I believe democracy works. But this crisis has shown me that the US political system does not.
Having done some deep thinking, I've come to the conclusion that the root of the problem is a vicious cycle. First, that we do not have Democracy in the United States, but rather a failed democracy based on minority rule on multiple levels, from city/county to federal. This minority rule goes to whichever group is most effective at branding, not at policy, argument, coherency, or any other useful metric. Due to this, effective leadership and sound policy is the exception, rather than the rule. And so, the population of the voting public has less information, less education, less engagement, and less trust for its government.
This results in an impoverished, ignorant, and hateful populous that cannot discriminate between good leaders and bad, and is uninterested in policy or ethics. The only way to win over such a group is to have the right regional appellation. I specifically include Democrats in this not because they are as bad as Republicans (Democratic politicians are not so cynically broken as Republicans, and in fact in some places do indeed provide a path to recover), but rather because they are still stuck in the same system, so even the effective politicians of the left must use the same dirty tools.
We see ourselves that in the primary, the winner was not the one with an effective policy proposal, not the one who had no sex scandals, not the one who was most coherent and healthy, not the one who was able to reach out to minorities, and not the one who was closer in age to the voting public, but instead the one with the greatest brand recognition.
I do not know how to recover from this. We see that the ignorant American public is already killing itself by legislature by voting against healthcare, and against global cooperation. We see it is killing itself by turning against the WHO and other international cooperation.
In fact, the more I consider it, I wonder if this is how the purge of the unemployable will go. I don't see how the economy can possibly recover without a restructuring that there is no signs of happening. People think it will go back to normal on its own, but that will take decades of growth at old rates. Without a socialist reconstruction, the poverty will kill far more people than the plague. This is not to criticize shelter-in-place orders; it's the failure to plan for recovery that worries me. And that is, as they say, a plan to fail.
We need a new way of doing things. The lessons before us are obvious, but so many Americans will refuse to learn. Food is more expensive than we thought, when you aren't using slaves to harvest it. Communication networks are essential, and must not be built on arbitrary limitations and expectations. Medicine is a human right, and needs expert leadership, not partisan or self-interested administration. Commerce inevitably fails in emergencies.