Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 428: Is It Possible You Are Irrational About COVID? | David Leonhardt
Episode Date: March 16, 2022As we enter year three of the pandemic, the psychology of COVID is no less complex or consequential. This episode features one of the most prominent chroniclers of the pandemic, David Leonhar...dt from the New York Times, who argues that there is irrationality on all sides when it comes to the pandemic. He would also urge you to consider whether you might be over or underestimating the risks of COVID, based on where you stand politically. This episode also explores: the state of play in the pandemic right now and where we may be headed next; why and how attitudes about the pandemic, at least here in the US, have sorted along partisan lines; whether it makes sense to be angry with the unvaccinated; how a rise in vehicle crashes might speak to how COVID accelerated the fraying of America's social fabric; and David’s argument for why history and human decency can be a source of optimism going forward. David will also respond to his vehement critics who argue that his emphasis on lifting COVID restrictions and returning to some semblance of normalcy callously disregards the needs of the immunocompromised and unvaccinated. David Leonhardt is a senior writer for The New York Times. He writes The Morning, The Times’s flagship daily newsletter, and also writes for the Sunday Review section. He has worked at The Times since 1999 and has previously been an Op-Ed columnist, Washington bureau chief, co-host of “The Argument” podcast, founding editor of The Upshot section and a staff writer for The Times Magazine. In 2011, he received the Pulitzer Prize for commentary. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/david-leonhardt-426See 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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This is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey, gang, I have this clear memory of December 2019 back when I was still a news anchor.
And we started doing stories on ABC about this new virus that was popping up over in China.
At first, I paid almost zero attention to the story.
We had covered viruses such as SARS and MERS in previous years when they
popped up on the other side of the planet and neither of those outbreaks
severely impacted America.
However, even when this new coronavirus started wreaking havoc in Europe
and seemed to be heading our way, I was for no good reason, pretty sanguine.
Even when the Dalai Lama, with whom I had an interview set for early March 2020 over
in India, postponed our meeting, I figured it was just an overabundance of caution.
Even when my wife, a pulmonologist, started stocking up on supplies, I still didn't want
to believe that we had a genuine problem.
It wasn't until early March 2020, with the virus truly at our doors that I started to
wake up to the gravity of the situation, along with the rest of the country.
As you may remember, the NBA suspended its season.
Tom Hanks announced he and his wife had the virus.
The president addressed the nation.
Millions of us were sent home from work. Two years have now passed since those
fateful horrifying events.
And my initial denial stands as just one small example
of how this pandemic has brought out so many thorny aspects
of human psychology.
As we enter year three of the pandemic,
at least here in the States,
it's been going on longer elsewhere, of course.
But as we enter year three, the psychology of COVID is no less complex or consequential.
So today I'm going to talk to one of the most prominent chroniclers of the pandemic, David
Leighenhart from the New York Times, who argues that there is irrationality on all sides
when it comes to the pandemic, and who would urge you to consider whether you too might be over or under estimating the risks based on where you stand politically.
We're also going to talk about the state of play in the pandemic right now and where
we may be headed next.
How and why attitudes about the pandemic, at least here in the US, have sorted along partisan
lines, whether it makes sense to be angry with the unvaccinated, how a rise in vehicle
crashes might speak to how COVID is accelerating the fraying of America's social fabric.
And David's argument for why history and human decency can be a source of optimism going
forward. David will also respond to his vehement critics who argue that his emphasis on lifting
COVID restrictions and returning to some semblance of normalcy
callously disregards the needs of the immunocompromised and unvaccinated.
A little bit more about David before we dive in.
He's a senior writer at the New York Times.
He writes the morning, which is the Times flagship daily newsletter.
He also writes for the Sunday review section.
He has worked for the time since 1999.
He's previously been an op-ed columnist, Washington Bureau Chief, co-host of the argument
podcast, founding editor of the upshot section, and a staff writer for the New York Times
magazine.
And in 2011, he received the Pulitzer Prize for commentary.
Oh, and I should say this is actually the first in a two-part series on COVID that we're doing this week.
Coming up on Friday, we're gonna talk to Lama Rod Owens,
the great meditation teacher and author,
who we often bring on at crucial moments,
and he's gonna drop some knowledge about how to work
with your mind at a moment of COVID fatigue, anxiety,
and anger.
We'll get started with David Lee and Hart right after this.
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Okay on with the show.
Hey y'all, it's your girl, Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, singer, and entrepreneur.
On my new podcast, Baby This is Kiki Palmer.
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What's up?
David Leighenhart, welcome to the show.
It's great to be here.
So, happy third year of COVID to you.
And I guess my question is, as we enter this third year,
how would you describe at the highest level
the state of play?
It's actually an unusually clear moment,
but there is still significant uncertainty.
So let's start with the clear part.
We have just come out of this Omicron wave
in which we had a variant that was
quite clearly more contagious,
was much easier for people to give it to each other,
including vaccinated people,
but it was also somewhat milder.
It was not radically milder, but it was clearly milder.
And so what we had during this wave was a huge number of cases,
and we had a lot of severe illness, a lot of hospitalization
and death.
What makes that hospitalization and death hard to think about is that it was just heavily
disproportionately among people who were not vaccinated.
So if you just looked at the hospitalization and death numbers, you could sort of fool
yourselves into thinking that Omicron was much riskier for a vaccinated person than it really was.
So that's what we are coming out of. And I want to be clear that the human toll of Omicron was
really quite terrible. We're talking about levels of death that approached the peaks at any point
during the pandemic. So now we've had Omicron cases receding for several weeks and just as has been
the case in the past, hospitalizations follow cases by about a week
deaths follow cases by about three weeks and so not only have cases really plunged
But there's every reason to expect the deaths will continue to plunge for the next few weeks and there is nothing
As a new development on the horizon that is worrisome. There's no variant that we see coming.
And so the baseline is that cases may not plummet
all the way down towards zero,
but cases are gonna get quite low
for a variety of reasons we can talk about,
basically vaccination boosters and natural immunity.
And we're gonna be in a place that could look like,
if you can remember it, kind of the early summer of 2021,
where it really felt like
for the first time the pandemic was receiving.
The problem is, there's a very good chance that we're going to get a new variant, and
then we're going to end up in some new cycle that's going to introduce uncertainty.
But that's where we are right now.
First of all, thank you for the summary.
I really appreciate that.
Just follow up on it.
It never goes away entirely, I guess.
It's not like we ever magically arrive in 2019.
I think that's right.
I think it never goes away entirely.
And is there a scenario in which if we vaccinate enough people, it goes away entirely and we
get to your herd immunity?
There's that hypothetical scenario.
I think some observers have exaggerated how likely that was.
I think sometimes you've heard people basically blaming vaccine skepticism and lack of vaccine
equity around the world for not getting us to herd immunity.
But just realistically, it's not like we were going to snap our fingers and have billions
of vaccine doses overnight.
And vaccine skepticism is a real thing.
It's a real thing in the United States.
It's a real thing in much of the world.
You also weren't going to be vaccinating kids for a long time.
And so I think we didn't do this that well, but I actually am not sure how easy it ever
would have been to get to herd immunity.
And that's not great.
It would be really nice if we could snap our fingers and make COVID-19 disappear forever.
But we live with a lot of circulating respiratory illnesses.
We live with circulating coronaviruses.
We live with the flu.
And so there
definitely is a way to return to something that looks like normalcy, even with COVID still here,
or to take the framing of your question, we can get back to a world that looks a lot like 2019,
if we choose to, even with COVID continuing to circulate.
So many more questions to ask based on that.
Let me start with, what do you mean if we choose to and aren't there real risk associated
with that given that COVID is if I understand it deadlier than the flu?
Well, COVID is not deadlier for the flu for everybody.
It appears to be milder than the flu for children.
Now I don't want to get caught up in really close comparisons of is it a little bit milder than the flu for children. Now, I don't want to get caught up in really close
comparisons of, is it a little bit milder or is it a little bit more severe? Because we're going
to need a lot more data over many years to get that sense. But it's certainly in the same ballpark
as the flu. And it's in the same ballpark as the flu for vaccinated people, for most vaccinated
people. And I want to emphasize something, that includes vulnerable people. So the issue isn't so much that COVID is much more severe
for a vaccinated elderly person, or a vaccinated immunocompromised person.
COVID is probably somewhat more severe for some of those groups,
but it's in the same ballpark.
The issue is that COVID is another disease like the flu,
and that elderly people have vulnerable bodies,
and vulnerable health systems systems and immune systems.
And so I think this is really hard to think through the different layers of risk.
I think there are two things going on here. It's unavoidably complicated from a medical perspective.
And then there's also the psychological fact that COVID has dominated our lives for now.
What, two years, right? You started by saying, happy third year of COVID.
It's dominated our lives in a way that nothing in our lifetimes has. I mean, I really think
it's like nothing in terms of dominating daily life since World War II. I'm not saying it's
better or worse than World War II. I'm saying in terms of dominating daily life, I mean, I'm a New
Yorker. I'm a third generation New Yorker. I lived in New York on September 11th,
2001 and it was horrible, but within just a few weeks the vast majority of New Yorkers were back to something that looked like
normal life for them, right? Obviously there were 3,000 people kill and there was a lot of mourning,
but it's a city of 8 million people and for most people in the city their job
Three weeks after 9 11 was virtually identical to their job before 9 11. COVID isn't like that. I mean, I'm I'm in my attic
You appear to be in something that isn't an office, right?
COVID has
really dominated daily life and so I completely understand why we have a hard time
being rational about weighing the COVID risks.
And then you put on top of that the fact that there are these sort of three levels of risk to think about.
There's the risk to an unvaccinated person, which is of an order that's kind of like nothing else.
If you're not vaccinated, particularly if you're over 40 years old or over 60 years old,
COVID presents a risk to you like nothing else. If you are vaccinated or are a child,
the risks that COVID presents to you
look actually quite normal.
A kid almost certainly will face more risk
by getting in a car today than a kid will face from COVID.
And then the third level is,
well, but what about vaccinated people
who are vulnerable, elderly people
or immunocompromised people?
COVID is more threatening to them and that calls for responses to it that take it seriously.
But it's not necessarily of a different order of threat to them than the flu.
The flu also kills tens of thousands of Americans a year, overwhelmingly Americans who are
in vulnerable health.
And, you know, Rochelle Walensky, the director of the CDC, said that 75% of vaccinated deaths
came among people who had at least four risk factors.
And so, I think the way we should be thinking about COVID
is our efforts should be very much focused
on protecting a relatively small percentage of people,
essentially highly vulnerable people
and people who have chosen not to get vaccinated.
COVID doesn't actually present some huge new risk to the vast majority of people who choose
to get vaccinated.
And that's what makes it so hard to think about.
Yeah, so just to see if I can state some of this back here, I don't have many, or if
any of the risk factors, I'm triple-vaxed so as my wife, my kid.
So on some level, I can return to quote unquote, normal, but what makes
it, and in fact, as soon as we're done recording this, I'm going to go to a restaurant with
some friends inside. Yes. But what makes this hard to think about is I have parents who
are approaching 80 and living in a assisted living facility. I know people who are refused
to give vaccinated. So how do I deal with them? That has many levels, interpersonally,
and in terms of their health risks
and mine.
The math is not simple.
No, nor is the ethics of it.
I would really put those two groups
of people into different categories.
I think that people who have done all they can
to protect themselves from COVID,
which means at this point,
not only being fully vaccinated,
it's a bad phrase, fully vaccinated.
It means not only having had a full initial dose
of the vaccine, but also having been boosted.
I think people who are in that category,
who are in their 80s, who are immunocompromised.
And I think if you're talking about immunocompromised people,
who are people who deserve a lot of attention now,
I think it's important,
there are sometimes broad categories
of immunocompromised people,
not everybody who's immunocompromised is vulnerable to COVID specifically.
You know, you sometimes see estimates that 5% of Americans are immunocompromised.
It's not that many people who are specifically vulnerable to COVID.
So I think what we really want to do is focus on people who are specifically vulnerable.
And so at first when I was looking at the numbers, I was really alarmed about
what Omicron would mean for elderly vaccinated people. And the data is a little easier to
look at for the elderly than immunocompromised because the definitions are a little clearer,
but the patterns are probably the same. The more I looked at it, the more I thought that even for
elderly people, this looks like something on the order of the
flu when you look at the numbers for a boosted elderly person.
This looks like something on the order of the flu.
So I mean, I guess what I would say is given how easy it now is to take rapid tests, right?
If you're going particularly in an assisted living facility, if you're going to visit someone
in an assisted living facility, if you're going to be with someone
who's in their 80s or 90s,
and you have access to tests, take tests before you see them.
I think for those people, it's harder
because they have to decide whether they're comfortable
going to restaurants,
and I think any number of decisions is reasonable.
Look, I think with the unvaccinated,
I have a really hard time telling vaccinated people
that they need to organize their lives
to protect the health of the unvaccinated.
And the reason I say that is the unvaccinated aren't trying to protect you if you're vaccinated.
You just mentioned your parents who are in their 80s.
You know who's not doing things that protect your parents, the unvaccinated.
And so I have a really hard time saying, you know those unvaccinated people are making
decisions, they're their personal decisions, but they're doing things that threaten the
health of your parents.
And yet you should turn around and do a lot of things to protect them. I have a hard time going there, you know?
If they're not doing things to protect you, I have a hard time saying that you shouldn't go
interact with your kids' schools in order to protect unvaccinated adults. If you want to do it,
that's fine, but I have a hard time urging you to do that. Well, let's stay with the unvaccinated
for a second. And let me loop back to something you said earlier a couple of answers ago
I heard it as
Maybe those of us who are vaccinated shouldn't have been as angry as many of us were at the unvaccinated during the Obochron
Surge because there really wasn't a situation in which the whole world got vaccinated quick enough to have
Blunted that in a meaningful fashion.
Did I hear that correctly?
I think you heard the second half of it correctly.
But maybe not the first half.
I think it's fair to be frustrated
with the unvaccinated.
For precisely the reason I just said,
which is unvaccinated people are putting your parents at risk.
They really are.
I get that they're making a decision
that they think is best for them,
but they're putting almost no way
on the health and well-being of vulnerable Americans. And so I do think that there's been
a little bit of exaggeration of, oh, if only all Americans who were eligible to get vaccinated,
gotten vaccinated, we would have gotten to herd immunity. I think that's pretty unlikely. When
you take into account the fact that kids were not going to be vaccinated for a long time,
when you take into account that even if we had more equitable vaccine distribution around the world, we didn't immediately have billions of
vaccines, right? And so the vaccine rollout was always going to be slow. I think it's important
to take vaccine skepticism seriously in terms of realizing how widespread it is. I mean, it isn't
just Republicans in the United States. It's disproportionately Republicans in the United States.
But if you look around the world,
there's a lot of vaccine skepticism in France.
There is an enormous amount of vaccine skepticism
in some African countries.
There's also a lack of vaccine access in Africa,
but it really varies by country and Africa.
There have been countries in Africa, like South Africa,
that have not been able to use all the vaccine doses
that they got because of the level of vaccine skepticism. And so there's a lot of vaccine skepticism around the world. And when you add
kids in, I just think it's relatively unlikely that we were going to get to herd immunity. Now, who knows
we're sort of talking about a hypothetical. I still think it's fair to be frustrated with unvaccinated
people because even if we weren't going to get to herd immunity, even if we weren't going to make
this whole thing go away, unvaccinated person is much more likely to get COVID and to pass it along and potentially to pass it along to
a vulnerable person in this country. And they're also particularly likely to pass it on to another
unvaccinated person and cause terrible damage to that person. So I think it's okay to be frustrated
at unvaccinated people, even if we shouldn't say, if only more Americans got vaccinated,
this would all be over now. You talked about the likelihood of passing COVID along, but something I've heard from vaccine
skeptics is, well, what we've just seen during Omicron is that you can pass it along if
you're vaccinated.
Why should I get vaccinated?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, do you know that most drunk people who get behind the wheel don't get in an
accident?
I would still encourage you not to have three martinis and then get behind the wheel. And similarly, someone who is not vaccinated is more likely, substantially, more likely
to get COVID and pass it on than someone who is vaccinated.
It's like driving drunk.
What is your personal philosophy about having these dialogues across this yawning chasm of vaccine enthusiasm or let's just say compliance versus vaccine
skepticism.
I think it's really hard.
You and I haven't gotten into this yet.
We should at some point even briefly.
There are real costs to the pandemic restrictions that we've put in place.
There are real costs to isolation.
There are real costs.
They're not huge for most
people, but there are costs to wearing masks. That's why we didn't do it before. It makes life a
lot harder for people who are hard of hearing. It makes life harder for kids who are learning to
say, a lot of people just don't like it, you know, fox their glasses. So there are real costs to
these things. And by many, many measures, American society isn't functioning well right now.
Violent crime surged. And it has surging and it started surging right when the pandemic happened.
Vehicle crashes, same thing, drug overdoses, same thing, mental health problems, same thing.
Learning loss is, you know, is a huge problem.
And almost all these things are a bigger problem for lower income Americans and many of them
are bigger problem for Americans of color.
And so pandemic restrictions have costs.
And as you might imagine,
pointing out those costs is something
that political conservatives often like to emphasize.
I don't completely understand why America has sorted
on this thing by politics
because not all European countries have.
Being in favor of sort of opening up in Europe
doesn't align perfectly with politics.
Lots of leftists in Europe
are kind of less in favor of pandemic restrictions than Democrats in America, but it has in America.
And so when I've pointed out these costs of the pandemic, conservatives have sometimes echoed that
argument in it or invited me on their podcasts, and I tend to say yes unless they're promoting
disinformation. When I go on, what I try to do is I try to say, hey, if you like it when I point out that
isolation has costs, that even mass-quaring has costs, mass-quaring also has benefits,
by the way, makes you less likely to pass on the virus.
If you like it when I point out the costs, please listen to me about this as well.
The vaccines work.
They are miracles of science.
They work enormously well.
And so I'm a writer at The New York Times.
I'm obviously not someone who has inherent credibility
with vaccine skeptical right-wingers in America.
But I basically try to say,
if you listen to one message,
try to listen to the other.
I think the much more persuasive messengers
about the vaccine are gonna be people who themselves used to be skeptical and then weren't.
It's going to be people who have lost a relative from COVID and want to talk about it.
It's going to be Donald Trump.
I mean, look when Donald Trump said, hey, go get the vaccine.
He was sort of slowed, emphasized that, and he hasn't followed it up that much.
He's instead followed it up by kind of continuing to spout falsehoods about other things.
But it's really beneficial to have Donald Trump talking about the value of the vaccines because a lot of the people in the
United States who haven't taken the vaccines are big supporters of Donald Trump.
Didn't you get booed at one point first?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which makes it all the more valuable, right?
So, do you have anybody in your personal orbit you've had to have hard conversations
with about vaccines or is everybody you know on board.
That's a good question.
I have not had to have any hard conversations with friends or family members about the
vaccine.
I have had kind of tense exchanges with people about the vaccine, but they're readers,
right?
They're people who are interacting with me as a journalist in my professional role, not
in my personal role.
I mean, I sat in front of someone
in an airplane recently who was complaining loudly
about the vaccines.
It seemed pretty clear he wasn't vaccinated,
which obviously didn't love to be sitting
in front of him on the airplane, but what are you gonna do?
I'm vaccinated and I think the vaccines are extremely strong.
And so while I'd rather not be surrounded
by unvaccinated people, I also feel very well protected.
Did you engage with this person on the plane?
No, no, I read my book.
It's not like you're out there
engaging with every single person all the time.
When somebody hands you a megaphone
like the New York Times or a podcast,
you're gonna make your case,
but it doesn't seem like you're advising
that we should be engaged in hand-to-hand rhetorical combat
over this all the time.
Well, certainly not.
We shouldn't be engaged in hand-to-hand rhetorical combat all the time. time. Well, certainly not. We shouldn't be engaged in hand to hand rhetorical combat all the time.
I grew up in this wonderfully loving extended family with extremely different political views.
And one of the ways that it got along was basically politics was something that was rarely talked
about or at least not in some settings was a talked about a talk about an immediate
families, but not really extended family gatherings.
So I'm all in favor of things like that.
Sometimes I'm always wondering, when people say how to talk politics of Thanksgiving,
my attitude is a little bit like, don't talk politics of Thanksgiving.
There are a lot of great subjects to talk about a Thanksgiving that aren't politics.
But having said that, I do think if people have people in their lives who are not vaccinated
and they're sort of willing to swallow hard and say, hey, can I engage with you about
this?
Can I get you to talk about your doctor?
I think that's worth it, particularly if the person is
probably in the 40s and 50s, certainly in their 60s, 70s, 80s.
You mean you might be saving their life,
so I think it's worth it.
Much more of my conversation with David Lee and Hart
after this.
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Staying with vaccines,
you mentioned that in America,
we've sorted along political or partisan
or tribal lines on vaccines and also on lots of other stuff related to the pandemic.
You did some polling and wrote about what you've called the two COVID-Americans.
Can you hold forth on that, please?
Sure.
And let me just say at the outset, I find it really confusing.
Like I'm going to describe how we got here, step by step, and I kind of get each step.
But when you turn around and look at where we've ended up, it's really bizarre.
Like there is no real reason necessarily that all this stuff should align perfectly with
politics.
So the very brief history of it is COVID starts and we have a very polarizing
Republican president who says a series of things about COVID that are patently false. He says
it's no big deal. I think one of the reasons why people are uncomfortable with comparisons of
COVID to the flu, which is actually an excellent and relevant comparison for a boosted person,
is that Donald Trump started comparing COVID to the flu
before there were vaccines when it was a ludicrous comparison. And if you kind of just go back and look at the things that Trump said about the pandemic, they were just proved spectacularly wrong.
He said, it's gonna go away one day like a miracle. And so in response to him, not just him,
but in response to him. And I also think it played into a bunch of ideological instincts
that people have, conservatives like freedom,
rather than the government encouraging you
or telling you to do something.
I think liberals in the United States are often very concerned
about the notion of personal safety.
I think it's one of the reasons why playgrounds
and childhood, particularly in more liberal parts of the country
are sort of built to be even safer than playgrounds in Europe,
which is interesting.
You often hear the notion safety in terms of speech from the left.
So it played into a whole bunch of things.
And essentially what happened was people on the right viewed minimizing COVID as part
of their political identity.
People on the left viewed taking COVID seriously as part of their political identity.
I want to be clear that I am not equating those two attitudes in the first year of COVID,
particularly the attitude of the political left was just much more responsible and much
more in keeping with public health.
That continued to be the case when the vaccines come, and Democrats were much more eager
to go get the vaccine.
Obviously, it's a big country, tensens of millions of Republicans have been vaccinated. At first, among African Americans and Latinos who are predominantly Democrat, there was more
vaccine skepticism. But even that, trunk over time, and now, basically, the huge remaining
vaccine gap is the partisan gap. Something like 90 plus percent, it's probably 93 percent
of eligible Democrats are vaccinated. A huge share of Republicans are not vaccinated.
When we looked at this a month ago or so, there were more unvaccinated Republicans than boosted Republicans.
Now, maybe that's flipped, but that's just a remarkable thing. But then something funny happened, which is this switched from Democrats just being fully on the side of science and that attitude. It flipped and Democrats, even with the vaccines,
were so afraid of COVID that it became
a kind of weird form of liberal vaccine skepticism.
Liberals got the vaccine eagerly,
but they then sort of said,
well, even though I have the vaccine, it kind of doesn't matter.
And what we found in this poll is that Democrats
are so much more worried about their own personal
risk of COVID.
When you ask about your personal risk or in other polls, it's not just our poll, it's
found this.
When you ask, what do you think your chances are being hospitalized, not only are Democrats
much, much more anxious than Republicans, but younger vaccinated Democrats are more anxious
than older, unvaccinated Republicans, which is remarkable.
I actually think this might be the most telling thing.
Younger Democrats say they are more worried about their own risk of being hospitalized than
older Democrats.
So what could explain that?
That's certainly not a view consistent with science.
I think the thing that could explain it, and I've heard all the competing theories we can
talk about them if you want.
I don't think they hold up.
I think the only thing to can let get explained is that younger
Democrats are also substantially more liberal than older Democrats. And basically personal fear about
COVID risk correlates, not perfectly, but pretty strongly with where you are on the political spectrum.
The furt of the left you are, the more worried you are, even if you're vaccinated, the further to
the right you are, the less worried you are, even if you're not vaccinated. And it's sort of depressing because to me, it suggests
ways in which partisanship rather than science is dictating how we think about this.
If I had to sum up in two words, everything you just said, it would be irrationality
abounds. Yes. And I just want to pause here and say the form of irrationality
from Republicans has been more damaging than the form of irrationality from
Democrats.
But I do think a lot of Democrats are being irrational about this.
And I think their irrationality also causes damage, even if it is not as large
as vaccine skepticism. And the reason it causes damage even if it is not as large as vaccine skepticism.
And the reason it causes damage, I think many Democrats are exaggerating the risks of
COVID to themselves, to their families, to their friends, and are understating the costs
of isolation and disruption.
I think many Democrats are understating the damage we are doing to kids by keeping them
home from school, including during the Omicron Wave.
I think they are understating the damage we're doing to mental health by having people isolated
or in masks all the time.
And we have to get this balance right.
There are no easy answers.
There are real trade-offs here.
But I think what has often happened is a significant number of Americans who skew politically liberal
have tried to
solve for COVID rather than solving for total public health. And when you solve for COVID,
you do things like you keep kids home from school, even though COVID presents extremely
little risk to kids. A kid who has COVID and is contagious should be kept home from school.
A kid who's been exposed to it or a kid who is contagious a week ago, but no longer seems
to be, I think it's really hard to argue that we should be keeping those kids homes from school.
And yet, that's what we're doing.
And it's doing real damage to kids.
As you know, you have some critics.
Let me just give you a chance to,
specifically on this issue, you've got some critics.
Yeah, yeah, no, absolutely.
And let me just give you a chance to respond.
Another writer who I also respect Ed Young,
he didn't name you,
but seemed to be talking about you in a recent article, a profile of you in New York magazine.
And he said, I'm quoting here, we're still getting a daily mass death event.
Our hospitals were overwhelmed and broken.
And yet the narrative, I think, from many corners of the media has been one of optimism
of thinking about a return to normal.
I feel that a lot of influential people in this pandemic basically got vaccinated and then just kind of lost the plot. I also have a lot of respect for
Ed Young. I think the problem with this argument that talking about a return to normal is just
sunny optimism is that it completely ignores the huge costs for isolation and disruption.
So my attitude is not that we need to grapple with the balance of returning to normal because
we need to be sunny and happy or because it's nice to go out to dinner.
My argument is that the disruption and isolation of the pandemic has wrought huge costs on
our society and those costs have fallen disproportionately,
not on New York Times reporters or on magazine writers,
or on tenured epidemiologists and biologists.
We're mostly doing just fine.
When our kids get kept home from school
because of COVID, we still get paid.
We can do our jobs.
As a journalist, I can do my job for my attic.
And I don't have to wear a mask all day.
People who are in jobs where if they miss a day of work, because their kids are home, and because they're hourly workers, or as one person,
we just quoted in the Times, because they're hairstyles, and they just get paid when they have clients.
When their kids are kept home from school, they lose their paycheck. These are people who often
do, unlike me, have to wear a mask. They're a whole day at work, eight, 10 hours. And I think that a lot of this debate has ignored those costs.
And so just to repeat them, mental health problems have surged,
attempted suicides according to the latest CDC report
have particularly surged among adolescent girls.
Drug overdoses have absolutely gone through the roof
and the timing lines up with the pandemic.
Who overdoses from drugs in this country?
Mostly people who don't have a four-year college degree,
working class people.
Violent crime is sword.
Who are the disproportionately the victims of violent crime,
lower-income people, people of color?
Vehicle crashes have sword.
Again, the timing lines up almost perfectly
with the pandemic.
You wouldn't necessarily think it,
but who are the victims of vehicle crashes?
Disproportionately lower- income people and black and Latino
Americans.
Learning loss in school has gone way up, which is to say
learning has gone down.
Where is it going down the most?
It appears to have gone down the most probably among boys,
but certainly among lower income kids and kids who are
black and Latino.
And so the costs of this isolation and disruption
have been large,
they have fallen mostly on vulnerable Americans.
And what I have sort of yet to see
is someone grapple with those costs
and say yes, even in spite of those costs,
we should be closing schools.
And we didn't close schools entirely during Omekron,
but huge numbers of kids,
I mean tens of millions of kids missed multiple days.
A recent poll found that one in four kids
had missed at least a week of school in January.
At least a week in one month.
And so this isn't a kind of question of like,
let's go party.
It's a question of,
COVID has had horrible costs.
Isolation and disruption have had a horrible costs.
We can't simply wave away the
second of those horrible costs, which I think too often the political left has
done. We can't just wave away those costs and say, hey, let's be carrying human
beings and let's focus on COVID. Because if that's all we focus on, we're going to
hurt a lot of people and we're going to hurt a lot of working class people. And so
what I would urge people who said we can't get back to normal.
What I would urge them to do is focus on the whole picture.
Don't just focus on professionals.
Think about this as the entire country and think about what is it that would actually maximize
public health.
That doesn't just mean let it rip.
That doesn't just mean let's have all kids go to school.
It doesn't just mean everyone take their masks off. It doesn't mean have everything go back to normally. It
really doesn't. But it also doesn't mean that the way to be compassionate is to focus
only on COVID. And I think that's the mistake that some people have made.
So how do we balance this? How do we make public health decisions
from the broadest perspective of,
let's be very mindful of the costs
to the most vulnerable people in our society
from these COVID restrictions?
At the same time, let's also protect
the people who are vulnerable to the disease.
You know, one of your critics has said that
the idea that 2,000 people died today, it's acceptable
because they were old, they were sick, or they were unvaccinated, and that's eugenic
and genocidal.
Yes.
I don't hear you saying that for the record.
But these are two defensible values, and so how do we walk between them?
Yeah, setting aside the sort of kind of ludicrous adjectives thrown around there, which I know
you weren't adopting.
I do think this is a really healthy debate to be having, right?
It matters. We live in a democracy. We should be having passionate debates.
That's the way it should work. I mean, we should try to avoid making it personal.
Too much of a political discourse in this country has kind of become personal.
But the notion that we have to have passionate debates about this are really important.
I think, again, we can't just say you have to care about vulnerable people, or we could just say you have to care about vulnerable people,
but you have to look at it in a holistic way. So do we need to care about the elderly? Absolutely.
Do we need to care about the immunocompromised? Absolutely. I have some specific thoughts about things we're not doing to protect the elderly and immunocompromise.
Do we need to care about the unvaccinated? Absolutely. But the debate can't end there. Do we
need to care about lower income kids, about black kids, about Latino kids, about white kids
and Asian kids, even if the white and Asian kids aren't falling behind in school as much
as the black and Latino kids, we do.
Do we need to care about the huge toll of opioids, mostly in working class communities, that
has gotten much worse because of the isolation during the pandemic?
Do we need to care about the increase in suicide attempts among adolescent girls?
Do we need to care about the increases in mental health?
Do we need to care about the fact that blood pressure?
Nationwide has gone up during the pandemic. We are social creatures. We are built to interact with each other. And when we don't,
when people stay inside their houses, when they cover their faces, that has costs. And so I think
it is a really hard issue about how to balance. But we can't get there if we pretend that isolation and disruption hasn't had costs.
If we look at only one side of the ledger, we're going to make decisions that hurt people
and that's what I worry we are sometimes doing.
It still doesn't answer your question.
How do we do it?
Because it's really, really hard and we can talk a little bit about maybe how you do it,
sort of not my job to tell the country how to do it, but I think the only way to do it is to balance
these different things. It really is. And I also think that we have to have an honest conversation
about the role that the unvaccinated are playing in this because they are overwhelmingly the people
who are suffering severe illness here. And we have to think about,
I'm not saying this answers the question, but should we to protect the unvaccinated, be willing
to damage children, and particularly lower income children? I don't know what the answer to that
question is. Obviously, it's a pointed question. I can tell you the way we've answered that question for much of the pandemic is we have said yes we are willing to hurt children to protect the unvaccinated.
It's not obvious to me that that is the right decision. Much more of my conversation with David
Leonhart after this. Do you have any thoughts on how to convince the unvaccinated or is that just never going
to happen?
No, I think it can happen.
I think we've seen people doing really good work about that.
I think a lot of it's about getting vaccines super convenient, recognizing that the biggest
predictor vaccination is partisanship.
It's not income, but vaccination rates are lower for working class people than they are for professionals.
And so some of the same things I said before about missing work applied to vaccines, you know, many people have gotten vaccinated, including me,
feel pretty crummy for a day afterwards. So I can just get in bed when I feel crummy, but someone who has an hourly job can't necessarily.
So I think it's important to put pressure on employers to give people time off. I think it is important to make vaccine so convenient that maybe someone says, you know what?
Saturday morning I'm gonna go and it's a long weekend. Maybe they were on the fence and they
go on a Saturday morning and they think, I may feel crummy Sunday and Monday but I don't have to
be back at work till Tuesday. You know, maybe they work a shift where they're off Tuesday and Wednesday
and they decide to go Tuesday morning. I think it's having nurses and doctors available
to answer people's questions.
I think many people are not hard-know on the vaccine.
Many people are hard-know,
but many others are still somewhere
in the willing to consider it.
And when you listen to people who've actually gone
done this work, I really don't think we should give up
on trying to persuade people to get vaccines.
I think the value of it is so huge.
I think it's heartbreaking to hear people
who didn't get vaccinated and then are very sick
and regret it.
And so I think we should absolutely keep trying.
It's not simply a matter of if we give everyone access,
they'll get vaccinated.
I mean, any American who wants to go get vaccinated
can now go get vaccinated,
but we should make it as easy as possible
and we really should not give up.
But obviously a big factor in some percentage, a large percentage of vaccine skepticism
is this irrationality that we've been talking about.
And as you've said, there's irrationality
on both sides here of the political divide.
I wonder if you have thoughts about how to address that.
How do we get people thinking more clearly about this and other issues? Because
these tribal goggles that we tend to dawn on so many of the most important issues from climate
to race on and on seem to, to my opinion, just incredibly damaging. And so, yeah, I'll stop talking
and let you talk if you have anything to say about how we address this.
It's really hard. It's really hard. I mean, I do think it's really important to try to keep public debate on a level where you sort of don't try to disqualify the people you disagree with.
You know, and so I would encourage people, when you see someone you disagree with, don't
necessarily accuse them of being a bad human being,
right?
Don't accuse them of spreading falsehoods.
There are people who spread falsehoods,
as I've mentioned in this conversation,
Donald Trump is one of them.
There are also lots of people who are gonna disagree
and both be dealing in something that looks like facts.
And so I would encourage people,
recognize that passionate disagreement can exist without the
person you're disagreeing with either being a liar or being evil.
And I think often we see people forget that in this country.
I think, you know, as I just told you, I just had some sort of tough, substantive words
for people who I think are ignoring a lot of the cost of the pandemic.
I think their motives are overwhelmingly good.
Overwhelmingly good. They want to protect immunocompromised people. They want to protect elderly people. They want to protect unvaccinated people.
Often they're showing incredible care for the unvaccinated. I have deep respect for that.
The fact that I think they're sometimes ignoring some costs or adding up the ledger in a way that leads us to do things that are damaging,
doesn't make them bad people. And I just would sort of encourage
everyone to try to keep that in mind, that whatever your issue is, it's just really important.
I mean, I had Ross Dalfit as a conservative columnist at the time. He and I used to do a podcast
together. And I was really, I am kind of alarmed at his lack of alarm on climate, but I don't recall
Ross ever lying about climate change.
I think Ross is an enormously decent human being and it's hard, right?
Because sometimes I was really frustrated at him and I think he has a set of views on climate
change that we're probably are going to be damaging to his children and mine.
But that's what political debates are often about.
And so that's one thing.
I think the second thing I would say is try to limit the number of debates,
number of issues that you decide are existential threats to the future.
If you've decided that climate change and COVID policy and the future of Medicare
and abortion policy and charter schools and gun control.
And I could list five more things.
If you've decided that anyone who disagrees with you on those is essentially anti-American,
that's really hard.
Like we have to have some issues that we could compromise on.
We have to.
Right?
Like if you asked me, what are the issues that are above any other issues, I would say climate
change in democracy.
And I might put inequality in living standards, which are kind of one issue, just below that,
because I think it affects our entire society.
I have some strong views about some other issues, but I just can't get them up in that pantheon,
because we have to be able to disagree about a lot of these things.
It's the way a democracy is going to work.
Having said that, I am deeply, deeply, deeply humble that any of those things
I just laid out will help, but I do think they're useful things for individuals to think
about.
Staying on things that might be useful for individuals to think about. In the foregoing
you talked about, largely your emphasis was on how do we relate to people with whom we
disagree. I wonder if you have thoughts about how we relate to our own biases and our own potential
for irrationality.
That's a really humbling and scary thing to consider.
What do you have to say about that?
Yeah, I think that's also a really good individual exercise.
So I would say a few things.
One, a friend of mine introduced a game at a dinner party recently where, you know, be
honest about whether you're basically on the left or right half of the spectrum.
And then you have to talk about what the view you have
is that most runs counter to where you are in the spectrum.
Right?
So if you're a liberal, you got to describe
what your most conservative view is.
Right?
So I think exercises like that are kind of interesting
because it helps you a little bit put yourself
in the shoes of other people, right?
It helps you think about when you disagree with people you normally agree with.
Now that's hard in our super polarized society because
increasingly some people don't even have those views, but I still think it's useful.
I think it's useful to think about when have you changed your mind about something?
A political issue in your life. When was there something that you used to have one view?
And now you have another. What changed your mind? What do you think now about the people about something, a political issue in your life. When was there something that you used to have one view?
And now you have another.
What changed your mind?
What do you think now about the people
who have the view that you used to have?
And then finally, I think it's important.
And this might be a little bit more for journalists
and experts than it is for other people,
but think about when you got something wrong.
So I try to write one piece every year looking back over the things from the previous year and when you got something wrong. So I try to write one piece every
year looking back over the things from the previous year in which I got something wrong.
And I don't mean spelling mistakes, which we correct immediately. I mean bits of analysis
that don't look so good in retrospect. So I had three things in 2021. I underestimated
how many breakthrough infections there would be among vaccinated people.
There were very few percentage-wise before Delta, but then with Delta there were a lot.
I underestimated how important boosters were.
There was kind of a debate among experts about whether immunity was really waning, and
I kind of quoted both sides as if they had equal claims on the evidence, and turns out
that the people who were worried about and waning immunity and strongly in favor of boosters, the more evidence came in, the better they looked.
And I kind of presented it as a toss-up,
which is how it was in my mind,
but it wasn't a toss-up anymore.
And after 30 years in which inflation really wasn't a problem
in the US, if anything, the main problem
was people worried too much about inflation,
and screamed that we're about to have inflation win,
in fact, the bigger problem was that we didn't
have strong economic growth or rage growth.
Obviously, inflation became a big problem. So So you know, it's not particularly fun to
look back and talk about these are some things I wrote and in retrospect I think I was wrong about
them. But I think it's healthy and I would encourage other people to do versions of that and try to
think about okay what were the mistakes or the things I did that led to that? And you will never be perfect.
You'll still make mistakes,
but maybe you'll at least not make the same ones repeatedly.
Not only is it healthy,
but it's in your self-interest
because you're likely to make fewer mistakes going forward,
I believe, if you're examining the biases
that forced you into errors in the past.
Yeah, I agree.
I do think in the world we're in, it's in your self-interest, but I also just want to
say it's hard, because people, I promise you, will tell you, we'll remind you of the things you got
wrong, which is fine, but like, to people who are thinking about doing this, like if you start doing
it and you think, this is a little uncomfortable, please, still, keep going, do it. It's going to be a
little bit longer, careful. It's like, when I go and speak to college kids who are either in a journalism school or
working for the school paper, one of the things I always tell them is if you want to be a writer,
don't let the fact that you think you're not good at it stop you from being a writer.
Because that is the exact attitude I had when I was a teenager, which is wow, I really like this.
If I weren't so bad at it, I would do it. And you know what? You can get better at stuff.
And in the case of writing, you might never actually feel good at it, but you can get better at it. And sort of similarly, I think this is one of these
things in which there's just huge value and struggle, but that doesn't make struggle
necessarily enjoyable. And so just don't confuse the fact that there's value with the fact that
while you're doing it, it might be unpleasant. Hey, man.
Let me ask about another aspect of pandemic psychology.
You have brought up a couple of times, vehicle crashes.
Yes.
I was particularly disturbed by a recent article in the New York Times about not just vehicle
crashes, but pedestrian deaths by my colleague, Simoneero based in New Mexico. And the thesis Simone seemed to be advancing if I read the article correctly was that it was linked
to the degradation of social cohesion as a consequence of the pandemic.
Yes.
And I just would love to hear your thoughts about this that in some ways it seems like this pandemic,
as we enter year three, has put us in a situation
where we care less about one another.
We are willing to be reckless in a way
that really endangers other people.
Yes, Simone quoted multiple experts in that piece,
and I found their words just really affecting.
I mean, I said this to some colleagues of mine that
I've spent a lot of time talking to experts about COVID,
about the costs of the virus itself, about the costs of the sort of side effects that come from the isolation and disruption.
But Simone's article had like three of the most eloquent lines I'd read anywhere about this broad issue.
They were all about vehicle crashes and pedestrians, but the larger point
really applies in other areas. It's not that, you know, we've been in stuck in our houses,
and that's frustrating and no fun, and we get in the car, and we say, I don't care. I'm just
going to drive around. That's obviously not the way it works, right? It's that what they were
basically saying is that people feel frustrated. They feel frustrated by the amount of illness
and death that has been around. They feel frustrated by, and I'm now going beyond their quotes, that they feel frustrated by,
you know, the fact that maybe their brother wasn't able to have a wedding and they couldn't see
their whole family. Maybe their cousin missed her sweet 16-party and the family couldn't get
together. Maybe people couldn't gather for a funeral. Maybe people couldn't be at the bedside of someone who was dying.
And just in lots of little ways, we all know this.
I mean, sometimes I get an email from a reader that is angry.
There's a certain level of anger I'm just not going to reply to.
But then there's kind of like a middle ground where they're angry,
but they're also kind of making a substantive point.
And sometimes I'll reply and I'll say, hey, thanks for your note.
I appreciate the critique.
We don't have to do this angrily.
We can do this. We can disagree not angri appreciate the critique. We don't have to do this, Angerly.
We can do this.
We can disagree not, Angerly.
And the reaction I get almost to a one is some version of, oh, I didn't mean to be
angry, right?
And I promise they were angry in the tone, right?
It's like, oh, no, no.
But what I think that's about is that they weren't thinking of me as a human being when
they wrote that email, right?
They were thinking of me as a byline.
They were thinking of me as the New York Times. They were thinking who knows? They were thinking of me as a byline, they were thinking of me as the New York Times, they were thinking of who knows, they
were thinking of me as someone on the other end of an email. They were thinking of me as
a human being. Once I became a human being, the fact they thought I was terribly wrong about
something, they were able to say that without being hostile, right? And I think what's happened
over the last two years is we've been deprived of a lot of that human interaction.
We've been deprived of the things that let us say
in a workplace, hey, you know what,
I really disagree with you on this,
but you're a nice person.
And we talked about the movie.
We both saw this weekend when we bumped into each other
at the coffee stand, or we laughed about the fact
that the New York Jets lost again in horribly humiliating fashion.
And we had a human interaction.
And I think we've had so many less of those
that it is just caused frustration and anti-social behavior
and aggressive behavior to just become much more common
and acceptable.
Obviously, social media sometimes foments that.
But it's not just social media.
And to try to land this answer at the same place
where you had it take off.
We see it with the way people drive their cars.
They're just, they're more aggressive.
They say, Oh, I'm going to get through this light.
They're less caring about others.
And that has huge costs.
And so I don't think as we start to remove COVID restrictions, I don't think there's some
magic bullet that everything just goes back to,
society's going to be healthy, but I would encourage us to remember that there are huge numbers of flashing red lights that are saying that we are suffering from isolation and disruption. It's
vehicle crashes, it's violent crime, it's drug overdoses, it's the way kids are behaving in schools,
it's Americans blood pressure, it's suicide attempts. It's one thing after another.
And we are built to be social creatures.
And it's not especially shocking that when we have a two-year experiment in which we force
an enormous amount of isolation and less human contact on people, that people respond by
behaving really badly in all kinds of ways that don't necessarily obviously follow from,
oh, people were stuck inside their houses, they weren't interacting with each other,
they weren't smiling with each other, thus they were driving more aggressively.
But that's what's happened.
Yeah, and I guess this is sort of a bummer of sentiment to be voicing toward the end here.
But some of these flashing red lights, I think, will go to yellow, maybe green
as we reduce the levels
of isolation.
But to me, the incivility, the polarization, tribalism, dehumanization, loneliness, anxiety,
depression, those were all on the rise pre-pandemic.
From my grasping of the data, which may be wrong, but I think it's right. And I
just worry that while things may get less shitty because the pandemic moves into a less of an
emergency stage, we have social fabric issues that have been made measurably worse and were already bad.
We do have social fabric issues, and it's one of the reasons when I was sort of talking about
to me the kind of what are the pantheon of the most important issues
I put democracy and climate change at the top and I said well
Maybe inequality and living standards should be there too and I do really think that the decline and trust that we've had in
society and the rise and anger a lot of it stems from the fact that huge numbers of Americans have not had rising
Living standards. I'm not saying that's the only reason, but how could it not be a huge reason? We know that's the case, and COVID
didn't create that, and it's not going to go away without COVID. And so I do really think that
we have a bunch of extremely challenging issues. I think this isn't my line originally, maybe
obviously, although I'm either not remembering
or I don't know who's it was.
History is often a source for some optimists, which is when you look at some of the things
that the country has grappled with in the past, when you look at the problems that we've
had, it's not like things were great in the past and now we're going down this sort of
cycle to hell.
We may be going down a cycle to hell.
There's no guarantee that we get out of this,
but the country has overcome enormous problems
in the past, including some that I think are clearly worse
than the problems we're dealing with now,
particularly for people who aren't in privileged circumstances.
And so I think sometimes when you look at history
and you look at people who struggled to make a better society,
there is some source of optimism that you can take from that.
And on a smaller level, I do think a lot of people, the overwhelming majority of people
are fundamentally decent people who enjoy not being with all other people, but who enjoy
being with other people.
And so whenever we can get back to versions of that that look more normal, whenever school can look more normal,
whenever the workplace can look more normal.
And yeah, it looks more normal than it did
in the summer of 2020, but it's still not normal.
Whenever we can get back to that,
ideally with this little virus cost as possible,
I do think that some of these problems
we are going to realize really did,
if not start with the pandemic,
accelerate, reach a completely different level.
When you look at the charts, you see the start of the pandemic on a lot of these measures
of bad behavior.
And I'm not sure what attitude to have other than I'm kind of optimistic that is certain
normal forms of human behavior return.
We'll see some of this really bad behavior that we see in one place after another receipt.
Let's end on that some optimism. David, thank you so much. Thanks for having me and thanks for such a thoughtful conversation.
Pleasure. Thanks again to David really enjoyed that conversation. Also, thank you to the people who work so hard to make this show.
Samuel Johns, Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Cashmere, Justin Davie, Kim Baikama, Maria Wertel,
and Jen Poient, and our friends over at UltravioletAudio, who do our audio engineering.
We'll see you coming up on Friday for the second of our two-part series on the two-year
anniversary of COVID.
It's Lama Rod Owens, a fan favorite.
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