A weekly note on inequality in America and how we live now

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Just hours before the president tested positive for Covid-19, he was shaking hands and posing for photos with wealthy supporters at his New Jersey golf club. Fifty thousand got you in the door; $250,000 bought you a seat at a private roundtable and, now, a likely two-week quarantine after direct exposure to a virus that has so far killed more than 200,000 people in this country.
 
Mild panic is reportedly rippling through those attendees and the White House, which I guess feels kind of nice, in a cosmic sense. But as Jen wrote earlier today, the odds are on their side. Rich people have weathered the pandemic well because their wealth insulates them against the conditions it creates for others. Just as news of the president’s diagnosis was breaking, a report revealed that more than 19,000 workers at Amazon and Whole Foods contracted the virus in the same time period that Jeff Bezos’s fortune grew by 65 percent.

All of which leaves me with the feeling that Trump’s diagnosis changes a lot, but not nearly enough. Jonathan Rosa, a sociocultural and linguistic anthropologist at Stanford, characterized the news of the morning as “surface chaos, structural continuity.” That sounds right to me as I watch the circus unfold, so I guess I’ll leave it there.

—Katie McDonough, deputy editor

When Your Covid Symptoms Outlast Your Insurance
“I feel so much pain in my lungs as I’m cleaning,” María, who has been working under the table in the months since she recovered from Covid-19, told reporter Felipe De La Hoz. Her emergency Medicaid has long expired and, like so many other insurance-ineligible immigrants, she’s managing her ongoing symptoms without access to medical care. “They are essentially left on their own,” De La Hoz writes. But they don’t have to be. 
America’s Conspiracies of Profit
Sometimes the more boring story is the more violent one. Jen gets at something crucial here about the obscenity of normal order, and how conspiracy theories can sometimes let us off the hook for those things. 
The Elite Sisterhood of Amy Coney Barrett
Melissa is predictably good on the nomination of the conservative justice to the Supreme Court and the empty—and easily weaponizable—rhetoric of equality that helped fuel it. Who gets to be in Coney Barrett’s sisterhood?  
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