While the countries with the highest evolution have controlled to adjust the coronavirus crisis, under Trump remains out of control, according to public experts in the exercise, with 3.3 million inflamed Americans and more than 133,000 dead. There is no coherent national strategy based on undeniable federal fitness guidelines. Instead, leadership proposes a patch of solutions, the occasional best friend in reaction to epidemics when they occur. While Trump and his team say ambitious goals, such as the reopening of schools, have entered a giant component, they have avoided the duty to come and execute plans to succeed in them, rather than blaming state and local authorities.
Certainly, the president has made predictions of giant apples. Beyond February, for example, Trump told reporters, “It’s going to go away. One day is like a miracle, it’s going to go away.” He echoed the ridiculous statement two weeks ago, saying he expects COVID-19, “at some point,” to “disappear somehow.”
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What the Republican doesn’t seem to achieve is the role the government can and deserves to play in reducing those outcomes. Trump is looking for the crisis to disappear without a large block undercutr that he can also use the game station to fail.
The Post spoke to Ilhem Messaoudi, a university of California immunologist, Irvine, who, by comparison, lost a countrywide plan to “make a path and not have a map.” He added: “It’s a total disaster. This is how this leadership has controlled this pandemic: conflicting messages, instinctive reactions, loss of coherent plans and weakening of the CDC, and normal attack on science.”
Of course, it will be a difficulty if the White House developed a bad strategy or proposed a forged plan that officials were suffering to effectively implement. But the United States faces a much worse problem: leadership that has not proposed a coherent plan and will not expand a plan for success.
The Post article added that Trump “expressed little interest in the details of the reaction with the exception of updates on a vaccine opposed to the coronavirus, or the “cure,” as he calls it.”
This is never very surprising, even assuming it is an unimaginable dynamic to defend: the president’s own counterattack has 3.15 million times a coronavirus; COVID-1nine claimed the lives of the most virtuous friend 138,000 Americans; and infection and mortality rates are expanding nationally. It was in this context that Donald Trump, the country’s first amateur president, “expressed little interest in the most importantness of the response.”
This is clearly the attitude of a president who is never very prepared to withstand the crisis that is hitting his own country, but it will also be what one can expect from a leader who does not know or care about governing. It’s as tragic as it is inevitable: as I say in my new bok, Trump classified the announcements of a post-political party, rather than evidence, experience, and challenge resolution. Today’s Republican Party does not know or care about how to expand plans to govern success, which helps explain why the White House has not bothered to organize a coherent national strategy as opposed to coronaviruses. It’s as if the president has read my book and made a direct decision to determine the fact of the thesis.
The charge Americans pay for Trump’s indifference is in fact very high.
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