Of course, Trump's disdain for science is no secret. The US is paying a high price for his weeks-long refusal to take COVID-19 seriously, despite many warnings. He promotes unproven drugs. And he refuses to institute a nationwide plan for antibody testing, which is a vital prerequisite for an economic restart. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, left, with his new Health Minister Nelson Teich, after firing Teich's predecessor over disagreements on how to handle the epidemic. Credit:Getty Images But last week, the President's war on science reached a fever pitch, as he egged on demonstrators who were protesting stay-at-home restrictions at several state capitals. In my weeks of covering this crisis worldwide, I have never seen anything so shameful. "LIBERATE MICHIGAN!" Trump tweeted. "LIBERATE MINNESOTA!" Both are states whose Democratic governors put strict social distancing regulations in place, as have Republican governors in Ohio, Maryland and elsewhere.

"They want their life back. Their life was taken away from them," Trump said at his April 19 briefing, as if health regulations were the enemy, not the virus. He was effectively urging demonstrators to ignore the back-to-work guidelines of his own taskforce, which require a two-week decline in cases before states start to reopen. Loading Replay Replay video Play video Play video That encourages reckless Republican governors such as Georgia's Brian Kemp, who just ordered the opening of nail salons, massage parlours, gyms, and other close-contact businesses, in violation of Trump's guidelines, without even consulting mayors. Meanwhile, the denigration of Democratic governors becomes Trump's tool to disguise his own failures. He styles himself a wartime commander in chief. Imagine if Winston Churchill had used his BBC speeches during the Blitz to attack the mayor of London rather than urge his people to stand firm against Adolf Hitler.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin, take a break during a hockey game in Sochi, Russia. Credit:AP But nowhere is the President's ostrich-like behaviour more dangerous than in the matter of tests. 'Imagine if Winston Churchill had used his BBC speeches during the Blitz to attack the mayor of London rather than urge his people to stand firm against Adolf Hitler.' For weeks, Trump has misled the nation on the availability of testing for infected individuals, falsely claiming the United States was doing better at testing than other nations. Instead of co-ordinating the distribution of supplies at the national level − as South Korea and Germany did − Trump left governors from both parties struggling to obtain swabs and necessary chemicals and accurate test kits, in competition with each other.

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, right, and Vice-President and first lady Rosario Murillo. Credit:AP Trump's response is to criticise governors and call them ignorant. (Perhaps he is jealous that polling shows all governors to be far more popular than he is.) Nor has the President yet grasped the criticality of ramping testing way, way up in order for Americans to return safely to work. Most important, say epidemiological experts, there needs to be a national strategy, both to co-ordinate supplies and personnel and to do a large-scale scientific sampling of the entire population for antibodies. This is necessary to finally understand the extent of the disease, including how many people had it but showed no symptoms, and who may now be immune.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Credit:Getty Images Trump denies such a strategy is needed. He has fought Democratic requests for more money for testing. Germany, on the other hand, has already started conducting such a study, but then Chancellor Angela Merkel is herself a scientist. As for the United States, "we are still totally, absolutely operating in the dark", says Jennifer Pinto-Martin, executive director of the Centre for Public Health Initiatives at the University of Pennsylvania. "It is incomprehensible to send people back to work without accurate, consistent testing, contact tracing, and social distancing." She adds that for testing to be effective, you need a "consistent set of [national] testing protocols", with a testing model that takes into account differences within states, along with age, gender and other factors. If each state goes off on its own, the overall results will be inconsistent, and we will remain ill-informed about the disease.

But far from embracing science, Trump insists mass testing isn't necessary. Loading It is more convenient for him to shift the burden to the states, even though that makes a safe return to work impossible. If some states reopen too soon (at his urging), Trump can also blame governors when the virus reemerges. We all want to get back to normal soonest. But it is unconscionable for Trump to abet the conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers, Second Amendment fanatics and conservative talk show hosts − along with many genuinely fearful citizens −who want to ignore the painful constrictions of science. By joining the ostrich club, and playing politics with science, Trump is also playing with our lives.