PEGGY NOONAN, The Lockdown Class War.
There is a class divide between those who are hard-line on lockdowns and those who are pushing back. We see the professionals on one sidethose James Burnham called the managerial elite, and Michael Lind, in The New Class War, calls the overclassand regular people on the other. The overclass are highly educated and exert outsize influence as managers and leaders of important institutionshospitals, companies, statehouses. The normal people arent connected through professional or social lines to power structures, and they have regular jobsservice worker, small-business owner.
Since the pandemic began, the overclass has been in chargescientists, doctors, political figures, consultantscalling the shots for the average people. But personally they have less skin in the game. The National Institutes of Health scientist wont lose his livelihood over whats happened. Neither will the midday anchor.
Ive called this divide the protected versus the unprotected. There is an aspect of it that is not much discussed but bears on current arguments. How you have experienced life has a lot to do with how you experience the pandemic and its strictures. I think its fair to say citizens of red states have been pushing back harder than those of blue states.
Its not that those in red states dont think theres a pandemic. Theyve heard all about it! They realize it will continue, they know they may get sick themselves. But they also figure this way: Hundreds of thousands could die and the American economy taken down, which would mean millions of other casualties, economic ones. Or, hundreds of thousands could die and the American economy is damaged but still stands, in which case there will be fewer economic casualtiesfewer bankruptcies and foreclosures, fewer unemployed and ruined.
Theyll take the latter. Its a loss either way but one loss is worse than the other. They know the politicians and scientists cant really weigh all this on a scale with any precision because life is a messy thing that doesnt want to be quantified.
Heres a generalization based on a lifetime of experience and observation. The working-class people who are pushing back have had harder lives than those now determining their fate. They havent had familial or economic ease. No one sent them to Yale. They often come from considerable family dysfunction. This has left them tougher or harder, you choose the word.
Theyre more fatalistic about life because life has taught them to be fatalistic. And they look at these scientists and reporters making their warnings about how tough its going to be if we lift shutdowns and they dont think, Oh what informed, caring observers. They think, You have no idea what tough is. You dont know what painful is. And if you dont know, why should you have so much say?
The overclass says, Wait three months before were safe. They reply, Theres no such thing as safe.
Something else is true about those pushing back. They live life closer to the ground and pick up other damage. Everyone knows the societal costs in the abstractdomestic violence, child abuse. . . . .
Meanwhile some governors are playing into every stereotype of the overclass. On Tuesday Pennsylvanias Tom Wolf said in a press briefing that those pushing against the shutdown are cowards. Local officials who cave in to this coronavirus will pay a price in state funding. These folks are choosing to desert in the face of the enemy. In the middle of a war. He said hell pull state certificates such as liquor licenses for any businesses that open. He must have thought he sounded uncompromising, like Gen. George Patton. He seemed more like Patton slapping the soldier. No sympathy, no respect, only judgment.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer called anti-lockdown demonstrations racist and misogynistic. She called the entire movement political. It was, in partthere have been plenty of Trump signs, and shes a possible Democratic vice presidential nominee. But the clamor in her state is real, and serious. People are in economic distress and worry that the foundations of their lives are being swept away. How does name-calling help? She might as well have called them deplorables. She said the protests may only make the lockdowns last longer, which sounded less like irony than a threat.
When you are reasonable with people and show them respect, they will want to respond in kind. But when they feel those calling the shots are being disrespectful, they will push back hard and rebel even in ways that hurt them.
And if your words and behavior cause such a reaction, you’re doing “public health” wrong.
Related: Protests show two Americas those who lost their jobs and those still getting paid.
Also: A bitter class war is raging between the ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ of lockdown.
Should have predicted always-on-the-wrong-side Peggy would appear.