THIS!
IS!
ALL!
OVER!
How many times have you found yourself saying, or typing, those five words over the last few weeks? An unprecedented amount? That's another one you've been using, or at least seeing, a lot too, isn't it? Unprecedented? As well as challenging, difficult, troubling, and testing? I'm not knocking you for paucity of vocabulary. I'm using them too. They're the right words for what's happening.
Since my last Isolation blog Ian has hosted two fantastic, and funny quiz evenings (his own girlfriend and kids won the first one and Tony and Alex just pipped Mike in last night's horror quiz), I had a two hour long video call with my friend Jason in Ho Chi Minh City which took in home schooling, friends we've lost, friends we've kept, Guns'n'Roses, Anselm Kiefer, Lemmy, and the song Obsession by Animotion (the call still wasn't long enough and we're going to make Friday a weekly appointment for the foreseeable future), and I've had another video call with Darren and Cheryl in which Darren, remarkably, kept his dad jokes down to a bare minimum.
Germany and Belgium have joined the Netherlands with over one thousand deaths and there's over one hundred in Switzerland, Turkey, Brazil, Sweden, Portugal, Canada, Indonesia, South Korea, Austria, Ecuador, Denmark, Philippines, Romania, Ireland, and Algeria. The abstract element of such large numbers doesn't seem to hit home with some of us as much as tragic, personal testaments of which we've heard many or, even, the news of celebrity Covid-19 deaths.
This week Adam Schlesinger of the geek rock band Fountains of Wayne died at just fifty-two and the comedian Eddie Large at seventy-eight. I quite liked the Fountains of Wayne song Radiation Vibe but I was never a fan as such. Eddie Large, however, I clearly loved in 1980 as you can see from the below piece of classwork I did, aged 12, at school.
It's a tough one for the racists and the Brexit brigade (the middle of that Venn Diagram bulges like Bangerman's pants) but the cognitive dissonance is strong within these groups so I'm sure they'll manage to be able to still applaud the NHS each Thursday at 8pm while continuing to share memes and links to racist websites on Facebook and Twitter.
Yes, I'm back on the bad stuff again. Back with what I'm coming to call the corona cunts. Over the last three days we've seen DUP politician John Carson claim Covid-19 is God's punishment for homosexuality (as my friend John wrote, God really must work in mysterious ways), the president of the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte has changed the law in that country so that police can shoot people dead if they suspect of being out of the house when they're not supposed to be, and Brazilian president, and Trump of the Tropics, Jair Bolsonaro has told his citizens they should go to the beach because coronavirus can't be caught outdoors. Sounds legit!
Like many I'm offended by those who hypocritically applaud the NHS after spending years or decades voting for a party who are ideologically and philosophically opposed to it and have been doing everything they can to destroy it from within. Nobody was out applauding BUPA on Thursday night.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock, who I'm on record as saying is one of the better Tories, is a man I'm starting to see through. He can speak fluently expressed bollocks with the best of them but his endless promise to 'ramp' up testing is starting to look very hollow. John Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, was on Question Time on Thursday with Hancock and he managed, in just four words, to sum up what is required of the government now:- "Promise less, deliver more".
What rankled me nearly as much were Labour supporters (of the Corbynite persuasion) ranting about how clapping for the NHS is 'virtue signalling'. It's not an either/or situation. You can applaud key workers AND want better pay and conditions for them. I had a curry delivered recently and I managed to pay the guy who delivered it AND thank him. We both seemed happy with that arrangement.
Binary talk isn't a preserve of the far right. The far left are incredibly partial to it as well. It serves both extremes very well but the result, often, is that it enables the far right. It's one of the main reasons (along with the ownership of the press) that the public found Jeremy Corbyn unelectable and we're now saddled with a shower of shitbags like Dominc Raab, Liz Truss, Priti Patel, Michael Gove (even my parents have gone off him), Jacob Rees-Mogg, and, let's not forget all the terrible things he's done just because he's ill, Boris Fucking Johnson.
When Johnson first found out about the impending crisis did he take action or did he appear on television suggesting we could 'bung a bob for Big Ben's bongs'? The brilliant journalist John Crace reminded me it was the latter. Few of us foresaw just how deadly this virus would be but Johnson would have been briefed on it and Johnson, you have to pinch yourself to remind yourself you're not dreaming - still, is the Prime Minister. To paraphrase Stewart Lee, an actual real prime minister of an actual real country.
In (slightly) better news, Shenzhen has become the first city in China to ban eating cats and dogs (a start, let's see that ban extended to pigs, sheep, and cows - and not just in Shenzhen or China but worldwide), and large numbers of Americans (in a country seeing unemployment skyrocketing, the graph looks like the person making it got nudged during its creation) are waking up to the need for social care. Though some of them are still out buying guns. Where are they going to use them? The schools are closed.
As Terry Waite Sez, I'm not stuck at home, I'm safe at home. I hope you are too. I really appreciate all of you who have read or commented on these blogs, contacted me, and have kept my spirits up and, to end, an answer to Evie's question. No, harvestmen aren't poisonous. They're harmless. Just like most of us.
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