The Pandemic Issue

“P resident Kennedy was the first president to not wear a hat. Have you seen men wearing hats since then?” Neil deGrasse Tyson, one of the world’s few astrophysicists with a household name, asks on the phone from his car. Well, no. “If I wear some cowboy hats, it’s because it’s the outfit, it’s not because that’s my standard equipment when I leave the home.” But Tyson, who speaks in methodically reasoned para- graphs with lots of semi-rhetorical questions to make sure we’re all still listening, isn’t really making a point about Mad Men-era men’s clothing trends. “Should a president influence fashion?” he says. “I think people sometimes don’t know the full power they have over other people. So, that’s the first prong in this comment. My second prong is, why would anyone take medical advice from a politician?” Days before our conversation, news broke that President Trump said he was taking hydroxychloro- quine, which he had hyped for months as a surefire magical cure for COVID-19 — the science just hadn’t caught up to his predictions. But the science never did catch up; instead, it went the opposite direction, showing that hydroxychloroquine, when used to treat COVID-19 patients, actually led to an increased risk of death. Alarm spread swiftly around the globe as experts cast the president’s professed self-medicating as illogical and dangerous. However, it was just one of a series of wild pieces of medical advice espoused by Trump from his mighty pulpit, like that, hey, maybe disinfectants could cure people when injected into their bodies. (That also leads to death.) But people do take medical advice from politicians. An Arizona man afraid of COVID-19 died after consuming chloroquine phosphate, which he and his wife had sitting on the back of a shelf after using it to treat koi fish for parasites. The pandemic has exposed many weaknesses in the feedback loop of society, govern-

ment, the media, and science, including the difficulty of seeding accurate medical information with the masses. Many on the left and right decry a broken political and news media system, but Tyson believes the problem isn’t mega-influencers like Trump. Rather it’s the general public’s desire to take their advice on complex topics – like the science of virology – that such influencers know nothing about. Tyson’s not upset with the public, who follow Trump’s advice. “As an educator, I can’t get angry with you,” he says. Or even Trump himself. “Trump was elected by 60 million people, right? So, you could say all you want about Trump, kick him out of office, whatever. [There’s] still the 60 million fellow Americans who walk among us who voted for him. So, what are you going to do with them?” Tyson also isn’t upset with Facebook, Twitter, and other social platforms that serve as today’s biggest conduits for misinformation. After all, in the realm of modern media’s history, these networks are tadpoles. “As an educator and as a scientist, I’m leaning towards, let’s figure out a way to train people in school to not fall victim to false information, and how to judge what is likely to be false relative to what is likely to be true. And that’s hard, but you and I have never had a class in that, have we? We’ve had biology classes, we’ve had English lit, we’ve had classes on Shakespeare — we have classes on 100 things and none of them are on the ability to distinguish what is true and what is not.” This is why Tyson himself doesn’t engage in Trump bashing on his social feeds, but does try to get people to differentiate factual science from fake news. “I feel responsibility to participate in the enlightenment of culture and of civilization, because I have that access,” says Tyson, who has 13.9M followers on Twitter, 1.2M on Instagram, and 4.2M on Facebook. He doesn’t tell his followers not to inject themselves with Clorox (“no one likes being told what to do”), but tries to get them to visualize a pandemic’s impact by comparing it to, say, a throng of rabbits. “Left unchecked, 1,000 rabbits in 5 years, become 7-billion, the human population of the World. After 15 years, a ‘land-ocean’ of rabbits fills to one-kilometer depth across all of Earth’s conti-

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