Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
World War C is officially over in Hawaii as state and county elected leaders are , travel restrictions are fading and masks are finally coming off.
The daily reporting of local Covid cases has also , a decision that matches last summer.
One could say that this allows better accuracy and offers a more strategic picture of how the coronavirus is affecting the community, but let鈥檚 call it what it is and just say we ain鈥檛 got time to think about the pandemic anymore.
While it is insensitive to suggest that the world is in a better place right now , we also cannot overlook the fact that technology and science have granted us . Long gone are the days 鈥 for the most part 鈥 that a Covid infection meant a possible hospital visit and one had to worry about inadvertently exposing one’s close friends and family to a deadly disease.
To be honest, I personally never liked wearing face masks. I felt like mask use was more of a pre-vaccine gimmick to justify people being out and about in public when they should have been staying home.
The whole pre-vaccination masking, social distancing, and so-called 鈥淪afe鈥 Travels thing to me had the stench of thumb-sucking, safety-blanket holding, security theater compromise rather than the dynamism of political leadership that among a public that can鈥檛 be bothered to change even the slightest aspect of their daily lives.
I personally would have preferred that we had handled Covid-19 like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention handled , but Covid came to our shores some two years ago when America was politically divided, morally restless and intellectually distracted.
We can argue about 鈥渢he science鈥 later, but the need for masking and even vaccination is essentially moot because we have mostly settled on a consensus that it doesn鈥檛 matter what you do or don鈥檛 do right now. America and Hawaii will be open no matter what.
And that鈥檚 totally fine, but it鈥檚 fine in 2022 not because of the power of positive thinking, but because of millions of people who fought a silent war behind the scenes to push back the pandemic in whatever way they could. Their sacrifices made it possible for us today to believe whatever we want and do whatever we want, as if this whole thing never happened.
Most people won鈥檛 remember the early days of the pandemic when doctors and nurses didn鈥檛 know what they were dealing with and didn鈥檛 have enough protective equipment to wear, but still made do. To many people, that was somehow a 鈥渇ake鈥 event that never existed, despite .
After all, what was really a tragedy was not the loss of so many courageous people, but the fact that some of us wanted to attend a football or baseball game and , right? (I say this with sarcasm, in case people don鈥檛 get it.)
That is the real danger. Covid may have been , but mankind鈥檚 fight against deadly diseases is only just beginning. Various elected officials have suggested that one or two major pandemics threaten the world every century, but that assumption doesn鈥檛 take into account the effects of novel diseases spreading as a result of globalization, climate change and even war or terrorism.
I quake for humanity when I think about the possibility of a post-Covid generation encountering another deadly pandemic because the experience of the past two years is going to color decision-making to make responses to future threats difficult.
Are we going to hesitate to stop an even deadlier disease outbreak because politicians may want to roll the dice on herd immunity by mass infection or because the economy is too weak to take action?聽I wonder if our experience with Covid鈥檚 disruptions to society or the economy will cause us to do nothing in the face of future threats from disease, or even biological weapons.
Remember how Iran got away with or because no one wanted a war.
We鈥檝e always operated under the assumption that in the United States there鈥檚 always someone looking through a microscope, manning a radar or standing guard somewhere, ready to sound the alarm for decisive people to act against a threat before it can unravel our collective way of life. Now we face a future where alarms are set to silent to avoid panic and avoid disruption 鈥 until the day we can鈥檛 avoid having to act.
Enjoy the end of the pandemic. But let鈥檚 not ever make the mistake of thinking that the next time something bad happens, we should just do nothing.
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Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Well said. And don't forget the local reaction to run out and stockpile toilet paper and lysol spray, a senseless hoarding mentality that says I'm more important than you and the true human spirit of "its all about me" mentality.
wailani1961·
2 years ago
We didn't even get the future threat yet, and already we are planning on overreacting to it.
Intelligentsia·
2 years ago
Thank you. Remember we must, but forget we do. without a basic shift in attitudes and behaviors for community, for compassion and for humanity, I fear how our responses to the next one shift. We need the voice for memory that is too short.
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