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What Was Great About 2020
Townhall.com ^ | December 30, 2020 | Jeff Jacoby

Posted on 12/30/2020 11:48:08 AM PST by Kaslin

ONE YEAR AGO, in a column headlined "What was so great about the 2010s," I remarked that the first decade of the 21st century, "for all its sorrows, has been the best time to be alive." Despite the media's relentless focus on bad news, I argued, humankind was living in the most fortunate era our species had ever known.

Then came 2020.

The past 12 months have brought misery, turmoil, and distress on a scale that most Americans couldn't have imagined last New Year's Eve: the emergence of the coronavirus, a torrent of sickness and death, economic and social lockdowns, a tidal wave of racial protests, frightening riots, a poisonous election campaign, catastrophic wildfires, a nationwide shutdown of sports, concerts, and theaters, millions of lost jobs. If it hasn't literally been "the worst year ever,"as Time magazine labeled it, it has certainly been the worst that millions of people have known in this lifetime.

But it has been a year of good news and glad tidings, too. While 2020 was overloaded with stress and sadness, it also supplied reasons to be grateful and milestones to celebrate. Here are a few.

There was news the world yearned for all year: Two COVID-19 vaccines were developed and brought to market. Before 2020, it took an average of 10 years to create a new vaccine, test it for safety and efficacy, and manufacture it for public use. But this year, due in part to the technology of messenger RNA, or mRNA, it was accomplished in a matter of months — an achievement that marked the start of what is already being called "a golden age of vaccinology."

Africa was declared free of wild polio, a disease that until recently still infected thousands of young children each year, paralyzing for life those it didn't kill. In August, the World Health Organization proclaimed a "public health triumph," announcing that the final remaining strain of wild polio virus had been eradicated in Nigeria, the last country on earth to have reported a case of the disease.

One response to all the lockdowns and restrictions on socializing was a turbocharged rise in rescues and adoptions of animals. "Shelters, nonprofit rescues, private breeders, pet stores — all reported more consumer demand than there were dogs and puppies to fill it," reported The Washington Post. That was happy news not just for the animals, but for their new humans: Research shows that caring for pets tends to lower blood pressure, increase cardiovascular health, and reduce anxiety.

In the space of a few months, four Muslim countries — the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco — all agreed to normalize relations with Israel. After decades in which the Arab-Israeli standoff had seemed frozen in old hostilities, the sudden surge of peacemaking generated a level of hopeful excitement and joy that no one had been expecting in the Middle East a year earlier.

The politics of 2020 were atrocious, and the US election campaign was as polarizing and toxic as any in living memory. Yet when all was said and done, Americans demonstrated that their commitment to democratic self-government was as unwavering as ever: When the election finally arrived, 21 million more Americans cast ballots than had done so in 2016. In the past four years, America's population grew by 7.5 million. The increase in voter turnout was triple that.

In July, NASA launched a rocket carrying the nuclear-powered Perseverance, the most advanced Mars rover ever built. Perseverance is designed to search for signs of ancient life on the red planet and to extract oxygen from the Martian atmosphere. Even more ambitious, it will fly a helicopter! In another milestone, 2020 was the year that NASA successfully landed a spacecraft on an asteroid. Equally impressive were the accomplishments of a private American company: Elon Musk's SpaceX twice flew astronauts to the International Space Station — marking the dawn of commercial human spaceflight.

Charitable giving soared in 2020. America has always been a remarkably philanthropic society, but in this terrible year donors gave even more generously than usual. In the first six months of the pandemic, gifts to charity increased by nearly 7.5 percent over the same period a year earlier. As lockdowns deprived millions of Americans of their regular income, millions of others stepped forward to help — supplying money, food, services, and support of all kinds to people in need.

One other blessing of 2020: a heightened awareness of, and appreciation for, countless workers whom it had been so easy to overlook before — the delivery drivers and supermarket employees, postal clerks and transit operators, sanitation workers and hospital orderlies who kept doing their jobs even as the world went into meltdown. We finally learned to think of them as "essential workers," and to applaud and give thanks for what they do every day.

The glass wasn't half-full in 2020, but it certainly wasn't empty. May we hear more glad tidings in 2021.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: adoption; middleeast; vaccine; voting

1 posted on 12/30/2020 11:48:08 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

What was great is I don’t like people and didn’t have to see them often.


2 posted on 12/30/2020 11:51:22 AM PST by sevinufnine
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To: Kaslin

Trump won


3 posted on 12/30/2020 11:51:51 AM PST by stanne
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To: Kaslin

What was great for me was (1) my husband recovered from what seemed like it would be fatal illness in April after spending 8 days on a ventilator and 5 weeks in hospitals and nursing care (2) I quit smoking after many years on May 1st (3) in June, found out that we have a half-sister, 56 years old, and open to knowing us and having more siblings (and who used to live within 2 miles of me, even though we both moved to this state from over 400 miles away) (4) in July we got a new son-in-law.

Plenty of bad stuff happened in 2020, but this stuff was good.


4 posted on 12/30/2020 11:57:20 AM PST by NEMDF
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To: sevinufnine

Sounds like winning to me


5 posted on 12/30/2020 12:07:55 PM PST by newzjunkey (Purdue in GA for the Senate - Vote Giant Meteor in 2022)
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To: NEMDF

I’m happy that your husband survived his illness, and pray that 2021 will bring a better life to all of us. My son has been cancer free for a year, and that’s the best thing that happened to us in 2020.


6 posted on 12/30/2020 12:13:18 PM PST by mass55th ("Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway." ~~ John Wayne )
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To: stanne

I believe Trump won the 2020 presidential election even more fervently than I believe that Paul Tracy won the 2002 Indianapolis 500.


7 posted on 12/30/2020 12:19:10 PM PST by ZirconEncrustedTweezers (Posting from deep within enemy territory - San Jose, CA)
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To: ZirconEncrustedTweezers
I believe Trump won the 2020 presidential election

If you caught the GA hearing today, you would be convinced he won.

8 posted on 12/30/2020 12:20:05 PM PST by 1Old Pro
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To: Kaslin

What will be great about 2020 is it ends tomorrow night.


9 posted on 12/30/2020 12:23:07 PM PST by Widget Jr
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To: Kaslin

The greatest thing about 2020 was:

All diseases, except Rhona, stopped killing people! The flu and bronchitis and even the odd knife in the neck stopped being causes of death! Oh, what a time to be the coroner!!!


10 posted on 12/30/2020 12:23:25 PM PST by blu (Bagster's ping on the side)
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To: Kaslin

Americans are perfectly capable of working remotely for a Large Company while living in Rural areas with low living costs. Hopefully this will gut the cesspool metro areas.


11 posted on 12/30/2020 12:32:55 PM PST by The Toll
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To: Kaslin

“While 2020 was overloaded with stress and sadness”

That’s kind of squishy, isn’t it? The stress and sadness blared out on the news is insignificant compared to the individual and family stress and sadness we never hear about.

Overloaded? Was the entire world loaded with more than it could handle?


12 posted on 12/30/2020 12:40:22 PM PST by cymbeline
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To: Kaslin

I read somewhere...
If years had drinks named for them,
2020 would be the Colonoscopy Prep.


13 posted on 12/30/2020 3:35:15 PM PST by Vinnie
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To: Kaslin; Cats Pajamas

I think it’s time to lighten up a little!

Here are 12 things to consider as we get closer to closing the door on one of the most horrible years of our lifetime:

1. The dumbest thing I ever bought was a 2020 planner.

2. I was so bored I called Jake from State Farm just to talk to someone. He asked me what I was wearing.

3. 2019: Stay away from negative people. 2020: Stay away from positive people.

4. The world has turned upside down. Old folks are sneaking out of the house & their kids are yelling at them to stay indoors!

5. This morning I saw a neighbor talking to her dog. It was obvious she thought her dog understood her. I came into my house & told my cat. We laughed a lot.

6. Every few days try your jeans on just to make sure they fit. Pajamas will have you believe all is well in the kingdom.

7. Does anyone know if we can take showers yet or should we just keep washing our hands?

8. This virus has done what no woman has been able to do. Cancel sports, shut down all bars & keep men at home!

9. I never thought the comment, “I wouldn’t touch him/her with a 6-foot pole” would become a national policy, but here we are!

10. I need to practice social-distancing from the refrigerator.

11. I hope the weather is good tomorrow for my trip to the Backyard. I’m getting tired of the Living Room.

12. Never in a million years could I have imagined I would go up to a bank teller wearing a mask & ask for money.

Feel free to copy and paste, I did.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

Sent from my iPhone


14 posted on 12/30/2020 4:20:12 PM PST by native texan
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To: native texan

I agree native.

Peeps need to be chilling (maybe get a mani/pedi) like this Drama Queen!

https://mobile.twitter.com/squill_whispers/status/1343921430140956672

No thread slide intended. Short and sweet humor break only!


15 posted on 12/30/2020 5:08:53 PM PST by Cats Pajamas (President Trump won so big he broke their algorithm!)
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To: Cats Pajamas

Cats, I love it!


16 posted on 12/30/2020 7:49:15 PM PST by native texan
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