Want to get The Morning by email? Here’s the sign-up.
Good morning. Hong Kong has been transformed. Violence in Chicago is surging. And the U.S. looks ever more like an outlier on the coronavirus.
When can schools safely reopen? When will the economy really start recovering? And when will you next eat in a restaurant, go to a movie, watch pro sports or hang out at a friend’s house?
All of these are, in fact, versions of the same question: When will the United States finally start to get the coronavirus under control?
And the answer appears to be: not any time soon.
The U.S. looks ever more like an outlier. Over the weekend, President Trump again played down the coronavirus as a serious threat, falsely claiming 99 percent of cases are harmless. In many places, Americans continued to socialize in proximity, without masks.
Much of the rest of the world is taking a very different approach. It is slowly moving back toward more normal functioning, without setting off major new outbreaks.
Schools in Japan and much of Europe have reopened. Restaurants in Iceland are bustling. The South Korean baseball season is in full swing. Thomas Chatterton Williams, an American writer living in France, asked in a recent Atlantic piece: “Do Americans understand how badly they’re doing?”
The U.S. now ranks with Brazil, Sweden and Peru as having one of the world’s most rapid virus growth rates. (Online, you can find a detailed version of this chart, with lines for more countries.)
There have been two main ways that countries have managed the pandemic successfully. The first approach prevented major outbreaks through an aggressive initial response that included travel restrictions, tests, contact tracing, quarantining and mask wearing. Several Asian countries, like South Korea and Vietnam, followed this model.
The second set of countries, including several in Western Europe, did suffer major outbreaks. But they responded with lockdowns and then began reopening carefully. All of these countries continue to cope with new cases, and will for a long time, but the numbers are small.
The U.S. reacted too slowly to prevent an initial outbreak, and only some regions — like New York — have responded forcefully since then. Much of the country instead declared victory prematurely, leading to the current surge of cases.
My colleague Ben Casselman, an economics reporter, has a thoughtful way of explaining the dynamic. “Recent developments raise some real questions about what ‘good news’ even means right now,” he says.
The economy is a central example. Its surprisingly rapid growth in May and early June initially seemed encouraging, Ben points out. But it now seems to have been a sign that Americans were resuming normal activity in ways that spread the virus. Now the virus’s resurgence is causing new shutdowns that will delay a true recovery.
In other virus developments:
-
New data — made available after The New York Times sued the federal government — shows the extent of racial disparities: The contraction rate is almost three times as high for Black Americans as white Americans and more than three times higher among Latinos than whites.
-
Nick Cordero, a 41-year-old Broadway star known for his tough-guy roles in “Bullets Over Broadway,” “Waitress” and “A Bronx Tale,” died after a three-month battle with the virus.
-
Evidence increasingly suggests that the virus lingers in indoor air for extended periods of time. That, in turn, suggests that masks, air ventilation and ultraviolet light are key to slowing its spread.
-
Australia has locked down nine public housing towers in Melbourne to control the virus, telling about 3,000 residents that they must not leave for at least five days.
THREE MORE BIG STORIES
1. Gun violence in Chicago
A wave of gun violence in Chicago has killed nine children since June 20. That includes a 7-year-old girl who was struck in the forehead by a bullet when three gunmen opened fire on a Fourth of July street party.
Defenders of the police say that the violence shows they need more support, not less. Critics say it shows how deeply residents distrust officers and why cities should transfer funds to address underlying problems, including unemployment and mental illness.
2. Hong Kong’s frightened silence
A new national security law imposed by China, which criminalizes “subversion” of the government, has transformed Hong Kong seemingly overnight. The defiant protesters who once filled the city’s streets have largely gone quiet. Notes that had plastered the walls of pro-democracy businesses have vanished.
Further crackdown: The police in Beijing today detained Xu Zhangrun, a law professor and one of China’s most prominent critics of the Communist Party’s expanding control, his friends said.
3. Summer camp cheer, on mute
Camp — like school — is taking place on Zoom during the coronavirus pandemic. Some regions are technically allowing camps to open for in-person attendance, but the requirements are so stringent that few are choosing to do so.
At Interlochen Arts Camp in Michigan, campers are taking dance and acting classes, weaving friendship bracelets and singing songs from computers in their bedrooms and living rooms, as our colleague Nellie Bowles reports.
Here’s what else is happening
-
A herdsman in Inner Mongolia was infected with bubonic plague, Chinese health officials said, a sign that some old health threats remain.
-
Lobbyists with ties to top Trump administration officials are thriving as they help the president’s re-election effort while aiding corporate clients.
-
Uber has agreed to acquire Postmates for $2.65 billion, in an effort to increase its food delivery business while its core transportation business struggles.
-
Netflix didn’t set out to build a big library of Black programming, but it has created enough of one to become the envy of rivals, the Times’s media columnist, Ben Smith, writes.
-
Lives Lived: Ennio Morricone composed the music for spaghetti westerns including “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” as well as hundreds of other films. He died today in Rome at 91.
IDEA OF THE DAY: Racist mascot psychology
A team of leading psychologists once conducted an experiment to see how popular images of Native Americans — like sports logos — affected Native American high school and college students. The psychologists first showed the students the images and then asked a series of questions.
The students mostly used positive words, like peaceful and kind, to describe the images, which included the Cleveland Indians mascot and Pocahontas. But when the researchers then asked a series of follow-up questions, the study took a more negative turn. Students who had seen the images reported lower self-esteem and more negative views of their community compared with a control group of similar students who had not seen the images.
The problem was not that the images were purely negative, the psychologists suggested. It was that they reminded students of the very narrow public portrayal of Native Americans — stereotypes of warriors of an exotic race (who were ultimately defeated and killed in large numbers). The mascots “function as inordinately powerful communicators, to natives and nonnatives alike, of how American Indians should look and behave,” the psychologists wrote.
For years, pro sports leagues have used caricatures of Native Americans — and have mimicked old rituals — in ways that would be unthinkable for other cultures. But the issue has taken a turn in the past few days, as part of the country’s current racial reckoning.
Major N.F.L. sponsors told Dan Snyder, the owner of the Washington Redskins, that they would no longer support the team if he didn’t change the name, and he announced a “thorough review” of the name. “It’s not the same thing as the N-word,” Philip Deloria, a Harvard historian of Dakota descent, told me, “but it’s clearly offensive.” There are no other team names with skin colors, and this name recalls a violent ritual of taking human bodies as trophies.
Deloria added that he hoped the team would not choose a new name — like Warriors, as some have suggested — with some of the same problems.
For more: Many tribal leaders have condemned the name; NPR has explained its history as a slur; Stephanie Fryberg of the University of Michigan has explained the dueling opinion polls about the name; and the Cleveland Indians are also reviewing their name.
PLAY, WATCH, EAT, KIMCHI
Make some quick kimchi
Think of kimchi as a verb, suggests the food writer Eric Kim. Yes, the word also refers to the delicious fermented cabbage side dish, but it’s “an umbrella term for a much larger world of dishes you can find on any given Korean table,” he writes. “You can kimchi just about anything.”
Here’s his recipe for smacked cucumber quick kimchi, which echoes the flavors of traditional kimchi minus the lengthy fermentation period. The base sauce is versatile and can also be used with other vegetables, such as thinly sliced fennel or juicy grape tomatoes.
Lessons from women’s roller derby
Other pro sports leagues struggling with the pandemic could learn a thing or two from women’s roller derby. The sport’s extensive plan for returning to play, as reported in Wired, includes a seven-tier system with strict benchmarks for each level, and recommendations that extend beyond athletes to officials, volunteers and photographers.
The section describing the sport’s policy on spectators is so good, it “almost made me cry,” one epidemiologist told Wired.
A TV show everybody should be watching
My colleague Sanam Yar recommends tuning into the dramedy “Ramy.” She writes:
It feels reductive to describe “Ramy” as a show about a millennial Muslim-American searching for purpose. Starring the comedian Ramy Youssef, the semi-autobiographical series does grapple with the main character’s faith and self-destructive tendencies, as well as his traditional family, morally dubious circle of friends and romantic failures. It’s also occasionally surreal: One episode involves a dream sequence with Osama bin Laden.
But more than that, the show is a master class in empathy. Its best episodes are often not centered on Ramy, but the characters around him: his socially isolated mother, his boorish uncle. Through its specificity, the show highlights a messiness in its characters that feels deeply human. The result is a series that’s funny, complex and often tender.
You can find both seasons of the show on Hulu.
Diversions
-
What is it like dressing as 18th-century royalty for a week?
-
The town of Henderson, Minn., made famous by a scene in the movie “Purple Rain,” has unveiled a life-size bronze statue of Prince.
Games
Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Green lightsaber user (four letters).
Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David
P.S. The word “vanlifer” appeared for the first time in The Times on Friday, as noted by the Twitter bot @NYT_first_said.
You can see today’s print front page here.
Today’s episode of “The Daily” includes four new insights about the coronavirus. And the Book Review podcast features the illustrator Jules Feiffer and the NPR host Steve Inskeep.
Subscribers help us report stories from around the world. Please consider subscribing today.
Ian Prasad Philbrick and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.
"how" - Google News
July 06, 2020 at 06:10PM
https://ift.tt/3e54PCj
How Badly Is America Doing? - The New York Times
"how" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2MfXd3I
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "How Badly Is America Doing? - The New York Times"
Post a Comment