The Morning Dispatch: CDC Says the Vaccinated Can Hang Out

Plus: a new organization to protect academic freedom on college campuses.

(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images.)

Happy Tuesday! Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced yesterday that Wrigley Field will be able to open at 20 percent capacity when the Cubs season starts next month. Chicago-area TMDer meetup one day?

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The Centers for Disease Control released new guidance for fully vaccinated individuals on Monday, saying they no longer have to wear masks or socially distance indoors when around other fully vaccinated individuals or those not at high risk for a severe case of COVID-19. The CDC’s standard COVID-19 protocols remain the same for vaccinated individuals while in public.
  • Sen. Roy Blunt, a Republican from Missouri and a member of Senate GOP leadership, announced Monday that he will not seek re-election in 2022, becoming the fifth incumbent Senate Republican to do so.
  • The Biden administration on Monday granted 18 months of temporary protective status to undocumented immigrants from Venezuela currently living in the United States, saying the country was “unable to protect its own citizens.” The move—which follows a similar Trump administration action—would allow as many as 320,000 Venezuelan nationals to receive work permits and be exempt from deportation.
  • In a letter to Afghan president Ashraf Ghani, Secretary of State Antony Blinken proposed a United Nations-led effort to broker peace in Afghanistan, making clear that the United States is still considering a “full withdrawal” of its armed forces by May 1 as per the Trump administration’s agreement with the Taliban last year.
  • The United States confirmed 57,807 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.2 percent of the 1,156,241 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 763 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 525,750. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 38,608 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, and 1,738,102 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered on Monday, bringing the nationwide total to 92,089,852. The COVID Tracking Project announced yesterday it is closing up shop after a year of data collection, so we will need to find an alternative for some of our statistics.

Vaccine Guidance

Nearly 31.5 million Americans are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, and the benefits of their injections are coming into focus—at least officially.

In its long-awaited guidance for fully vaccinated Americans published Monday, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said the lucky 31.5 million can safely gather with each other sans masks or social distancing, and do the same with unvaccinated people from a single household who are not at high risk for a severe bout of COVID. The agency also says vaccinated individuals do not need to quarantine after being exposed to the virus, unless they experience symptoms.

The CDC continues to recommend, however, that fully vaccinated individuals wear masks and practice distancing when in public or when visiting someone with pre-existing conditions. And the agency’s guidance on limiting travel remains unchanged, even for the fully vaccinated.

How does the CDC define “fully vaccinated” in this context? Individuals who have received both doses of the Pfizer/Moderna vaccines or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine qualify for the updated guidance—two weeks after the last jab.

Once people hit that mark, the CDC’s relaxed guidelines go into effect. “A growing body of evidence suggests that fully vaccinated people are less likely to have asymptomatic infection and potentially less likely to transmit SARS-CoV-2 to others,” the guidelines read. “How long vaccine protection lasts and how much vaccines protect against emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants are still under investigation. Until more is known and vaccination coverage increases, some prevention measures will continue to be necessary for all people, regardless of vaccination status. However, the benefits of reducing social isolation and relaxing some measures such as quarantine requirements may outweigh the residual risk of fully vaccinated people becoming ill with COVID-19 or transmitting SARS-CoV-2 to others.”

What does all this mean in layman’s terms? “Grandparents can hug their grandchildren,” says Dr. Paul Offit, a virologist at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

The Academic Freedom Alliance

If you’ve been reading The Dispatch for any length of time, you’ve probably caught on to our concern about the intolerance for heterodox thinking that’s working through many of our cultural institutions—academia in particular. So we wanted to highlight the creation of a new organization that has been set up expressly to push back against that wave of illiberalism: The Academic Freedom Alliance, which launched this week with the goal of defending professorial speech around the country.

According to Keith Whittington, a professor of politics at Princeton University and the group’s academic chair, the Alliance “boasts a broad and diverse coalition of over 200 academics from across the country who are committed to upholding the principles of free speech in academia.”

Complaints about the increasingly stifling nature of academic culture and the damage that culture does to free speech aren’t a new phenomenon. But the new organization—following in the footsteps of groups like the American Civil Liberties Union and the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education—aims to give teeth to those complaints by providing legal support in cases where professors’ “academic freedom is threatened by institutions’ or officials’ violations of constitutional, statutory, contractual, or school-based rights.”

Worth Your Time

  • While the coronavirus may have not posed a large threat to the physical wellbeing of children and teenagers, it certainly posed a threat to their emotional wellbeing. In a harrowing piece for ProPublica, Alec MacGillis documents the “lost year” for high school students in Hobbes, New Mexico. “Mental health experts struggle to identify a precedent for the challenge this pandemic is producing for many Americans,” he writes. Kooper Davis, a straight-A student and high school quarterback, died by suicide in December. “No doubt, if my son had been in school on Monday this wouldn’t have happened,” Kooper’s father told MacGillis. “He would’ve had an adult standing next to him, a coach saying, ‘Kooper, quit being a dummy.’”
  • The origins of the coronavirus within China have been the subject of intense scrutiny for nearly a year, and the debate will continue for years to come. In an excerpt of his new book published in Politico, Josh Rogin explores the theory that the virus can be traced back to a lab accident. “Back in 2017, the U.S. diplomats who had visited the lab in Wuhan had foreseen these very events, but nobody had listened and nothing had been done,” he writes. “‘We were trying to warn that that lab was a serious danger,’ one of the cable writers who had visited the lab told me. ‘I have to admit, I thought it would be maybe a SARS-like outbreak again. If I knew it would turn out to be the greatest pandemic in human history, I would have made a bigger stink about it.’”
  • One of the most difficult aspects of the pandemic has been the solitude, perhaps most pronounced for those fighting off the virus alone in the hospital. In a piece for The New Atlantis, Aaron Rothstein argues this should not be the case. “Hospitals can be strategic, cautious, and generous in a targeted fashion, ensuring that more patients safely have advocates and loved ones at their bedsides during the pandemic,” he writes. “It will make this devastating pandemic a bit less devastating.”

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • With David off celebrating his anniversary, Katie Barlow—a lawyer and editor of SCOTUSBlog—joined Sarah on the latest episode of Advisory Opinions. The two discuss the Supreme Court’s ruling in Uzuegbunam v. Preczewski before turning to Katie’s career arc and the Prince Harry/Meghan Markle saga.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).