🐱 Europeans Say COVID-19 Revealed America as 'Fragile,' Inconsiderate

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Many Europeans are asking if Americans even care about their people's own health, as they have watched in astonishment at the world's most powerful country faltering in its response to the coronavirus pandemic.


Italians, Germans and residents of other European nations who were hit the hardest by the coronavirus outbreak in February said they are disappointed, saddened and even frightened by the United States' COVID-19 response. Public health experts and everyday residents said they "always saw America as a model" for the world, but the pandemic has exposed a country with horrendous infrastructure and no coherent public health system.

Several European doctors agreed with their U.S. counterparts in saying Americans' individualist spirit has backfired and led the country to the top of both infection and death toll lists.


Americans are now at the top of the list of "at risk" travelers to Europe after countries like Italy — which placed themselves in a strict 10-week lockdown — have emerged from the pandemic while Americans continue infighting and rising above 160,000 dead from COVID-19.

"Don't they care about their health?" a mask-clad Patrizia Antonini asked the Associated Press about Americans as she walked with friends along Lake Bracciano, north of Rome. "They need to take our precautions ... They need a real lockdown."

"We Italians always saw America as a model," said Massimo Franco, columnist with daily Corriere della Sera newspaper. "But with this virus we've discovered a country that is very fragile, with bad infrastructure and a public health system that is nonexistent."



Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza, one of the country's top public health officials, outright condemned President Donald Trump and Washington lawmakers' response to the virus as "wrong." Italy now sees about 150 to 300 new cases nationwide each day, down from the 6,500 daily the country recorded on March 21. In the U.S., there are about 54,000 new cases a day — which is a higher number proportionally when its larger population is factored into consideration.


As of Sunday, the U.S. now has a world-record 5 million confirmed coronavirus infections amid a politicized debate over face masks and health precautions, which has incredulous Europeans questioning the country's leadership on the international stage.

"Had the medical professionals been allowed to operate in the States, you would have belatedly gotten to a point of getting to grips with this back in March," said Scott Lucas, professor at the University of Birmingham in England. "But of course, the medical and public health professionals were not allowed to proceed unchecked," referencing Trump's undercutting of his administration's own public health experts.


Doctors throughout Italy, where the virus killed more than 35,000 people and ravaged towns between late February and April, say the country's strict nationwide lockdown was a major factor in beating back its spread. Additionally, Italian government officials on both the national and local levels worked primarily in lockstep as they conducted widespread testing, robust contact tracing and a slow process of reopening.


"If you are in Florida and you hear your governor saying something, and then the governor in New York is saying the opposite, it's really difficult. In Italy, it was just one voice," said Dr. Roberto Cosentini, head of an emergency medicine unit at the Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital in Bergamo, Italy, as reported by NBC News.

Newsweek reached out to the Italian and German embassies in Washington for any additional remarks as well as the White House Sunday morning.
 
Fun Fact: Approximately 1% of the US population dies every year, that's near 3 million people.

In 2018 2,813,503 people died, or 234,459 people died every month. Just something to think about the next time you hear someone talking about how 160,000 deaths over 6 months from a highly transmissible virus is some kind of untenable atrocity that will be devastating for [current talking point].


Also Italy's population is 60.5 million, the US has a population of 331 million which is approximately 5.5 times greater.
Take Italy's 35,000+ Covid deaths and multiply it by a factor of 5.5 and you get 192,500 deaths if you were to apply Italy's response to a country the size of the US. You maybe want to stop acting so smug about your shittier Covid death rate Italy?
 
Also Italy's population is 60.5 million, the US has a population of 331 million which is approximately 5.5 times greater.
Take Italy's 35,000+ Covid deaths and multiply it by a factor of 5.5 and you get 192,500 deaths if you were to apply Italy's response to a country the size of the US. You maybe want to stop acting so smug about your shittier Covid death rate Italy?
Precisely this. Comparing the entire US to an individual European country, on pretty much anything, is an apples-to-oranges comparison.

More accurate comparisons would set all of the US vs. all aggregated European countries, or individual US states and individual European countries with similar populations and economies (i.e. Texas to France).
 
Also Italy's population is 60.5 million, the US has a population of 331 million which is approximately 5.5 times greater.
Take Italy's 35,000+ Covid deaths and multiply it by a factor of 5.5 and you get 192,500 deaths if you were to apply Italy's response to a country the size of the US. You maybe want to stop acting so smug about your shittier Covid death rate Italy?
Precisely this. Comparing the entire US to an individual European country, on pretty much anything, is an apples-to-oranges comparison.

More accurate comparisons would set all of the US vs. all aggregated European countries, or individual US states and individual European countries with similar populations and economies (i.e. Texas to France).

Another way to put it is that the US has twice the population of Russia and is geographically larger than China. It's difficult to get everyone to do anything.
 
One state in the US getting hit corona isn't magically going to stop it from spreading and hitting other states, much like Italy getting hit didn't save England or Sweden.
The US is much larger, sparsely populated with "flyover states". Each state in the US is pretty much its own country for stuff like this, and each state with major urban areas will have their own individual flare ups.
 
"There are many who deny the second statement in the previous paragraph, that the United States is the spearhead of progress. Strangely enough, the two groups that deny it do so from opposite positions. The Marxists deny it from progressive assumptions, and American 'conservatives' deny it because they consider their country the chief guardian of western values. These two points of view are sometimes confused and combined by Europeans whose jealousy of the United States leads them yo accuse Americans of being too reactionary and too modern at one and the same time." - George Grant, Lament For A Nation, Pg. 53

So true!!!!!!111 😍😍😍😘. But also the term "modern" in that book is more referring to the advanced stage of capitalism in America because capitalism is almost synonymous with progress in that book.
 
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