Commentary

Idahoans are tough. We can protect our freedoms by fighting our common enemy: the coronavirus.

Defeating a serious disease takes a united effort. Holdouts can threaten the entire fight, write guest columnists Jim Jones, David Pate and Mike Satz.

St. Luke's patient receives vaccine

A patient at a St. Luke’s vaccination clinic receives the COVID-19 vaccine.

The valiant struggle of today’s health care workers against the coronavirus hearkens back to one of the toughest enemies George Washington faced while fighting for American independence: variola, the smallpox virus.

Smallpox was decimating the ranks of the Continentals in 1776, threatening our fight for freedom. Despite misgivings of the Continental Congress, Washington ordered a mass inoculation of the troops, and it helped his army to win the Revolutionary War.

Our government of the people is strongest when we all pull together and do our part to defeat a threat, whether a tyrant on the battlefield, a downturn in the economy, or a vicious virus, like smallpox, polio, or, indeed, coronavirus.

In 1905, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the health and protection of society from smallpox took precedence over the objections of an individual man to a compulsory smallpox vaccination law. Like Washington, the high court understood that defeating a serious disease takes a united effort and that holdouts can threaten the entire fight.

Now, 245 years from our founding, our principles stand strong and our science stands even stronger. A majority of Idahoans have acted with compassion and common sense, protecting our neighbors and friends — and our fragile health care system — from the rampant spread of this virus. But a vocal minority, fueled by disinformation and extremist politics, is threatening that balance and undermining Idahoans’ innate understanding of the role individual responsibility and civic duty play in citizenship.

Right now, across our state, we are facing the real potential of overwhelmed hospitals. Those of us who take on the very reasonable and temporary sacrifice to wear a mask have helped keep community spread down.

Idahoans who respect our neighbors, our young children, our health care professionals and the medically vulnerable enough to get vaccinated have prevented our hospitals from being overwhelmed throughout this pandemic, so that all Idahoans will be able to get care if they have an auto accident, a heart attack or a stroke. Thank you. You are the silent and largely unseen heroes!

When we take public health guidance to heart, we are living our best lives, refusing to live in fear. As the saying goes, “when the going gets tough, the tough get going.” Idahoans are tough, and we have to keep going, protecting our personal freedoms by fighting our common enemy: the novel coronavirus. We must continue protecting our families, our neighbors, our co-workers and our businesses by wearing masks and getting vaccinated.

True freedom is never free. Personal freedom is worth nothing if we are all alone. Idahoans win when we work as communities to take care of our friends and neighbors.

A recent USA TODAY poll reveals that a strong majority of Americans agree — 72% support mask mandates and 61% endorse vaccination requirements. Idahoans are continuing to get free, safe, approved vaccines in all of our communities. Bless those who have joined with and supported our dedicated health workers in the fight against the coronavirus by getting vaccinated and by supporting masking and other efforts to stop the spread of the virus in our schools and communities.

As we enter another fall of COVID across Idaho, let’s conquer our fears together, get vaccinated, and work together to protect our many freedoms.

Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics.

David Pate
David Pate

Dr. David Pate is the former president and CEO of the Boise-based St. Luke’s Health System. He joined St. Luke's in 2009. He received his medical degree from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and his law degree from the University of Houston Law Center.

MORE FROM AUTHOR
Jim Jones
Jim Jones

Jim Jones served as Idaho attorney general for eight years (1983-1991) and as a justice of the Idaho Supreme Court for 12 years (2005-2017). His weekly columns are collected at JJCommonTater.com.

MORE FROM AUTHOR
Mike Satz
Mike Satz

Mike Satz is founding executive director of The Idaho 97 Project, theidaho97.org, which supports the democratic process in Idaho. It counters disinformation and extremism and protects free expression and good governance for the public and public officials alike.

MORE FROM AUTHOR