Minnesota has been in the grip of coronavirus hysteria for the last two months. We have submitted to unprecedented restrictions on our freedoms and stood by as our economy crashed, all because politicians, experts and journalists have warned we face an apocalyptic scenario.
Gov. Tim Walz justified his first shutdown order with a mathematical model that predicted — horrifyingly — that 74,000 Minnesotans would die from COVID-19 without social distancing, and 50,000 even with the economic shutdown. A public health crisis remotely on that scale has not materialized. But an economic and social crisis has, and it is just beginning.
We have reached a critical moment. In his latest extension of the shutdown order, Walz decreed that our economic life will resume by unpredictable fits and starts, with no end-date for lifting the order in sight.
That is not good enough. We must insist on a detailed, transparent account of how — and whether — the executive branch, with its newly unchecked power, is fulfilling its duty to responsibly balance the risks from COVID-19 with the shutdown's increasingly unbearable economic and social costs.
We will only get the truth if we demand it. But fear of two kinds is blocking accountability.
The first is people's fear of the virus. The second is government policymakers' fear of acknowledging that, by overreacting, they have created a monster, a genie they don't know how to put back in the bottle.
Today, an irrational panic seems to account for many Minnesotans' tendency to defer unquestioningly to the government's shutdown dictates. That panic springs from weeks of exposure to frenzied, overblown "body count" headlines, government briefings and social media reports that claim we face a looming Armageddon.
The result has been a gross distortion of the threat's real nature. For example, in a Harris Poll, 57% of millennials said they were afraid they would die of the virus. In fact, their risk of death is extremely low. The COVID-19 death rate for people ages 18-45 in New York City, the American epicenter of the pandemic, is only 0.01%.