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PANDEMIC, INC. by J. David McSwane Kirkus Star

PANDEMIC, INC.

Chasing the Capitalists and Thieves Who Got Rich While We Got Sick

by J. David McSwane

Pub Date: April 12th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-982177-74-4
Publisher: One Signal/Atria

A justifiably indignant investigation into the financial malfeasance and outright swindling that accompanied the Trump administration’s botched handing of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Award-winning ProPublica reporter McSwane scathingly unveils a “shady networks of brokers, scammers, investors, and profiteers who did insane things to get rich while our nation suffered an incalculable loss of life and global standing.” Some acts weren’t exactly insane since those profiteers gamed a system already rigged, thanks to the Trump administration, in their favor. One case involves an investor who had landed a $34.5 million federal contract to provide 6 million N95 masks. Never mind that he “had zero experience sourcing medical supplies” and “knew little about how to navigate the supply chain, which almost always leads back to China, where American manufacturers had outsourced to keep wages low, prices attractive, and profits high.” He simply bid on the job, and the contract was awarded without competition. In the end, the masks—which should have cost about $1 apiece but were subject to exorbitant price gouging that “would swiftly result in criminal charges during a localized catastrophe, such as a hurricane”—never materialized. The scammer was far from alone in thinking that he could snag a contract, find a supplier, and deliver goods that were simply unavailable. Untold numbers of dollars went out the door, some by way of Cabinet member Peter Navarro, whom McSwane deems with nice irreverence “the Nicolas Cage of modern politics, unhinged but not always off his mark, beholden only to himself, amused by his own stunts.” Thanks to neglect of federal stockpiles and the deluge of rip-off artists, when Covid-19 arrived, “the United States had on hand just 1 percent of what we needed for the coming onslaught.” The situation has since improved, no thanks to Trump and the con artists who, if they came through at all, often delivered counterfeit goods that were useless and even dangerous.

Revealing one outrage after another, McSwane's book should prompt congressional review and systemic reform.