THE ABSURD TIMES
This
should explain the name of this publication.
Absurdities,
Trump, and Gaza
By
Czar
Donic
At
one time, we thought that it was pointless to continue publication, as the
absurd would be obvious to all. That proved to be an incorrect assumption. We thought it would be needed if Hillary was
elected, but it is obvious that not even Trump is absurd enough to alienate
enough people. In fact, it is even possible that Trump will be re-elected despite
his obvious idiocy. The most recent
example was his suggested use of disinfectant, taken internally or by
injection, may be a cure to at least preventative measure against the corona-19
virus. This is confirmed by a near deluge number of calls for advice of how to
use it or calls for help due to poisoning as a result of people consuming such
chemicals themselves.
I
believe it was P. T. Barnum who long ago stated that nobody ever went broke by
underestimating the stupidity of the American public. One simple example was the problem he had with paid visitors to
one of his exhibits. People did not move away quickly enough and thus new
paying customers were kept out. He solved this by putting up a sign, leading to
a self-locking exit. The sign said “To the egress.” People would hurry up out
and find themselves out on the street. Problem solved.
The
failure to act when we were first aware of Covid has led to between 50 and 60
thousand deaths in the USA. That is about 25% of the world’s total, and we have
about 4% of the population. When Trump
is asked "what metric do you use to judge?”, he points to his own head. A
helpful book of Republicans is THE REPUBLICAN WAR OF SCIENCE, Chris Mooney,
published in 2005. It was endorsed by officials in both the Nixon and Ford
Administrations. Now such stands by Republicans will not be tolerated. Science
is now seen as just one more ideology, next to supply-side Economics,
Christianity, Socialism, Communism, and anti-immigration.
Does
anybody remember the idea that every person will get $1,200, announced about a
month or so ago? I know of no one who
has received it and neither has my bank.
Perhaps some have. The IRS website has said the payments will be
automatic for many people. There was a
section where you could inquire further, but it was “down for repairs” the last
time I checked.
You
might have fun if if you can see the signer from the Governor of Georgia. I
swear that he looks very much like George Bernard Shaw doing some sort of disco
dance (I'm not sure how to classify it, to be honest). The President of the
American reporters association titles a new article “First Row at the Trump
Show”. It seems pretty funny and
accurate – a valid definition of the absurd.
Finally,
Trump is busy blaming China for the virus and some rumors have it that it was developed
in a laboratory near Wuton. Well, Trump supporters have gone after every
minority group he has blamed or stereotyped, and Asians are the new target,
especially “Oriental Looking" ones.
It seems as though the race problem could be solved if the white people
and the black people got together and beat up all the yellow people? It is not
clear where the brown people would fit into this. While many Mexicans have been
classified as “essential workers," Trump has lowered the legal minimum
wage for them.
Well,
meanwhile, in the Middle East:
Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: This
is Democracy Now!, Democracynow.org, The Quarantine
Report. I’m Amy Goodman. We’re turning now to Gaza, where fears continue
to grow about what a rampant outbreak of the coronavirus might do to the
occupied Palestinian territory, already crippled by years of Israeli sanctions.
The Gaza Strip thus far has only reported 17 confirmed cases of COVID-19, but this week the Israeli army halted testing there
after just two days of administering tests.
On
Thursday, the International Committee of the Red Cross donated medical
equipment to Gaza hospitals, but its weak medical system remains ill-equipped
to serve an influx of patients. The Red Cross reports Gaza has just 93
ventilators for a population of more than 2 million Palestinians. This is Gaza
Health Ministry official Abdullatif Alhaj.
ABDULLATIF ALHAJ: Facing this COVID-19 as a pandemic, Gaza is facing this pandemic with its
fragile and overstretched health system due to lots of factors, like the long
years of closure and siege, and the poverty and loss of — I mean, shortage of
many resources.
AMY GOODMAN: Crowded
refugee camps in the Occupied Territories are particularly at risk. This is
Um-Shady, a Palestinian woman living at a refugee camp in Gaza with her family,
speaking to the BBC.
UM-SHADY: [translated]
We know that here in Gaza there are no resources to fight this virus. We’re all
in God’s hands here. … People don’t have enough to eat, and there is no work.
Had there been any means to work, we would have helped ourselves. But we can’t
go out there. I borrowed money to buy food for this week. But next week, I
might not be able to borrow anything to feed these kids.
AMY GOODMAN: For
more, we’re joined by Dr. Tarek Loubani, Palestinian-Canadian doctor, emergency
room physician, based in London, Ontario, Canada. He volunteers in the Gaza
Strip, returned from a trip there last month. Dr. Loubani recently wrote
an op-ed in The
Washington Post headlined “Gaza is an open-air prison. As covid-19
spreads, it’s time to lift the siege.”
Dr.
Loubani, it’s great to have you back on Democracy Now! Talk
about the situation there, before we talk about what’s happening in Canada, as
you are an emergency room doctor. What’s happening in Gaza?
DR. TAREK LOUBANI: In the Gaza Strip
right now, we see a situation in which, very clearly, we’re not able to detect
the active cases that are happening and are definitely circulating within the
Gaza Strip. Testing is severely limited. There are fewer — there have been
fewer tests in Gaza so far throughout the entire pandemic than there were in
South Korea yesterday. And so we know that we don’t see all of the cases that
exist. We know that we don’t have the capacity to treat. And we know that these
cases are not just circulating, but are also about to spike in terms of their
severity and consequences.
AMY GOODMAN: And
talk about the latest news that we have out of Gaza. But first I want to go to
the world-renowned linguist, political dissident Noam Chomsky. I just had a
chance to speak with
him a week or two ago from his home, where he’s sheltering at home in Tucson,
Arizona, and asked him what the coronavirus pandemic means for Gaza.
NOAM CHOMSKY: International
institutions have pointed out that by 2020 — that’s now — Gaza will probably
become barely livable. About 95% of the water is totally polluted. The place is
a disaster. And Trump has made sure that it will get worse. He withdrew funding
from the support systems for Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank — UNRWA, killed the funding; Palestinian hospitals, killed the
funding. And he had a reason. They weren’t praising him enough. They weren’t
respectful of the god, so, therefore, we’ll strangle them, even when they’re
barely surviving under a harsh and brutal regime.
AMY GOODMAN: If
you could expand on what Professor Chomsky is saying, Dr. Tarek Loubani? And, I
mean, you have direct experience in Gaza, have been there a number of times. In
fact, you were shot by the Israeli military when you were there, as you were
there as a medic helping people in Gaza involved with a nonviolent protest, who
were being gunned down.
DR. TAREK LOUBANI: The situation in
Gaza has been terrible for years. I’ve been going there for about a decade. And
one of the things that always shocked me is that each trip I think to myself,
“This cannot possibly get worse,” and then, each trip, it does. And this was
truly one of the worst visits that I had had.
You
know, we had some improvement in electricity. We were up to five or six hours a
day of electricity, and people thought, “Wow! That’s so wonderful!” But in the
hospitals, all of our supplies were out, in general, even without anything. We
barely have enough gloves to proceed day to day. For example, usually I would
carry a pair of gloves in my pocket and then only put one when I treat a
patient, so that I would spare the other one, and then, with my bare hand,
would try to touch maybe areas that weren’t as contaminated or sensitive.
It’s
really a situation in which something like the coronavirus is bound to keep
spreading, and a situation where I understand that there are lots of
geopolitical factors that are at play here. And I just think that what we need
right now, if Palestine is this open-air prison, or if Gaza is this open-air
prison, is just a moment’s parole. This situation is so severe and so dire that
it’s not only going to impact on the Gazans — though I think that they should
be the main consideration — but it’s also going to impact on everybody around.
The virus does not care about the geopolitics. It will go to Egypt. It will go
to Jordan. It will go to Israel. And it will affect all of those populations
and make it impossible for them to control their COVID situation.
AMY GOODMAN: So,
what has to happen there, Dr. Loubani?
DR. TAREK LOUBANI: Absolutely the
first thing that has to happen is an unrestricted permission for all medical
aid, medical supplies and medical personnel to enter. That is number one. It
must happen, effective immediately. And we have all, within the medical
community, not been requesting or demanding that the Israelis do this; we’ve
been begging that the Israelis do this. This is not a situation, I think, in
which there can be much pride or ego about it. This is a situation of absolute
catastrophe. And the Israelis really do, in a big way, hold the keys here. And
so, that’s why so many of us are imploring them to just stop for a moment with
the severity of the siege. And then, you know what? We can go back to status
quo once this disaster is addressed.
The
second thing, of course, is we can’t treat what we can’t see. And so we need
those tests to resume immediately, even if there isn’t an unrestricted lifting
of the siege for medical personnel and medical equipment. At the very least,
the tests have to start flowing.
And
then, thirdly, of course, one of the disasters that’s happening right now,
there are about 2,000 people in quarantine, but the people who are trying to
support them in quarantine don’t have any PPE. And
so, the first two cases were people who had come from outside, but the next 15
cases were people who had been in contact with those people, in Gaza. It’s
slightly different in the West Bank. And so we need, really, personal
protective equipment. We’re trying, the Gazans are trying, and people in the
West Bank are trying to make their own, as they are elsewhere. But it’s
impossible to do that under the current conditions.
AMY GOODMAN: Finally,
we only have a few minutes, but I wanted to go where you are right now, to Canada.
You’re based in London, Ontario. You’re a Canadian doctor, emergency room
physician. Can you talk about how Canada has approached this, how it compares
to the United States — the massive lack of testing and PPE, personal protective gear, for the doctors, the nurses,
the custodian, the cleaning staff at all of these hospitals? What has it been
like in Canada?
DR. TAREK LOUBANI: Obviously, the
situation in Canada is much better than the United States. And I think we can
really chalk that up to a couple of factors. One of them is the fact that we
have for medical care system that will care for anybody, under any condition,
without payment at the point of care. Of course we pay for our medical system,
but we don’t do it when we show up to the hospital. Nobody asks for a credit
card or a bill. And if people aren’t able to pay who aren’t covered under the
health system, then we take a risk-based approach, and, obviously, for public
health, everything is covered.
The
other big aspect here is that people, of course, are worried about poverty.
Canada is no panacea, but they are not as worried about poverty, because there
are some social safety nets. And so, the real pillars of the response are
things like making sure that everybody can access healthcare — well, we have
that in Canada; making sure that everybody can stay away from work and not be
worried about ending up on the streets — well, it’s not as good as we want
it, but we have that, in large part, in Canada. Canada has many problems, of
course, but when we look to our neighbors in the south, it’s obvious that the
way in which Canada has set up its system and guaranteed care has reduced the
caseload tremendously and is giving us a fighting chance.
AMY GOODMAN: And
finally, you just had one of the worst massacres in Canadian history, 22 people
dead, it looks like, at this count, in Nova Scotia. You have this 51-year-old
man who posed as a police officer. Apparently, AP is reporting he had just had
a fight with his girlfriend. She survived this attack. But so often these mass
shootings are related to domestic violence and abuse of women. Now Prime
Minister Trudeau is talking about tightening gun rules in Canada. If you could
just, overall, comment on what this has meant for Canada? There will be a news
conference today, where they’ll be releasing the latest information around
this?
DR. TAREK LOUBANI: I’m from the east
coast of Canada and still have family there, so this did hit close to home for
me. I think, as an emergency physician, we see the impacts of gunshot wounds,
and we see the impacts of domestic violence, as well. And, of course, in
domestic violence situations, having the availability of a gun is a surefire
ingredient in the recipe for disaster. And so, of course, as an emergency
physician, I applaud the Canadian government for doing what they can to improve
gun control regulations. I don’t know enough about the situation in Nova Scotia
to comment very intelligently, but, in general, with what we see with
gun-related violence, it’s obvious that even though Canada, again, does a
better job than the United States with gun control, there’s still some way to
go. And Canadian doctors have called for this in a concerted way over the past
few years.
AMY GOODMAN: Dr.
Tarek Loubani, we want to thank you for being with us, Palestinian-Canadian
doctor, emergency room physician, based in London, Ontario, Canada. We’ll link
to your piece in The
Washington Post on what’s happening in Gaza.
Democracy
Now! is working with as
few people on site as possible. The majority of our amazing team is working
from home.
By
the way, if you want to get our daily quarantine report, Democracy Now!’s
daily show and all its reports, in transcript, video and audio podcast form,
you can send the word “democracynow” — one word — to 66866. Text the word
“democracynow” — one word — to 66866, or sign up online at democracynow.org.
Democracy
Now! is produced with
Renée Feltz, Mike Burke, Deena Guzder, Libby Rainey, Nermeen Shaikh, Carla
Wills, Tami Woronoff, Charina Nadura, Sam Alcoff, Tey-Marie Astudillo, John
Hamilton, Robby Karran, Hany Massoud, Adriano Contreras, María Taracena. Our
general manager is Julie Crosby. Special thanks to Becca Staley, Miriam
Barnard, Paul Powell, Denis Moynihan. I’m Amy Goodman.
The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No
Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Please attribute legal
copies of this work to democracynow.org. Some of the work(s) that this program
incorporates, however, may be separately licensed. For further information or
additional permissions, contact us.
No comments:
Post a Comment