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U.S. Officially Surpasses 150,000 Coronavirus Deaths

At least 150,000 Americans have died of the coronavirus since the U.S. began keeping count, and the number continues to rise.

By Ja’han Jones, Huff Post

At least 150,000 people in the United States have now died of the coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University. The grim milestone comes months after President Donald Trump claimed Democrats were starting a false panic over COVID-19 and predicted that the number of cases in the U.S. would “go down close to zero” within days.

In reality, every state in the nation remains gripped by the pandemic in one way or another. Widespread deaths and hospitalizations, as well as waves of forced economic shutdowns to curb the spread of the virus, are the markings of a nation that, by the numbers, has waged the world’s worst fight against coronavirus.

Trump, who in February said he believed the virus would “miraculously” go away by April, has tried desperately to turn Americans’ attention from the virus, reportedly out of concern for his own political prospects. In recent weeks, he has focused on amplifying far-right, white nationalist grievances, including voicing his disapproval over housing desegregation measures and the removal of monuments and symbols honoring the Confederacy. In response to demonstrations against police brutality and racial injustice, his administration has also deployed a squad of unidentified federal officials to violently quell protests.

Unfortunately for Trump, earlier efforts to distract from the virus have failed, and evidence suggests that is still the case. Just 38% of the public approves of Trump’s handling of the pandemic, according to a HuffPost/YouGov poll released last week.

From the beginning, Trump has dismissed the threat of the virus and complained that it made him look bad.

In March, he bemoaned letting passengers on a cruise ship disembark in California because he didn’t want to add to the total number of reported cases in the U.S. Some Americans on board were infected with the virus.

“I don’t need to have the numbers double because of one ship that wasn’t our fault,” Trump said at the time.

As the numbers of coronavirus-related infections, hospitalizations and deaths across the country have risen, the president has complained about how much testing has been done in the U.S.

“When you test, you have a case. When you test, you find something is wrong with people,” Trump said in May during a tour of a medical supply distribution plant in Allentown, Pennsylvania. “If we didn’t do any testing, we would have very few cases.”

During a rally the following month, he said he’d asked officials in his administration to “slow the testing down.”

Several states reported struggling to administer tests, and some said they’d received little to no help from the federal government.

Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego, for example, said the Federal Emergency Management Agency told her it was “moving away” from helping states administer tests, even as her city had the highest number of new cases per capita in the United States.

“We’ve asked FEMA if they could come and do community-based testing here,” Gallego said July 5. “We were told they’re moving away from that, which feels like they’re declaring victory while we’re still in crisis mode.”

Yet the U.S. continues to struggle during the pandemic largely due to its inability to conduct widespread testing quickly and efficiently.

In Arizona and Texas — states that have seen coronavirus cases skyrocket over the last few weeks — many people reported running out of gas as they spent hours at drive-through testing sites. A test site spokesperson in Florida said in early July that the state was “asking people to have plenty of gas and make sure the air conditioning is working and make sure your windows can fully open and close because if not, they can’t perform a test on you.”

Many labs responsible for processing tests have been overwhelmed by the number of requests, and the inability to provide results quickly has made containing the virus nearly impossible in many areas.

Still, officials continue to spin the Trump administration’s response as a success.

Adm. Brett Giroir, a Department of Health and Human Services official in charge of the administration’s testing protocol, claimed Sunday there was sufficient support for laboratories in need.

And when asked whether he was afraid to discuss testing with the president, Giroir said, “Nobody in the task force is afraid to bring up anything either to the vice president or president.”

This article originally appeared in the Huff Post.

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