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Corona Virus And The Digital Divide

Above photo: From Free Press.

Farhad Manjoo (New York Times, 3/11/20): “The true embarrassment is that it took a pandemic for leaders to realize that the health of the American work force is important to the strength of the nation.”

It is not lost on some that, all of a sudden, paid sick leave is obviously socially important; understaffed hospitals are an outrage; and, really, shouldn’t the government be paying for this…? I mean, it’s community health we’re talking about!  And all it took was a little pandemic—an outbreak that, as it just happens, doesn’t confine itself to low-income or non-white people.

The New York Times‘ Farhad Manjoo (3/11/20) tried wistfully to imagine US companies and politicians taking seriously the coronavirus lesson of the need for a real social safety net and worker protections. Journalists could also themselves keep focus on enduring fissures that a public health crisis throws into relief. For example, as more schools move classes online, we could talk about the minimally 12 million, disproportionately African-American and Latinx students who don’t have internet access at home.

To the extent elite media acknowledge a “digital divide” anymore, they generally foreground differences between rural and urban access to broadband. But as work by Free Press (9/25/19) and others has shown, rural deployment, while important, is still not as significant as the adoption gap—due primarily to cost, not access—for low-income people and people of color.

FCC commissioners Jessica Rosenworcel and Geoffrey Starks (Axios, 3/12/20) are calling on the agency to step up in the Covid-19 crisis, by lending hotspots to schools and libraries and setting up mobile hotspots in low-income neighborhoods, for instance.

As elite media go on about how we all should, nay must, tele-work, tele-school, tele-health and so on, we can ask that they try and hold on to what they’re now learning about who can’t do that, and why.

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Due to the attacks on our fiscal sponsor, we were unable to raise funds online for nearly two years.  As the bills pile up, your help is needed now to cover the monthly costs of operating Popular Resistance.

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