I think most people would agree that 2020 was the worst year of our lives. With the exception of some who served in war or dealt with death or suffering, this year was very bad for most of us. We had the largest pandemic in a century kill over 1.6 million people worldwide so far (as I write this), 18% of which live in this country (even though the US has only 4% of the world’s population), in what is supposed to be the world’s most advanced nation. We are in a massive recession coming from the pandemic, causing millions to lose their jobs. According to Fortune Magazine, nearly 100,000 US businesses shut down permanently for reasons related to the pandemic – and that was still in September. We had huge forest fires in the US West – the largest and most intense in recorded history and the largest number of serious storms ever around the Gulf. Plus, we had very contentious and polarizing political races, which certainly upset and depressed many people. A huge whammy of serious problems, if there ever existed.
I don’t mean to talk politics here, but I think the vast majority of us can agree that the leadership to combat these problems at the national level was mediocre to be charitable and really poor. President Trump failed to acknowledge many problems and address them to at least make a dent in them. Nobody could expect of any leader to achieve zero deaths from COVID-19 or no named storms in a year. But instead Trump pretty much ignored the many problems the US had to confront because he saw he could not get a full, quick, and complete victory. So he wished them away and hoped to de-emphasize their impact on the public.
His was leadership by intimidation. And in many cases, it worked. There was solid evidence he committed convictable crimes, yet at his impeachment trial, he used intimidation to keep his party’s Senators in line to acquit. He used Twitter to attack good people who, in almost all cases, accepted their smearing and firing or ended up defending their attacker. What I found particularly amazing was Trump’s humiliation and firing of Jeff Sessions, the first mainstream Republican to support him. He might not have become President without him. But when Sessions made the proper decision to recuse himself from an investigation, Trump not only fired him, but belittled and sullied his name so badly that he could not run successfully in his home state again.
But we learned in 2020 that leadership by intimidation has its limits. President Trump could not bully the coronavirus into submission. He could not intimidate massive storms and wildfires to be less severe or not form or spread. Trump could not control – in fact, he was ultimately controlled by – science. Science prevailed and broke the norms he wanted of life and was the ultimate winner in 2020 – to our pain and detriment ultimately, of course.
So a lessen we should learn for 2021 is to respect nature and let us harness the power and knowledge of science for the better for all. There are some good signs. The new COVID-19 task force that President-elect Biden has put together and appears to empower is composed of top notch physicians and scientists and appears to be ready to make decisions based on knowledge of how viruses spread, proliferate, and do damage, not wishing it go away. The new Administration said it will re-enlist the US in the Paris Climate Accords to lead the world in addressing Climate Change based on knowledge and science and will try (within democratic constraints) to pass regulations and incentives to bring down greenhouse gas emissions, which science has demonstrated is its cause and not keep our heads in the sand and ignore the problem. And turn clean, efficient energy into economic prosperity, which it can do. Let’s all hope and support this approach!
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Have a healthy, safe, prosperous, and more knowledge-based 2021 for you, your loved ones, and your companies from CCES!