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Two Years After Lockdowns, The West’s Troubles Aren’t Ending — They’re Just Beginning
https://thefederalist.com ^ | March 15, 2022 | BY: CHRISTOPHER BEDFORD

Posted on 03/15/2022 9:48:17 AM PDT by Red Badger

The lockdowns mark the start of a ride we can’t get off.

Two years ago this week, the United States shut down. Churches, schools and businesses went dark. Weddings, funerals, and birthdays went silent. City streets stood empty, with an eeriness closer resembling occupied Paris than the bustling hubs they’d been just days before.

Two years later, as the last of the mask mandates for school children falter and crack, it’s tempting to believe our nightmare is finally over. Just as the disease is going to haunt us a long while, however, so too will the effects of how we tried to fight it.

Americans’ relationships with our politicians, bureaucrats, schools, media, police, and churches are fundamentally altered. Indeed, the entire West’s relationships with these major segments of society are forever remade. As we look out on the wreckage of two years of Covid policies, as well as our spiking fuel prices, rocketing inflation, a contested election, a Chinese Olympics, and a land war in Europe, it’s increasingly clear that, far from standing at the end of a dark era, our civilization teeters unsteadily at the very beginning of one.

It’s hard to notice at first. The modern West has become so accustomed to a slow, steady decline — the kind Merle Haggard sang about, and Ronald Reagan ran against — that complaining about it has become a cliché; like the angry old man waving his cane.

More than that, it’s very tempting to view the past two years as separate from our other major problems. But just as Black Tuesday began an era marked by the Depression, the Dust Bowl, the New Deal, the Second World War, and a fundamental reshaping of the American life, so too will the Lockdowns mark the start of a ride we can’t get off.

The Damage Is Done

Even in states that have long since shrugged off the bureaucrats’ Covid demands, trust is broken. The people had believed in March 2020 that if they did their parts, all would soon be well. As President Calvin Coolidge famously said, “The chief ideal of the American people is idealism… [and] the chief business of the American people is business.”

Neither Americans’ idealism nor our industry were rewarded, however. From March 2020 on, ours was rule not by people, but by bureaucratic diktat.

Our politicians betrayed us: flying abroad, getting haircuts, going maskless, holding parties, and dining out while also closing schools, forbidding gatherings, banning amenities, and demonizing all who resisted — or even questioned — their orders.

Our corporate media betrayed us: propping up liars and fools, tearing down all who spoke against their champions, and spreading fear and hatred of dissent as far and wide as their words would carry.

Our teachers betrayed us: using Covid to gain a grab bag of vacation time, control over parents, wage hikes, and other unrelated perks, all while punishing school children with years of masks, separation — and the educational and developmental retardation those rules cost.

Even our much-vaunted hospital workers betrayed us: keeping dying husbands from their dying wives, grown children from their elderly parents, brothers from their sisters, and babies from their mothers — all to ensure “Covid safety.”

As hard as it seems, much of this might be good. Not that our politicians, media, teachers, and health care are broken — as the most important essay of 2021 laid bare — but that Americans now recognize just how broken they all are.

Other betrayals, however, are fresher. While corruption among our most powerful religious leaders is older than the Bible itself, when our government declared religion a disposable pastime, many of our religious leaders publicly obeyed. When they bowed before the bureaucrats, a trust was broken, and America was left with one more central civil institution weakened when we needed it strengthened.

The family — the political unit as old as the body politic itself — also suffered greatly. While American political fights have frayed blood relations since Benjamin Franklin fought his loyalist son, the past two years have seen so marked an increase in familial destruction that few of us are left untouched.

This past Christmas, for example, people across the country told their relatives they would not be welcome if they hadn’t taken the vaccine. You probably know more people this hurt than you realize; many of them, sad and embarrassed, hid it, claiming they simply couldn’t make the trip this year.

Then there are the grandparents across the country who have never seen their grandchildren. In the past month alone, I’ve met two different couples seeing theirs for the first time ever — provided they quarantined for two weeks first, and then took a test.

The kind of fear and intolerance it takes to bar your mother from your children extends to broader society, too. Cops, hospital workers, and many others have lost their jobs over refusals to take the shot, while corporate media and its viewers loudly cheered for even harsher penalties. Confronting and reporting on businesses and people who break Covid restrictions is actively encouraged by both government and media.

Our inability to dissent from the latest Covid decree penetrates our society so deeply, liberal comedy show “Saturday Night Live” is now openly mocking how closely American liberals have had to monitor even their private conversations with friends.

We’re now comfortable with the concept of censoring “disinformation,” it’s extended well beyond Covid. These days, it’s not surprising to see the hosts of a daytime TV show for women casually call for the investigation (and possible imprisonment) of journalists and politicians who express opposition to something they support — in this case, an American war in Ukraine.

This sort of thing has become actually monotonous: Censorship, investigation, and even arrest are offered daily as solutions to problems as mundane as political or medical disagreements. Has the phrase “We’re all in this together” ever rung so hollow?

The Start Of Our Troubles

As in past eras of marked trouble, struggle, and decline, not all our problems are plainly linked; but they coalesce in their effects.

We find ourselves more divided than we’ve been in 150 years, and so less able to handle what comes our way. Many of our civil institutions — long sick — now seem terminally ill. Distrust and enmity run high, and why shouldn’t they?

The result of these divisions: As we plunge into the next series of crises — rapid inflation, destabilized fuel prices, the real prospect of world war in Europe — we have fewer tools to handle them, less willingness to try, and more suspicion of our fellow Americans than any time in over a century.

Taking it all in, we know that we’re weaker than when we began 2020. Taking it all in, we know that far from returning to normalcy, we’re entering a period of deadly turmoil, with enemies foreign and domestic intent on taking advantage of our divisions, our distrust, and our dangerously unsteady economic situation.

We’ve been challenged before, even in modern times. The Sept. 11 attacks rocked us like we hadn’t seen since Pearl Harbor, yet we soldiered on. What’s finally missing, however, is that general feeling of confidence.

We no longer share an understanding that no matter the monsters we’d face — and we face many, here and abroad — that everything would be OK; that the American Way will go on.

“Overriding everything else,” Walter Lord wrote in his 1955 book on the sinking of the HMS Titanic, “the [disaster] also marked the end of a general feeling of confidence.”

“Until then men felt they had found the answer to a steady, orderly, civilized life. For 100 years the Western world had been at peace. For 100 years technology had steadily improved. For 100 years the benefits of peace and industry seemed to be filtering satisfactorily through society.”

“In retrospect,” he continued, “there may seem less grounds for confidence, but at the time most articulate people felt life was all right. The Titanic woke them up. Never again would they be quite so sure of themselves.”

Within two years of the sinking, the First World War began. By its end, its hubris, violence, and indifference to personal suffering destroyed a generation — and cut our civilization so deeply, the damage inflicted is still seen today.

The men who, in relative peacetime, placed supreme confidence in their steel ship against the great blue sea might only chuckle at the hubris of their successors, who had supreme confidence they could master a disease they didn’t know.

We in the West, though, can be confident of one thing only: These past two years have cut us deeply, and will haunt us for many more to come.

What’s not yet written is whether we overcome. That will be up to us, and God.

Pray for America.

Christopher Bedford is a senior editor at The Federalist, a founding partner of RightForge, the host of "Culture War," vice chairman of Young Americans for Freedom, a board member at The Daily Caller News Foundation and National Journalism Center, and the author of "The Art of the Donald." His work has been featured in The American Mind, National Review, the New York Post and the Daily Caller, where he led the Daily Caller News Foundation and spent eight years. A frequent guest on Fox News and Fox Business, he was raised in Massachusetts and lives on Capitol Hill. Follow him on Twitter.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Health/Medicine; History
KEYWORDS: culture; society
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1 posted on 03/15/2022 9:48:17 AM PDT by Red Badger
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To: Red Badger

2 posted on 03/15/2022 9:52:59 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Ukraine is not a good country and does not deserve active US support.)
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But the solutions started with the decisive elimination of the tweetus rudis


3 posted on 03/15/2022 9:53:23 AM PDT by dsrtsage ( Complexity is just simple lacking imagination)
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To: Red Badger

“Americans now recognize just how broken they all are.”

FAR too many of them are A-OK with it.


4 posted on 03/15/2022 10:01:38 AM PDT by HKMk23 (https://youtu.be/LTseTg48568)
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To: Red Badger
The trust is broken and even now, there's nothing stopping the Pfascists from doing it again.

Government employees and elected officials showed themselves as true Pfascists who despise We The People.

The medical community lowered themselves below politicians, snake oil salesmen, and con artists. It's been going on for years but now it's official.

Korporate officers showed how little they think of their own workers and clients. They showed human life meant nothing to them compared to their pay and compensation.

The Propaganda Media has dropped any guise of delivering actual events and now openly gaslights viewers with clear propaganda.

Religious "leaders" showed they have no faith in God and are instead willing servants of the State.

The rule of law has been discarded for unconstitutional diktats.

Reason has been supplanted by absurdity and deceit.

On the plus side, the long overdue red pill is now being thrown by at people by the handful. Also on the plus side, President Donald MAGA Trump has gotten these deceivers to take off their masks, throw them on the ground, and stomp on them.

5 posted on 03/15/2022 10:03:17 AM PDT by T.B. Yoits
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To: Red Badger
Closing in on 1 million (reported) Covid deaths. Glad to see Biden has it under control. Im sure he will get the same media treatment as Trump would have if he was in office when we hit 1 million.

COMPARING TRUMP AND BIDEN ON COVID DEATHS (As of 3/15/22)

The media went wild when the reported US Covid death toll reached 400,000 on Trumps last day in office.

Blood on his hands': As US surpasses 400,000 COVID-19 deaths, experts blame Trump administration for a 'preventable' loss of life

On Trump’s Last Full Day, Nation Records 400,000 Covid Deaths

US Covid-19 death toll passes 400,000 on Trump’s last day in office

The reported death toll from Covid now stands at:

965,397 according to Johns Hopkins Covid Tracker

991,038 according to Worldometer Covid Tracker

BIDEN: 565-591 thousand reported COVID deaths

VS

TRUMP: 400 thousand reported COVID deaths

Some will say its not fair to blame the deaths that occurred during Biden’s first month in office on his policies. That the daily deaths when he entered office January 20th 2021 were already in the midst of peak. To avoid this criticism, lets skip forward some 6 months into his presidency. By this time Biden’s policies were in full effect and he was “following the science” and “listening to the experts”. Around this time, July 12th 2021 , 50% of Americans were fully vaccinated yet over the next 7 months some 309,000 Americans died of Covid under Biden’s leadership. Compare this 7 month period to Donald Trump’s last 7 months in office. With less than 1 % of Americans vaccinated, and Trump supposedly “not following the science” or promoting masks… the total amount of Americans that died during this time was 278,000.

Trump’s last 7 months in office: 278,000 Covid deaths

VS

Biden’s 7 months after US reaching 50% fully vaccinated: 309,000 Covid deaths

6 posted on 03/15/2022 10:04:56 AM PDT by Pxzftrnqfrn
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To: Red Badger

Good article. Thanks for posting.


7 posted on 03/15/2022 10:06:32 AM PDT by WhoisAlanGreenspan? (It's a failed virus but a hugely successful propaganda campaign.)
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To: Pxzftrnqfrn

Biden had the advantage of the vaccines his entire presidency, whereas Trump only had them for his final month in office. Biden also had the advantage of a less lethal variant for much of his first year. These facts make Biden’s performance look even worse.


8 posted on 03/15/2022 10:21:34 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Red Badger

Good summary of current times. Solutions?


9 posted on 03/15/2022 10:31:39 AM PDT by consult
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To: Red Badger

Two Weeks
To Flatten the Curve,
Two Years Like
Slaves We Served!


10 posted on 03/15/2022 10:33:58 AM PDT by Big Red Badger (On the Other hand, )
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To: HKMk23

Yes...thats true.


11 posted on 03/15/2022 10:43:46 AM PDT by rrrod (6)
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To: Red Badger
Good article...

Our politicians betrayed us: flying abroad, getting haircuts, going maskless, holding parties, and dining out while also closing schools, forbidding gatherings, banning amenities, and demonizing all who resisted — or even questioned — their orders.

Our corporate media betrayed us: propping up liars and fools, tearing down all who spoke against their champions, and spreading fear and hatred of dissent as far and wide as their words would carry.

Our teachers betrayed us: using Covid to gain a grab bag of vacation time, control over parents, wage hikes, and other unrelated perks, all while punishing school children with years of masks, separation — and the educational and developmental retardation those rules cost.

12 posted on 03/15/2022 10:44:18 AM PDT by CodeJockey (Politicians are to America as oligarchs are to Russia. )
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To: Red Badger
Soros: "I had a very good recession pandemic"
13 posted on 03/15/2022 10:46:08 AM PDT by RckyRaCoCo (Please Pray For My Brother Ken.)
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To: consult

Solutions,,,
Turn Off the T.V.


14 posted on 03/15/2022 10:46:33 AM PDT by Big Red Badger (On the Other hand, )
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To: Pxzftrnqfrn

And those numbers are fake because they are heavily weighted by fraud and by MASSIVE medical misadventure. The insane overuse of ventilators, despair of old people locked in rooms at their old folks homes, remdesivir killing kidneys. The brutal suppression of HCQ and Ivermectin.

The number is actually more of a genocide count.


15 posted on 03/15/2022 10:47:31 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up..)
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To: Big Red Badger
Solutions,,,
Turn Off the T.V.

Exactly. I would add...

Read a good book
Go outside for a walk
Put on some good music

Having a television blaring in the house all day is toxic, toxic, toxic.

16 posted on 03/15/2022 10:49:16 AM PDT by SamAdams76 (I am 16 days from outliving Robert Reed (Father of the Brady Bunch)!)
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To: consult

There aren’t any that do not involve a catastrophe that we must endure.

It’s like being in a 737, 35 degrees nose down at 450 knots, at 700 feet AGL and asking for a solution. Other than the hand of god, you ARE going to hit terrain, and their is no other solution.


17 posted on 03/15/2022 10:50:53 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up..)
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To: consult

There


18 posted on 03/15/2022 10:55:33 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up..)
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To: SamAdams76

A good Book,
.
I’ve just pulled something
From my Library that’s been
Calling me for months!
.
Get busy living or
Get busy Dying.
.
Choose LIFE!


19 posted on 03/15/2022 11:00:20 AM PDT by Big Red Badger (On the Other hand, )
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To: Red Badger

The process the author is expertly describing is expressible in one word, Apocalypse.

It’s the process of unveiling ugly truths, which leads to destruction of the old in favor of ... something else.

Here we are at the brink of the unknown. We know we have to sail away from the current insane paradigm but no one knows for sure where or what the destination is.

Probably the destination will be whatever rocks we wash up on during the storm, but that’s the rough and tumble Earthlings sign up for.


20 posted on 03/15/2022 11:10:08 AM PDT by JustaTech (A mind is a terrible thing)
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