Despite COVID-19 vaccines, Americans in D.C. not feeling celebratory — or charitable
WASHINGTON — This might make Canadians jealous of their American cousins for the first time in a while: the lineup Friday outside a downtown Washington D.C. Apple Store was longer than at one of the city’s largest COVID-19 mass-vaccination sites.
Getting the shot at the nearby Walter E. Washington Convention Center — all D.C. residents over 16 are now eligible — took people only about 20 minutes, with some recipients displaying their ‘I Got Vaccinated’ stickers or telltale Band-Aids as they emerged.
Access to the vaccine in the United States is growing by the day. But the country that just months ago was the international poster child for how not to respond to a pandemic still doesn’t seem to be in a celebratory — or charitable — mood.
“I don’t think it’s going well,” said Wayne Brown, a 45-year-old former pharmacist who has already received two doses of the Moderna vaccine.