Posted on 07/22/2021 7:26:17 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Any such conclusions should ideally emerge from reliable sources, seen through the prism of traditional principles and values, and buttressed by a good dose of common sense.
Reliable sources are those media sources that are seen to adhere to the first duty of the press, as was well explained by Robert Lowe, the Viscount Sherbrooke, in The Times in 1851. This, he wrote, is to obtain the earliest and most correct intelligence of the events of the time, and instantly, by disclosing them, to make them the common property of the nation.
As for common sense, this should be similar to that which guides so many in such diverse fields as small businesses, the trades and farming. But, unfortunately, such common sense increasingly seems to elude a surprising and increasing number in the academy, among the political class, the mainstream media and in boardrooms.
So I suggest the following conclusions that we can draw from the whole COVID-19 experience.
Clearly, it can be argued that the best reaction when a virus emerges is to seal a country’s international borders until the virulence of the virus can be properly assessed.
It is also vital that countries find out the origin of the virus. Although originally dismissed by Lancet, it has become increasingly likely that the origin of the virus was in a laboratory rather than a Wuhan wet market. It would be a mistake to assume that this was only for some questionable form of gain-of-function research, but given the record of the Chinese Communist Party, it was likely that it was also for military purposes.
Countries affected adversely by the pandemic should be able to claim financial reparations from Beijing. This is, at the very least, for the breach of duty in both allowing New Year revellers to spread the virus across the world while closing internal travel and denying what they knew to be true—that is, that human-to-human transmission was not only possible, but was repeatedly occurring to their knowledge.
There is precedence for such action to occur. One only needs to look at the 1947-49 Corfu Channel Case, which was heard by the International Court of Justice. The case saw the United Kingdom awarded damages after the Peoples Republic of Albania, a Soviet satellite, started mining the English Channel.
Thus the case against China over the pandemic could be heard by an international commission overseen by a group of Western powers, and would presumably enquire into the international legal responsibility for releasing and, if relevant, engineering the Sars-CoV-2 virus. It could also assess the losses incurred by each of those powers.
Backed up by a signed treaty that provides each power with the ability to recover losses assessed from property within their jurisdiction. Each state would then legislate to give effect to the treaty internally.
While it is clear that no existing international body could be relied on to undertake a serious impartial inquiry and that Beijing would never genuinely cooperate with an investigation, it remains entirely unacceptable that Beijing should escape the consequences of its actions. There must be genuine contrition, a binding commitment that this never is repeated and a significant contribution to alleviating the loss of life and economic costs incurred around the globe.
Only a virus that has a broad and extreme impact on the population, as the Spanish flu did, would justify lockdowns along the lines used by, say, communist powers. Even polio was not considered a justification for lockdowns that are currently used—intensely—in many countries. While the initial reason given was to flatten the curve—slow down infections so hospitals could cope. No one today believes that lockdowns will eliminate the virus.
One of the most important things this pandemic has demonstrated is that governments should take their responsibility to the vulnerable seriously. They should also pursue all forms of medical treatments, assessed by eminent scientists, and make those available to treat the virus.
The early approval and production of a number of vaccines, as seen in Operation Warp Speed, is an excellent precedent. However, as with all aspects of handling any new virus, full information needs to be made immediately available to the public, including the side effects and the effectiveness of each vaccine.
One of the biggest lessons this pandemic has shown is that there is no justification for governmental secrecy as to advice or in curtailing fundamental human rights, including freedom of speech and the press.
The usual constitutional checks and balances should apply in relation to executive action. Interactive computer services which restrict such freedoms, either of their own initiative or in an arrangement or understanding with governmental authorities, should lose any legal exemption and be liable for breaches of laws including antitrust and of the constitution.
The crisis has demonstrated how easily a significant part of the mainstream media can depart from being free and responsible and holding a government accountable to becoming the propaganda arm of one major political party. This is unhealthy and leads inexorably to the loss of one’s freedoms.
This saga demonstrates the eternal truth of Ronald Reagan’s warning: Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.
As he said, “It must be fought for, protected, and handed on (to our children) for them to do the same.”
David Flint, a former chairman of the Australian Press Council, the Australian Broadcasting Authority, and the World Association of Press Councils, is an emeritus professor of law.
Missing: “The harm should not be exaggerated by a politicized and power hungry public health establishment relying on bad measurements.”
Missing: “The harm should not be exaggerated by a politicized and power hungry public health establishment relying on bad measurements.”
You can say that again!
Lessons I’ve learned:
1. People do not care about logic.
2. Rational thought is an endangered species.
3. Basic data analysis is viewed as black magic by the masses.
4. Something is seriously wrong with our society.
I literally feel like the world I thought I knew; the one I grew up in, raised a family in, loved, laughed and cried in, has been replaced.
My wife has a theory that the experiments at CERN have created a tear in reality and alternate universes are bleeding through into our own. It’s as good a theory as any.
Just replied to Kaiser Permanente propaganda pushing the CoVID 'vaccine' narrative. The word 'immunity' was totally absent from their email. I criticized them for not making the t-cell test for CoVID antibodies available to their patients to be able to fully detect 'herd immunity', the goal of the experimental (not expressed in its propaganda) genetic treatment, aka, the 'jab'. I followed the money and complimented them on their business plan of capitalizing on the damage from the CoVID spikes that will keep them solvent for decades.
We're all getting a first-hand look at how a society operates when it's run by people who are always catering to the mindless whims of suburban Karens. Our leaders are invariably going to end up making decisions that are idiotic and irrational ... and they're going to feel completely unaccountable when they fail.
Take out the enforcers and the system will collapse.
My #1 takeaway is that the government will gladly let you die if it furthers their propaganda initiatives.
Missing - a serious search for therapeutics that can be used before or after a victim is infected.
Missing - a serious search for the animals that allegedly spread this infection to humans.
Otherwise, this was a very good essay.
Maybe it’s time to repeal the Sixteenth Amendment.
Only about 10% of women in elected office are rational.
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