Some More News - SMN: Covid Is Over! We Did it!
Episode Date: February 2, 2022Hi. Today we celebrate the one year anniversary of defeating Covid and ending the pandemic, a thing we did and a thing that happened. Support SOME MORE NEWS: http://www.patreon.c...om/SomeMoreNews We now have a MERCH STORE! Check it out here: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/somemorenews Grab Liquid I.V. in bulk nationwide at Costco or you can get 25% off when you go to http://LIQUIDIV.com and use code MORENEWS at checkout! Visit http://Stamps.com, click on the microphone at the TOP of the homepage, and type in MORENEWS and you'll get a special offer that includes a 4-week trial PLUS free postage and a digital scale. No long-term commitments or contracts. Executive Producer - Katy Stoll (@KatyStoll). Written by Lon Harris (@Lons) and David Christopher Bell (@Moviehooligan). Directed by Will Gordh (@will_gordh). Edited by Gregg Meller. Graphics by F. Clint DeNisco. Head Writer - David Christopher Bell. Producer - Nick Mundy. Researcher - Marco Siler-Gonzales (@mijo_marco). Associate Producer - Quincy Tucker (@LTP313). Follow us on social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Support the show!: http://patreon.com.com/somemorenewsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Cody.
Hi.
Shut the fuck up.
Did you hear?
Hear what?
Cody, shut up.
Bill Maher just said the pandemic is over.
The Bill Maher?
No foolin'?
No foolin'.
It is over.
It is finally over.
We did it!
Yeah!
Woo! Woo! Yeah! Woo!
Yeah!
It's the first annual Some More News COVID Victory Special, sponsored by AstraZeneca.
Join us for a night of fun and excitement, commemorating one year of America officially defeating the coronavirus.
Featuring the Impractical
Jokers, from the
Eternals, Druig,
Martha Stewart featuring
Snoop Dogg, the inventor
of Wordle, Dr. Thaddeus
Turtle, those Squid
Game VIPs, the
terrifying ghost of Robert Durst,
a performance from Johnny Depp and
the Hollywood Vampires, President Joe Biden, the ethereal Void of Despair, and many more.
And now, here's your host, Cody!
Thank you, thank you, thank you so much!
Oh, what a great crowd.
Hey, look at that.
It's time for the news.
And we've just got one story today.
COVID.
We did it!
We have got a huge show for you today.
Literally all of the people we just mentioned will be here.
That was not a joke.
But first, we've got our roving correspondent, Warmbo,
live from the big celebration at Some More News COVID Victory HQ.
Warmbo, what's the scene like down there?
Mr. Cody, everybody's having such a great time here at COVID Victory HQ.
They're so excited to see Warmbo and how we can all be right next to each other
in an enclosed space with no masks, except for potty masks.
And it's totally safe because we've declared victory over COVID,
and Warmbo isn't sad anymore.
That is just so great, Warmbo.
You know, it was touch and go there right at the start of this outbreak,
but then thank goodness we got a handle on it and everything worked out.
Anyway, we'll let you get back to the party.
Actually, I can keep talking to you.
Warmbo isn't very good at parties
and gets very nervous sometimes.
He tried to make friends,
but nobody wants to talk to Warm-
Okay, have fun you little scamp.
We will get back to Warmbo later, eventually.
Maybe.
There's just so much to do.
Obviously, America and the world been through a lot
over the past few years with a pandemic
that had the potential to seriously disrupt just about every facet
of our day-to-day lives.
A crisis like this can really be a stress test
looking for any weak or fragile links
in the chain of our social community and economic system.
And what do you know?
We passed with flying colors.
Wasn't even that hard.
I mean, it seems like it should have been a whole thing that would drag on and affect the country for years to come.
But wow, Mr. Dr. Bill Maher, along with a variety of opinion pieces, say that it's over.
And I will drink to that.
Only the finest.
Only the finest. So now to celebrate this historic victory,
let's take a look at some of our favorite COVID clips
from the show, starting with when it all began
back in March of 2020.
Roll that clip.
Was later described by witnesses as the culprit.
And in other news, after the first coronavirus case
was detected in Washington state back in January,
the federal government launched
into swift and decisive action.
Thankfully, the National Security Council Directorate
for Global Health and Security and Biodefense,
which had been created during the Obama administration,
had been left intact by their successors.
And why wouldn't it be?
Why would you dismantle that?
Out of weird personal spite against Obama?
Not in this country.
And so President Tim Kaine quickly snapped into action
because boy, those first few weeks are extremely crucial
when it comes to detection and containment
of a potentially deadly and infectious virus.
You know, testing as many people as possible,
despite whether or not they have symptoms
or have been exposed to the illness,
really got us ahead of the illness
through strategies like contact tracing.
If you work quickly and effectively,
flood the system with tests,
you can actually follow the path of the virus,
quarantine and isolate anyone who's exposed,
and keep it from spreading everywhere,
which is what we did.
I'm sure you recall, it's weird I'm even talking about this
considering that we totally accomplished all of it.
Phew!
But it's important to talk about what would have happened
if we didn't do this stuff.
Like if we had a different, worse president
than our beloved Tim Kaine,
or perhaps simply didn't have a system
that could handle a pandemic.
Had we not done this in a timely fashion,
then the disease would be allowed
to spread through a population.
Soon enough, it's too late,
forcing authorities to move on to mitigation strategies
that just try to flatten the curve.
What that would mean is that there's a specific amount
of cases that our healthcare system can reasonably handle.
So if a virus really started to spread,
our focus would no longer be to stop it in its tracks,
but simply try to promote enough protective measures
to ensure we don't get overwhelmed.
And while I'm sure the American people are mature enough
to do something like that, it really concerns me
that our healthcare system would be designed like this.
I don't know, I don't wanna be a squeaky wheel either,
not with Tim Kaine in the White House.
God bless that Tim Kaine.
Also the CDC, who are really pulling through for us
by quickly and effectively taking this leadership role,
communicating with the American people and not contradicting each other or bowing to the whims of the political and
financial ruling class. And as much as I don't want to, I do have to give some credit to the GOP
as well, who very early on in the pandemic pushed the CDC and president to step up their game.
And this is a serious public health threat. The approach of the administration so far
has been like its approach to so many other things, fundamentally unserious. And the time
has come to ban commercial air travel from countries that have an active outbreak. The
arguments the administration is giving against it don't make any sense. And the top priority, Sean,
should be to protect the health and safety
of American citizens.
We need to do more, we're not doing enough.
And if the president won't act,
then Congress should reconvene
and Congress should act to protect the American people.
Very good point by Ted Cruz,
who despite his party,
has at least shown a lot of spine and conviction.
Totally not spineless guy, Ted Cruz.
And so I guess if the roles were reversed
and the president was a Republican,
it's good to know that they would still be taking this stance.
Like, can you imagine that?
If they got really concerned about an outbreak
of something like Ebola during Obama's term,
and then suddenly didn't care just a few years later,
and we were actually showing a clip of that
for comedic purposes.
Outrageous that would be and would have been.
Ha! Great stuff!
Folks, Dr. Drew and Adam Carolla are on their way out.
But first we have a quick commercial break for you all.
But before we get to them,
let's check in real quick with Warmbo at the victory party.
Warmbo, how you doing little buddy?
I've asked around and no one at this entire party
has ever even had COVID.
Several STDs, though.
Also, one person did say
they wish they could taste Wormbo,
but I don't think that was about a symptom of...
Thanks!
I have to say,
this has been our most friction-free episode
in quite a while.
I might even tie my tie at some point,
perhaps even after these ads.
Stay tuned for more of the Some More News COVID Victory Special!
Hello, my sweet little babies.
Oh, you've grown so much since the last time we spoke.
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Who is a pretty bird?
It's you.
It's you.
You're a pretty bird.
The Some More News COVID Victory Special returns now.
We are back and we're feeling good and we're celebrating our anniversary of kicking COVID's butt.
Let's take a look at a few more clips,
starting with the end of 2020
when the virus was seriously winding down.
You remember that scene in Bloodshot
where Vin Diesel gets shot in the face
and then the nanobots slowly put his eyeball back together?
It was a lot like that.
And I feel comfortable referencing that movie by now
because it was such a huge box office hit.
Anyway, between Bigfoot coin
being declared America's official currency
and President Keynes' impossibly smooth withdrawal
from the Middle East
and expectedly rocky invasion of Greenland,
you could almost forget that technically,
there is still a pandemic going on.
I know, right?
COVID, remember that?
Some Americans actually still have this thing.
Thankfully, because of our strategic
but rigorous early lockdowns
and the mutual agreement from Americans
across all walks of life and political stripes
to look out for one another and wear masks
whenever they're in any kind of densely packed public spaces,
we have managed to keep this thing under control
throughout the entire first half of 2020.
I just have to say, speaking personally,
that the solidarity on this issue
has actually been really refreshing to see.
Super smart for the government
to send everyone free masks in the mail
right when this all started,
not to mention the immediate monthly relief checks
ensuring that everyone can stay at home
so as to not spread the virus.
On top of that, there's really no other issues to cover
thanks to President Tim Kaine
somehow managing to eliminate poverty
by creating a universal basic income,
reform our police and prison system,
ban gerrymandering, repair our infrastructure,
and beat the very concept of death
so that we may all live eternal.
In fact, I don't even have to cover the news.
We can just talk about the bloodshot cinematic universe
if you want, the BCU.
Who do you think is gonna play the villain
in the Marcus Tibbs spinoff?
They could literally get anyone they want.
And furthermore, right, so what he said,
everything was going great and is still going great.
We'd beaten death, the film bloodshot
with sweeping the globe,
and instead of playing politics
or bending to corporate interests
or trying to maintain the clearly failing capitalist system
at the expense of people, we pushed all that aside and allowed people to stay at home immediately.
Let's check in with the moment we officially declared victory.
The beginning of 2021, after Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson, and America's favorite
biotech company, AstraZeneca, had released the first COVID vaccines after Tim Kaine's
successful operation Super Warp Speed.
And with air travel, cruises, and gender reveal parties all hitting record numbers in 2020,
we sadly said goodbye to another several dozen endangered species,
including the black rhino, the Sumatran elephant, the orangutan, and the...
parrot?
Just all parrots?
Totally gone.
Wow, they will sort of be missed.
And of course, we also had to say goodbye
to former host Cody Johnston,
who last week evolved into a being of pure light
before ascending into Supreme World leader
Tim Kaine's utopian cloud castle,
as will we all once our number is called.
Meanwhile, things are wrapping up on Earth when it comes to the COVID vaccine rollout.
Quite frankly, this will probably be our last ever mention of the virus on this show.
But because we did such a good job containing it,
many people are now questioning if the virus ever posed a real threat.
Former billionaire Elon Musk stated this week during an episode of the New York Times podcast,
and I quote, I'm not at risk for COVID, nor are my kids. Everybody dies. The question is what,
on balance, serves the greater good. And while that would be an extremely ghoulish and ignorant
statement to make in, let's say, a reality where COVID had already killed hundreds of thousands of people in this country alone,
well, luckily that's not the case and everything turned out okay, so he's just being a little flip.
But of course, we now have members of the GOP and CEOs also claiming that we overreacted to the coronavirus in the first place and that the pandemic was never really a threat.
And I guess we'll never know for sure.
Maybe Elon's just miffed that his SpaceX and Tesla programs
were made irrelevant after Tim Kaine granted all Americans the power of flight.
And this just in.
I, too, have begun my ascent to the next phase of humanity.
May we all bask in the glory of Tim Kaine's Sky Kingdom of Endless Bliss!
Wait, just a goddamn second.
Did that clean-shaven, long-haired me just take a sip of a diet Dr. Pepper?
That is disgusting.
Just like don't even have a soda at that point, right?
Just drink a fresca or your own spit.
There is no way I would have ever done that.
In fact, I don't think any of those clips
were from our reality.
Damn, my little alternate coding machine
must be on the fritz or maybe I hit a button.
It doesn't matter, you get the premise.
Probably should have noticed sooner,
but you know, I've been hitting this champagne pretty hard.
So, dextromethorphan.
Okay, well, that actually explains a lot of things.
I got this damn cough for weeks,
and I guess I didn't notice
because I'm having trouble tasting things now.
Sorry, everyone.
Looks like I made an oopsie.
A real whoops of a goofle.
And now that I'm remembering things a bit better,
I don't think we put together any sort of victory party for Wormbo to attend either.
I think I might have just put him in a cab and told him to find the first crowded area he saw.
Hey, Wormbo, are you still there?
Of course I'm still here, silly goat!
Great, listen, um, you mentioned party masks earlier.
That's right! They're all wearing party masks!
Yeah, like, sort of pearl white masks, maybe with encrusted jewels and exaggerated features?
Yup, that's the masks!
Yeah, yeah. And they're, um, are they naked?
Mm-hmm.
Right.
That's what I thought.
Thanks, Wormbo.
Okay, yeah, I think he got into that mansion
a few blocks down.
The one with all the embassy vehicles, he'll be fine.
Anyway, let me just set this clip machine
back to our timeline and fixed.
Okay, do we have a clip from our timeline
highlighting how we handled the COVID pandemic?
I just wanna see the sky again.
Yeah, that checks out.
That's the good old pandemic I remember.
The one where in America,
it's killed over 852,000 people
and infected over 67 million.
Became the number three cause of death in the United States.
And that number quite possibly will change
between the brief time we record this episode
and release it.
So maybe it didn't go great, but it is over.
That's the important thing.
But before we can move on,
we do need to understand what happened.
Are you ready?
No.
Too bad!
For starters, only three months
after the very first infections were reported
in this country, hospitals were already experiencing
a massive shortage in supplies.
This included gowns, masks, eye protection,
and of course the equipment needed
to actually keep patients alive.
And even the supplies needed to deal with patients
who weren't alive.
We literally were running out of body bags, if you recall,
which sounds more like a wrestling promo
than a news headline.
And if you're wondering why that happened,
how we could have immediately run out of hospital supplies,
well, it turns out we did a whole video about this
right when it was going on.
In that video, we talked about something called
a just-in-time supply chain
that was practiced by both hospitals
as well as grocery stores,
otherwise known as that other place
that ran out of supplies.
In short, since the 1990s,
hospitals have been greatly reducing their backup inventory
as a cost-cutting measure.
The idea being that by using overseas manufacturers and computer algorithms to optimize efficiency
and cost, they would order the minimal amount of a product at a time.
Except once the coronavirus hit and overseas trade slowed way down, nobody could keep up
with the suddenly high demand and hospitals very quickly ran out of all their limited
supplies.
And while it makes sense for a business to worry so much
about cutting costs and not stockpile products,
it started to seem like perhaps hospitals shouldn't also
have to operate like a fucking Best Buy.
But as it turned out, public hospitals weren't nearly
getting the funding they needed for like so many years,
even before COVID hit and really had no choice
but to look for tricks to reduce their overhead.
In other words, unlike some other countries,
healthcare in America is aggressively a for-profit business.
We could, and probably will, do a video
about the history of health insurance
and how exactly hospitals made this transition
because spoilers, it wasn't always like this.
But for the purposes of this video, all you really need to know, and probably already
know, is that America really fucked up somewhere down the line and decided that hospitals would
operate no different than a movie theater or a porn theater or some other porn thing
and exist as a business that considered its patients as customers.
It's not really a utility or government service,
but a fucking store.
The big difference obviously being
that patients aren't choosing to be there.
And instead of realizing that's a case
for perhaps not having hospitals charge for care,
medical companies took it as a cue to raise prices
as goddamn high as they want,
because who the fuck is gonna not pay it?
And thanks to insurance,
it all became part of this economy so embedded
in the country that even the supposed left wing side
of the political spectrum works very hard
to protect this deeply fucked up system.
It is without hyperbole, a dystopia.
And while we've somehow been acclimated enough
to largely not notice it,
the pandemic suddenly shined a very bright light
on the problem.
By there being a public health crisis
that affected the entire world,
suddenly these for-profit businesses
were expected to handle a massive pandemic
that didn't care about things
like supply chains or insurance.
And so having our hospital system handle coronavirus
was a little like having our army navy stores
actually start supplying the army and navy.
May our next war be fought with throwing stars.
So yes, the hospital system and supply chain
absolutely and immediately ate shit.
But hey, at least the insurance companies
made an obscene amount of money.
And boy, we will certainly talk more about that later.
But what I'm getting at is that this supply chain issue
and general healthcare collapse meant that hospitals
were having to actually make decisions on who lives
and who dies based on the supplies they had.
On top of this, over 2020,
we'd see an equally massive shortage of hospital staff.
Some states even resorting to taking healthcare employees
out of retirement to deal with the holiday surges
because people were still going out, you see.
Airlines didn't close down.
And as early as April, 2020,
we started seeing a decline in people staying home
in various parts of the country.
Depending on which state you lived in,
there were already talks of opening things back up,
if not measures already in place to do so.
And so we never actually got ahead of the virus.
We barely tried to keep people home.
And while it's easy to just pin this on dipshits
who refuse to follow the rules,
for a lot of people,
this had to do with employment and income.
The outbreak disproportionately impacted
lower income communities for a number of reasons.
To name a few, they tend to be more densely populated.
People use public transportation more.
Many local residents work outside of the home
or have preexisting or chronic health conditions.
And public health and medical services
are lower quality and less available.
Minorities and migrant populations
also face language and cultural barriers
that prevented them from accessing public health information.
And so during this first year,
a clear separation occurred
between people who could telecommute and access doctors
and people who could not.
And of course, the majority of people
still going out to work
happened to be in the lower income bracket.
This is because of service jobs like delivery and grocery employees not paying a living wage while also demanding
that these people still do their extremely stressful jobs.
People needed to eat after all.
And so people still had to work for food and work in the food service industry.
I don't know if you recall, but we never really got a lot of money from COVID relief.
Maybe like a couple thousand total,
which would cover rent for maybe two months,
depending on where you live.
I'm not even gonna look up the exact number
because reading it will make me piss the hottest of lava.
Hint, it could cover almost three months worth of insulin.
And as for non-essential or independent businesses,
well, they just fucked right off.
To be specific, 200 goddamn thousand establishments closed
in that first pandemic year.
There was no saving them.
But hey, at least Amazon made a bunch of money,
so that's good.
Yay for Amazon, huzzah!
And I guess we should acknowledge that those PPP loans
that famously went to people like Kanye West
did actually help a lot of businesses during this time.
Although we're not entirely sure to what extent.
Despite this, they were a good idea on paper.
And so naturally our government did everything they could
to fuck them up, including having too little oversight,
not enough money, and ultimately just not doing
nearly enough of them to keep businesses alive.
Not to mention the black owned businesses
found it way harder to get the loan than other businesses.
That's not the America I know,
but at least the Ayn Rand Institute got one.
You, me, the employees and the supporters
of the Ayn Rand Institute, all of us are forced
to support the welfare state,
whether we agree with it or not.
If the government offers to return some of the money
taken from us by force, each of us is entitled to return some of the money taken from us by force,
each of us is entitled to reclaim some of what was taken.
Yes, I believe it was John Galt who said, no, you don't understand. We took the money
because we need it on principle. Anywho, so the PPP loans weren't enough and didn't solve
it. And so unemployment quite obviously exploded. Only just like those loans,
we soon learned that our unemployment system
in this country was the equivalent
of a mouse-packed barn car.
For starters, unemployment differs wildly
from state to state.
And we almost immediately learned
that a lot of states simply haven't bothered
to keep their underfunded systems up to date.
Checks were delayed in many states
due to their computers still running on COBOL, a computing language
that hasn't been popular since the freaking 1990s,
which coincidentally happens to be the last time
we gave a projectile fuck about actually funding
our unemployment systems.
That's a 2017 presentation by the National Association
of State Workforce Agencies, which found that federal
funding for these programs had dipped 30% since the glory days
of gigapets and music television.
Along with the technology,
we also discovered that some systems
simply weren't meant to work.
Florida, a state that's like 80% theme park,
unsurprisingly had one of the higher unemployment rates
during the pandemic,
and almost immediately were flooded with stories
of people completely unable to navigate their benefit system, higher unemployment rates during the pandemic. And almost immediately were flooded with stories
of people completely unable to navigate their benefit system.
A system that one DeSantis advisor described
as a shit sandwich by design.
As in they had purposefully made the system hard to use
because if fewer people get unemployment benefits,
then that technically makes it look
like there's less unemployment in the state.
And boy, that's not how the government should be working.
And again, this is just one of many states
that put up a series of obstacles
in order for people to actually get unemployment payouts.
Just one more reason why this pandemic
was a gigantic bureaucratic nightmare.
On top of all the, you know, deaths.
And so, naturally, we saw a rise in depression and suicide
because of course we did.
People were broke and stuck at home
and grappling with impossible government websites.
Or maybe they were forced to work after all.
In fact, a June 2020 CDC study found that 21%
of essential workers had said they seriously
were considering suicide.
This was all especially damaging to young,
lower income and minority members of the population.
Also women and children didn't have it great.
Those two groups being the most common victims
of domestic violence,
a thing that had of course risen across the board.
A study by the National Commission on COVID-19
and Criminal Justice reviewed 12 separate studies
spanning multiple areas of the country
and estimated at the very least
an 8% rise in domestic violence.
On top of that, there was a 4% increase
in domestic violence-related shooting deaths in 2020,
most of those victims being women.
All of this amounted to a second healthcare failure
in the form of a mental health crisis.
Texts sent to the federal government mental health hotline
rose nearly 1000%.
You may have seen us pointed this
with a sock puppet character, Mr. Bonkers,
who is now retired due to possibly making light of
and dismissing the actual mental health issues
people had before and during and because of the pandemic,
though that was not our intention.
It is an actual serious issue.
And very little of the relief money went to clinics
who found themselves having to lay off employees
while simultaneously dealing with a surge
of mental health emergencies.
And so that was yet another corner of our system
that simply fell apart the moment COVID
made things difficult.
Oh, and this is all on top of the significant rise
in drug overdoses that particularly affected black
and native American communities.
Feels like I should commit more than a few sentences
to that whole deal, but boy,
we have a lot of scorched ground to cover in this episode.
After all, we haven't even talked about the rise
of anti-mask and anti-vaccine movements
that came out of the pandemic,
which I would also count as a systemic failure
to some degree.
Specifically, an entire political party
that was allowed to devolve into laughable conspiracy
theories,
headlined by a singular dry dildo of a president
proudly declaring that he will not wear a mask.
The president opted not to wear a face mask
after announcing new CDC guidelines a day earlier
for Americans to use them in public.
I won't be doing it personally.
It's a recommendation.
That was April of 2020 folks.
And since then the entire GOP has perpetually pushed back
on the basic idea of wearing a face mask.
By one estimate during the first peak of the pandemic,
there were roughly 30% of Americans barely wearing a mask.
Most of them right leaning.
We really don't stand back and appreciate
how amazingly damaging this moment was.
And that perhaps you could argue
that Trump being allowed to rally against masks
should be considered an act of violence.
Like, yeah, we're gonna be covering a lot in this episode
and spreading the blame around a bit.
We'll talk about the American system as a whole
and failures from the Biden administration.
But one of the things we really can't stress enough
is that most of the problems we're having
are very much to the max with at
least three X's, all Trump's fault. So supposing we hit the body with a tremendous, whether it's
ultraviolet or just very powerful light. And I think you said that hasn't been checked, but
you're going to test it. And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you
can do either through the skin or in some other way. And I think you said you're going to test that too.
Sounds interesting. Right. And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute,
one minute. And is there a way we can do something like that by injection inside or
like that by injection inside or almost a cleaning because you see it gets on the lungs and it does a tremendous number of the lungs so it'd be interesting to
check that so that you're gonna have to use medical doctors with but it sounds
it sounds interesting to me. Many doctors think it is extremely successful the
hydroxychloroquine coupled with the zinc and perhaps the zithromycin.
But many doctors think it's extremely good. I'm good with masks. I'm OK with masks. I tell
people wear masks. But just the other day, they came out with a statement that 85 percent of the
people that wear masks catch it. So, you know, this is a very tricky. That's what I heard. I feel about vaccines like
I feel about tests. This is going to go away without a vaccine. It's going to go away and
it's we're not going to see it again. If people want to get tested, they get tested.
We have the greatest capacity in the world. Not even close. If people want to get tested,
they get tested. But for the most part, they shouldn't want to get tested. There's no reason.
They feel good. They don't have sniffles. They don't have sore throats. They don't have any
problem. If they do feel there's something happening, they have the absolute easy. In fact,
Ron DeSantis of Florida, the governor, doing a fantastic job in Florida, he said he's got a
little bit of the opposite problem. He's got so much testing that people sit around
and wait for people to come in, that they have far a great overcapacity for testing.
And there are numerous other states that have told me the same thing.
You know, case numbers, you know why we have so many case numbers? Because we do more testing
than any country in the world times five, 10, 20. You have many countries don't do any testing,
so they don't have any cases.
It cannot be overstated
that the president of the United States
uses administration to regularly take a hard stance
against the basic concepts of science.
And by breaking that seal with his base,
proudly crossing that line of absolute ignorance,
he has created a singular way for the GOP or really anyone
to dismiss any information across the board
that inconveniences them.
Climate change, pro-choice, LGBTQ rights
are all issues that have a lot of scientific evidence
backing them.
Stuff that was once undeniable
can now just be denied without shame
instead of denied with noble, quiet shame.
And those are just the abstract consequences.
Trump has very unabstractedly
pushed obvious misinformation about the virus
that directly resulted in the deaths of countless
to the point that I'm still not exactly sure
if he was secretly working for the virus.
Have we checked his real estate records
to see if COVID was renting one of his properties?
There isn't even a partisan or strategic reason
to do what he did.
And in fact, it probably hurt his chances
of being reelected ever again.
So like, what was he just like the Joker or some shit?
Or perhaps they really were so incredibly all in
on this idea of capitalism that people like Trump
truly didn't see reality.
And now the GOP is just permanently living in that deep end.
Like, yeah, I know we say it all the time here on this show,
but holy Christ shitting cocks,
the Republican Party has over the course
of just a few years become full blown anti-vax.
That is incredible when you really think about it.
Like if you wound the clock back to 2019,
the anti-vaccine movement was largely seen as a fringe,
but growing group of people considered
to be medically illiterate
and therefore laughable in nature.
The fact that we now have actual major politicians
like Ted Cruz taking a stance against Big Bird
getting a vaccine is unreal.
It's like if an entire political party suddenly ran
on the singular issue of hashtag restore the Snyder verse.
But hey now, Cody Bear, Ted's not anti-vax,
he just doesn't like mandates.
You know how the GOP is across the board
against government health mandates,
except when they totally aren't when it comes to abortion.
And so this isn't about the vaccine,
but rather forcing people to get it.
You know, the thing that Big Bird is clearly doing by
tweeting that he got the vaccine,
a thing Sesame Street has been literally doing for decades.
I don't know, man,
seems like it's not Big Bird that's changed,
but rather these weird freaks suddenly calling
basic PR pushes for public health measures,
government propaganda, despite also being in the government.
Seems like Ted Cruz probably knows this
and that children's programming has always done this
and is actually courting the specific anti-vaccine crowd
as opposed to taking a stance
against mandates.
And I'm just spit balling here,
but if a Senator is either this stupid or disingenuous
about basic reality, they should really not be a Senator
or really have any job where they make decisions
about the lives of others.
I don't even want him owning a pet, frankly.
It's really hard to put into words how this idea
of basic sanitation
and personal protection from disease
was stonewalled by a political party
in the name of vague individualism
to the absolute confusion and horror
of the rest of the world.
It is so deeply embarrassing
that it abstracts in the mind,
indescribable as a grotesque failure,
like seeing God take a dump on his own face,
or her face.
You're welcome, ladies.
Anywho, that's what actually has happened
these last few years in terms of America's actual handling
of this global pandemic.
In short, we somehow tripped on our own dangling balls
or labia and went head first into a pile of rusty screws
or wing nuts.
That's the tool equivalent of a vagina, right?
Getting distracted. What I'm tool equivalent of a vagina, right? Getting distracted.
What I'm saying here is that America
as a collection of ideologies, pro-capitalism,
careless individualism, as well as our profoundly broken
and apathetic political system was seemingly built
to collapse under a pandemic that could only be solved
by a collective selflessness and personal discipline enabled
by a government willing to give people
the free resources needed to survive.
So yeah, that all sucks,
but I guess we now get to do some more ads.
So we'll be right back with the first annual victory.
We totally did it, COVID special.
Hello, adoring fans.
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And so one thing I simply don't have time for
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Okay, gotta go super in a hurry, bye.
Oh no, the time.
Some more news, COVID victory special returns now.
Oh great, we're still here.
Let me just,
yeah, I know it's cough syrup, what of it?
And so now we need to ask a pretty important
and probably depressing question
about this giant pandemic that is apparently,
allegedly, over.
Did we learn anything from all of this?
Actually, more to the point,
what lessons will we fail to learn from this?
Because, you know.
And I'd like to start on where we left off.
The bizarre push by a shockingly mainstream group of people
refusing to wear masks or get the vaccine.
Obviously we and many others have touched on the fact
that this was a direct result of our then president
choosing to treat this virus
like some performatively rugged guy
wearing a jean vest in the dead of winter
to prove he's too tough to be cold.
Then getting sick and trying to pretend
like he's also too tough for that.
Real baby shit, very embarrassing. But I think Trump's hilarious spectacle distracted from
another very important influence that led this anti-mask hogwash, which was the CDC itself.
There's a lot of confusion among people and misinformation surrounding face masks.
Can you discuss that? The masks are important for someone who's infected to prevent them from infecting someone else.
Now, when you see people and look at the films in China and South Korea, whatever,
everybody's wearing a mask. Right now in the United States,
people should not be walking around with masks.
You're sure of it? Because people are listening really closely to this. Right now, people should not be walking. There's no reason to be walking around with masks. You're sure of it? Because people are listening really closely to this.
Right now, people should not be,
there's no reason to be walking around with a mask.
That is for March of 2020.
And before we all jump on Fauci,
must protect God King Fauci,
this was the official stance of both the CDC
and Surgeon General during this period.
By the time we got to that summer,
people were extremely confused by the mixed messaging
coming from this branch of our government.
I can't believe I'm saying this,
but it was actually understandable for Donald Trump
to initially de-emphasize the use of masks because of this.
What isn't understandable is his decision
to stick to this message even when the CDC said otherwise.
But what was happening here is that since the country
was running into that aforementioned
supply chain shortage,
the decision was made to tell the public not to wear masks
in order to free them up for the healthcare workers
who needed them the most.
But instead of simply explaining that to people,
we were told very sternly that masks were simply not needed,
which really seemed like a lie after the fact,
which I guess it was.
And as the CDC began to flip flop about this,
they came across as untrustworthy
and the public began to turn to other sources
for their information.
And those sources ranged greatly in quality.
Even among Fox News watching Republicans,
views on social distancing differed significantly
depending on whether or not you watched Tucker Carlson,
who cautioned that the virus was indeed real.
Congratulations, Tucker, you did it.
I guess you're good now.
Or Sean Hannity, who was more directly dismissive. So the lesson here is that being vague or unclear in that
initial messaging made a rippling impact that probably cost a lot of lives. And this is a lesson
that sure enough, we didn't learn when it came to the vaccine.
Well, it's generally recommended that you get the booster that is the original regimen that you got in the
first place. But for one reason or other, and there may be different circumstances for people
availability or just different personal choices, you can, as we say, mix and match. And those are
the data that were discussed and were acted upon yesterday that you can now mix and match one with the other.
Oh, okay.
So if we have to, we can get the Pfizer booster shot
even if we got the Moderna vaccine.
Got it.
With regard to your question for preference,
you know, we will not articulate a preference.
My understanding is that most people
will have done largely well
with the initial vaccine that they got
and may express a preference very much for the original vaccine series they got having done largely well with the initial vaccine that they got and may express a preference
very much for the original vaccine series they got having done very well.
There may be some people who might prefer another vaccine over the one that they received,
and the current CDC recommendations now make that possible.
Okay, wait. The CDC does not recommend a preference between sticking with your
original vaccine type or changing it for the booster, but is just saying that it's now possible.
So like, should we, or shouldn't we?
They're not saying which option is better,
but just that we can.
And depending on what study or news story we read,
it can be hard to know what the best method is.
But also some pharmacies were confused about the dosages
for this mix and match approach
because they were waiting for guidelines about this.
So it's all a bit confusing and inconsistent
and can be easily used by grifters
to somehow prove the CDC doesn't know what it's doing.
The reality being that when dealing
with all the science garbage,
it's hard to give very solid answers.
And instead their message has
and always was really noncommittal.
So ultimately the problem wasn't just Trump,
but rather that Trump was just such a big problem
that he distracted us from these other smaller issues,
sort of like a puppet at an orgy.
And like a lot of things that went wrong
during his administration,
it's really easy to just hand wave the problem
as being exclusive to this one bad president
as opposed to something larger.
But this lesson is extremely important for us to learn.
And by us, I mean the CDC.
There's a certain pushback against experts in this country.
And while it may seem unfair,
that pushback makes it important for the people in charge
to be very clear about explaining complicated ideas
in a way that we can all understand.
For example, we don't even really have language
to talk about what the pandemic's over means.
Is it when the virus is completely gone?
Is it when everything's open again?
Is it when most people, even kids are vaccinated?
We just give up trying to stop it spreading?
We're already seeing wildly different opinions
about what Omicron will do to the virus.
Both CNBC and Fox News saying
that it will actually make the virus end quicker,
while other reports saying the exact opposite.
Fauci is saying very directly that our current boosters
will protect us from Omicron
and that we should get one immediately.
Meanwhile, the WHO is warning that by focusing boosters
only on wealthy nations,
it's actually going to make the virus worse
because here's some news.
It turns out that the only way to end a global pandemic fast
is to think on a global scale.
But despite mounting pressure,
Moderna has outright refused to share its recipe
for the COVID-19 vaccine,
and continues to sell doses almost exclusively
to wealthy countries.
Pfizer is doing the same,
but they're taking a bit less heat
because they didn't also take $2.5 billion
from American taxpayers to help out with vaccine development.
It's not even clear that there's anything we can do about it
to force their hand.
Biden's chief science officer, David Kessler,
has warned the company to step up
and provide more vaccine doses to the world
and has met with the company privately a few times,
but we've seen no actual movement on the situation.
Seems like the kind of thing
that should have been worked out in advance.
Oh well.
Maybe next time we all almost die.
See, the thing is that every new infection
gives the virus a chance to mutate
into a way more transmissible version.
It doesn't matter where the virus starts,
as we saw with Omicron,
it'll eventually make its way here.
So even if you want to think of this
in the most cold-hearted,
facts don't care about your feelings way,
it's very much in our best interest
to get the vaccine to as many countries as we can.
Perhaps we shouldn't tie medical breakthroughs
to the profits of private companies,
you know, if we want this to end.
But also, the truth is that there really is no exact end,
which is why people are struggling to define
what an end would look like.
That isn't to say things won't get back
to what we define as normal,
but rather the most experts agree
that the coronavirus will ultimately become endemic,
as in a virus that will be regularly seen
in our population like the flu.
And in terms of where we are in that timeline,
a lot of people are hoping and downright claiming
that since Omicron appears less severe,
it's going to be the start of that change.
But we just don't know yet.
We can certainly hope, hope is fine.
We like hope, right?
A new hope, hope that floats, Doug Stan Hope.
But this will once again be something
that can easily confuse the public.
Hey, you know what would be really helpful actually?
If along with access to the same information,
the public was able to easily access people
who could tell them to their face what they should be doing.
Like some kind of like a care physician
who is primary in their lives.
A sort of guaranteed position that everyone has access to
with the sole purpose of keeping them healthy.
Some kind of healthy for all?
Yes, I am talking of course about crystals.
They absorb the universe's power
and then allow you to channel it into your chi
or possibly your chakras.
I'm not sure, I think you can smoke them too.
Also, we should probably make sure
people can occasionally see a doctor.
I know, I know, here comes old man sexy Cody Longballs
talking yet again about how perhaps it's very bad
that more and more Americans
don't have a primary care doctor
and perhaps healthcare should be available
to everyone for free.
But in the context of COVID,
this problem became way more visible.
The US was already falling behind other developed nations
in the world before the COVID outbreak even started.
And as you would expect,
the pandemic has widened this gap even further.
But what's especially revealing
is this study by the Robert Graham Center.
It compared COVID deaths and infections
to an area's community health index,
which is a rating based in part
on a community's access to primary care.
And of course, they found that places
with a lower health index rating
would have a much higher rate of COVID deaths
both before and after the vaccine was rolled out.
It was a 42% difference in fact.
Geez, who would have thought that having easy
and affordable access to a doctor
would prevent you from getting a virus?
And by not providing any kind of mechanism
for people to get in front of real physicians,
people they already knew and trusted,
when the pandemic hit, well,
they ended up turning to places like Fox News
or groups like America's Frontline Doctors,
a right-wing grifter network
that made obscene amounts of money
doing online prescriptions of bogus coronavirus treatments.
But at least we're now getting around to investigating them.
You know, now that their customers died.
You remember them, right?
They're the ones who did that video
and newly purchased lab coats
claiming they were coronavirus doctors
and pushing hydroxychloroquine.
And this video showed these people saying
that you don't need masks,
claiming that there is a cure out there,
that hydrochloroquine is effective,
and that recent studies showing otherwise are fake science. They claim that the virus has a cure out there, that hydrochloroquine is effective, and that recent studies showing otherwise are fake science.
They claim that the virus has a cure.
Now, this video went viral on social media,
partly because of outlets like Breitbart,
and also, of course, because of President Trump and his son,
who obviously have huge followings.
Yeah, you remember those folks
where the head doctor turned out
to have made a lot of previous statements about alien DNA?
You know, you know the video.
The one made up of painfully obvious grifters
that has since been wiped from social media,
but would then go viral because the president
of the United States shared it on Twitter.
Boy, I wonder what those folks are up to now.
Ah, yeah, that makes sense.
At least they were arrested for something,
but maybe should be arrested for other stuff too?
I don't know.
Maybe also arrest that president
who tweeted their fake medical video.
Just spit balling ideas.
Also arrest all presidents, but mainly that last one.
Right now, I'm willing to settle for that last one,
and then we can talk about the rest.
Anyway, healthcare.
We're sure gonna need it,
especially but not exclusively after the pandemic.
The lack of universal healthcare greatly impeded the country
when first detecting and monitoring the virus.
And unless this changes,
it will happen again with the next one.
Not to mention the fact that COVID won't actually be over,
even when the virus appears gone.
That's thanks to something called long COVID,
which is both the lasting effects of the virus
and either the worst or best porn star name
currently available.
According to the American Academy of Physical Medicine
and Rehabilitation, anywhere from three to 10 million
Americans have this long COVID, seeking treatment
for a whole host of ailments that doctors suspect
are related to their initial COVID diagnosis,
but still remain poorly understood.
This is actually something that happens
with a lot of viruses,
but is gaining visibility with COVID
because that's of course the big hotness right now
in that it can give you a fever.
And nearly two thirds of long COVID patients
report brain fog, including memory loss.
Half say they don't think they can return
to full employment.
Luckily, the Biden administration has said
that people with long COVID may qualify for federal disability protections.
These conditions can sometimes, can sometimes rise to the level of a disability.
So we're bringing agencies together to make sure Americans with long COVID who have a disability
have access to the rights and resources that are due under the disability law.
Super. Except, as it stands, it's actually very hard to prove that you have long COVID and actually
get accepted to these programs. Doctors haven't been able to fully understand the illness and
its related symptoms yet, making diagnoses uncertain and erratic. That said, we do know
that if you're vaccinated, you're 50% less likely to get long COVID. So heck, maybe do that if you haven't yet.
But in terms of long COVID,
there's simply a lack of hard evidence when someone has it.
Many people who now have the symptoms
don't even have a positive COVID test,
especially if they got sick early in the pandemic
when tests were in short supply.
It can even be a challenge just to see a doctor
to discuss your long COVID symptoms.
Often these diagnoses require a network
of coordinated specialists who are all overbooked
and have long wait times,
like they do in those evil universal healthcare countries.
And this is if your insurance will get you in to see them.
Just starting from the research alone,
this is going to be an extremely costly problem
for years to come. That's assuming anyone will bother to give a shit, of course, because it's not like this isn't a
problem for all of the people who currently have non-COVID related disabilities. Specifically,
the 70% of people who have social security disability insurance claims denied every year.
Like long COVID, there are a lot of disabilities such as depression or chronic pain or really anything that's hard to diagnose
that simply cuts people out of these benefits.
And so even if COVID becomes endemic and fizzles out,
it's just such a disservice to consider that
as being back to normal,
not only for the people suffering from long COVID,
but also ignoring all the faults in our disability system
that leaves so many vulnerable people
to fend for themselves.
In terms of pain, these people often turn
to dangerous methods to self-treat
because no one will listen to them.
Oh, right, that's another thing
that rose during the pandemic.
Overdoses, can't forget that.
Did we mention that?
I think we did, but not nearly enough.
God, there's just so many things
that went horrifyingly wrong.
On the subject of our most vulnerable populations.
We haven't even mentioned that the majority of COVID deaths were our grandmas and grandpas
and how we actually saw lawmakers on television saying this about it.
And, you know, Tucker, no one reached out to me and said, as a senior citizen,
are you willing to take a chance on your survival in exchange for keeping the
America that all America loves for your children and grandchildren? And if that's the exchange,
I'm all in. And that doesn't make me noble or brave or anything like that. I just think there
are lots of grandparents out there in this country like me, I have six grandchildren, that what
we all care about and what we love more than anything are those children.
And I want to, you know, live smart and see through this.
But I don't want the whole country to be sacrificed.
Dude said that out loud.
He processed it in his brain and ordered his tongue to make shapes resulting in how he thought it was better
to let old people die than hurt our economy.
And it wasn't just him,
because thanks to failures in healthcare
and supply and employee shortages,
we absolutely did let our elderly die during this pandemic.
Not just here, but all over the goddamn world.
And we should feel extremely ashamed by that.
That we apparently designed a system so bad
that we had to just forget elder care the moment a pandemic hit. And while I can't speak for the
rest of the world, in this country, we've actually been doing that for a long time.
For starters, by not paying the people charged to take care of our elders nearly enough.
But more broadly, we've devised a system where the average American can't afford to take care of an elderly parent at home,
nor can they afford to have their loved ones
taken care of at a retirement home.
By one estimate, in less than 10 years,
80% of middle-income seniors
won't be able to afford assisted living.
And so I guess this whole letting old people die
for the economy thing is just a practice run
for the really shitty future
we are all giving ourselves.
It's like Logan's run, but somehow way more drawn out
and cruel and without those fun flowy future togas.
Same amount of turtlenecks though.
And speaking of money, we should probably talk
about the other long COVID you can experience,
the COVID on your wallet.
Back to you, Diane.
Actually, wait, no, not back to Diane.
I don't even know a Diane.
What I'm getting at here is that even if you were infected
and didn't get lasting effects,
you probably still got a massive motherfucking medical debt,
especially if you are, you guessed it,
from a demographic that lacks affordable healthcare.
According to a survey of over 5,000 adults
by the Commonwealth Fund,
one half of uninsured adults who got COVID
said they were having trouble paying off medical bills.
Heck, even one third of insured adults,
as in people with employer coverage,
also had this problem,
which got a lot worse when the people surveyed
were black or Hispanic adults
who were far more likely to have medical debt
or loss of income during the pandemic.
Additionally, out of the people who did suffer
from medical debt, 35% said that debt completely dried
up their savings.
43% said that debt resulted in a lower credit rating
and 27% said that this debt made them unable to pay
for things like food, rent, or utilities.
And this is just one study as it relates to COVID.
You see, while federal law ensured
that both tests and vaccines were free,
this didn't extend out to the actual treatment of COVID.
And while there is federal protection
for both the uninsured and people on Medicaid,
if you caught the virus while on private
or employer insurance, there was nothing stopping
those companies from doing just about whatever they want.
Gee, seems like perhaps health insurance
shouldn't be handled through your job, but whatever.
Point is that you probably heard about these horror stories
of people being handed COVID bills
for literally millions of dollars, and this is why.
Simply put, the regulations our government put
on insurance companies and hospitals
when it came to COVID related treatment
wasn't nearly enough,
especially on a system that treats insurance like a business.
And so the lasting effects of this will span decades.
And perhaps that's why a 2020 survey found that 80%
of likely voters think that reducing healthcare costs
needs to be a priority for the next president.
You know, this next president.
Let's get it done this year.
This is all about a simple premise.
Healthcare should be a right, not a privilege in America.
Let's get it done this year, he said in 2021.
Healthcare should be a right.
You remember when that was a thing we were hearing both after and especially before the election?
This speech was from April of last year.
And since then, we've seen a lot of good things
Biden has done in terms of allowing better access
to the systems we already have in place.
But we're talking about something that needs heavy reform
and a willingness to make drastic changes.
And since this speech, the more extreme ideas
like Biden's push for a public option,
not at all extreme, bare minimum healthcare reform,
has since just faded away.
It really just feels like since the election is over,
everyone feels perfectly fine walking back
the more progressive sentiments we saw
when everyone was trying to be the next president.
Because it's too hard, you know,
to actually gut our healthcare system
and replace it with something that doesn't bury people
in debt for the crime of getting a virus.
Because hey, here's some not at all news.
Poverty is not great in this country.
And that naturally makes it harder for people
to get the proper healthcare they need.
For example, 11 million US children,
about one in seven, currently live in poverty,
which has tremendously negative long-term consequences for their health and development.
And COVID naturally exacerbated these issues as well.
Millions of parents and caretakers lost jobs
or were forced to quit
so they could provide full-time childcare as schools closed.
The share of children living with unemployed parents
peaked to more than 21% as of April 2020.
That was the highest rate observed in the last 50 years.
A few months later, this number did go down,
but was still just below the same rate observed
during the 2009 recession.
And sweet Cheeto, I don't know if you know this,
but kids suck, man.
You have to love them and junk.
And if you're unemployed,
you probably can't afford childcare.
And if you can't afford childcare,
it's pretty darn tough to find a job.
As it stands now,
a lot of states are beginning to kick in for subsidies
aimed toward just that,
providing money for childcare
so the adults can find a job.
And that's great, they're doing that,
but only in certain states and for certain jobs.
You might also notice that this is just
so late in the pandemic.
Similarly, as of December of 2021, just like a month ago,
a survey by the University of Michigan found 32%
of low-income families had yet to even receive
a fucking dime in child tax credit payments.
There are just so, so many people still twisting in the wind
fucking years after this pandemic started.
And much like healthcare,
perhaps this could have been helped
if we actually had free universal childcare in this country
instead of simply talking about how we should have it.
Like a lot of these early 2021 Biden statements
for universal childcare is yet another thing
he's greatly scaled back since.
Wouldn't it be great if he wanted to do good things
and talked about how they were good every day
until he did them?
In his defense, I guess,
Biden did raise the basic child tax credit
from $2,000 to $3,000 per child
and included a measure to extend that credit in his Build Back Better plan.
In his not defense, he still put a time limit on that
instead of perhaps proposing we just do this from now on
and very much super duper a million times
not in his defense, the Build Back Better plan
hasn't been motherfucking passed
and so the child tax credit has not been renewed,
immediately sending families back into poverty. And just to be very clear, this shit really did help.
We know for sure that direct cash payments
to low-income families improve future outcomes.
The poverty rate actually fell
following the passage of the CARES Act,
which sent out $1,200 payments to Americans early in the pandemic.
Poverty fell to 9.1% in the 2020 census
from 11.8% in 2019.
8.5 million people were lifted out of poverty
just last year.
That is unprecedented.
And if we actually thought about these things
on the long term,
instead of giving them weird time limits
like Biden is doing.
Well, one estimate found that the child tax credit alone,
as in a $3,000 increase in annual family income,
would result in a future 19% earnings increase
for any child in that family.
So this direct payment wouldn't just help
with COVID right now,
but actually begin to fix poverty as a whole.
If you're into that.
Right, you'd have to be horny for fixing poverty, I guess,
or at least kind of willing to.
Or heck, let's say you don't give a fuck about kids at all.
Maybe you're just a selfish prick who hates kids and doesn't care about people.
Don't be ashamed.
It's an unpleasant and contagious condition
that impacts more and more Americans each year. But the thing is, even if you don't be ashamed. It's an unpleasant and contagious condition that impacts more and more Americans each year.
But the thing is, even if you don't care
and are more concerned with government spending
or some dumb shit like that,
getting ahead of child poverty
would actually make more money later.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering,
and Medicine estimated that child poverty
exacts a cost of 800 billion to $1.1 trillion in lost economic output annually.
And so like a lot of lessons
we should be learning from COVID,
most of it comes down to changing society in positive ways
that would then naturally reduce the negative effects
of the next pandemic.
Universal basic income, free healthcare
that wasn't tied to employment
and guaranteed a primary care physician.
And like a general get shit togetherness
would not only just make the country better,
but better in a way that it wouldn't immediately buckle
when the next deadly virus shows up to party.
We also have to sit down and have a serious talk
about the term essential worker,
as well as the general idea that we have built a country
that apparently needs to prioritize its economy
over the deaths of its people.
Because one thing this virus really exposed
is that this country as a whole was both figuratively
and literally living paycheck to paycheck.
And so we quickly got to a point where politicians
were looking at entire industries as acceptable losses
on top of our supply chain immediately collapsing.
And while I'm absolutely not just talking about hospitals and healthcare employees,
one of the strangest aspects of this pandemic was how we both prop them up while not actually
helping them.
Because while we'll certainly applaud them as they go to work and give them free fast
food, we're also not going to pay them more.
And in fact, in some cases, if a healthcare professional tries to leave their current
job for better working conditions,
apparently it's totally cool for that hospital
to issue a fucking restraining order,
forcing those people to not be able to get a new job.
That's a real thing that happened in Wisconsin
that has since thankfully been lifted in the courts.
But apparently that's the lesson
some of these hospitals learned,
that it's easier to legally harass employees than treat them marginally better.
Holy shit. Holy fucking shit.
How are we not seeing stories like this as America hitting rock bottom?
Or have we already figured out a way to spin it as an inspirational story?
Steve Hartman has the inspiring story of some young people to the rescue.
Steve Hartman has the inspiring story of some young people to the rescue.
When people call for an ambulance in Sackets Harbor, New York,
and the crew shows up at their front door, almost everyone has the same reaction.
A lot of people just come up and ask you, like, wait, how old are you?
You're the EMT? Or like, when's the ambulance coming?
So what do you say?
We just explain to them, when's the ambulance coming? So what do you say? We just explain to them we are
the ambulance. These baby-faced first responders took over the village's emergency medical services
not long after COVID hit, when all the older EMS volunteers either couldn't or wouldn't do the job
anymore. So cute. Look at those baby-faced ambulance drivers we're training to save lives Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha to fix the situation instead of considering perhaps, maybe rethinking a system that is clearly broken.
Like nevermind considering things
like making med school cheaper or perhaps free
or raising workers pay.
No, we're just gonna revert labor rights
back to the early 1900s.
Real retro, you know, bringing back the 20s and such.
And as it stands, we're experiencing a massive shortage
in healthcare workers as one in five workers
have quit their job because of stuff like burnout.
And according to one survey,
a lack of supplies at the hospital.
That's right, as of late 2021,
there is still a massive supply chain issue
at hospitals and retailers.
Or to quote one business owner,
"'The whole system is totally fucked.'"
And so it turns out that we built that entire structure
on a hilariously flimsy foundation,
meaning that the entire way we deal with trade
has to be rethought.
And even our commerce secretary is saying
that it's going to take time to get back to normal.
Depending on who you ask, this is either a tiny hiccup
or simply what life will be from now on.
But circling back to healthcare employees
and essential workers getting that free fast food,
here's a little riddle for you.
Who exactly was cooking and giving them those meals?
Robots, some kind of bird race we created in a lab.
That's dumb.
Why would we let birds handle food?
Perhaps it was also people.
And so it's odd that the people who were forced
to clock into these minimum wage service jobs
weren't also applauded every day.
And in fact, jobs like line cooks, security guards,
and taxi drivers had some of the highest rates
of COVID deaths during this pandemic.
And so, geez, along with healthcare workers,
perhaps we should be paying these people a lot more
since they're so vital to our economy
that we're risking their lives.
Perhaps it's extremely fucked up
that childcare workers, for example,
are making an average of $12 an hour
despite being ridiculously important
in keeping people out of poverty.
And so, no fucking wonder
that we're seeing so many workers strikes
suddenly happening in this country.
Or as the New York Times put it,
a mysterious and unexplained disease of commoner works folk
demanding to not be treated like wet trash.
Oh, what are we to do with this infectious new pridefulness
of the worthless lesser classes?
This is actually one of the more positive lessons
that some of us did for the most part
succeed in learning from this pandemic.
It's something that we're absolutely planning to do
an episode about in the future,
specifically these strikes and the progress
that is or isn't being made.
For example, in October, 10,000 picketing workers
from John Deere successfully negotiated 5% to 6% raises.
On the other side, HelloFresh workers failed to unionize
after the company launched a campaign against it,
despite the many claims of unsafe working conditions
for their employees.
Yes, that's hellofresh.com, America's favorite way
to have farm fresh food delivered straight to your door
by an extremely miserable employee.
Use promo code, improve your working conditions.
But overall, that is at least one positive mindset
we're getting from this pandemic.
The realization that the systems we had in place
when threatened just a little bit,
we're almost immediately willing to risk the American people
instead of change.
Like if COVID was a bear and the government
and large businesses were our spouse
who chose to shove us between them and the bear,
we would then have to seriously sit down
and rethink that relationship.
And so people are realizing more and more
that things like raising the minimum wage
and having universal healthcare should and can be demanded.
Because if we actually band together,
it turns out we have way more power than them
if we band together.
Because the other thing we've learned from this
should be evident in the fact that COVID
is not even close to being over yet,
despite some very loud people proclaiming otherwise.
It's just gone on too long.
Nobody cares anymore.
Last night, the Grubhub delivery guy
was eating my French fries right in front of me.
I mean, too long.
I don't wanna live in your paranoid world anymore, your masked paranoid world.
You know, you go out, it's silly now.
You know, you have your mask, you have to have a card, you have to have a booster, they scan your head.
Like you're a cashier and I'm a bunch of bananas.
I'm not bananas, you are.
So let me start by saying,
I understand the reason so many people are done with COVID.
Emotionally speaking, I too am done with COVID.
I don't know if you realize this,
but literally no one wants COVID to keep happening.
This pandemic, as we mentioned earlier,
was profoundly difficult on mental health,
but I don't think we took enough time
to really reflect on that,
to reflect on the actual geography of our world changing,
on businesses we enjoyed vanishing,
on going to see movies or eating at restaurants
becoming non-existent or at best extremely stressful,
on seeing our loved ones die,
and for many, on feeling this toxic resentment
toward individuals who simply refuse to accept the reality
of what needs to be done from day one.
Hey, Bill Maher, you're over COVID now?
How is that different from when you were over COVID
back in March of 2020?
Hey, Bill Maher, I know I've said this on the show
at least one other time,
but could you perhaps consider for a moment,
just a tiny bit addressing my humble request
for you to 100% absolutely shut the fuck up.
There's this absolutely unreal
and artificial pushback we're seeing
against claims of medical fascism and draconian practices.
People acting like it's brave to declare
that they are done with COVID
as if they live in an Orwellian world
of street marching mask squads,
black bagging anyone without a vaccine.
But like most large companies
have already dropped mask requirements.
Biden's minimal vaccine and testing mandates
have been struck down by the courts.
Businesses and schools are all open again.
So I don't know, man,
what the fuck are these people even talking about?
They won in that we have decided to just let COVID
take us all, the dipshit anti-vaccine babies
all got their bottle and then some.
And since when did any of these dips spend so much
as even a fucking day not whining
about the extremely brief lockdown?
The idea that we should be done with the pandemic
simply because people are tired of it,
coming from those who never made an effort
to actually try and reduce the spread of the virus
from day one is something we need to reject wholeheartedly.
Because I get it,
I get why this type of message appeals to people
who are just so fucking tired of the isolation and fear.
But the only way to actually get out of this
is to be patient, do the work,
and I guess continue to hound the government
for some semblance of help,
because holy sexy cow,
the government gets a big old F on this one.
For fun?
And when you consider
that everything we've talked about today
can and will be applied to future climate-related disasters,
you know, the denial of science,
lack of foresight in planning,
refusal to spend the necessary resources
or sacrifice the comfort of the upper classes,
profound negligence towards minimum wage workers
and the elderly in exchange for holding onto a dying economy,
the lack of willingness to protect the most vulnerable,
the disinterest in redesigning our system
to actually function, and this lack of people agreeing on a common vulnerable, the disinterest in redesigning our system to actually function,
and this lack of people agreeing on a common reality
and working towards a common goal.
It's just not looking great
for when the shit really starts to hit the fan.
So sadly, the lesson is that we just can't rely
on the systems in place anytime soon.
We can definitely push for change, expect the best,
but practice for the worst.
And we can do that right now during this pandemic,
which eventually will, in some form, actually end.
But for now, if you're in a position
where you have the means to help others who don't,
a landlord or an employer who can make lives
a little easier, you just gotta do that.
You gotta support each other as best you can
and think about how this can be avoided in the future.
And maybe then we can actually have our celebrations
and our clip show and all the puppets we can eat.
Hey, speaking of, we haven't checked in
with Warmbo in a while.
Hey, Warmbo, how are things going on your end?
Warmbo, are you well?
I'm sure he's fine.
Man, we never got any of those guests here, huh?
I really wanted to meet that void of sadness.
I feel like we'd have a lot to talk about.
Okay, happy COVID to all, I guess.
Is that COVID?
Happy, happy COVID day.
COVID bad. make sure to do the YouTube things to the video and the channel and check out our merch store with things available.
We've got a patreon.com slash some more news.
We've also got a podcast called even more news
where all the podcasts are and this show
that you just watched as a podcast.
And I don't know.
It was a long episode.
So that's, bye.
Get out of here.
Go on.