Pandemic Perspectives

Page 9

Trump’s Kung Flu Takes its Place in Chronology of Racial Fear-Mongering Edward C. Halperin, M.D., M.A.

Photo Credit: Nicholas Kamm/AFP

At Donald Trump’s indoor campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, attendees were neither required to maintain social distance nor wear masks, blatantly disregarding previously established pandemic control guidelines. These guidelines were established by our nation’s top infectious disease physicians, including Dr. Anthony Fauci and other members of the White House Coronavirus Task Force. In a rambling speech delivered by Trump, who also did not wear a mask, he referred to COVID-19 as the “kung flu.” He has previously called it the “Chinese virus.” During the rally, he also stated that he had asked government officials to “slow the testing down” for COVID-19 to reduce the reported incidence rate of the disease. As a medical historian, I immediately recognize and recoil from anyone labeling diseases with names that disparage racial or religious groups. Behavior of this type occupies a dark place in medical history.

Attaching Racist Names to Diseases During the 14th century, the Black Death killed about a third of Europe’s population. Most modern medical historians agree that the bacteria named Yersinia pestis caused the Black Death. It was a form of a rapidly progressing disease, which we would now call plague. In the 14th century, however, no one blamed bacteria. Instead, they erroneously blamed the Jews. Large-scale massacres occurred of Europe’s Jews – a period of wholesale slaughter which, in its time, presaged the Holocaust of the 20th century. As syphilis spread across Europe in the 15th century people took turns scapegoating each other. The Germans called it the “French Disease” while the French called it the “Italian disease.” Anglo-Saxon Protestants blamed cholera outbreaks in the United States in the 19th century on Roman Catholic Irish immigration.

The British medical historian Niall Johnson has written that some people try to portray disease as,

“foreignness…What is wrong or unnatural cannot be of us, but must be of the ‘other’… One of the most obvious expressions of such externalizing of blame is when a geographical name becomes attached to a disease. The name suggests both disease and blame.” When President Trump referred to an encapsulated RNA virus as “kung flu” rather than COVID-19, he was trying to shift blame from poorly formulated and incompetently executed public health policy (included his wish to suppress COVID-19 testing), and instead place that blame on the people of Asia. In so doing, he is reincarnating a distasteful late 19th century epithet directed against Asian immigrants to the United States: the “yellow peril.”

‘American Lung Cancer’ Of the four plants of the Americas that spread to the rest of the world following the arrival of Christopher Columbus – potato, maize, tomato, and tobacco – only tobacco has successfully spread to reach everyone on the planet. Tobacco use is responsible for a significant proportion of cancer, cardiovascular, and pulmonary disease and death. How would the citizens of the United States feel if, instead of calling the disease “lung cancer,” the rest of the world adopted the term “American lung cancer?” Would we like it if cigarette-induced emphysema were named after a tobacco-producing state along the lines of “Kentucky Air Hunger Disease” or “North Carolina suffocation?” I think we would be deeply offended. Blaming diseases on racial, religious, or national groups is no joke. Innocent people get beaten or killed because of blame-shifting. We have already seen assaults in our country against Asian Americans as a result of this propensity to use racially charged language. In the midst of a crowd standing far too close to one another while not wearing masks, Trump injected the disease of racial hatred into the already virally infested airborne droplets that were being disseminated in that indoor arena in Tulsa. People of goodwill must oppose the disease of racism as vigorously as they combat the viral pandemic. As appeared in The Globe Post on June 29, 2020.

Why do some people attach racist names to diseases?

7


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Generation COVID: From the Eye of the Storm, a New Generation is Born

14min
pages 64-72

Want More Women in Leadership Roles? Focus on Their Strategy and Not Their Smile

3min
page 63

Hospital Industry Faces Reckoning: Where Do We Go From Here?

3min
page 57

Imperative Wake Up Call For Industry Leaders: The Time To Think About COVID-19 As A Complex Adaptive Challenge Is Now

6min
pages 59-62

COVID-19: In the Race for a Vaccine, Biopharmaceutical Companies Showing Moral

3min
page 58

The COVID-19 Pandemic: For-Profit Health Plans Win, Hospitals Lose

4min
pages 55-56

Don’t Disparage the Pace of COVID-19 Research

7min
pages 53-54

Amid a Historic Pandemic, Public Health Must Take the Lead Even With Other

3min
page 52

How Tech Is Saving Lives During COVID

4min
pages 50-51

A Pandemic Ethical Conundrum: Must Health Care Workers Risk Their Lives to Treat

27min
pages 39-48

The COVID-19 Vaccine is Coming. But Will We Be Ready?

3min
page 49

The COVID-19 Pandemic is Squeezing Women Out of Science

13min
pages 34-38

Let Ageism Bite the Dust During COVID

3min
page 32

Unspoken and Undone: Caring for Women Dealing with the Emotional Trauma of COVID-19

2min
page 33

A Pandemic in a Pandemic: Gender Based Violence and COVID

3min
page 31

Higher Education’s Misguided Obsession with Diversity Officers

5min
pages 29-30

Too Little or Too Late: U.S. Senate Response to Public Health Crises

4min
pages 26-28

Weighing the Economics, Public Health Benefits of Sheltering in Place

4min
page 25

We Need a Better CARES Package for the Elderly

3min
page 24

A Poignant EMS Week Amid a Historic Pandemic

5min
pages 19-20

NYC Paramedic Describes Holding ‘Ad Hoc Wake’ in Ambulance for Coronavirus Victim

2min
page 22

To Stop College Students from Attending “COVID Parties” Start Asking Why

4min
pages 15-16

The Trump Rally in Tulsa is A Recipe for Disaster

3min
page 10

COVID-19 Patients? Saving Ourselves from the Groundhog Day Effect When the Current Crisis Passes, Will We All Still be Created Equal? May Have Different Answers The Ethical Minefield of Prioritizing Health Care for Some with COVID

3min
page 21

Improving Communication in Technology Driven Mental Health

3min
page 18

With COVID-19, Civil Discontent Must Not Lead to Civil Disobedience

4min
pages 11-14

COVID-Safe: Amidst the Pandemic, Look Out for Number One

3min
page 17

Senator Paul’s Skepticism of Experts Sets a Very Dangerous Precedent

3min
page 8

To End the Female Recession, Women Need Their Own Rally Cry

4min
page 7

Trump’s Kung Flu Takes its Place in Chronology of Racial Fear-Mongering

3min
page 9
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.