From the New Deal to Now: Individual Exceptionalism in the Face of Covid-19

In memorium: Francesca Amendo, 12 January 1925-7 May 2020 and for those who have survived or are currently battling Covid-19

Before I launch into the main point, I want to acknowledge the phenomenal work of Heather Cox Richardson, Professor of History at Boston College. Her work “How the South Won the Civil War”, her Facebook Live videos, and her Letters from an American, have proven invaluable and thought provoking. I recommend getting her book and following her on Facebook and even subscribing to her email; it’s a subscription that’s worth signing up for.

To be clear, most of what I write is spit-balling and ruminating on our current collective moments. I’m not interested in making definitive statements, but I also think it’s healthy to interrogate the moment (as well as blow off a little steam) and see where the riffs lead. This started out as a rumination on two different news stories that stem from a distinct ideology; that the individual’s rights are being trampled on by the government. How these stories have and are playing out is instructive, so much so, that I found them dovetailing nicely with what Professor Richardson has discussed the past couple of weeks. And yes, I ripped her off for both articulation and resources.

I don’t think that the tension between the individual and the greater community has to be antagonistic. Sometimes, the individual should take precedence but I don’t think the current moment justifies that stance. In what follows, I admittedly take a ham-handed approach, and may well be off the mark on some facts (again, spit-balling and often calling on a hazy memory) but the gist is that we need to question the actions of those who don’t seem to grasp the aggressive nature of this virus and its communal assault.

In terms of solution(s), well, I admit I’m half-assing that but I offer what I can in good faith.

It might be a waste of time...

This is a long ass post and I hope it’s not a total wash. I don’t want to waste anyone’s time and if you feel it wasted yours, remember: you were warned!

Enough. Let’s begin.

For the most part, I can’t say that I find lockdown problematic. Of course, I’m remarkably lucky; I’ve got a steady income that covers my necessities and I’m living with my sister, the easiest person in the world to live with. The flip side of this is the awareness that not everyone has it so cushy and that there are those who find lockdown not merely inconvenient, but an assault on their liberty, on their preconceived notion that they have the right to do whatever they want.

I have nothing but sympathy for the people who are suffering under this moment in humanity’s history; the people who have nothing and are now faced with having even less, vast swathes of individuals and families on the cusp of poverty and beset by darker spectres on the horizon, and those with sick or dying friends and family, afflicted by this virus.

However, I have little to no sympathy with the often white crybabies who rail against an unjust government that seeks to curtail their freedom of movement. Actually, let me emend that: I have no sympathy at all for them.

The hubris and selfishness of these people stresses credulity (and admittedly, my patience) and for those of you who live in other parts of the U.S. and the world, the apotheosis of this can be found in the armed “Protesters” that have occupied or tried to occupy the state of Michigan’s capitol and Shelley Luther, a Dallas woman who has gained traction of being the face of the victimized business owner whose livelihood and that of her staff is at stake. There are severe issues with how this case was reported and I highly recommend perusing the additional reading after the end of this post.

Both are examples of a strain of individualism that privileges the self above and over and against the well-being of the community. Letting alone that if you feel a need to visit your state’s capitol heavily armed to voice your concerns there may be other issues there and for the moment, setting aside the very real issue of how to manage economic necessity while preserving the health and well-being of our fellow citizens, these people are representative of a Randian selfishness that demonstrates the barrenness of Randian philosophy and “me-first” ideologies.

The main case is that we have a health crisis. Not just “we” as in municipality, county, or state. I very much mean “we” as in humanity. We have a virus that is capable of mutating and adapting to a degree that increases its communicability. At present, it doesn’t seem to be any more or less virulent in its various mutations, but that may be moot; we’re discovering that the effects of the virus are more far-reaching than respiratory distress. It can cause neurological damage, as well, and seems to have osteopathic effects. We know that it often results in permanent damage to the lungs. These are the results that await many who survive. As for the death toll, these metrics speak for themselves.

Let’s circle back to the communicable aspects of Covid-19. It’s extremely passable from one host to another and the principle approach to mitigation is social distancing. This is something anyone can do. There are, of course, situations that might not make this easy for everyone. There are those trapped with abusers in damaging relationship, there are essential workers who need to be on the front lines, and there are those who may be infected but cannot get tested because they may be asymptomatic or as likely if not more so: there aren’t enough available tests.

There are also the incarcerated; prisons and ICE detainment centers in this country are petri dishes of infection taking down guards and prisoners alike. And of course, nursing homes and senior communities that vary in quality and level of care. Essentially, and not to put this in too stark terms, we’re looking at potential death sentences for very many people.

Yet, there seem to be many people who either don’t know or don’t care about the numbers – perhaps the statistics just seem too abstract for them – or don’t understand how this virus works – no surprising since very many Americans are almost anti-science (unless it supports their arguments…often poorly researched, I’ve found). But they show something else; they don’t care about their community or people outside their circle, and this is an issue.

As an aside, it’s intriguing to me that the armed “protesters” and the business owners who want to open full bore are railing against an unjust government. In Michigan’s case, my supposition is that much of this is rooted in party politics against a Democrat (and yes, a woman; we can assume that gender has a part in this, too) governor and in Texas, well, it’s just weird. I know this is an aside, but this requires some explanation:

Governor Abbott, a Trump supporter, and laissez-faire Republican until he needs to bend to business interests, instigated the stay-at-home orders to be left up to the county and/or municipality. So much for leadership; however, he later decreed a rolling reopening of business. The re-opening would be on the order of cinemas and restaurants carrying only 25% capacity, retail would provide curbside service, and then – according to Abbott, based on recommendations from doctors and medical research – there would be more stepped-up reopening.

Thus, it strikes one as a little odd that this beauty parlor owner decides to buck the system and open up fully prior to the reopening, claiming she’s fighting an unjust government (that, apparently, she supports and that, apparently, sigh, supports her with Lieutenant Governor of Texas Dan Patrick posting her bail!) Obviously, there’s more to the story and there’s a link here and down below, as well.

My point with Ms. Luther’s story is not whether she is what she appears to be but that there is enough of a backing group that does represent this prioritizing of individual desire over and against community necessity. All of which leads us back to the sickness that is the United States of America that is not Coronavirus.

As a society, we have at different times been one – more or less – community. The Depression of the 1930s was no one’s idea of a good time, but there were many groups across the country that banded together to look after each other and with the inauguration of the Roosevelt administration, a coordinated series of efforts were in place to lift the population out of poverty caused by the rampant speculation that led to the Stockmarket Crash of 1929.

Between the New Deal and the ascendancy of the unions as voices for labor, it is not unreasonable to say that most Americans were more likely to feel a communality (excluded from this would be people of color and women). This takes a more concerted turn with the arrival of World War Two and at the end of the war, the U.S. saw an unprecedented period of growth. But this did not come about because of oligarchy or class privilege. The New Deal proved extremely popular with the voting populace and provided the National Highways Act which opened up transit and a more mobile population (of course, this depleted cities and the flight to the suburbs meant the poorest Americans were left behind) and the G.I. Bill which provided for service members and their families to be able to purchase homes, attend higher education, and build businesses among other benefits.

Of course, there were issues; exclusivity based on race, class, and gender were still present although it is worth noting that the genesis of the Civil Rights Movement and the push for gender equality were gaining traction even in the fifties. The price paid by black Americans was steep, and continues to be, but the point is that even with a relatively unified United States, there was its legacy of racism to be met.

Also of course, there were those in government who wanted to return America to pre-New Deal norms. Hoover style politicians wanted to see a return to the concept of running government like a business and began to conflate taxes which were scaled at the time so that the wealthy paid a more reasonable share, with a “redistribution of wealth” – the well-known term from Marx and Engels as a cure for the exploitation of the workers under capitalism. In other words, with this conflation, taxes and the social programs they supported (see the aforementioned Highway Act, GI Bill, and others) equaled communism.

Coming out of the second world war, the next big enemy was more ideological than military. Communism spelled the end of all that Americans held dear, or so it was presented, and the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China would stop at nothing to crush the U.S. and all she (yes, the feminine…the old gender bias at play, feminine = weak and most be protected) represents.

We know what happened then; Senator Joe McCarthy begins his anti-Communist hunt and William F. Buckley, Jr. begins publishing The National Review, both birthed by Movement Conservatism. It’s important to point out here that this happened on the watch of a Republican president, but not supported by that president. Eisenhower regarded the isolationism and fear-baiting with disdain. He was also concerned with what he saw as Congressional malfeasance in terms of securing military and manufacturing contracts for certain areas and not others. Indeed, his original formulation wasn’t only the Military-Industrial Complex, but he Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex. He saw the interrelated dependencies of all three in promoting a queasy alliance between expansion of power and personal gain.

It was around this time that we begin to see the rise of the narrative of the little guy who gears up to fight against the oppressive government in a way that hadn’t been quite seen before. Heather Cox Richardson points to the popularity of the cowboy/western genre in popular culture during the fifties and I take her point; the cowboy often rises up to challenge the corrupt sheriff/outlaws that enslave a community/governor, and so on, to fight for the oppressed and how that trope gained currency with the conservatives culminating in the ascendency of Ronald Reagan in 1981.

That said, and in the interest of fairness, popular culture also presented as many counter examples. Science fiction that warned of the dangers of conformism, films that pointedly addressed racial inequality, and of course, rock and roll. Just sayin’.

Still, the Movement Conservatives (their term) did well in promoting the primacy of the individual. So much so, that we see the first change in the tide with the rise of the Silent Majority in the mid-sixties. Here is where I usually pinpoint the general shift. The Civil Rights Act had been passed, but we had escalation of hostilities in Vietnam. Tensions grew across the country across all manner of fault lines: race, gender, gay rights, the antiwar movement. It could be argued that the U.S. was never more divided.

But here’s the rub, to my mind. Despite the unity we’ve seen exhibited at different times throughout the nation’s history, we have always been divided – often strongly, sometimes violently – on issues. In my lifetime, I’ve seen how insane we get and much of it can be traced to this idea that I want what’s mine and I don’t care what it costs others to get it. This is where the throughline between the mid-sixties to the full formation of overriding self-interest in the 80s can be seen.

Nixon and the Republicans knew how to frame an opponent as weak and un-American. He and the party had learned from his scathing defeat by Kennedy years before that people are swayed by emotion (often fear) and the promise of a better society (for them, of course, not for those Others who are dangerous). To be sure, there were hiccups along the way, but by 1980, the G.O.P. had learned its lesson well and positioned a man of outstanding mediocrity to be the face of the party that spouted bullshit, got elected and began the dismantling of government that we live with today.

It couldn’t have been done, though, without a compelling narrative. That story is that “they’re” after you, “they” want to take advantage of the system, and “they” will ruin the country. “They” quickly became the “crack mom” – a Republican manifested demon of a Black woman with a ton of kids illegally on welfare living off food stamps and representative of a Welfare State that threatens the livelihood of every true, hard-working American (most likely white and living in the ‘burbs). This metastasized to include every non-WASP lifestyle (and when AIDS began, how little did the Reagan Administration move until it started to show that it also infected – gasp – heterosexuals, as well).

Did this abate with a Democratic president? I’m not sure. Anecdotally, I felt that we as a society hung together better. And it’s telling that in the wake of the Rodney King slaying, racial tension seemed to lessen but as I pull back from the anecdotal, I’m not so sure. The economy had rebounded, the national budget was being balanced (and would end the era with a surplus), and as much as there might not have been the visual antagonism and anti-immigration stances we see today, this might well be because the U.S. was still carrying on operations to destabilize regions in Latin America and control oil prices with its usual aplomb. In other words.

The main issue I’d point to was passing the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994. For sure, incarceration rates were trending higher but the crime bill exacerbated them after its passing. Think of “the three strikes” rulings that came with it and the disproportionately black populations that were affected by this and similar legislation at state and local levels in ensuing years. Admittedly, Clinton tried to walk about its passage but frankly, that’s too little too late and while some might argue that its effects are overstated, I would argue to the contrary; the mere passage of the bill speaks to the racial divide in the U.S. – institutionalized and systemic.

I don’t know how much of this feeds into the theme of the rise of individualism against the good of all, but it’s a moment for reflection because it’s obvious that black people more than any other minority population is discriminated against in this country. I don’t wish to downplay the indignities and outrages that Latinx and people of Asian descent and extraction have suffered, but incarceration rates and studies show that the broader (white and frankly, other people of other ethnic origins) community stigmatizes Black people out of proportion.

In any case, as we enter the twenty-first century, we seen increasing Us-Versus-Them levels of rhetoric and behavior. In the wake of 9/11, Arab Americans were the first casualty, but it wouldn’t be putting to fine a point on it to say that this is where backlash against immigrants began to take flight. I remember a friend of mine at work at the time was – frankly – shit scared. Before we were released from work, she told me she already felt unsafe; “what is this going to do brown people?” I opined nothing good.

What I didn’t foresee was just how much divides would widen across other lines, as well. To say we don’t have class divisions in the United States is to be willfully benighted, but it seems that’s one type of ignorance that is capitalized on regularly (and has been). The chasm between the rich and the poor is massive and it’s perplexing that the very not-rich continue to throw in behind the wealthy and the very wealthy unthinkingly.

That in itself is perplexing but as a strategy for continuing to keep classes separate and “in their places”, works like a charm. It also effectively empowers the comfortable with a greater sense of entitlement over the working class and working poor (let alone the more marginalized). This strategy is a subtler divide and conquer and less intensive to manage than outright suppression, though there’s certainly that.

In the earlier parts of the millennium, it was also difficult to ignore – “difficult”? I’ve got to stop with the understatement – impossible to ignore the rise of the Tea Party and its welcoming into the Republican Party. I don’t think the old guard imagined how quickly they would be replaced by this incendiary movement of reactionaries. (I so wanted to use other adjectives like “slavering band of ill-educated miscreants” but I’m trying to keep my repressed Hunter S. Thompsonisms in check.)

That movement became more pronounced with the Obama administration; it’s been said that the Obama administration exacerbated racial tension but if so, I think it has more to do with prevailing perceptions of the white majority and the very real bases for fear of that majority by many black people across the country. It is also with the Obama administration that we notice upticks in hate groups and general violence against all minorities.

It’s probably not too much to suggest that this has to do with the militant factions of the conservative movement that this is their logical reaction to the recognition of a shift in the balance of racial relations. It’s a given that the country will be a minority-majority population within a generation or two. What this spells for racial purists, I don’t know; but I don’t think it means we’ll all be hugging one another and singing “Kumbaya” (though that would be lovely). Much depends on how we survive the current moment.

Surviving this moment is calling on clear-sightedness, understanding, and good planning based on medical science and data and solid deployment at a central (read: federal) level. As much as my Libertarian friends would decry the value of the Federal Government and its uselessness in the best of times (views I’ve never understood and do not share), we have no such central or steady planning or deployment. Consequently, we have an uninformed and often skeptical populace and one driven by the sense that the “government” is lying to them, that they are being denied their rights to work and assembly, and that they can do whatever they want without the nanny state’s say-so.

The pity is that if it was only they who were to be affected by their actions, I might be less concerned (I hate to write that; even if it were only they who were affected by their actions, it would still be tragic), but it is the case that this is not so. It is saddening that there are very many people who feel so entitled to “buck the system” in their eyes, in order to shore themselves up economically. They are not martyrs to a cause, though. If anything, they are principle players in continuing to ensure that this virus grows.

Any other time and I’d be inclined to say education is the answer, but it’s going to take far more than that. Absent any meaningful leadership, we have blocs of states organizing to move through this pandemic as best they can with others going it alone, inviting more infection, if not disaster. There was floated a utopian solution of simply halting the economy, initiating a temporary universal base income and then reopening markets with an all-clear down the line. Sounds good but a) I can’t imagine the slimmest chance of that happening in this country and b) I’m at a loss to find the source I got that from I dismissed it so quickly. And I love utopian solutions!

All I can come up with concretely is that now is a good time for people to support one another in doing the right thing and helping each other out. I have friends who buy groceries for their elderly neighbors, there are neighborhood groups who deliver food to those in poor neighborhoods and restaurants that have repurposed themselves to distribute meals to the homeless.

I would also suggest keeping in touch with your state and local representatives. My congresswoman has regular virtual town halls and is readily available and accessible (this may not be the case for everyone). The point is that even in isolation, we can make our voices heard and there are plenty of ways to organize in virtual environments.

How much of this would or can translate into meaningful action or serve as helping quell the passion that comes with feeling threatened by “the government” (I’m not even sure that that’s the concern they think the proponents of this argument have…the baseline just seems too childish for any kind of world view, policy, or mission statement)? For extremists, nothing will calm their agitated breasts. However, maybe – just maybe, for others, it may point to other alternatives they (and myself, for that matter) hadn’t considered.

Sources/Further Reading

These are all easily accessible no-paywall resources and not all have a part to play in this essay. However, I like to leave the reader with points of departure and the ability to traverse their own path. Admittedly, blog posts are not necessarily essays that require bibliographical references. Mine tend to be polemical and purely my responses to specific moments in time. From there, there’s a lot of free association. Lots. I hope that if anyone does read this, that it provides more than mere bellyaching or rolling my eyes. If there are issues to be addressed, I like to think I offer possible routes to solutions or at least, temporary relief.

Lansing Occupation:

Other states (good summary, but refer to citations for more thorough information):

Shelley Luther:

The New Deal:
of additional interest is Roosevelt’s “Second Bill of Rights”:

Post-War America

Rise of the Movement Conservatives:

As a prime example of both ideology and rhetoric, Reagan’s “A Time for Choosing” is emblematic:

The Civil Rights Movement:

The Civil Rights Digital Library


Heather Cox Richardson (relevant videos):

The American Paradox (Part 7)
The American Paradox (Part 8)

Economic present and future; the cost of lives versus the economy:

H.R.3355 - Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994




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