Dan Crenshaw schooled Washington Post opinion columnist Jennifer Rubin today after she wrote a hit piece against Trump entitled “Trump’s inaction has a staggering toll”:
the Trump toll, when we are done, will likely include tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths, massive unemployment, trillions of dollars more in debt and trillions of dollars in lost wealth not to mention emotional hardship and educational disruption https://t.co/piGNbudj0G
— Jennifer Rubin (@JRubinBlogger) April 15, 2020
Is this Jennifer Rubin or Nancy Pelosi?
In any event, Dan Crenshaw took on the anti-Trump RINO and decimated her ‘arguments’ with facts:
STOP. REWRITING. HISTORY.
Instead of attempting to spin the public into a hateful, frightened frenzy, let’s try reporting some facts with the correct context. Here’s what that might look like:
THREAD https://t.co/xrn9Qool3L
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
On March 3rd, the day after you claim Trump should have shut our economy down, this is how the WHO downplayed the virus:
“COVID-19 spreads less efficiently than flu, transmission does not appear to be driven by people who are not sick”https://t.co/BNWzEViKJn
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
Would the America public really have accepted millions of jobs destroyed for a virus that had infected just 102 people by March 2? Especially considering Italy would not lock down until March 10th, Spain on March 14th, and the UK on March 23?
A bit of context is in order here.
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
Context is important. I remember feeling like we were getting ahead of ourselves when all professional sports started to cancel everything and that was 9 or 10 days after when Rubin is claiming everything should have been shut down.
Crenshaw continues…
I want to respond to this particular comment:
“Because we did not act earlier to ramp up testing at a massive scale and prepare our health-care system, social distancing — shutting down most of the economy — was required.”
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
Not sure where the magic COVID-19 testing switch is. The truth is that long-standing regulations – in place for decades – prevented us from doing so. https://t.co/fDtnnbLg0i
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
Additionally, you falsely state that social distancing should have been a “last resort.” But this has no basis in fact. Experts have long said flattening the curve via social distancing is the only way to prevent the initial case spike that would overwhelm hospitals.
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
First, you argue that we should have shut down the economy weeks before we did. Then, you argue that the shut down, resulting job loss, and economic devastation are his fault too.
Which is it? You can’t have it both ways.
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
Your analysis makes it seem like our government deliberately decided not to buy more PPE. The truth is there was a global production shortage when China began stopping exports, and demand soared. This is still happening.
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
While you argue that Trump ignored early warning signs, you ignore the headlines that ran on the pages of your paper in January and February. Here are a couple: pic.twitter.com/mESRoVydtq
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
When it’s all said and done, this bad-faith analysis isn’t fact-based and lacks important context. Hating Trump is not an excuse for lazy argumentation and emotional reasoning.
Now, more than ever, we need critical thinking and productive deliberation.
— Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) April 16, 2020
Boom.