Who is Amy Acton? Vivek Ramaswamy, who challenged Ohiyo’s ‘Fausi’ for governorship, meet world news

Some people want power because they yearn. Others have seen them very small by a virus, but enough to shape fate. Amy Amyon, square in the latter category, became a child of poverty and misconduct, a public health professor who became the health director of Ohio, and now a woman who challenges Vivek Ramaswamy for a state governor who still prays on the altar of Donald Trump.For those who have forgotten (or want), acton Ohio’s Kovid was the face of reaction. The “smelly child” at school-as he once described herself-grew as a woman, who asked Ohios to demolish the hatch on 23 March 2020, issuing order order to live in the first state of the US. For her fans, she was the Midwestern heroine, who could close schools before death, enter her door. For his inhibitors, he was a tyrannical in a lab coat – a “medical dictator” and, the wife of a Republican, for a Nazi, because she was a Jew and asked people to wear a mask.Acton’s childhood reads like a decanian nightmare in Youngstown: Parents divorced three, sexually abusing her stepfather, a basement under an ancient shop for an ancient shop for an ancient shop, a tent for a winter roof. Still that rose – quick medical program, public health leadership, compassion burnt with living trauma. When the Republican Governor Mike Dewin, a Bush-era-age conservative, chose her to deal with Ohio’s Opioid crisis in 2019, neither realized that she would soon lead the war on a silence, mutation to the enemy.
Her Kovid Briefing Ohio’s daily moral instructions with Devin became an hour. Acton removes complexity with clarity and compassion, making the truths of cold epidemics with poetic determination: “This is a war on a silent enemy. I don’t want you to be afraid. I am not afraid. I am not firm. I’m not firm.” For a frightened, lock-down population, its bright brown waves and major cheeks became a symbol of hope, earning the river the river the river show and fan clubs with more than 100,000 members. The children dressed for Halloween. The nurses placed the covid scrapbook with his face on the cover.But America’s love for saints is fleeting. By June 2020, armed protesters camped outside their home, some waving antisemitic symbols. Republican MPs demanded to snatch their powers. And when the political pressure mounted to allow the maskless county to allow a fair mob, he resigned, not prepared to sign the warrant of death as executive orders.Five years later, the acton is back, running as Ohio’s only candidate for the governor, who saw “Hood under Democracy” during the epidemic. His pitch: moral clarity forged in crisis. His liability: A crisis wants to forget the memory of voters.Vivek Ramaswamy, who faced him, is supported by Maga’s smooth-philosophy-philosophical-nominee, Trump and Ohio GOP. He brands her a “Anthony Faussian knockoff”, which forgives every child for school shutdown. And this is true: lockdowns are badly aged. The surface disinfected ritual theater came out. The school closure stopped academic progress and mental health. Acton argues that he then acted on the best data. Critics argue that the intention does not erase the result.Nevertheless, acon’s deep challenge under epidemiology debate: Ohio’s Trumpian change over control. This is the state that made JD Vance a senator and made Ramaswamy a governor. Even within her party, she faces Sherod Brown and Tim Ryan in primary – two Democratic Warsers who see both potential and crisis in acton.For every voter who sees her as Florence Nightingale of Ohio, another sees her as a nurse. For every nurse who asks him to sign the Swiss cheese model printout – his famous epidemic visual aid – a father who curses his name on lost wages and funeral alone.But the acton is unaffected. His life taught him to convert trauma into service. From the new shoes in the test of the seventh grade court against his stepfather, today for the ballet flats in the park meat-end-street, he assures that the leadership is “about maximizing the best results with what you have.”In a state divided between populist anger and epidemic fatigue, Amy Acton’s candidature is more than a referendum on lockdown. It asks Ohio: Do you want the world as it was, or as it should be?