Watch: Anand Giridharadas Shares What 'We Learned' From the Covid-19 Pandemic
Writer Anand Giridharadas on Friday shared key lessons from the ongoing coronavirus pandemic on and wondered whether the “collective memory” of the crisis will compel the U.S. government and public to significantly invest in care infrastructure, pursue “real racial justice,” and embrace an approach to live-saving healthcare that prioritizes global security over corporate profits.
“It is possible at this hour to be consumed by despair,” Giridharadas said while filling in as guest host of Peacock‘s “The Mehdi Hasan Show,” as the U.S. death toll from Covid-19 neared 600,000. “But there is, in moments like this one, a possibility of tearing open a hole in the universe and marching through it.”
“I will tell you some of what I think we learned” since the lockdowns began, he said. “That child care is a shared societal burden, not a private good. We learned this year how much harder it is to work, how much harder women in particular have it, how much female brilliance we sideline, when we make child care a luxury product.”
“We learned that we’re only as healthy as the person next to us—so when they don’t have access to healthcare, we all suffer,” he continued. “We learned, at the same time, that there are no great equalizers, not even viruses—that inequity is a preexisting condition, and viruses, like so many other disasters on record, hit people according to their position in the caste hierarchy.”
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