The Wall Street Journal - 28.03.2020 - 29.03.2020

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Saturday/Sunday, March 28 - 29, 2020 |A


opportunistically piggybacking on a
pandemic, maybe the more cele-
brated one. If it was a common one
I suspect others are having it too
and so it should have a name, but
not a distinguished one like corona.
Let’s call it the schmutz virus.
It came three weeks ago with a
chill, the next morning I felt fine,
that night chills again, and a temper-
ature of 101. It bopped around from
99 to 101.5.
Symptoms seem to vary a lot and
everyone asks about them. Here was
my coronavirus or schmutz:
A dry cough that turned deep and
then wracking. Bad sore throat. The
first week I had a funny electrical
headache that made me think of si-
lent videos of lightning in the dis-
tance. These would come, go away,
return. Early on I experienced some-
thing that some people are report-
ing, a racing heart. Just a minute or
two of a fast-beating heart, mostly
at night as I read. Looking back, this
started in the days before the fever.
I think it was my system flashing
red:We are fighting something.
There are reports some lose their
sense of taste and smell, and some
have conjunctivitis—not me. Fatigue

a week in, which I discovered after I
stripped down and made up a bed
and was so exhausted I had to nap.
There seems no accounting for
how hard the virus hits one person
and not another, nor for the duration
of the illness. Mine stayed so long
because I believe it heard I’m a
charming host. If yours doesn’t linger
you should ask yourself: Why?
From the beginning I took self-
quarantine both literally and seri-
ously, going out only for a doctor’s
appointment, a virus test and a run
to the bank. I haven’t been home for
three weeks in 30 years.
There will be a lot of self-reckon-
ing going on inside a lot of us in the
coming months and years. For me
there have been some surprises. One
is that I didn’t do anything most of
the time and yet each day sped by
kind of satisfyingly. And I didn’t feel
lonely—there’s been a lot of tele-
phoning, texting, emailing, even
FaceTiming.
I wanted to read Trollope but in-
stead mostly read the intellectual
equivalent of comfort food—Honoria
Murphy’s respectful memoir of her
parents, Gerald and Sarah; A.E.
Hotchner’s “Papa Hemingway,”

My Corona (or Is It Schmutz?)


sary, and I would have said, “No,
alas,” if they’d asked. This reminds
me of meeting a stooped old Marine
with one eye in Washington in the
1980s. Somehow it came up that
he’d fought at Guadalcanal. I asked
if by chance he’d crossed paths with
Richard Tregaskis. No, he said, who
is he? He wrote an important ac-
count of the early days of the battle,
“Guadalcanal Diary.”
The Marine gave me a steely one-
eye look and said, “No, I was gone by
the time the writers came.” This
ever after gave me a subdued sense
of my place in the order of things.
But with how poorly some gov-
ernment agencies have handled this
thing in general, you have to wonder
if the problem with reporting results
is not only triage but other things,
such as poor organization and plan-
ning and incompetent systems. Eight
days in I entered the living hell of
attempting to find my results
through websites and patient por-
tals. I downloaded unnavigable apps,
was pressed for passwords I’d not
been given, followed dead-end
prompts. The whole system is built
to winnow out the weak, to make
you stop bothering them. This is
what it’s like, in a robot voice: “How
to get out of the forest: There will be
trees. If you aren’t rescued in three
to seven days, please try screaming
into the void.”
Once I got through to an actual
person who was assigned to another
department at the clinic but kindly,
furtively checked my name and date
of birth. “We have no results for you
on Covid-19,” she said. I asked if they
were overwhelmed. She said they
are “just trying to deal with the
data. A lot.”
iii
Here I’ll speak of my experience
of whatever illness I had.
Various tests had eliminated flu
and other possibilities early on, and
my doctor and I concluded I likely
had a virus, maybe a common one

which I hadn’t read since it first
came out when I was a teenager and
was important to me then. A lot of
Lost Generation literature going on
here. I read Jay Parini’s fair-minded
biography of Robert Frost, whose
work I more and more revere but
whose nature and personality I
somehow cannot warm to. It would
irritate him to hear his effortful life
makes you think of Carl Sandburg:
“This old anvil laughs at many bro-
ken hammers.”
That resonates, doesn’t it?
Let’s be inappropriately personal
because what the hell. Through the
larger drama of the past few weeks
my spirits have been good but my
emotions somehow closer to the sur-
face. I found I didn’t want to binge
on Netflix, I wanted to watch what
other people were watching and
watch it with them. “A League of
Their Own,” and “Les Miserables”
have been in cable rotation, and mo-
ments in them which in the past
hadn’t moved me moved me now. I
watched, “My Best Friend’s Wed-
ding,” and in the restaurant scene
when they all break into “I Say a Lit-
tle Prayer for You”—it choked me
up. I’m choked up now!
Man, what a time. Here is a real-
life moment. I mentioned running
out to the bank. We’re all tipping
$20s in Manhattan and I ran low. I
walked over in full regalia—N
mask, sanitary gloves, high-necked
coat and scarf. As I walked home I
passed by the 90th Street Pharmacy,
looked in the shining windows, and
saw Hamidou and Barbara at the
counter. I felt so grateful for them. I
knocked on the glass, they looked,
and I drew myself up and threw
them a full, formal military salute.
At exactly that moment I thought:
Oh no, the mask, the gloves, they
won’t recognize me!But they did,
immediately, and we laughed and ap-
plauded each other.
How fiercely we love people we
don’t know we love.

A technician packages testing kits at Co-Diagnostics Inc. in Salt Lake City.

GEORGE FREY/BLOOMBERG NEWS

F


or the first time in 21 days
my temperature has been
normal twice in a row, so
as far as I’m concerned the
fever is gone and the illness
over. I still don’t know what I had. I
got the coronavirus test March 17 and
haven’t received the results.
If this is happening to me, it’s
happening to others. A week and a
half is a long time for suspense, es-
pecially when you’re sick, and speaks
of a certain breakdown. In the early
days of the pandemic the adminis-
tration was embarrassed to have
bungled the production and dissemi-
nation of tests. They say they’ve
pumped millions of tests into the
system, but if laboratories don’t
have the gear or personnel to pro-
cess the tests, the problem is not
solved.


It is to be assumed, and some
news reports imply, that the labs
too are doing triage, as they should.
Top priority would be those admit-
ted to hospitals and exhibiting
symptoms. Next might be doctors,
nurses and other hospital personnel.
Beyond that you’d hope they are
thinking in terms of essential non-
medical personnel: firemen, cops,
garbagemen, grid workers. I don’t
remember being asked at the North-
well GoHealth urgent-care store-
front on First Avenue if I was neces-


I went in for a Covid-


test March 17. I’m feeling


much better but still


awaiting my results.


DECLARATIONS
By Peggy Noonan

OPINION


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Old Age Is a Bummer for the Baby Boomers


T


he uncomfortable collision of
a perilous pandemic and a
boisterous battle for the pres-
idency conveys an unwelcome but
unmistakable message to aging baby
boomers. The generation that has
dominated pop culture and politics
for nearly a half-century, that has
loomed in the national conscious-
ness as perpetually pre-eminent,
may not be so ageless and invincible
after all.
Joe Biden (who’ll turn 78 before
Inauguration Day) and Donald J.
Trump (who’ll be 74), would be the
two oldest people ever nominated
for the presidency by a major party.
And it isn’t only the two survivors of
the arduous selection process who
demonstrate the graying of our poli-
tics. Mr. Biden’s most durable Demo-
cratic rivals—Bernie Sanders, Eliza-
beth Warren and Michael Bloomberg
—are all septuagenarians.
All of these grizzled geezers also
qualify as prime targets for Covid-19,
which seems to focus its most viru-
lent ravages almost exclusively on
those who’ve passed the age of
threescore and 10. American voters
like to believe that robust, inde-
structible chief executives will prop-
erly protect them from the world’s
dangers, but in the current situation
it’s the candidates themselves who
seem especially vulnerable, threat-
ened by coronavirus. If we do make
it to November with no health
breakdowns for either of the aged
electioneers, it will still constitute
the end of an era—a “Last Hurrah”
in the spirit of a marvelous, nostal-
gic 1956 novel about a political war-
horse in his final campaign.
However this plot plays out,
whether Mr. Trump proceeds to a
second term or Mr. Biden manages
to seize his place, it’s virtually in-
conceivable that we’ll ever again
elect a president born in the 1940s.
Boomers (and pre-boomers like Mr.
Biden, who arrived less than three
years before the end of World War
II) won’t be shuffled offstage alto-


gether, but they won’t capture star-
ring roles for the future, or hold the
spotlight that our generation tradi-
tionally demanded.
From the beginning, the postwar
baby-boom cohort always received
disproportionate attention for the
simple reason that there were so
many of us: Some 76 million were
born during the period of fertility
and mounting prosperity from 1946
through 1964. When we were tod-
dlers and mischievous tykes, the
public delighted in newspaper car-
toons depicting our misadventures—
think of “Peanuts” (launched in
1950) and “Dennis the Menace”
(1951). “Leave It to Beaver” (a televi-
sion smash hit between 1957-63)
took us a bit further in our child-
hood journeys.
As we entered our adolescent
years, the term “teenager” suddenly
entered the popular lexicon while
the rest of the nation puzzled over
our exotic tastes in music (The Beat-
les, acid rock), hair (“flow it, show
it, long as God can grow it”) and
cosmopolitan clothing (why bell bot-
toms or Nehru jackets?). At Wood-
stock, fawning media accounts dis-

cerned the dawning of a new
millennial age, some 31 years before
the actual millennium, indulging our
generational arrogance and self-re-
gard. A year later, Yale law profes-
sor Charles Reich published a best-
seller called “The Greening of

America” that hailed his students
and their cohort for shaping a new
world, not based on what they cre-
ated or even pursued, but what they
rejected: materialism, militarism,
conformity.
In recent years, the “turn on,
tune in, drop out” radicalism of the
’60s gave way to a notable pursuit
of power. Two high school classes
achieved the near-complete domina-
tion of American presidential poli-
tics, with the seniors from the Class
of ’64 (Bill Clinton, George W. Bush,

Donald Trump) enjoying more con-
spicuous success than the hapless
juniors of the Class of ’65 (Al Gore,
Mitt Romney, Hillary Clinton).
My 1976 book, “What Really Hap-
pened to the Class of ’65?,” probed
the destructive, disillusioning im-
pact of the counterculture on mem-
bers of my California high-school
class, looking back from the vantage
point of our 10-year reunion. In
speaking about the progress of this
fabled, favored generation in lec-
tures and media appearances related
to that book, I often made the point
that wherever we found ourselves in
our peregrinations, admirers would
define our excesses as the very es-
sence of stylish novelty, so that
somewhere around the year 2020,
the world would consider it un-
speakably hip to be fashionably en-
sconced in cutting-edge nursing
homes.
That punch line drew chuckles,
but the real-life suffering of boom-
ers in board and care, grievously af-
flicted by Covid-19, counts as no
laughing matter.
At the moment, the bulk of ’60s
survivors still shelter in place and

hope for adequate supplies of toilet
paper, hand sanitizer and, if neces-
sary, ventilators. None of it seems
adventurous or sexy; instead of long-
ing for brave new worlds, most of us
would settle for a fondly remem-
bered bygone era—say, the good old
days of three months ago.
Boomers will not, of course, go
gentle into that good night, disap-
pearing before we play our own
role in the longed-for return of the
grand blessings of normal Ameri-
can life. We might even savor the
last exercise of presidential power
by one of our rough contempo-
raries, whichever of the dueling
old-timers wins the 2020 keys to
the White House. But with brothers
and sisters of the Woodstock fam-
ily suddenly frail and vulnerable,
we can far more readily accept the
patronizing, smug disdain of “OK
boomer” in place of the less palat-
able formulation—“Bye bye boom-
ers”—that inevitably lies ahead.

Mr. Medved hosts a daily, nation-
ally broadcast radio talk show and
is the author, most recently, of
“God’s Hand on America” (2019).

By Michael Medved


My generation, dominant
for so long, gets a taste
of its mortality with the
help of the coronavirus.

Yes, We Need Cost-Benefit Analysis


Our country’s pre-
mier advocate for
cost-benefit analy-
sis has written
about the corona-
virus. He is Cass
Sunstein, the Har-
vard law professor
and former Obama
White House regu-
latory guru.
Of course you
have to use the search function at
Bloomberg News to find his column
from Thursday. His editors don’t
make it easy. And his headline and
subheadline writers adopt the un-
usual tack of advertising his piece
by fibbing about what it says.
Mr. Sunstein endorses two stud-

ies that see benefits of “aggressive
social distancing,” even at the cost
of considerable economic destruc-
tion, in terms of lives saved. Who
doesn’t? But the proposals he cites
define aggressive social distancing
to mean something less stringent
than the sweeping mandatory busi-
ness shutdowns and shelter-in-
place commands already in force
around the country.
One study proposes seven-day
isolation of those with symptoms,
14-day isolation of exposed house-
holds, and “dramatically reduced
social contact for all those over 70
years of age.” The other, sterner
study proposes closing schools, the-
aters and sports venues.
Even so, Mr. Sunstein allows that
if the economic depression is long-
lasting or the recovery slow, the
costs “start to explode” and need
to be rethought. And nowhere does
he suggest costs shouldn’t be con-
sidered at all as the Bloomberg
headline writers seem to believe:
“This Time the Numbers Show We
Can’t Be Too Careful: Hard-headed
cost-benefit analysis usually con-
firms that it’s dangerous to be
overcautious. The coronavirus is
different.”
Huh? That’s exactly not what his
column says. Even Gov. Andrew
Cuomo, whose New York City is
America’s worst coronavirus hot
spot, was having second thoughts
on Thursday about the strenuous
social-distancing requirements he
has been imposing on the city’s
businesses and citizens.
Since I made a joke at CNN’s ex-
pense on Wednesday, I have had to
explain to a few readers that it
wasn’t just a gratuitous sideswipe.

For news organizations, misleading
the consumer can, at times, be part
of the business model. If consumers
put up with it or seem to enjoy it,
it will continue. Like Hillary Clin-
ton’s tweets, this is the last thing
we need right now.
Mr. Sunstein goes to some length
to explain why it’s exactly wrong
and self-defeating to refuse to weigh
the benefit of public goals against
the cost of achieving them.

He chooses examples of the sort
that excite ridicule when President
Trump cites them, such as our tol-
erance for traffic deaths as the
price for being able to move around
freely, or acceptance of construc-
tion deaths (perhaps an uncon-
scious wink to the real-estate im-
presario in the White House) so we
can have buildings to live in and
work in.
“I have long been an enthusiastic
defender of quantitative cost-bene-
fit analysis,” Mr. Sunstein begins.
In words plain enough that a head-
line writer can understand them, he
acknowledges that in the present
situation a significant percentage of
the “avoided mortalities involve
older people” and this ought to be
a factor in our calculations.
Of course he punts in the final
analysis as people often do when
the going gets tough. “In a period

when a lot of human beings are
getting sick and dying, it might ap-
pear callous to rely on statistics,
and especially the monetary valua-
tion of human life,” he writes, and
then ringingly finds that “extensive
precautions, not ending soon, are
amply justified by the most hard-
headed forms of analysis that we
have.”
Which is fine, but which precau-
tions? The lesser ones in the studies
he cites, or the more severe clamp-
downs governors around the coun-
try have been imposing on their
states? And when should we decide
the costs are rising too fast for the
expected benefits? His guidance
would be much appreciated.
There has been considerable talk
lately of moral hazard, as if airline
shareholders should have required
their companies to hold large
amounts of cash in advance against
the government unexpectedly shut-
ting down the economy to fight an
epidemic. This is not a case of
moral hazard (and neither does it
mean airline shareholders should
be bailed out now). When share-
holders want to pile up cash
against unlikely contingencies, they
buy Treasury bonds.
The real moral hazard in the
present crisis is the one Mr. Sun-
stein exemplifies: our politicians
and thought leaders, because they
don’t want to be seen as meanies,
failing to advise the country can-
didly about the nature of the trade-
offs we face in our current distress.
And just so you don’t get the
wrong idea, I’m a 61-year-old col-
umnist with a problematic lung,
whose Battle of the Bulge-surviving
father is 98.

BUSINESS
WORLD
By Holman W.
Jenkins, Jr.

A guru punts in the
last paragraph but
what he says is still
worth listening to.
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