
Well, so then, right, right.
So then the question is, well, what can you do?
In that situation,
so here's where we need more than just vaccines.
One of the things I've been pushing for and we're making slow progress,
we'd make faster progress
if we had a federal government that was engaged,
was is having like cheap antigen testing.
They cost five bucks
and you get a 10-minute result.
Okay?
So imagine at every comedy club,
you have to get tested.
You have to show up 15 minutes before the show
and there's a $5 extra charge
of getting the test.
And just you throw that onto the ticket price
or the place eats it or whatever.
It doesn't matter, right?
You can imagine that you can.
And then everybody who walks in
has had a negative antigen test and you've already had tests. You've already
had people getting vaccinated. That would make it. And then if you really want to be safe,
just ask people to wear a mask, but that'll be hard if they're having drinks. I don't know.
But the point is, like, we're not going to get to zero risk, but we can get a pretty low risk.
Yeah. If we do those things. And I'm not talking about like those
antigen tests that cost five bucks. We've had them around for five months. This is not some
new technology breakthrough. They have existed for months. Why can't you get them today? Because
the companies take a while to produce them. And like the federal government, it would have been
amazing if they had put in billions of dollars and said, let's just make hundreds of millions
of these tests. So you can go out to restaurants, you can get on an airplane. They just haven't
done it. Man. But despite that, you still have a pretty optimistic tone of voice. Generally,
you're not too far off from where you were in March, where you seem to have a,
we can do it attitude. I, you know, I always believe like,
it isn't gonna sound totally cheesy. Right. But I'm like, we're Americans. We can do stuff.
Like we used to send people to the moon. Like that was cool.
But like, here's a $5 test. Oh. And then literally the guy who's running the testing for the country,
he's like, oh, we've done everything we can. America can't possibly do any more than what we've already done. And I'm like, what? This is not America at its best.
We can do so much more. But yeah, it'll take some work. And people just, the federal government just
has not been willing to put in the work to do this. And by the way, it will cost a few billion dollars,
some billion dollars, but we're like losing trillions of dollars in economic activity
because we don't have these things. Yeah. Like if you think about it from that nightclub point
of view, if a nightclub isn't open at all, if they were told there's a $5 extra fee for every guest
who comes in to get a test.
I bet most nightclub owners would be like, yeah, absolutely. Right.
That's a no brainer.
Yeah. Every comedy club has those bags. They make you put your phones in.
Those are an extra cost. You put your,
you put your phone in the bag and you take your test and then you're,
you're on your way in. Yeah.
Incredible. Well, do you have any parting words for the, for the audience as they,
you know, if they're sitting at home with, with this anxiety or they're sitting at home saying,
when can I go back and do all the things that I love? What, what is your, what is your message
to the anxious people on the street? Yeah. So I, I basically I'm telling folks, look, the,
the next two months are going to be hard. You got to hunker down a bit here because the virus is
really spreading out of control and we're not going to have hard. You got to hunker down a bit here because the virus is really spreading out of control.
And we're not going to have a federal government that's going to be deeply involved and engaged.
I do hope that if we end up with a Biden presidency, and right now we don't know who's going to be president because we're in the middle of the election.
What I'm hearing from the Biden team is a absolute plan to get super aggressive on controlling the virus.
So the next couple
of months are going to be hard. Early next year, we're going to start to see the vaccine get out,
and it'll start slowing the spread of the virus. I'm hoping there'll be more testing available.
That'll help. And by springtime, things will start looking different. And by summer of 2021,
life won't be totally normal. But boy, it'll be a lot closer to the summer of 2019 than
the summer of 2020, right? Like we'll be on our way back. And then there'll be some things we're
going to be dealing with for like a couple of years, some things that will be different and
harder. But like, well, so like the indoor concerts are going to be, you know, where you
got super, those are just going to be hard.
But maybe okay if we can have really great testing.
Like, I don't know.
We're going to have to sort of play some of that stuff out.
But short of those very high risk things, much of our life starts coming back by next summer.
Spring will be better than what it is right now. I just don't want
people to totally lose hope and just say, forget it. I'm going to go back to normal because
there's going to be a lot of people who are going to get sick in the next couple of months. I don't
want any of your listeners to be one of them. We got to get through this period. But if we do,
it's like the light at the end of the tunnel is there. I can see the light. Trust me, it's there.
But we still have a little bit of ways to go. Not six months, but the next two, three months. Well, I can't thank
you enough for coming on to talk to us about it, Ashish. It makes me comforted and also awakened
to the stark reality we live in, which is my favorite emotion, to feel frankly, my favorite
mixture and basically what I've built my career on. So I really thank you for coming on and taking the time.
And I know you're a very busy guy.
So we'll let you go.
Adam, thank you so much for having me on.
Always fun chatting with you.
Well, thank you once again to Ashish Jha for coming on the show.
I hope you enjoyed that interview as much as I did.
If you did, please leave us a rating or a review wherever you subscribe. It really does help us out. I want to
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Let me tell you a little bit about what I'm doing on Twitch. Every Monday and Tuesday,
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And remember, stay curious. Heroes