"Well, it’s clear what we have to do then: go outside, but don’t go outside, start to socialise again but not with more than one person and not at a distance of less than two metres, and go to work but don’t go to work, and don’t go on the bus if you have to go to work, but if you do go to work don’t get the bus, please, and if you have to work (and you can! And should! But don’t) then drive yourself there. Fines will be increased for rule-breaking. Nobody on Earth has any idea what the rules actually are. Just know that fines are looming, somehow, for something. So to clarify: work is bad, buses are bad, rules are bad, work is good, rules don’t exist, fines are everywhere, fines are nowhere, disorder reigns" - Joel Golby's take on that same 'advice' in The Guardian.
Telling people, some people at least - construction and factory workers - not important people, that they can go back to work tomorrow morning at 7pm on a Sunday night. That's a shitty move on its own (people like at least some notice for stuff, you know) but by not being in tune with the far more safety-first and, small c, conservative measures announced in Wales and Scotland he's created yet further confusion at a time when many many people, though admittedly less than a few weeks back, are still dying from this 'thing'.
'Stay alert' is far more unclear than 'stay home' as a message and that's no accident. The ambiguity is intended. If you go out and catch the disease now, if you die of it, then it's not their fault anymore. It's yours. For not being 'alert' enough. Johnson most likely knows more people will die because of his messaging. He doesn't want people to die. I don't believe that of him. But I do believe he's quite indifferent to their deaths. He's far more concerned with covering his arse.
A jokey mock up of the government's slogan heavy new messaging reads "OOH, CAREFUL > MIND HOW YOU GO > BE LUCKY" but a more hard hitting one reads "BE VAGUE > COVER OUR BACKS > SHIRK RESPONSIBILITY" and that's where we're at now. It was noted that the colour red on these signs has been changed to green. Red means 'stop' or 'stay in'. Green means 'go' or, here, 'go out'.
As with so many things from Brexit to veganism and on to trans rights the people are being divided into two and the noises being heard the loudest are those from either extreme end of the spectrum. There's little room for nuanced voices, few attempts to reach consensus or make compromises, and the centre, as has been the case so often in recent years, struggles to hold.
Fervent Brexit supporters once waxed lyrical about the sunlit uplands we'd emerge into once we'd rid ourselves of the imaginary shackles of the European union but, instead, we've come out from the first wave of coronavirus darkness blinking into a different kind of uplands. A gaslit uplands. A place where we know there are rules but we don't know what they are, a place where the government have shown a deadly dereliction of duty to the people that elected them, and a place where we know whatever we do somebody, somewhere, will tell us we're doing the wrong thing.
The current global Covid-19 death toll is north of 280,000, there are 80,000+ dead in the US alone, over 32,000 have perished in the UK, and 20 countries in total (from India to Indonesia, from Portugal to Peru) have registered more than 1,000 deaths. Brazil, as predicted by many due to Bolsonaro's denialism, are the big climber in the global death league, becoming the sixth nation (besides the US, UK, Italy, Spain, and France) to get into five figures.
With this as the background you can imagine how disappointed, though not surprised, I was to see someone, a former friend, from Tadley (where I grew up) sharing an image of Johnson dressed as Churchill telling the 'haters' to fuck off. An idea that thinking 30,000 deaths are bad now makes you a hater. Johnson's BFF, Trump, goes further. 30,000 deaths aren't enough for him. 80,000 aren't enough. He now claims that the US needs to accept a lot more death and he's opening the country up again, before they've hit their peak, because, he says, the economy is more important than life.
George 'Useless' Eustace, the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs appeared on Question Time to say we shouldn't compare ourselves with other countries (even though his own government had been doing exactly that until the comparisons started to look really bad) and, elsewhere, excuse after excuse is wheeled out for Johnson's negligence in dealing with this. As Keir Starmer pointed out to Johnson at Prime Minister's Questions last week. Starmer was forensic and dispassionate in his debunking of government lies. To his critics that was a bit boring. Why bother with a serious approach, you fucking square?
Elsewhere in the coronavirus-sphere we're seeing, as Afua Hirsch said on Question Time, a lack of 'intellectual curiosity' on the part of the government as to why BAME people are more susceptible to succumbing to Covid-19. The lack of information on this baffles me. Is it because BAME people are disproportionately working in key worker and frontline positions or living in more densely populated areas (which would highlight how much racial inequality our society still allows) or is there a genetic factor? If that turns out to be the case it seems highly unlikely that that would not be juiced by the racist extreme right to 'prove' white racial superiority. Talk of eugenics, which were already in the air before all this, tend not to be far behind such twisting of science.
Don't get me wrong. What he did was wrong, very wrong considering his role in all this, and he deserves reproach but the first of his transgressions occurred, and was seemingly well known about, in March and it appears that the government held on to his (unpaid) services until they needed a distraction, a dead cat to throw on the table. Becoming the European country with the second highest death toll, it was time to throw someone under the bus and Ferguson, stupidly, had put himself in a position to be just that sacrifice.
Ferguson had made a great mistake but that mistake has been used to mask far greater (and more deadly) failings on the part of the government. This government cannot, and will not, lead by moral example so it was hardly a surprise that they were taking advice from a man cut from the same cloth. When the government announced relaxation of lockdown, in England only, they said we could sunbathe, have picnics, and leave the house more than once a day. Even meet with friends as long as we do it outside and maintain social distancing.
These are not necessarily bad moves and most of us had realised a few weeks ago that social distancing is key. Many in London, including me, who have no gardens have already been inching towards those things. It was once said of Boris Johnson (and I can't remember who by or I would credit them) that he is a man who when he sees a crowd runs to the front of it and shouts 'follow me'.
It's a very accurate and prescient consideration of the man's character but it's a terrible pity that so many who chose to follow him did so to their own deaths as will surely happen to those who follow another cult, that of Christianity. There can hardly be any denying that Johnson and Trump are cult leaders. They encourage their followers to place faith above reason and when you hear Christians campaigning for increased relaxation of lockdown because they "need to physically be with Jesus" more than they need food (yeah, good luck with that) you realise that the most deadly development in the politics of the US and the UK in recent years has been that politicans have started acting like quasi-religious figures beyond questioning and criticism.
I've, fortunately, escaped those things over the last couple of months (today is my 59th day of lockdown) and that's, primarily, down to the generosity and kindness of friends and family. Since I last wrote about this I've spoken, multiple times in some cases, to Mum, Dad, Michelle, Adam, Ben, and even my brother Andy and my nephews Alex and Daniel. We even did a family quiz to go along with the Kahoot quizzes I've been doing, and loving, with a very dear group of close friends.
My friend Dan has been sending me a tune a day to keep my spirits up (today was the Dave Holland Quartet, yesterday was Pauline Oliveros, the day before Sister Rosetta Tharpe - the quality has been excellent), I'm continuing to set my daily music challenge on Facebook (most days the thread stretches beyond one hundred posts), and, on the same platform, I'm still running down my one hundred favourite reggae songs (today it was Alton Ellis, yesterday Culture). On top of that I've been listening to lots of the joyous, beautiful, and transcendent music that Little Richard, Kraftwerk's Florian Schneider, and Millie (who have all passed away in recent days - none, it seems, Covid-19 related) have gifted us. If you formed a triangle of my musical tastes those three could easily be the three corners.
We can, and should, come out of the darkness. But when we do we must make absolutely certain the person that leads us out of it does not lead us somewhere even darker. Current evidence suggests that's a lesson we've yet to learn and if we can't learn it from this can we ever?
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