As readers know, I frequently mock the Star Tribune and I do despair over the political bent that infects every aspect of the paper. But I will also say they have been very fair to me in publishing what I wrote during the epidemic. The former op-ed editor, Doug Tice, was a very reasonable person. His successor David Banks appears to be as well, and I am grateful that despite my mocking, the paper will print my views. Here for those of you who don’t subscribe to the paper is the op-ed.
A DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE ON MINNESOTA’S CV-19 RESPONSE
On Sunday in this paper former Commissioner of Health Jan Malcolm painted a picture of Minnesota’s response to the epidemic which was glowing but highly misleading. As someone who has a lifelong background in health care, research and data and who actively tracked and wrote about the epidemic, including doing extensive independent analysis of the data the state was and wasn’t presenting to the public, I have a more complete and accurate perspective of the true impact of the state’s response, which was guided by the Commissioner and Governor Walz.
From the start, the state’s response was driven by fear, panic and models with obvious flaws. We will all recall the 50,000 deaths forecast which were so widely promoted by the Governor. The state’s model was created by amateurs who refused to accept any input from myself or others and who ignored such basic tenets as understanding variations in susceptibility across the population and differing penetration rates into segments of the population over time. So of course the model was wildly erroneous, but the Governor used it to justify radical actions essentially shutting down all aspects of society.
Contrary to Commissioner’s Malcolm’s assertions, past experience with respiratory virus epidemics was completely ignored. The United States has endured a number of serious influenza epidemics, with equal morbidity and mortality to that shown by CV-19, and never engaged in mandated widespread lockdowns or school closures, social distancing, masking or other measures widely forced upon the public in this epidemic. The known nature of respiratory virus epidemics was also ignored—spread is impossible to suppress; these viruses have reservoirs and transmission methods that are not well understood and eventually evade every suppression attempt.
The claim that the response was balanced is absurd. From the start the only consideration was attempting futilely and unsuccessfully to stop infections; with no regard for the damage done by the measures employed. The truth about Minnesota’s response is seen in its health, social and economic consequences. Almost every Minnesotan was ultimately infected, many multiple times, demonstrating the typical futility of respiratory virus suppression efforts. Properly adjusted for age and minority proportion of the population, Minnesota’s hospitalization and death rates were middle of the pack at best. Minnesota experienced high rates of nursing home deaths. Care for other conditions was delayed, worsening disease states for many patients. Drug and alcohol abuse soared.
The population was terrorized with constant fear-inducing press conferences. Children’s lives were upended, leading to a surge in mental health issues and a massive decline in educational attainment. Minority children were particularly grievously damaged, with many becoming and staying chronically absent from school. Athletic and socializing opportunities were eliminated. The educational issues persist to this day. Many businesses went under, and the flight of companies, individuals and income from Minnesota’s particularly draconian lockdowns accelerated. And most infamously, the Governor forbade families and friends to gather and encouraged people to snitch on those who might be violating his orders.
By now the entire nation is familiar with Governor Walz’ constant estrangement from truth. This was on full display during the epidemic as he frequently twisted data and “misstated” facts. A particularly striking example was after a day in which Minnesota experienced a high number of deaths and the Governor vehemently demonized the unvaccinated and said that not a single of the deaths was among the vaccinated. This was false, in fact almost half the deaths that day were among the vaccinated. The Governor must have known it was false. I am a strong supporter and defender of vaccines, but respiratory virus vaccines have notoriously weak effectiveness and the Governor’s constant erroneous statements regarding effectiveness were a major contributor to public mistrust, which lingers particularly toward vaccines in general.
The Governor and Commissioner could have sought multiple sources of data, analysis and perspectives on an appropriate response. Not only did they not do that, but constant attempts were made to shut down any criticism of their actions. They barred certain journalists from press conferences. They demeaned and mocked those who questioned the wisdom of lockdowns, masking, school closures and other measures. They made it difficult for people to access data; we still have multiple data requests which have simply never been responded to. Not the actions of people who really believe what they did was correct.
It is now commonly accepted that lockdowns and school closures were both ineffective and inflicted far more harm than they prevented. The Commissioner fails to acknowledge the scope of this harm. Instead of a selective whitewash of Minnesota’s epidemic response, the public deserves a full independent inquiry, which would deliver proposals on how to avoid such a futile and damaging response to future epidemics. In particular, the use of never-ending emergency dictatorial powers must be stopped. Within a few days of any event, the legislature is perfectly capable of responding and will do so in a manner that is more likely to consider all the evidence and options.
Commissioner Malcolm and Governor Walz owe the public a mea culpa and an apology, not a false portrayal of brave and effective actions. Anything less only heightens the citizenry’s distrust of public health and other government officials that Commissioner Malcolm claims to be so concerned about.
This blog needs an applause button. Well done, Kevin!
Spot on as usual Kevin. Thanks for sharing, since I suspect that most of your followers (me included) wouldn’t wrap dead fish in the Strib, let alone waste our time reading it
great rebuttal Kevin!
Bravo! Well said.
As Kevin notes – ” Properly adjusted for age and minority proportion of the population, Minnesota’s hospitalization and death rates were middle of the pack at best. ”
Leftists heavily critizied Florida’s “lax ” response noting Florida’s high death rate.
Knowing that the 65+ age group had the highest death rates, I ran a schedule of the cumulative deaths per 100k population for most every state. The cumulative deaths as of Dec 2021 ranged from a low of 1100 through 1180 with no correlation between red states and blue states. That is a very narrow range, inspite of the huge differences in mitigation protocols. Florida cumulative deaths per 100k was approx 1130 while MN was approx 1145 (speaking from memory, so my apologies if slightly off) . I will note the only exceptions were NY and NJ which were significantly higher per capita death rates while NH, VT, WA ,OR and HA were significally below the norm.
The data that I ran is consistent with the points made by Kevin and our new NIH director.
That was brilliant. It should be etched on a marble slab and displayed forever at the state capitol. Or the U.S. capitol.
Excellent summary of the madness. Your recommendation for the official response to future public health emergencies is spot on. Shame it won’t be done.
Your op-ed in the Red Star just got noted by Mr. Johnson over at Powerline. It may not trigger an Instalanche, but it should help get some more traffic.
I really hope this comment was published in the Paper!!!!!