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Originally Posted by ToothSayer
On January 29th, way before anyone else, Trump created the Coronavirus Task Force, with broad powers to coordinate the response. Fauci, as head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984, was given broad powers.
I fail to see any broad powers granted to Fauci here:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings...us-task-force/
And the head of the task force was Alex Azar, not Anthony Fauci. Regardless, it's important to understand that anyone working under the administration only has powers to the extent that the President approves of what they do. Ultimately, you can't distinguish their inaction from Trump's preferences. I don't understand how you can say anyone had "broad powers" - no one in this situation has statutory powers. All they can have is an implicit backing from the President, which allows them to effectively force various agencies to follow the mandate. Not because the czar has any power, but because they are afraid of consequences of not following what comes directly from the President. If Trump isn't backing this mandate, they have no powers. And if Trump is out there saying he wants numbers to be low, how could anyone have the power to get all the agencies to do what it takes to expedite testing?
And it's unclear what the task force did and what their real mandate was, who really had the power and how they were evaluated. It just seems like a random collection of people they put together because the President was afraid of putting someone in charge but needed to look like they are doing something. Maybe they were in charge of coming up with official sounding things that sort of back Trump's tweets.
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The experts, are they often do, screwed it up. They screwed up the tests
This is pure nonsense - the US has the capacity to get this right multiple times over. Scaling up testing doesn't have to go through CDC - it's a bureaucratic layer. Clearing out red tapes is exactly what a competent response would have looked like. There's no excuse - local failures aren't why the nation with the world's largest economy doesn't have testing at scale.
This weird black and white thinkng of "experts = BAD" is also quite illuminating as to your understanding of the world. Have you perhaps considered the possiblity that some experts are better than others and that also in some evolving situations, you need experts of one kind over another? And that a competent administration could have pushed for explanations and listened to the right people? This happens all the time in corporations - you force experts in one subject area to explain the whys and hows and you realize they are making assumptions in areas that are outside their competency, which invalidates their conclusion. As President, you have access to experts in any number of disciplines as well as smart generalists who can synthesize all of that to come up with a more accurate world view. "Experts = BAD" is a hilariously awful take when what clearly failed as the ability for the administration to meaningfully digest all of these different viewpoints to something actionable.
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"The risk to the American public is very low"
"There is low community spread in the United States. The risk to the public is low."
"You don't need to do anything special. Follow normal flu season guidelines. I want to reiterate that the risk to the community is low"
These are all substantially superior messages that what Trump was putting out there. If you tell someone that the risk is low (and the risks weren't particularly high to individuals at the time), they believe you and you later tell them the risk is higher, that's fine, things can change and people can understand that. If you tell them that this entire thing is hysteria created by your political enemies and they are trying to blow it out of proportions, well, you're going to have a harder time changing their viewpoint. Which has contributed to the response at all levels of society.
And once again, you cannot divorce what the administration officials are saying from what Trump is saying. It's entirely possible multiple possible scenarios were considered and Trump pushed for the most optimistic version and this was what was put out there.
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This is a failure of experts - appointed under Obama and before
Again, the entire point here is that in organizations, incentives matter and the viewpoint of the leadership matter. We can't divorce their reactions and public statements from the preferences of Trump.
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Left wing thinking is a fatal disease.
This has nothing to do with left and right but it seems to me that you're projecting your partisa world view. Donald Trump was the same person when he was a Democrat and competence isn'ts something that's unique to either side. There's nothing partisan about Trump's incompetent response to the crisis - it's something you could just as well imagine from a leftist incompetent President. This being a left vs right thing is just a figment of your own imagination - and possibly a sad commentary on your ability to analyze situations objectively.