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Iowa
Related: About this forumHow an Iowa summer resort region became a Covid-19 hot spot
A medical anthropologist on why the coronavirus response is so controversial in her hometown.
By Emily Mendenhall Updated Aug 8, 2020, 9:18pm EDT
Photographs by David Thoreson
ARNOLDS PARK, Iowa Walking down Broadway Street, flanked with nightclubs and restaurants, you would never know that the coronavirus is lurking here. The sun is shining, maskless people are buzzing about, and ice cream is selling. This is the 100 days of summer in which the Iowa Great Lakes region makes most of its money. Everything is open.
But this year, the vacation destination is also a regional coronavirus hot spot.
The local economy shut down in the spring for about a month. There were six cases recorded in the area by May 1, when Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds partially reopened restaurants, retail stores, and many other businesses in rural areas, like Dickinson County, where the lakes are located. There was also minimal testing.
By Memorial Day, only eight cases had been recorded in the county, which has a population of about 17,000 people year-round and nearly 100,000 in the summer. Although big events were canceled, the hotels began filling back up and the lakes were scattered with tourists.
...snip...
As a medical anthropologist who has studied the overlap of diseases and society around the world, I set out in June to understand what was going on in the Iowa Great Lakes region where I grew up. I interviewed more than 80 people all over town, reaching out to old friends and classmates, business owners, elected officials, and public health leaders.
Here is what I learned about my hometown region and how its deep conflicts around the coronavirus reflect broader friction across the country. Dickinson County is largely white (96 percent), Republican (72 percent of voters returned a straight Republican ballot in the November 2016 election), and Christian (more than two-thirds). There is an overwhelming ethos of American individualism over collectivism, along with the cultural ideal of self-sufficiency and of pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. I heard many people say, I am not scared of coronavirus, or, Im not scared, I believe in God, or If its my time to go, God will take me.
For instance, if you wear a mask around here, it reflects defiance against President Trump. When masks became this sort of political statement, most people described feeling deeply hurt simply due to the divergent views that were (or werent) now spread across their faces.
more...https://www.vox.com/2020/8/8/21357625/covid-19-iowa-lakes-okoboji-kim-reynolds-masks?fbclid=IwAR3QgG2d04RJdmUKxjT7j-VgkvVuqfT_E8G7KD5u1MY5I-XcdIQhgolNEF0
By Emily Mendenhall Updated Aug 8, 2020, 9:18pm EDT
Photographs by David Thoreson
ARNOLDS PARK, Iowa Walking down Broadway Street, flanked with nightclubs and restaurants, you would never know that the coronavirus is lurking here. The sun is shining, maskless people are buzzing about, and ice cream is selling. This is the 100 days of summer in which the Iowa Great Lakes region makes most of its money. Everything is open.
But this year, the vacation destination is also a regional coronavirus hot spot.
The local economy shut down in the spring for about a month. There were six cases recorded in the area by May 1, when Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds partially reopened restaurants, retail stores, and many other businesses in rural areas, like Dickinson County, where the lakes are located. There was also minimal testing.
By Memorial Day, only eight cases had been recorded in the county, which has a population of about 17,000 people year-round and nearly 100,000 in the summer. Although big events were canceled, the hotels began filling back up and the lakes were scattered with tourists.
...snip...
As a medical anthropologist who has studied the overlap of diseases and society around the world, I set out in June to understand what was going on in the Iowa Great Lakes region where I grew up. I interviewed more than 80 people all over town, reaching out to old friends and classmates, business owners, elected officials, and public health leaders.
Here is what I learned about my hometown region and how its deep conflicts around the coronavirus reflect broader friction across the country. Dickinson County is largely white (96 percent), Republican (72 percent of voters returned a straight Republican ballot in the November 2016 election), and Christian (more than two-thirds). There is an overwhelming ethos of American individualism over collectivism, along with the cultural ideal of self-sufficiency and of pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. I heard many people say, I am not scared of coronavirus, or, Im not scared, I believe in God, or If its my time to go, God will take me.
For instance, if you wear a mask around here, it reflects defiance against President Trump. When masks became this sort of political statement, most people described feeling deeply hurt simply due to the divergent views that were (or werent) now spread across their faces.
more...https://www.vox.com/2020/8/8/21357625/covid-19-iowa-lakes-okoboji-kim-reynolds-masks?fbclid=IwAR3QgG2d04RJdmUKxjT7j-VgkvVuqfT_E8G7KD5u1MY5I-XcdIQhgolNEF0
This is just fucking depressing.
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How an Iowa summer resort region became a Covid-19 hot spot (Original Post)
progressoid
Aug 2020
OP
raging moderate
(4,525 posts)1. Trump has NEVER pulled himself up by his bootstraps!
Can't they see he's just a spoiled pampered city slicker con artist?
secondwind
(16,903 posts)2. Yes it is depressing........ DAMN!
IADEMO2004
(5,975 posts)3. aMEricans