'Mystified' NYT columnist asks the internet why southern states have such low rates of COVID-19. Twitter users happily enlighten him.



Since mid-September, COVID-19 cases have been plummeting in southern states. As of Nov. 2, the South had 13 coronavirus cases per 150,000 — the fewest by region in the nation — compared to 21 cases in the Northeast, 27 in the West, and 31 in the Midwest, according to the New York Times.

Hospitalizations in the South have also dropped significantly in recent weeks. The top 10 states that have experienced decreases in COVID-19 hospitalizations are all in the South. There are 12 hospitalizations per 100,000 people in South Carolina — a 38% decrease in the past 14 days, according to Becker's Hospital Review. Hospitalizations in North Carolina are down 36%, Louisiana fell 36%, Tennessee has seen a 34% drop, Kentucky has plunged 32%, Florida also witnessed a 32% decrease, hospitalization in the past two weeks is 30% less in Texas, Mississippi declined 30%, as did Alabama, and hospitalizations tailed off by 28% in Georgia.

Meanwhile, hospitalizations per 100,000 people in the last 14 days are up in New Mexico (19%), Vermont (15%), Colorado (14%), Nebraska (11%), Arizona (9%), New Hampshire (9%), Utah (8%), Maine (7%), California (6%), and Michigan (4%).

The southern states have seen COVID-19 cases fall despite easing COVID-19 restrictions.

The shift in COVID-19 cases out of the South baffled New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow — who couldn't fathom why cases were plummeting despite the southern states not stringently adhering to guidelines set forth by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"I am mystified by how these southern states have such low rates of Covid when many of their governors haven't followed cdc guidance," Blow wrote on Twitter and included a COVID-19 "hot spot" map from the New York Times. "Someone please explain this to me."

I am mystified by how these southern states have such low rates of Covid when many of their governors haven\u2019t followed cdc guidance. Someone please explain this to me.pic.twitter.com/klmBEPVu6p

— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) 1636026867

The internet was happy to oblige and explain the shift to Blow. A wave of respondents gave their explanations for the decreasing COVID-19 cases in the South — which included seasonality.

Inez Stepman — senior policy analyst at the Independent Women's Forum — responded, "Hint: in southern states they go inside with AC in the summer (high rates), in northern states, they go inside when it gets cold (high rates). Haven't we seen this play out enough times in the last nearly two years not to be surprised by it?"

Human Events journalist Will Chamberlain made a similar point, "Hint: it's pleasant outside in the South right now, so people aren't spending as much time indoors running the AC Meanwhile, it's getting colder everywhere else, so people are spending more time indoors there."

Investigative reporter Jordan Schachtel wrote, "NYT columnist on the brink of discovering seasonal respiratory illness. Prediction: He won't accept the obvious. Too big a red pill for him. Best to embrace the COVID Mania stuff. Better to keep the readers hoaxed and compliant."

New York Times best-selling author Tom Woods asked, "So you won't admit that the mitigation measures don't do a damn thing, which should be excruciatingly obvious by now? You can't ever give up on that religion?"

Senior fellow at the Atlantic Council Damir Marusic explained, "Once you accept that policy only has marginal effect on outcomes, everything becomes much easier to digest. The COVID surge just does its thing, burning through vulnerable populations until the kindling is gone. It then moves on."

Radio host Jesse Kelly reacted by tweeting, "Because everything you 'know' about coronavirus is a lie. The 'experts' had no idea what to do when it got here so they just made a bunch of stuff up and pretended it was 'science.' Your entire world is make believe. How does that make you feel?"

Outkick founder and radio host Clay Travis commented, "The number of blue checks who still think lockdowns & masks stop covid is absolutely staggering. This is a @nytimes columnist. These blue checks have never bothered to look at the actual data. They are covid sheep."

Podcast host Benny Johnson said, "The defiant smoothbrain bubble people will never fully understand the extent to which they have been manipulated for power and control of an establishment ruling class."

New York Times columnist gets hammered for saying Looney Tunes' Pepe Le Pew 'normalized rape culture'



Dr. Seuss was canceled last week, and six of Theodor Seuss Geisel's books were discontinued by his own estate, plus eBay yanked the children's book from its online retail platform. This week's figure beloved by children that is being canceled by leftists is Looney Tunes' character Pepe Le Pew, who is a cartoon skunk.

Pepe Le Pew is an animated fictional French skunk who romantically pursues a black cat, who he believes is a skunk. Penelope Pussycat always fights off Pepe's advances because he is a stinky skunk. To most everyone who has been watching Pepe Le Pew since debuting in 1945, this is a silly cartoon. But for New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow, he doesn't see a cartoon, he sees this as the normalization of rape culture.

Blow wrote an op-ed about the Dr. Seuss situation, and demanded that other pop culture icons also be canceled. He cited the 1953 Looney Tunes character, Speedy Gonzales, for pushing racist stereotypes against Mexicans. He also condemned Mammy Two Shoes from the classic cat and mouse cartoon "Tom & Jerry."

He also cautioned the dangers of watching a cartoon skunk, "Some of the first cartoons I can remember included Pepé Le Pew, who normalized rape culture."

Following blowback from "right-wing blogs" for the column, he attempted to defend his position that the cartoon skunk advancing rape culture.

"RW blogs are mad bc I said Pepe Le Pew added to rape culture," Blow wrote on Twitter. "Let's see. 1. He grabs/kisses a girl/stranger, repeatedly, w/o consent and against her will. 2. She struggles mightily to get away from him, but he won't release her 3. He locks a door to prevent her from escaping. This helped teach boys that 'no' didn't really mean no, that it was a part of 'the game', the starting line of a power struggle."

"It taught overcoming a woman's strenuous, even physical objections, was normal, adorable, funny," he tweeted. "They didn't even give the woman the ability to SPEAK." The "woman" he is speaking of is the cartoon cat.

This helped teach boys that “no” didn’t really mean no, that it was a part of “the game”, the starting line of a po… https://t.co/Np1gmOcY3w
— Charles M. Blow (@Charles M. Blow) 1615039573.0

Commenters slammed Blow for the commentary about cartoons from the 1940s.

Radio host Jesse Kelly noted, "To be a Leftist in America is to reside in an imaginary world where everyone (everything) is a rapist, racist, or Nazi. I wish they could see how bizarre that is from the outside looking in."

Brigitte Gabriel, New York Times best-selling author, quipped, "You just described Joe Biden."

Radio host Gerry Callahan brought up the numerous sexual harassment allegations against Andrew Cuomo, "In the demented mind of a liberal, a cartoon skunk has to go but the governor of New York can stick around."

A commenter replied, "You might be a liberal if a cartoon skunk adds to rape culture, but a human governor exerting control and power over five accusers doesn't."

Another stated that Pepe Le Pew is the "antagonist and the cartoon treats him like one."

A Twitter user explained, "For the millionth time, He is not a protagonist character, he is to be interpreted as the bad behavior character who can sometimes learn to change to make fun of people who act like that, much like Elmer Fudd is a joke villain but isn't always a full tilt villain."

A person tweeted, "1-Pepe is an animated skunk (hint). 2-He never rapes the cat. 3-It's an exaggeration of love at 1st sight. 4-Part of the humor is how the cat is going to get the white stripe to make her a female skunk-Pepe le Pew only falls for his own species. 5-Get a life.Turn off the TV."

Another person joked, "Cartoons ruined my life too. I did ten years for painting a black circle on the side of a mountain. That poor family drove right into it thinking it was a tunnel. I still blame that coyote."

One person noted that cartoon skunks trying to kiss cartoon cats, probably isn't the most important topic at this moment in history, "People are dying, losing homes, hungry and yall worried about a damn Pepe Le Pew."

Another had the same reaction, "Covid had killed 500,000 Americans in one year. California is on fire. Texas is frozen solid. Millions of people can't find jobs. Millions who work can't make ends meet. But THIS is what society needs to concern itself with, THIS is a serious root issue that MUST be stopped."

According to a Twitter search, Blow has not commented about the five sexual harassment accusations against Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo on the social media platform.

Blow did have several tweets celebrating rapper Biggie Smalls, who had several songs with extremely problematic lyrics. The song "Dead Wrong" glorifies physically assaulting women, sexual assault with a broom, and misogyny.