The Atlantic’s David Frum suggests treating unvaccinated patients last in hospitals
One critic shot back, ‘It’s amazing how you keep getting worse.’
The Atlantic staff writer David Frum suggested hospitals and doctors should give low priority to unvaccinated citizens in a series of tweets on Saturday.
“Unless the US moves to vastly stricter vaccine mandates – which I would favor, but which is plainly not going to happen – the US will stall at present vaccination levels,” Frum began his Twitter thread.
Within the thread, he added that barring “seemingly basic mandates” such as vaccine requirements to board airplanes, the best advice to protect against unvaccinated citizens could be prioritizing vaccinated patients in hospitals.
“Seems the best option is 1) Keep encouraging vaccines and boosters; 2) Impose vaccine mandates where it can be done; 3) Otherwise return to normal as fully as we can, especially the schools; and 4) Let hospitals quietly triage emergency care to serve the unvaccinated last,” Frum wrote.
Seems the best option is
1) Keep encouraging vaccines and boosters;
2) Impose vaccine mandates where it can be done;
3) Otherwise return to normal as fully as we can, especially the schools; and
4) Let hospitals quietly triage emergency care to serve the unvaccinated last
— David Frum (@davidfrum) December 12, 2021
Frum faced backlash for suggesting hospitals treat unvaccinated patients last.
Contributing editor The Spectator Stephen Miller responded with a few tweets of his own criticizing the thread writing, “’the malignant minority’ he writes while he and his magazine wonder why people just tuned them all out. JFC you’re just a toad.”
“It’s amazing how you keep getting worse. It should be studied. (But don’t worry I wouldn’t force you to be injected with anything or be separated from society.)” Political commentator and YouTube personality Dave Rubin tweeted.
Twitchy editor Greg Pollowitz wrote, “honest q for @davidfrum: Unvaccinated 18yo Black male shot on his way home from school vs white 85yo vaccinated former CEO with a heart attack. Both need an ICU bed, only one bed is left. Who gets it?”