Jensen: Shocked, shocked to find hypocrisy in humans – Chattanooga Times Free Press

No precise estimate is available, but after watching an excess of cable television programming lately, I would say at least 40% of current news shows are composed of what I call "Hypocrisy Watch." Someone somewhere has failed to live up to their moral code and an intrepid reporter is there to say, "Gotcha."

One day it's the governor of California sitting maskless at a fancy restaurant with people from multiple households close together, when he's told his constituents to do none of those things. Then it's the mayor of Austin, Texas, posting a warning on Facebook against travel as he was vacationing in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser traveled to Delaware to attend a Joe Biden rally, and Maryland dining even got some free publicity when a photo of Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney eating at the Chesapeake Inn Restaurant was posted on social media in late August.

As journalism, this is cheap stuff. It used to be your transgression had to be pretty serious to warrant big headlines and excited, on-the-street TV stand-ups. The local minister getting caught in an affair? An oncologist sneaking a cigarette down the hall? A Weight Watchers counselor with love handles? No, no, no. Breathless coverage was reserved for famous people who truly abused their position, like televangelist Kenneth Copeland, who begs for money for his ministry but gave his wife a $200,000 Lamborghini SUV and owns three private jets.

But the COVID-19 pandemic appears to have changed all that. A lot of folks deeply resent stay-at-home orders, lockdowns, restrictions, suggestions, whatever you want to call them, and they are looking for villains. Find anyone preaching restrictions but not following them? Well, for many, that's a deal-breaker. Why should I have to take coronavirus precautions when fill in name here doesn't do that?

I'm not here to defend any of this behavior. But I also have to be honest and recognize that I'm human. I have tried to do the right thing during the pandemic. I don't do in-person restaurant dining. I wear a mask where it's appropriate. But am I perfect? Should I have visited a Delaware beach in October with my spouse? Do I replace my mask frequently enough? Should I have invited the neighbors to sit on my front porch? Is that enough?

I've been pondering this since the weekend, when word came out that Dr. Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House coronavirus response, was revealed to have visited a Delaware beach resort, too. Only she did it the day after Thanksgiving with three generations from two households, and it seems to be something of a pattern. As The Associated Press reported, she also regularly visits her home in Potomac, where her parents and daughter live. This is not ax murdering, but it doesn't exactly square with best COVID-19 practices either. And so, she's getting blasted on social media.

Is Dr. Birx the greatest public health practitioner on the planet? This I don't know. I have heard quite a few doctors say she should have been much more outspoken months ago when President Donald Trump was making some misleading and harmful statements about the coronavirus and its prospects for disappearing. Still, I just can't get that worked up by the thought she counseled one set of behaviors for all Americans and then chose a slightly different one for herself. She made some wrong choices. It's what we humans do at times. It doesn't mean the rest of us should give up on doing our best to slow the spread of a virus that has taken hundreds of thousands of lives in this country. What I'd prefer to see is a little less holier-than-thou pontification unless, of course, it extends to billionaire media barons like Rupert Murdoch getting a COVID-19 shot while misinformation about the vaccine is spread on his TV network. That I would probably enjoy.

The Baltimore Sun

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Jensen: Shocked, shocked to find hypocrisy in humans - Chattanooga Times Free Press

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