dailywire | LAURA: Bill Gates, the Gates Foundation are in favor of developing
digital certificates that would certify that individuals, American
citizens, have an immunity to this virus and potentially other viruses
going forward to then facilitate travel and work and so forth. What are
your thoughts from a civil libertarian point of view about these types
of – what some would say tracking mechanisms that would be adopted going
forward to reopen our broader economy?
BARR: Yeah, I’m very
concerned about the slippery slope in terms of continuing encroachments
on personal liberty. I do think during the emergency, appropriate,
reasonable steps are fine.
LAURA: But a digital certificate to
show who has recovered or been tested recently or when we have a vaccine
who has – of people who’ve received it. That’s his answer in a Reddit
ask me anything. They had a little forum.
BARR: Yeah, I’d be a
little concerned about that, the tracking of people and so forth,
generally, especially going forward over a long period of time.
LAURA:
Are you surprised at how wildly partisan a response to this pandemic
has become in the United States? I know everything’s political, but this
is about saving lives and saving the broader life of America, and yet
from a drug like hydroxychloroquine that’s been around for 65 years, 70
years, to other measures the president’s taken, working with Democrat
governors quite well, looks like, it never seems to be good enough.
BARR:
No, I have been surprised at it. In fact, it was very disappointing
because I think the president went out at the beginning of this thing
and really was statesman like, trying to bring people together, working
with all the governors, keeping his patience as he got these snarky,
gotcha questions from the White House media pool. And it – the stridency
of the partisan attacks on him has gotten higher and higher, and it’s
really disappointing to see. And the politicization of decisions like
hydroxychloroquine has been amazing to me. Before the president said
anything about it, there was fair and balanced coverage of this very
promising drug, and the fact that it had such a long track record, that
the risks were pretty well known, and as soon as he said something
positive about it, the media’s been on a jahad to discredit the drug,
it’s quite strange.
LAURA: There’s a lot of concern now, given the
— again, the length of this time, the concern when you hear Dr. Fauci
say, well we probably can’t go back to normal life until a vaccine,
would be like 12 months, 18 months, that if things don’t open up pretty
soon, over some gradual reopening with new protocols and all that,
there’s a concern about social unrest. You’re seeing a lot of stores
boarded up in San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, and you’re
seeing more of that, small businesses affected, especially by theft and —
and other criminal activity. How concerned are you about the social
unrest and criminal activity in an ongoing shutdown?
BARR: I mean,
I think if we extend a full shutdown, that’s a real — that’s a real
threat in some of our communities. But, I don’t think it’s limited to
that. I think the president’s absolutely right, we cannot keep, for a
long period of time, our economy shut down. Just on the public health
thing, you know, it means less cancer — cancer researchers are at home. A
lot of the disease researchers, who will save lives in the future,
that’s being held in abeyance. The money that goes into these
institutions, whether philanthropic sources or government sources, is
going to be reduced. We will have a weaker healthcare system if we go
into a deep depression. So, just measured in lives, the cure cannot be
worse than the disease. But when you think of everything else,
generations of families who have built up businesses, for generations in
this country — and recent immigrants who have — who have built
businesses, snuffed out. Small business that may not be able to come
back if this goes on too long. So, we have to find, after the 30 day
period, we have to find a way of allowing businesses to adapt to this
situation and figure out how they can best get started. That’s not
necessarily instantaneously going back to the way life was —
LAURA: Well, people are going to be afraid to go out for a long period of time.
BARR: A period of time.
LAURA: And they’re going to be afraid to restaurants, not — maybe won’t go to the re-up at their health club —
BARR: Right. Right.
LAURA: — but people have to have confidence that it’s decently safe out there to move around.
BARR:
Right. And that’s why they have to be given accurate information. But
also we have to make PPE more broadly available. Restaurants have to
change their protocols, perhaps, or other businesses —
LAURA: A
lot of them can’t stay in business if they can’t pack it in. You know
D.C., and they’ve got to pack — that’s the only way they make money
paying these jacked up rents.
BARR: That’s — right, that’s a
danger. That’s a danger. So, I think we have to allow people to figure
out ways of getting back to work and keep their workers and customers
safe. I’m not suggesting we stop social distancing overnight. There may
come a time where we have to worry less about that. So, you know, I
don’t know when that will be.
LAURA: One question I didn’t ask
before — federalism, states rights, the president has been very clear on
that during this health crisis. Are you surprised that certain states,
New Jersey, in particular, had come in to say that gun stores are
nonessential, gun shops are nonessential, but abortion facilities are
essential, given — given what we’re facing?
BARR: Well, I’m not
surprised. I mean, that’s where our politics are these days. But,
obviously, the federal government agreed that gun stores are essential.
LAURA:
And abortion facilities in Texas deemed nonessential by the governor,
lieutenant governor very strong on that, that saw a lot of legal
challenges. Do you foresee —
BARR: I think it was just upheld.
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