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Perspective

Back-to-work drive places countless thousands at risk

This week marks a significant turning point in the global coronavirus pandemic. In the United States, the country with more infections and more deaths than any other, the Trump administration and the governments of nearly every state have authorized the reopening of major factories and other workplaces and a broader reopening of the economy.

This policy will have disastrous consequences. The coronavirus is extremely infectious, spread through aerosols or on surfaces. Encouraged by the Trump administration and the media, scenes of mass gatherings at public locations are beginning to emerge. People are engaging in behavior without understanding the consequences, and which they will come to regret.

Just days after the top government scientists Anthony Fauci and Rick Bright told Congress that a premature return to work risks a major resurgence of COVID-19, tens of thousands of US auto workers return to crowded factories today.

Autoworkers getting off a shift at the Fiat Chrysler stamping plant in Warren, Michigan

The United States, with barely four percent of the world’s population, has 32 percent of the world’s cases and 29 percent of the world’s deaths. The coming week will see the US death toll, already topping 91,000, approach 100,000. The total number of cases has already passed 1.5 million. Due to the extended incubation of the virus, the true impact of the policy being adopted will emerge by the end of the month.

The criminal policy of the ruling class is being implemented even as much remains unknown about the nature of the coronavirus. In one of the most alarming reports, it has been revealed that 13 sailors on the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt have tested positive for COVID-19 a second time, after recovering from the disease and returning to the ship. This calls into question whether surviving the coronavirus confers any long-lasting immunity.

Workers are being forced back to work without universal testing to screen, isolate and treat those already infected with the coronavirus. Each workplace, therefore, has the potential to become a new focal point of a new outbreak of the pandemic.

A new paper published in the journal Health Affairs estimates that without social distancing and lockdown orders, “10 million more people in the United States would have been infected with the virus by the end of April.” Such a toll, increasing exponentially month by month, is the predictable outcome of the ending of these protective measures.

Despite claims by Trump, the reopening is not taking place because the coronavirus epidemic has been defeated, or even contained. Factories and workplaces are reopening because the corporate owners demand it: workers must return to work and resume the process of generating surplus value and profit, regardless of the cost in terms of suffering and human life.

Anyone wishing to know the brutal psychology that prevails on Wall Street can consult this week’s report by William Cohan of Vanity Fair, based on interviews with investment bankers. The headline conveys the comment of one Wall Street denizen: “People will die. People do die.”

This same banker used financial market jargon to dismiss the impact of the pandemic. “We can’t shut down the country for some minuscule number of people,” he said. “This is not a 100% death rate. It’s a number of basis points.”

“Basis points”—hundredths of one percent—is a term used in financial circles to discuss the movement of interest rates. That is how the deaths of tens of thousands of people are regarded.

Even cruder thinking, if it can be called that, pervades the Trump clan. Trump’s son Eric dismissed social distancing as a Democratic Party plot, telling Fox News Saturday it was meant to sabotage his father’s reelection campaign. “They think they’re taking away Donald Trump’s greatest tool, which is to go into an arena and fill it with 50,000 people every time,” he said. “You watch,” he added, “They will milk it every single day between now and November 3. And guess what, after November 3 coronavirus will magically, all of a sudden, go away and disappear, and everybody will be able to reopen.”

The American government is at war with its population. The Trump administration is leading this campaign, but he has been sustained by the media and the supposed opposition in the Democratic Party.

It is a Democratic governor, Gretchen Whitmer, who authorized the reopening of the Michigan auto plants today. It is a Democratic governor, Andrew Cuomo, who included in recent state legislation a provision exempting New York nursing homes from liability for the horrendous death toll from COVID-19, in which negligence, understaffing and profit-gouging by the owners played so large a role.

Then there is Trump’s Democratic predecessor. Former President Barack Obama gave well-publicized remarks to two groups of students Saturday: seniors graduating from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and seniors graduating from an array of American high schools.

Obama’s comments were unserious, perfunctory and banal, delivered in Obama’s fake-populist persona. He referred to the Trump administration only indirectly, when he declared, “This pandemic has fully, finally torn back the curtain on the idea that so many of the folks in charge know what they’re doing.”

In fact, the Trump administration, the Democratic and Republican parties, and Wall Street know exactly what they are doing. They are compelling millions of workers to go back to their jobs knowing full well that many of them will contract coronavirus and die. They are doing this to restart the extraction of profit from workers in order to pay for the trillions handed out to Wall Street, approved unanimously by both parties.

The Socialist Equality Party condemns the back-to-work campaign. We reject the false choice between impoverishment and death. The economic crisis facing tens of millions of people is not the consequence of the pandemic, but of the policies of the ruling class and the capitalist system.

Every measure taken by the Trump administration, along with governments throughout the world, has been based on the interests of the corporate-financial oligarchy. In opposition to this criminal policy, the SEP insists that the interests and needs of working people and society as a whole must take unconditional priority over all considerations of profit and private wealth.

The implementation of measures to stop the spread of the pandemic and secure the interests of the working class—including the continued shutdown of non-essential production, a massive program of universal testing and contact tracing, the reallocation of society’s resources to ensure high quality health care for all, and the provision of full income to all workers whose jobs are affected by the pandemic—is incompatible with the continued domination of society by the corporate and financial oligarchy.

Everything happening demonstrates one inescapable fact: The fight against the COVID-19 pandemic is at the same time a fight to organize the working class independently and in opposition to capitalism. Only in this way can a way out of the crisis in the interests of the working class be forged.

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