The nearly five-hour meeting largely consisted of public comments, where some 150 people addressed the board, following a public-health update by board health officer Dr. Wilma Wooten. Wooten presented data on vaccination rates and case-testing efforts in the county.

One constituent, Shaun Frederickson, called out Wooten specifically during his turn to address the board: “The numbers you stated are propaganda…. Last month … do you know how many deaths happened in the month of July? Wilma [Dr. Wooten]? Nathan [Board Chairman Nathan Fletcher]? Thirty six. How much propaganda are we going to use for the deaths of 36 people? How many rights are we going to take, and Nathan, how many lies are you going to continue to propagate?”  

“There is already a recall effort started for one dictator, there will be another if necessary,” continued Frederickson, addressing Board Chairman Fletcher, referencing the recall election of Governor Gavin Newsom on September 14.

 “Your authority is being pummeled…. We are here to inform you the people have spoken, COVID is over.”

San Diego County, with a population of 3.4 million, just below that of Los Angeles County, has reported 3,839 total COVID-related deaths, as of August 20 — a total fatality rate of 0.1 percent.

During her presentation, Dr. Wooten described the “more contagious and transmissible” Delta variant, noting that “vaccinated individuals can get Delta through a breakthrough infection and can be contagious,” but that “vaccinated people represent a very small number of transmissions across the country.”

Dr. Wooten went on to state that “since March 1, there have been a total of 13 COVID-19-related deaths among those that were fully vaccinated compared with 103 among those who were not fully vaccinated.”

Statistics from 2019-2020, covering roughly the same time span of six months, show that San Diego County reported 105 flu deaths.  

Concerned citizens, such as Frederickson, whose speech at a previous board meeting went viral online, took to the podium on Tuesday to speak out against vaccination and masking requirements, stating “We are here, as your constituents, to tell you, this [COVID pandemic] is over. San Diego is no longer under your rule of thumb.”

Another speaker, eleven-year-old San Diego resident Olivia expressed her concerns, “this past year has been very difficult for me,” describing the closure of her school and church and the difficulty of adjusting to online learning. “Ridiculous rules [were] in place. We could only walk in one direction down the hallway…. I could barely hear my teacher through her mask. I couldn’t hug my friends or see their faces. It made me very sad to keep six feet away from them.”  

Taking her turn at the podium to address the board, young Emily Archuleta said, “Whatever your political affiliation, we [Americans] all hold one thing near and dear to our hearts, the freedom of choice.” Yet “how is the choice to have a vaccine different? Mandating a vaccine to work is against our constitutional rights as Americans.”

San Diego resident Brittany Mayer led off a powerful speech by reminding the board that “America is not a hospital. California is not a hospital. San Diego is not a hospital. This is a constitutional republic that guarantees protection of individual freedom.” She continued, “We remove consent from treating us like we are patients in a hospital ward. We are done. The consent of the governed is removed. We will not comply. We do not consent. Nathan Fletcher you are on notice. We will constitutionally remove all petty tyrants beginning now!”

Directing her comments at Fletcher and Wooten, constituent Sharon McKeeman, a mother of four, a military wife, and the founder of the nonprofit Let Them Breathe said, “You have talked about cases rising, but what you didn’t talk about was suicide risings. You didn’t talk about mental health disorders that are deadly that we are seeing our families battle every day.”

Notably, back in December 2020, Dr. Chris Gordon, chief medical officer at the Family Health Centers of San Diego, reported “seeing higher incidents of anxiety, depression” and a 30-percent increase in patients seeking help during the COVID crisis. Over the course of the past year, millions of Americans have endured prolonged stretches of social isolation, with many relapsing into drug and substance abuse.

In response to the rising emotional and mental crises, Gordon said, “We have to understand our lives have been turned completely upside down and it’s ok to not feel good about that. It’s ok to feel sad, to feel anxious.”

According to CBS8 News, “San Diego County saw over a 200% increase in fentanyl overdose deaths just last year and now a San Diego recovery center says more than half of its new clients in 2021 are still struggling with opioid addiction.”

“Health officials predict that about 700 people will die from a fentanyl overdose in 2021 in San Diego County. Since July, the George Bailey Detention Center in San Diego has reported at least eight fentanyl overdose cases, with one person dying. Shoreline Recovery Center says right now, about 55% of their clients have opioid use disorders.”

The impact of the efforts of San Diego residents remains to be seen, but if Americans are to fight the larger battles ahead, we must first fight the small, local battles.

In San Diego County, the people are fighting. They are organized, prepared, and standing together for the purpose of taking back their community from county officials abusing the power of their duly elected positions. Under the present circumstances, the prescient words of the 19th-century psychologist Carl Jung come to mind:

It is not famine, not earthquakes, not microbes, not cancer, but man himself who is man’s greatest danger to man, for the simple reason that there is no adequate protection against psychic epidemics, which are infinitely more devastating than the worst of natural catastrophes.