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Half a million dead later…

A favorite t-shirt sold at CPAC 2020. Really.

Trump is scheduled to speak at CPAC this week. The annual confab is usually held in Washington but this year it will be another super-spreader Florida event.

Here’s a dispatch from the meeting one year ago:

The specter of communism, and along with that, socialism, Bernie Sanders, Chinese expansionism, big tech corporations, the national popular vote compact and a host of other conservative hobgoblins haunted the Conservative Political Action Conference this year. But the coronavirus? Whatever.

The threat of the potential pandemic did not cause any angst at the annual gathering. Although the COVID-19 novel coronavirus has crippled much of China and quickly spread across the world sparking significant outbreaks in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East — prompting a nearly 13 percent decline in the stock market over the past week — the worries at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in Maryland were minimal.

“Everything is really under control” proclaimed President Trump on Saturday in one of his trademark rambling addresses that freely mixes riffs demeaning political opponents with strident, right-wing rhetoric fed from a teleprompter. He went on to claim that his response to the outbreak has been “given very good grades, like an A plus plus plus” from unnamed experts. Trump also claimed that some critics of his policy to fight the pandemic “wanted to let infected people pour in our country.”

Trump received a rapturous response at the event, where red MAGA hats have become as mandatory as the khakis and blazers earnest young conservatives have always worn. CPAC is a Trump gathering now. Skeptics have been banished from the event while D-list Trump-world luminaries like Diamond and Silk and Seb Gorka are treated like stars

The president’s speech came one day after he called rising concerns about the coronavirus and his administration’s response a “new hoax” from Democrats, likening it to his impeachment as yet another attempt to undermine his presidency.

Other Trump aides openly dismissed concerns about thecoronavirus while speaking at CPAC on Friday.

Mick Mulvaney, the longtime acting White House chief of staff said on stage at the event, “The reason you’re seeing so much attention to it today is that [media organizations] think this going to be what brings down the president.”

White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow, sounded a similar note and warned the real threat to the U.S. economy was “socialism coming from our friends on the other side of the aisle.”

In contrast, Speaker Nancy Pelosi sent out a letter on Saturday afternoon calling the outbreak “a public health emergency” and laying out a plan to quickly pass a bill with emergency funding to combat the disease. Meanwhile in Washington State, health officials announced the first U.S. death from the virus, confirmed additional cases with no known links to other infections, and warned of a possible outbreak in a Seattle-area nursing home. Governor Jay Inslee declared a state of emergency.

So far, over 85,000 people have been infected with the COVID-19 coronavirus, which has spread to more than 50 countries and resulted in nearly 3,000 deaths.

Attendees at CPAC were blithe about the disease and some compared it to the 2014 Ebola outbreak, which was almost entirely contained to West Africa. Samuel Garrett, a freshman at Regent University, was one of them. “I don’t think it’s a legitimate concern for most people,” he said, “but it’s a legitimate concern for Asian countries, of course.”

Jack Hunt, a senior at East Carolina University, struck a similar note. “Obviously you don’t want a new virus spreading,” he explained, “but from the research I’ve done and looked at, the death rates are pretty low for it, so I’m not worrying about it being a deadly virus.” He did, however, express concern about “the impact it has on production and the economy.”

Alario Martinez, a volunteer for the event from Easton, Maryland, saw the disease as “a typical thing that always happens.” His view matched the president’s: the outbreak was overhyped by the media, and he pointed to other ailments as counterexamples. “People die of fever. How many people die of fever? A lot of people. AIDS, look at AIDS. Look what happened to AIDS. It disappeared.”

They dismissed it from the very beginning.

By the time Trump takes the stage for his triumphant return to the spotlight, we will have more than 500,000 people dead.

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