COVID and the Pandemic with Beatrice Adler-Bolton
Upstream
Upstream
4.9 • 2.1K Ratings
🗓️ 15 February 2022
⏱️ 83 minutes
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Summary
By traditional metrics, the U.S. economy is doing pretty well right now — better than any other high income countries. But, at the same time, we have the worst COVID health outcomes of any of these countries too. It seems pretty obvious that by reopening the economy and all but abandoning any interventions aside from the vaccine, the Biden administration has pretty much this outcome. But of course, the problem goes much deeper — it's a combination of years of disinvestment and neoliberal policies. In this Conversation we're talking COVID with Beatrice Alder-Bolton, co-host of the Death Panel podcast and co-author of the forthcoming book, "Health Communism: A Surplus Manifesto," which will be published by Verso Books this fall. What are the structural causes of our skyrocketing COVID rates? How has COVID laid bare the rotting foundations of not just the U.S. healthcare system — but almost every single institution in this country? How are our political leaders using the pandemic as a launching ground for the rewriting for the social contract in a way that even further minimizes the responsibility of the state to protect people? These are just some of the questions we explore in this Conversation with Beatrice Alder-Bolton.
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Transcript
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| 0:34.2 | Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh. |
| 0:56.0 | So of course, the prioritization of reopening |
| 0:59.2 | has led to massive, massive amounts of death, but our inability to provide people with a bare |
| 1:08.6 | minimum of health care in the US, health finance, that in and of itself is also responsible for our |
| 1:17.2 | absolutely astronomical rates of death in the US because it's not just the immediate economy. |
| 1:23.6 | It's also all of the other things, all of the other economic decisions and all of the things we |
| 1:29.0 | have decided are not the responsibility of the government or any sort of collective effort, |
| 1:35.4 | but they are individual choices at the consumer level. And that being the sort of underlying |
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