A few months ago, I said “Misinformation is best combatted by (accurate) information. I thought that was the job of the news media, particularly newspapers. ” Over the past weekend CNN.com published an article fact-checking a recent speech by President Biden. As I said in one of my earliest posts, “Since I expect to use many of my posts to take the traditional media to task for weak or opinionated reporting, it is only fair that I also note good efforts from time to time.”
The CNN article reviewed a speech President Biden gave on January 26 and found that some of the claims “were false, misleading or lacking critical context, though others were correct.” I’m not going to summarize the whole article: you should read it. I will comment, however, on one of the portions of the speech that CNN described as “misleading at best” — President Biden’s boast of the number of people vaccinated under his administration as compared to President Trump’s: “Back then, only 3.5 million people had been – even had their first vaccination, because the other guy and the other team didn’t think it mattered a whole lot.” While CNN points out that the 3.5 million figure is the number of people who had received both shots that constituted “full vaccination” at the time and that 19 million had received the first shot, even the otherwise thorough CNN article fails to mention that as of January 20, 2021, the ability to get a vaccine shot was extremely limited. The Pfizer vaccine was granted emergency use authorization (EUA) only on December 11, 2020, and Moderna’s vaccine received EUA on December 18, 2020. Thus, there was only about a month during the Trump Administration when the vaccine was available. Initially stocks of the vaccines were limited and for some months only older persons, those in certain occupations, and those with particular medical conditions were eligible.((See some NJ.com articles reporting the expansion: “N.J. quietly added 11 medical conditions, including being overweight, asthma, to COVID vaccine eligibility list” (March 3, 2021), and “Big COVID vaccine eligibility expansion starts today. Here’s everyone in N.J. who can now book shots.” (March 29, 2021).))
Jay Bohn
January 30, 2023