It’s been hard not to notice the rise in COVID-19 cases lately. And while few are expressing the alarm of past waves, some politicians on upcoming ballots are trying to channel the anti-public health fervor of 2020 and 2021 into votes this fall.
“Let me say it again – there will be no mask mandates, COVID vaccine mandates, or lockdowns in Mississippi,” Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, up for reelection on Nov. 7, tweeted on Sept. 6—perhaps latching onto baseless conspiracy theories that have spread on social media.
The defiant posture against a perceived threat that doesn’t seem to exist comes amid an unfolding health-care crisis with several hospitals closing or cutting services as dozens teeter on the brink.
Even so, state leaders like Reeves continue touting their “pro-life” bonafides and anti-abortion views after Mississippi banned nearly all abortions. But despite decades of “pro-life” rhetoric from leaders of both major parties, including Reeves’ Democratic opponent Brandon Presley, Mississippi remains the state where infants are most likely to die during the first year of life.
NBC News reported on Sept. 7 that national GOP strategists are considering ditching “pro-life” in favor of a different phrase as public opinion of the term has soured in the wake of the Dobbs decision—with Republicans pinpointing the problem as language rather than policies.
Political operatives will do what they do, but we at the Mississippi Free Press are devoted to journalism that intrinsically values the lives of all our state’s people.
We value life when we ask why incarcerated people continue to die in Mississippi’s prisons or wait for months behind bars for mental health evaluations.
We value life when we interrogate the systems of racism that produce grossly unequal outcomes and continue to wreck lives.
We value life when we look past politicians touting “pro-life” accomplishments to the twin tap-dancing elephants in the room of infant and maternal mortality.
We value life when we take public-health issues seriously.
We value life when we highlight the lived experiences and struggles of marginalized and underrepresented people.
We value life when we examine whether children have equitable access
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