At the border. From Daniel Horowitz at
The Conservative Review:
We were told that the governmental interest in ensuring that
hospitals aren’t overrun with too many COVID-19 patients was so strong
that it superseded the Bill of Rights. All businesses had to be shut,
masks must be worn, church services had to be canceled. As Chief Justice
John Roberts said
in upholding California’s ban on church services, “When those officials
‘undertake to act in areas fraught with medical and scientific
uncertainties,’ their latitude ‘must be especially broad.’”
The very first action one would expect a government to undertake to stem the tide of a virus is to not
purposely admit people sick with acute cases of the virus from
countries with substandard health care. Cross-border travel is not a
fundamental right like free movement within the country and from state
to state or the right to earn a living, assemble, and worship. Plus,
cross-border travel is the ultimate super-spreader.
Amazingly, at a time when politicians and media figures are pushing more lockdowns
because of a rise in cases in some states, they fail to inform you that
the biggest factor driving the most serious rise is coming from Mexico
and is taking place in our southwest border counties. Thus, they are
using the malfeasance of our government, which did not fully lock down
the border, as a pretext to lock us all down within our own states.
As I’ve noted in recent days,
most of the spike in cases is coming from the discovery of more cases
through mass testing, antibody tests, multiple positives for one
individual, reporting anomalies, universal testing of non-COVID-19 hospital patients
and a new way of reporting “probable” cases. This is why, across the
country, we are still seeing a decline in ICU admissions and fatalities.
Most of the new cases are among younger and healthier people who are
largely asymptomatic. However, there is one place where we have been
seeing a spike in serious cases and even deaths since May: the border
counties of California, Arizona, and Texas. (Read more.)
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1 comment:
The increased exposure of young people to one another in public places is certainly where the increase in cases centers. However, the deaths have not increased because contracting this virus is not a death warrant in most age groups. But whatever numbers it takes to re-enforce the lockdown and the continued failure of American businesses is acceptable in many quarters. I do not want to intimate that this is political, but is it? If it is related to focusing on President Trump's 'failure' in containing the spread of the virus, and placing the blame on him for everything else that goes wrong in this Country, than one has to wonder.
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