What Matters "How the virus is devastating communities of color" - Zachary B. Wolf, CNN newsletter

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Questions? Comments? what.matters@cnn.com

 

: How's your pandemic going?

Absolutely everyone will feel the effects of the coronavirus. But not everyone will feel them equally.

 

What is becoming painfully clear is that people who might already have been struggling are having a much more difficult time than others as society grinds to a halt.

 

Social distancing is a luxury. Staying home may be the government's recommended behavior, but it's a privilege to be able to work from home.

 

You cannot deliver things from home. You cannot stock shelves from home. You cannot wk @ a meat-processing plant from hm. You definitely can't be a hospital doctor or a caregiver & an assisted living facility from home.

 

In the early days of the US outbreak, coronavirus afflicted cruisers & business travelers. Now we are seeing a divide between the communities that can practice distancing & the ones that can't. Leaving the house for an hourly wage is risking your life.

 

That reality is disproportionately affecting people of color. 

 

Read reports about who Covid-19 is often killing -- it's grocery store workers, nurses, meat industry workers. It is a terrible reminder that these workers take care of our sick & our old, make supply chains possible & allow everyone to prosper.

 

Chronic problems made worse. The US surgeon general spoke last week about the fact that minority communities are more likely to suffer from chronic medical issues & those are compounded by inequality. There have been more African American & Hispanic deaths from Covid-19 in New York than their share of the population.  

 

"The chronic burden of medical ills is likely to make people of color less resilient to the ravages of Covid-19 & it is possibly, in fact likely, that the burden of social ills is also contributing," Dr. Jerome Adams, 1 of the top-ranking African Americans in the Trump administration, said during a White House press briefing. 

 

: 'The Color of Covid'

CNN's Don Lemon & Van Jones will host an hr long special, "The Color of Covid" on Saturday at 7pm PT to take a look @ how coronavirus is affecting communities of color in the US. 

 

I spoke w/ Jones about the special & how the pandemic is exacerbating racial inequality... 

Devastating communities of color

ZW: Your special is called "The Color of Covid." What is it about & what are you trying to accomplish w/ it?


VJ: We are trying to sound the alarm that this virus is devastating communities of color, especially African American communities. This outcome surprised a lot of people, because the 1st victims of the virus were mostly white people who had traveled to Asia. Next came elderly people who were dying in nursing homes. Therefore, many people assumed that this disease kills only white people & older people.


But now the data is clear. The hot spots for this virus are disproportionately in black & brown communities. Ampersand the hottest spots of all are in the jails, prisons & detention centers. So the government should be rushing masks, tests & ventilators to the hot spots -- flooding black & brown communities w/ PPE, testing equipment & top-end hospital equipment.


Ampersand people of color who take pills every day for health issues, or who sometimes use an inhaler, should be extra careful. Folks need to shelter in place, wash hands religiously, etc. Also, we should take steps to boost our immune systems, etc., by cutting out sugary junk food, sleeping more, meditating, drinking water & eating fresh vegetables when we can.


We can’t control what comes out of politicians’ mouths. But we can control what we put into our own mouths. It is time for us to take control & own our health.

 

Pandemic upon epidemic

ZW: This is a disease that anyone can get, but there is proof it has been more deadly for people of color -- & that it is now spreading faster among food supply workers & others who never expected to be "front-line" personnel. After preparing for this special, is there any 1 reason for this disparity you're hoping people come away w/?


VJ: In communities of color, Covid-19 is extra-lethal because it is a pandemic jumping on top of multiple preexisting epidemics. Black & brown communities already have a disproportionate share of high blood pressure, asthma, diabetes & obesity. Each one of these factors -- especially high blood pressure -- makes it easy for this virus to kill you. Period. That’s why people in their 50s, 40s & 30s are dying from this virus in the black community. 


2nd, we have an epidemic of poverty & low-wage jobs. Nearly every person I see working in a grocery store, or dropping off these packages, is a person of color. Now they call them “essential workers,” so they can’t hide @ hm. But that means they are in essential danger. & few, if any, are getting the kind of hazard pay that they should, since they are risking their lives to keep America functioning during a plague.


Too many African Americans are underinsured & underemployed, on a good day. So when a pandemic hits, we are especially vulnerable.

 

How prisons are becoming death traps

ZW: You've done a lot of wk on sentencing reform & prison overpopulation, so I'm guessing the portion dedicated to Covid-19 striking incarcerated Americans -- who are forbidden from social distancing -- was of particular interest to you. We've seen reports of a hunger strike at Cook County jail, which is a coronavirus hot zone. An inmate in Washington died from Covid-19 after being denied bail. Some inmates are being let out early. Will this pandemic lead to any permanent changes in how we put people behind bars? 


VJ: It should change the way we think about prisons. In the age of the virus, any jail sentence could be a death sentence. In fact, even a simple arrest could lead to death, if someone is transported in a police car w/ the virus, or put in a holding cell w/ someone who has the virus. It is impossible to “social distance” inside a jail or a prison, where most people are packed in like sardines. So we need to really rethink how we want to use arrest & incarceration, during this time. We got so used to taking poor people’s liberties for minor reasons. But now we could end up taking their lives.


By the way, the prisons & jails are becoming death traps. Ampersand that should concern everyone. Because it is impossible to defeat a plague o/s the prisons, if you let a pandemic run rampant i/s the prisons. Not only could our jails & prisons turn into morgues over the next few wks, w/ tens of thousands of people dying behind the walls. The guards, staff & food services people will also get sick. Ampersand they will keep going in & out of those facilities -- bringing the virus in & out, reinfecting both populations. Plus, the U.S. has 2.4 million people behind bars; if they all get sick from this virus, it could overwhelm every hospital & clinic in the country -- knocking them out of use for the rest of us. 


To protect correctional officers, staff, incarcerated people & everyone else, we need to safely & intelligently shrink the prison population. Governors, courts & sheriffs should order the release of all people behind bars who are elderly & sick, as long as they pose no danger to anyone. People who are imprisoned for minor probation & parole violations, or minor crimes, should also be sent to home confinement. Unless someone is a real threat, everyone’s bail should be dropped to zero, so folks can await trial while quarantining @ hm. Nobody new should be jailed during this period for a minor offense.


The REFORM Alliance has been working w/ our allies in  2 dozen states to implement many of these ideas. Thousands of people are exiting jails & prisons in those states & that exodus has not had a negative impact on the crime rate. Tens of thousands more should come home.

 

Social distancing is a luxury not everyone can afford 

ZW: The government is telling people they must social distance, but that's a luxury. I can write this newsletter from home, but I'm helped by people who deliver food, keep the internet & utilities running & much more. What can we do to keep this pandemic from further splitting the country between the people who can stay @ home & those who cannot?


VJ: Rich people create social distance for themselves all the time. They live in gated communities & they sleep in huge mansions w/ almost nobody in them. But if you are poor, it’s impossible to create social distance. If you live in a housing project, a homeless shelter, a women’s shelter, a refugee camp, a detention center or a jail -- how do you create social distance? The inability to create social distance is 1 of the defining features of poverty.


So we almost have to see gloves & masks & other PPE as a human rights issue. The right to protect yourself is something that governments should be trying to guarantee to citizens. Again, they should be rushing in masks, gloves, gowns, everything, into places where low-wealth, low-wage people live.


Those of us who are well-off should honor the essential workers. 1 way to do this is by supporting a big boost to the minimum wage, as well as better family leave & health care policies. Ampersand when this is over, cities need to put up statues honoring nurses & grocery store workers who lost their lives on the front lines of this pandemic.

 

It would be a shame to just let this NBA season end 

ZW: On a much lighter note, you've got a section on a world w/o sports and how athletes are trying to lead. So I'll ask if you have an opinion on how or whether the NBA should try to finish what was shaping up to be a thrilling end to the season for the Lakers, the Clippers & the Bucks… ("read-on, see website & subscribe") - O-!


VJ: Test 'em all. Then let the healthy ones play in empty arenas, w/ robotically controlled TV cameras. It will be interesting to see who has managed to stay in shape during this period. I sure have not.

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