By Charles C. W.
Cooke
Wednesday, September
08, 2021
Mr. President, tear down this travel ban.
Seriously, tear it down. Nix it. End it.
Bring it to a close. Relegate it to history. Send it six feet under. Arrange
its termination. Dispatch it. Dispose of it. Eliminate it. Fit it with concrete
shoes and send it to the bottom of the ocean.
And do it now — effective now.
Since March of last year, the federal
government has barred pretty much everyone who isn’t an American from visiting
the United States. It has now been half a year since the COVID vaccines were
made universally available, and still the U.S. persists in this
policy. No, this isn’t because America is more science-y than other nations;
it’s because America is more inert. In the last few months, Canada has re-opened its
border with the United States; Britain has
dropped its
restrictions on travelers from the United States;
and the European Union has removed its restrictions on travelers from the
United States only to reimpose them after the U.S. refused to respond in kind. Among the free
nations of the Western world, America has become an outlier, and is at risk of
becoming a pariah. And for what?
There was a point at which draconian
restrictions on travel made a certain sense. But, as our closest allies have
shown, that time passed long, long, long ago. The rules for Americans who wish
to visit Britain are relatively straightforward: Vaccinated travelers are
obliged to take a pair of tests while in the country but do not have to
quarantine, while unvaccinated travelers are obliged to take a pre-arrival
test, take tests while in the country, and quarantine for ten days. There is no
good reason that the United States could not impose a similar set of rules on
incoming Brits — or even require COVID vaccinations of them outright as it
sometimes requires vaccinations for other viruses. Can it really be the case
that we mistrust the British?
This issue is no mere abstraction. As a
first-generation immigrant, I am among the millions of Americans who have close
family-members in another country and who, for nearly two years now, have
struggled to get together with those loved ones. My youngest child was a year
old when he last saw his grandparents; now he goes to school. My five-year-old
was three, and he has grown so much since then that he wore out the pajamas
they got him for the trip we had to cancel. My parents are not elderly, but
they are not young, either. We are wasting precious years.
When you became president, you said, “I know the past few years have strained and tested the transatlantic
relationship. The United States is determined to reengage with Europe, to
consult with you, to earn back our position of trusted leadership.” In
June, you said, “I think we’ve made some progress in re-establishing American
credibility among our closest friends.” Have you? Those closest friends
are begging you to bring this folly to an end, and yet, despite insisting 18
months ago that “a wall will not stop the coronavirus. Banning all travel from
Europe — or any other part of the world — will not stop it,” you won’t so much
as comment on the ban on all travel from Europe that has been your de facto
policy for every single day of your presidency. Last October, while
campaigning, you promised America that you would “shut down the virus, not the country.”
Well, the country is literally shut down. Have you
failed?
Milton Friedman, whose political worldview
you seem to be obsessed with
tarring, famously wrote that
“nothing is so permanent as a temporary government program.” I
daresay that the federal travel ban fits neatly into Friedman’s maxim. If it
did not exist, there is no way in hell that it would be imposed now. But
removing it takes effort, and, more importantly, involves staring down the most
zealous among us, and so, to borrow from another great Anglo-American, Winston
Churchill, your administration deems determined to “go on in strange paradox,
decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift,
solid for fluidity, all powerful for impotency.”
Build Back Better? You could start by
opening the bloody gates.
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