Posted on 09/04/2020 5:41:36 AM PDT by Kaslin
To that nagging question, the answer increasingly seems to be yes.
Certainly, they were a novelty. As novelist Lionel Shriver writes, "We've never before responded to a contagion by closing down whole countries." As I noted in May, the 1957-58 Asian flu killed between 70,000 and 116,000 Americans, between 0.04% and 0.07% of the nation's population. The 1968-70 Hong Kong flu killed about 100,000, 0.05% of the population.
The U.S. coronavirus death toll of 186,000 is 0.055% of the current population. It will go higher, but it's about the same magnitude as those two flus, and it has been less deadly to those under 65 than the flus were. Yet there were no statewide lockdowns; no massive school closings; no closings of office buildings and factories, restaurants and museums. No one considered shutting down Woodstock.
Why are attitudes so different today? Perhaps we have greater confidence in government's effectiveness. If public policy can affect climate change, it can stamp out a virus.
Plus, we're much more risk-averse. Children aren't allowed to walk to school; jungle gyms have vanished from playgrounds; and college students are shielded from microaggressions. We have a "safetyism mindset," as Jonathan Haidt and Greg Lukianoff write in "The Coddling of the American Mind," under which "many aspects of students' lives needed to be carefully regulated by adults, and that it was far better to overreact to potential risks and threats than to underreact."
So the news of the COVID-19 virus killing dozens and overloading hospitals in Bergamo, Italy, triggered a flight to safety and restriction. Many Americans stopped going to restaurants and shops even before the lockdowns were ordered in March and April. The exaggerated projections of some epidemiologists, with a professional interest in forecasting pandemics, triggered demands that governments act.
The legitimate fears that hospitals would be overwhelmed apparently explain the (in retrospect, deadly) orders of the governors of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan requiring elderly care facilities to admit COVID-infected patients. And the original purpose to "flatten the curve" segued into "stamp out the virus."
But the apparent success of South Korea and island nations -- Taiwan, Singapore, New Zealand -- in doing so could never be replicated in the continental, globalized United States.
Governors imposing continued lockdowns claimed to be "following the science." But only in one dimension: reducing the immediate number of COVID-19 cases. The lockdowns also prevented cancer screenings, heart attack treatment and substance abuse counseling, the absence of which resulted in a large but hard-to-estimate number of deaths. What Haidt and Lukianoff call "vindictive protectiveness" turned out to be not very protective.
Examples include shaming beachgoers though outdoor virus spread is minimal; extending school closedowns though few children get or transmit the infection; closing down gardening aisles in superstores; and barring church services while blessing inevitably noisy and crowded demonstrations for politically favored causes.
The new thinking on lockdowns, as Greg Ip reported in The Wall Street Journal last week, is that "they're overly blunt and costly." That supports President Donald Trump's mid-April statement that, "A prolonged lockdown combined with a forced economic depression would inflict an immense and wide-ranging toll on public health."
For many, that economic damage has been of Great Depression proportions. Restaurants and small businesses have been closed forever, even before the last three months of "mostly peaceful" urban rioting. Losses have been concentrated on those with low income and little wealth, while the lockdowns have added tens of billions to the net worth of Amazon's Jeff Bezos and Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg.
Attitudes on lockdowns are highly correlated with partisan politics. Democrats tend to be more risk-averse and want lockdowns continued until there's a vaccine. Republicans are less risk-averse and want most restrictions lifted.
As a result, since governors and mayors make these decisions, it's heavily Democratic central cities -- New York, Washington, Los Angeles, San Francisco -- whose civic fabric is being rent and cultural capital is left in ruins, with much less devastation in the exurbs and countryside.
This fouling your own nest extends to voting. Many more Democrats than Republicans want to vote by mail, even though the risk of voter error or non-counting is higher than for those, most of them Republicans, who want to vote in person.
The anti-lockdown blogger (and former New York Times reporter) Alex Berenson makes a powerful case that lockdowns delayed, rather than prevented, infections, and that current plunging hospitalization and death rates suggest we're approaching herd immunity, where the virus will fade out for lack of new targets.
There are old lessons here, ready to be relearned. Governments can sometimes channel but never entirely control nature. There is no way to entirely eliminate risk. Attempts to reduce one risk may increase others. Amid uncertainty, people make mistakes. Like, maybe, the lockdowns.
Were the Lockdowns a Mistake? Does a cat have whiskers?
Thanks to the enacted lockdowns, a lot of Americans got their ‘first toe joint in the water’ of Socialism, and found it distasteful.
Thank you, democrats!!
Does the Pope crap in the Vatican?
And it is not hard - I lost 20lb during this whole episode by doing something so revolutionary - it's a new diet craze sweeping the nation, it's called ...shhhh... eat less.
Does Antifa have fleas?
YES, especially so after the Hydroxychloroquine + Zinc protocol was made known, and after the Budesonide via nebulizer treatment was made known.
We don’t need to lockdown, we don’t need masks, we don’t need social distancing — none of this is needed. The pandemic is really a political war and all of us are collateral damage.
Hindsight is always 20-20. I think the lockdowns should have stopped in April and HCQ should have been readily available.
Yes.
Yes, next question.
bump
History will record this period as one of the, if not the, most foolish endeavors of a supposedly intelligent society.
I believe the lock down at the being was not a mistake Because China was not sharing information with the World, the World did not know what it was dealing with. Once everyone got an understanding of what it was, then politics came into full swing. If you remember, Our President wanted to reopen first around April 15 and then April 30th. He knew what we were dealing with then, but again politics starting running the show. Just wish people could put 2 and 2 together. But they can’t because they are so dumbed down.
Initially, the measures made sense. There was a lot that was unknown. Now, there’s a lot that’s known that just isn’t true. We are definitely at war, because the truth was the first casualty. A listing of the lies about this hoax would be fun. From the false positives in testing, to the fake death rate, to masks vs. no masks, to the treatments that obviously have at least some validity (until the #badorangeman talks about them) ...
It’s all so tiresome.
yes.
Empty Shelves,
Self Quarantined,
Face Masks,
Distancing and Sanitizer.
.
Government Controls thru
FEAR.
At This Time,
The World’s Greatest Hoax!
.
Thanks China and
All Your Coconspiritors.
“Were the Lockdowns a Mistake?”
That depends on what the objective was. If it was to damage the economy and get people used to following arbitrary government dictates, it worked brilliantly. If it was to take down Trump, the jury is still out.
If it was to stop the spread of the virus, based on no logic or science other than following the example of the Chinese, welding people into their homes, then yes, it was a mistake. One that continues to this day.
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