Feb 26: Trump appoints Vice President Pence to lead the White House response to the outbreak. Trump says the “risk remains really low” and “we’re very, very ready for this.” The CDC announces that a person in California has tested positive for coronavirus, or COVID-19, without traveling to a place with an outbreak or having contact with someone infected. Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper informs overseas American military commanders that they should “check in” and provide advance notice before making decisions on how to protect their military personnel from the virus (The next day, the DoD denies this, although Secretary Esper later seemingly confirms this during a testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee). The House passes the Emmett Till Antilynching Act, a bill making lynching a federal hate crime. An employee at a Coors brewery in Wilwaukee, Wisonsin, kills 5 co-workers.*
News of the virus is steady now. The Democrats are pushing to give more money to emergency healthcare than Trump’s administration is asking for—four times more. Trump’s head of Health and Human Services asked for $2.5 billion in spending, only $1.25 billion of which would go to fight the coronavirus. The Democrats offered $8.5 billion. I’m no believer in massive spending, but if the CDC tests are faulty and we don’t have easy access to more, wouldn’t it make sense to spend the money and fix it? Are we being pound foolish? It is reminiscent of how Catherine the Great responded to the news that a Cossack upstart named Pugachev had recruited some locals and attacked the city of Kazan in 1773. She put a tiny, 500-ruble bounty on his head and went back to her party. A year later, Pugachev’s army was killing her generals and the dead littered the countryside. She would have been smart to take the threat more seriously. At the Coronavirus Taskforce briefing today, Trump says he’s okay taking whatever amount of money Congress offers. Then he invokes the flu stat, that “25,000 to 69,000 people a year” die of the flu. He says we’ll be at only five people infected pretty soon, then maybe one or two (I guess he thinks that the folks who are currently in quarantine are the only people who have the virus). Then he claims that Johns Hopkins has found the U.S. to be the most prepared in the world for a pandemic. Trump announces that Vice President Pence is now in charge of the coronavirus task force. Maybe this move to put Pence at the helm is done to make it look like the administration is taking the virus more seriously. For a president who came into office on the promise of business growth, it can’t look good to have the market tanking. Azar at HHS is still there, still saying that the risk to everyone is low, that the containment policies are working. Anne Schuchat from the CDC also seems to be saying that our quarantining of the individuals from Wuhan and the Diamond Princess worked. She also says that businesses and schools should get their “pandemic preparedness plans” together. Those seem like contradictory comments. Why would we need to prepare for a pandemic if there isn’t one? Also, I seriously doubt that my daughter’s public school has a pandemic plan. Anthony Fauci from the CDC then gets up and says that it’s going to take a year to a year-and-a-half to create and test a vaccine. That’s not surprising. But given how quickly this second SARS is spreading, it’s a little disconcerting to hear it so bluntly. There are other possible treatments in the intervening months. The biotech industry is testing a drug called remdesivir and other antivirals. It’s a little disturbing to have a drug company named “Gilead” spearheading these trials. I’ve read the Handmaid’s Tale. I’m just saying. Trump’s inability to lead in a crisis, to stop talking about himself, to work within established norms, to tell the truth for more than one or two consecutive words, or to perform basic functions like speaking coherently or standing normally is disconcerting. Nevertheless, a study released today by the Public Religion Research Institute shows his support has not really suffered through his entire chaotic presidency. The Muller investigation, the impeachment, his incessant golfing, his mocking of cherished American symbols and military heroes, his complete lack of knowledge about biblical Christianity—none of these things seem to matter to his white evangelical base. One might suspect that they were interested in other things that he gives them. A Letter from a friend arrives today, on this Ash Wednesday: I went to the Ash Wednesday service tonight to get ashes rubbed onto my forehead. Ashes mixed from last year’s burned Palm Sunday palms and oil, with the reminder that we are dust glued together with spit and sweat and blood. The sanctuary is the soaring A-frame sort from the ’70s. Candlelight danced off the wood plank ceiling. In the silence, the boards cooled and creaked. I needed a break from all this news, honestly. As I waited for the ritual, I couldn’t help but imagine the virus like a shadow monster out there, trying to find its way in between the boards and all of us in need of the sacred symbol streaked on our foreheads—quickly now—to fend it off. I think back to when I used to attend a white evangelical megachurch. We didn’t do this ritual, didn’t talk about death at all really. Judgment, sure. Judgment for all the unredeemed and for the unfortunate brown folks living in the “10-40 window” who have not heard of our white Jesus and don’t sing the vapid, repetitive worship songs played by a white man with a guitar on stage at front. But not dying itself—not how simultaneously fragile and robust we are. For instance, how this ancient woman in line in front of me with tissue-paper skin and matchstick bones can sing hymns and pray and say the creeds and shuffle slowly all the way in here from the parking lot week in and week out, no matter the rain or heat, with casseroles and corn bread. This is as miraculous to me as how quickly she will fall if a microscopic envelope of RNA lands on her fingers just before she rubs her eyes. In the evangelical church there was talk of “strongholds of sin” and “decisions for Christ,” but somehow they missed this. Our ability to stumble through four billion heartbeats, just persisting, while all around us things are conspiring to dissolve us. Coronavirus is just one among many. All these thoughts sort of smash together in that moment, as I watch her tip her forehead up so the pastor can streak the oily ashes down, then across, to say her name as a child of God, and remind her that death is coming for her, as it is for all of us. I can’t help it. Suddenly, vehemently, down deep in my gut, I want the President of the United States to do his goddamn job to keep the virus monster at bay—or die trying. Preferably both.
Right-wing Youtube vlogger, Mike Dice, on the Democratic primary. Mark Dice. A TOTAL MESS!, 2020. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOyYJTXMrzo.
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Text of Schumer’s $8.5 Billion Coronavirus funding request, February 26, 2020. https://www.democrats.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/022620%20LEADER%20SCHUMER’S%20CORONAVIRUS%20REQUEST.pdf
HAPPENING NOW: @realDonaldTrump says @VP Mike Pence, who, as governor of Indiana, allowed an HIV outbreak to blow up rather than allow a needle exchange to operate, will be in charge of #CoronavirusOutbreak response.
— Andrew Feinberg (@AndrewFeinberg) February 26, 2020
Pence has been tasked to lead us through #CoronavirusOutbreak. Do you feel safer, America?
— Wajahat Ali (@WajahatAli) February 26, 2020
I do think there’s a method to Trump’s madness on #COVID19. It’s just blinkered. https://t.co/8Uzzk44bET
— Daniel W. Drezner (@dandrezner) February 26, 2020
#Coronavirus suspected in 200 air passengers in #Atlanta #Georgia!#coronavirususa #CoronavirusOutbreak #COVID19 #coronavirusWHO #CDC #California #NewYork #LosAngeles #Oregon #Washington #Canada #WuhanCoronavirus #POTUS https://t.co/IhXoQ1Qk7j
— Angie Blu (@AngieBlu7) February 26, 2020
Coronavirus: San Francisco declares state of emergency amid CDC warning#News #Office #Wuhan #LondonBreed #California #SanFranciscans #NancyMessonier #SanFrancisco #AlexAzar #CDC #TheAssociatedPress #Chinahttps://t.co/FKggbRGyP7
— TheNewsHOOK (@thenewshooked) February 26, 2020
Milwaukee Shooting: Multiple people killed including gunman https://t.co/X8L3WLJtTe
— Jeffrey Levin (@jilevin) February 26, 2020
Vice President Mike Pence says in leading the White House response to the coronavirus, he will be “bringing together” all the members of the coronavirus task force and will provide President Trump with “the best options for action.” https://t.co/pAUO2PN10Y pic.twitter.com/wlenNW2Wh4
— ABC News (@ABC) February 26, 2020
Secretary of Defense Mark Esper is likely to face a grilling from lawmakers Wednesday on Capitol Hill for his decision to divert military funding to pay for the US border wall as he testifies before the House Armed Services Committee.https://t.co/zNJlWpJVjO
— Jon Cooper 🇺🇸 (@joncoopertweets) February 26, 2020
BREAKING: House passes the Emmet Till Antilynching Act which designates lynching as a federal hate crime. Given increased hate crimes, it is imperative that we remember the racial terror inflicted on thousands of Black Americans and acknowledge our history of racial violence. pic.twitter.com/Bem63ZBVbn
— Kristen Clarke (@KristenClarkeJD) February 26, 2020
— Zuzu's Mom (@LizzieluGreen) February 26, 2020
* Timeline summaries at the top of the page come from a variety of sources:, including The American Journal of Managed Care COVID-19 Timeline (https://www.ajmc.com/view/a-timeline-of-covid19-developments-in-2020), the Just Security Group at the NYU School of Law (https://www.justsecurity.org/69650/timeline-of-the-coronavirus-pandemic-and-u-s-response/), the “10 Things,” daily entries from The Week (theweek.com), as well as a variety of newspapers and television programs.