editorâs note
by Donna Ladd, Editor-in-Chief
âT
here is no such thing as a ânonessentialâ Mississippian.â When I saw Gov. Tate Reevesâ tweet that on April 23, I stared at my screen. As a native Mississippian, I know that our leaders donât feel that way about every Mississippi resident. Their own actions, or lack of them, speak volumes. Reeves was making this inclusive proclamation to prep Mississippians for his rollback of his belated shelter-inplace order to allow more ânon-essentialâ Mississippi businesses to re-open. Reopening is to help the economy and keep people off unemployment benefits that the state and feds canât figure out how to provide anyway. (See story on page 9.) The governor who went to Spain on vacay in the middle of a world pandemic is confident, he tells us, that cases in Mississippi have reached a plateau, meaning we can start getting out and spending
April 29 - May 12, 2020 ⢠jfp.ms
âThere is no such thing as a ânonessentialâ Mississippianâ â Tate Reeves
4
again. Certainly it is a high-plains plateau with 238 cases announced as I sit on my porch writing and listening to the roar of helicopters headed to the University of Mississippi Medical Center. But Iâm quite sue Reeves is more worried about brown-nosing Donald Trumpâs wish that this whole pesky coronavirus was behind himâbut this wasnât why Reevesâ tweet gave me such pause. I froze to try to conjure any other instance where Reevesâ actions telegraphed that he feels that way about all Mississippians, regardless of political beliefs, where they were born, race, socioeconomic status, health, who they love, criminal record or how they worship. I canât think of one example, either by Reeves or his predecessor Phil Bryant that gives credence to his tweet. But I know of many times Reeves, as lieutenant governor and now as governor, has indicated the opposite. Hereâs a list: His absolute refusal to consider expanding Medicaid to help more essential Mississippians get health care they canât afford and to keep rural hospitals open. His belief that teachers in well-
performing, affluent schools should be financially rewarded, while pulling funds away from poor schools with essential young Mississippians who need it most. His support of legislation that would allow essential mothers to die on an operating table rather than get an abortion to save their lives. Likewise, wanting essential little girls to give birth to the child of a grown man, or even a relative. His refusal to do anything meaningful to help lower the mortality rate for essential infants or essential mothers who often die in childbirth in Mississippi. His determination to redirect taxpayer funds from public schools educating essential children into private schools that donât need nor should have legal access to public funding. His refusal to support commonsense gun laws to keep more essential Mississippians, including the mentally ill, alive long enough to get help. His apparent contempt for essential low-income Mississippians who need public assistance to keep from allowing their essential families to starve. Now, in the time of the COVID19 crisis, Reeves proclaiming he sees all Mississippians as essential strains credulity even more. If weâre all so damn essential, why did the governor take so long to declare his April 1 shelter-in-place order in the first place? Why did his first distancing order include an exhaustive list of âessential businessesâ that went even beyond what the White House wanted? Why did he include confusing legal loopholes on social distancing for shopping centers, department stores and âofficesâ? Why were car dealers declared essential? Churches? Gun stores?
ashton Pittman
âEssentialâ Truths: Gov. Reeves Is Failing Many Mississippians
Gov. Tate Reeves tweeted that âthere is no such thing as a ânonessentialâ Mississippian.â Donna Ladd lists many ways he communicates the opposite.
Reevesâ apparent lack of interest in the potential explosion of COVID-19 cases behind barsâin prisons among convicted people and in jails among people who canât afford bail or get a trial for months or yearsâshows no compassion for Mississippians who make mistakes, even if they havenât committed a violent crime or even been tried for one. The governorâs refusal to name nursing homes that are key COVID-19 hotspots shows a disregard for the essential neighbors of those places, stifling the ability of communities to watchdog how the State is handling those situations. During a pandemic, good information is more important than ever to help make sure politics isnât trumping safety. And, of course, Reeves megaphoned as loudly as possible on April 3 that he is little concerned about the 38% of essential Mississippians who are bearing
contributors
Nick Judin
Alyssa Bass
Jenna Gibson
State reporter Nick Judin grew up in Jackson and graduated from the University of Mississippi. He is covering this yearâs legislative session. He interviewed State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs on racial disparities relating to COVID-19 for the issueâs cover and wrote a talk on UI benefits.
Freelance writer Alyssa Bass serves as executive editor at the University of Southern Mississippiâs student-led newspaper, The Student Printz. In her free time, she enjoys watching reality TV and pretending to be bougie at brunch. She wrote the music story on Amanda Chappel of Travelinâ Jane.
Freelance writer Jenna Gibson is originally from Petal and graduated from Millsaps College, where she majored in communications and English literature. She now works as a copywriter at an ad agency in Fondren. She wrote the arts story on Erica Quinn Thompsonâs recent book.
the burden in COVID-19 illness and deaths. He actually proclaimed Confederate Heritage Month as multiple essential members of black churches were stricken with COVID-19, often far from needed medical assistance. When reporter Nick Judin asked him later what he would say to black Mississippians upset by the proclamation, he just mumbled about a statute requiring it. Thatâs false. Of course, essential black Mississippians bear the burden for this disease precisely due to the reasons above, as symbolized by the Confederate emblem in our flag and those who defiantly insist our government still pay for it to be an official reminder of a war to keep white supremacy. Reeves is doing nothing to actually alleviate the racismâstructural, systemic, institutional, interpersonalâ that causes white people to pack out their resources when too many essential black people start gathering around them, leaving broken systems, neighborhoods, schools and no respect for all essential human beings left behind. Reeves as said far more about the First Amendment rights of Reopen Mississippi dead-enders than he has bothered to say to the roughly 1 million black Mississippians whose blood, sweat and toil are the backbone of this state and its ability to do business and keep his friends rich. He could start showing he actually cares for them, and all poor Mississippians with one essential action: expand Medicaid. Stop failing Mississippians and help people get and stay well so they can work and thrive. That, Gov. Reeves, is essential.