1/31/2021

Confucius on Good Government


Confucius on Good Government, the 6 Steps to a Harmonious Society, and Self-Discipline as the Key to Democracy

“Things have roots and branches… If the root be in confusion, nothing will be well governed.”

Confucius on Good Government, the 6 Steps to a Harmonious Society, and Self-Discipline as the Key to Democracy

Two and a half millennia before Leonard Cohen wrote in his timeless and tender ode to democracy that “the heart has got to open in a fundamental way,” the ancient Chinese philosopher and statesman Confucius (551–479 BCE) recognized the indelible link between personal and political morality, recognized that interpersonal kindness is the foundation of social justice, recognized that democracy — a form of government only just invented on the other side of the globe in ancient Greece, not to take root in his own culture for epochs — begins in the heart.

Confucius. 1909 engraving, artist unknown. (Available as a print.)

Centuries before the advent of Christianity and its central tenet of the golden rule, the Chinese sage pioneered the concept of compassion as a moral guiding principle — an ancient concept subtly yet profoundly different from empathy, which only entered the modern lexicon at the dawn of the twentieth century as a term for projecting oneself into a work of art. On his existential reading list of essential books for every stage of life, Tolstoy listed Confucius among the most mature reading. His teachings went on to influence millennia of poets, political leaders, and ordinary people seeking to live nobler, kinder, more empowered lives.

Among them was the poet Ezra Pound (October 30, 1885–November 1, 1972) — a man of immense talent and immense blind spots, of sympathetic idealisms and troubling sympathies — who set out to translate and compile the most enduring teachings of the great Chinese sage. His 1927 more-than-translation earned Pound the $2,000 poetry prize of The Dial — the pioneering Transcendentalist magazine Margaret Fuller and Ralph Waldo Emerson had launched nearly a century earlier at the peak of their intense and complicated relationship, which shaped the history of modern thought. Pound used the funds to launch his own poetic-political magazine. The following year, his translation was published in book form as Confucius: The Unwobbling Pivot / The Great Digest / The Analects (public library).

In his prefatory note, Pound observed that China was tranquil and harmonious for as long as its rulers followed the teachings of Confucius, but dynasties collapsed into chaos and social catastrophe as soon as these principles were neglected. In a sentiment that applies as much to those ancient sociopolitical collapses as to the perils of the present, he writes:

The proponents of a world order will neglect at their peril the study of the only process that has repeatedly proved its efficiency as a social coordinate.

The Sage and the Banditti. 1887 woodcut, artist unknown. (Available as a print.)

That process, as Confucius conceived it, was one of treating public good as a matter of personal goodness, rooted in a purity of heart and a discipline of mind. Noting that “things have roots and branches” and that “if the root be in confusion, nothing will be well governed,” the ancient Chinese sage outlines the six steps to a harmonious society:

The [ancients], wanting to clarify and diffuse throughout the empire that light which comes from looking straight into the heart and then acting, first set up good government in their own states; wanting good government in their own states, they first established order in their own families; wanting order in the home, they first disciplined themselves; desiring self-discipline, they rectified their own hearts; and wanting to rectify their hearts, they sought precise verbal definitions of their inarticulate thoughts. Wishing to attain precise verbal definitions, they set to extend their knowledge to the utmost. This completion of knowledge is rooted in sorting things into organic categories.

Confucius. Colorized 1900 photogravure, artist unknown. (Available as a print.)

This essential classification is the work of clarity and comprehension — we classify to understand and to order our priorities. Once this work is complete, Confucius counsels, the process is folded over and the six steps are retraced back to the original goal of good government:

When things had been classified in organic categories, knowledge moved toward fulfillment; given the extreme knowable points, the inarticulate thoughts were defined with precision… Having attained this precise verbal definition, they then stabilized their hearts, they disciplined themselves; having attained self-discipline, they set their own houses in order; having order in their own homes, they brought good government to their own states; and when their states were well governed, the empire was brought into equilibrium.

Complement with mathematician Lilian Lieber on how Euclid illuminates the roots of democracy and social justice and the great humanistic philosopher and psychologist Erich Fromm on what self-love really means and how it anchors a sane society, then revisit Ursula K. Le Guin’s superb more-than-translation of Tao Te Ching and its ancient wisdom on the wellspring of personal and political power.


Brain Pickings

Sumo

1/30/2021

Mandelbrot set and so much more

A Single Equation that Rules the World

The equation connects neuron firing, fluid convection, the Mandelbrot set and so much more and will definitely change your view of this world.


Image for post
A Single Equation that Rules the World. Source: .

What if I say that the Mandelbrot set, a population of squirrels, a dripping faucet, the firing of neurons in our brain and the thermal convection is connected by one simple equation? Maybe you’ll laugh at me. But math is stranger than fiction.

Let’s dive deep into this.

Suppose you want to model a population of squirrels. This year, we have X number of squirrels. So, what might be the population next year? A simple model can be, just multiply the current population with a number. Let it be r. so, the growth rate is r. So, next year, the number of squirrels will be rX.

If r=2, it will mean that the population will double every year. But there is a problem. It implies that the population of squirrels will grow exponentially, forever. That doesn’t really happen. So, we bound it by some constrains. Let’s add the term (1-X) to the equation to represent the constraints of the environment.

So, it becomes rX(1-X). Here we are imagining X is a percentage of the theoretical maximum. X goes from 0 to 1 and as it approaches 1, (1-X) approaches 0.

Let’s say the population of squirrels next year will be Xₙ₊₁ and the population of squirrels this year is Xₙ. So, we get an equation:

Xₙ₊₁ = rXₙ(1-Xₙ)

This is the logistic map equation. If you graph Xₙ₊₁ versus Xₙ, you get an inverted parabola.


Image for post
Graph of Xₜ₊₁ vs Xₜ and a graph of Xₜ₊₂ vs Xₜ₊₁ and Xₜ. Source: .

In this graph, t has been used instead of n. But it’s the same thing.

It’s the simplest possible equation with a negative feedback loop. What’s that? Let me explain. The bigger the population gets over Xₙ (this year) the smaller it will be on Xₙ₊₁ (the following year).

Still not clear? Alright, let’s understand this with examples.

Let r be 3.4, and the starting population Xₙ be 0.3 (30% of the maximum population). Upon calculating, we get 0.816. Okay, so the population increased from 0.3 to 0.816 in the first year. That’s a huge increment. But then if we take 0.816 as the population of this year (Xₙ), next year the population will be 0.510. Again, the year after that it will be 0.849.

But wait, there’s a catch here. After some years, the population keeps oscillating between 0.451 and 0.842 approximately. It doesn’t really change beyond that.

But wait, there’s even more. A population remains almost constant when the growth rate is 2 or near to 2. Because two children just replace their parents, so, after a certain time, the population becomes almost constant. Let’s try this out.

Suppose Xₙ is 0.35 (35% of the maximum population) and r is 2.34. So, Xₙ₊₁ will be 0.532. The year after that it will be 0.582, followed by 0.569 the year after that. After a year, the population will stabilize on 0.57. It will not increase or decrease much and will almost be fixed at 0.57, i.e, 57% of the maximum possible population. The population reaches an equilibrium.

Now, even if we change the initial population, it will still reach the equilibrium sooner or later. The equilibrium number only depends on the value of r. If r is lower, then the equilibrium population gets lower and if it is lesser than 1, then the population gets to 0 sooner or later.

Now, let’s make another graph with r (growth rate) on x axis and the equilibrium population on y axis. At first, when r is lesser than 1, the equilibrium population remains 0. But upon r crossing 1, the equilibrium population keeps increasing.


Image for post
Single value equilibrium population.

But something interesting happens when r passes 3 and maybe you can guess it too. Remember when we kept r=3.4. The equilibrium population kept oscillating between 0.84 and 0.51. After that, if never settles down to a constant value and it oscillates back and forth between two values instead. One year the population is higher and the next year it is lower and then it is higher again in the following year.

As time passes, the equilibrium population splits into 4 values. The population repeats after a 4-year cycle.


Image for post
The value of equilibrium population keeps oscillating between two values.

Since the length of the cycle has doubled, it is called period-doubling bifurcations. as r increases, it leads to cycles of 8, 16, 32 and when r reaches about 3.57, it’s complete chaos. Then the population never settles down at all.


Image for post
Chaos in the value of equilibrium population.

The population just becomes random. It is so random that this was one of the primary methods of generating random numbers in computers. This way, a deterministic machine gave an unpredictable answer. Although there is no repeating, if you know the initial values, you can calculate the given values. So, it’s actually pseudo-random.

Wait, look at the graph at around r= 3.83 approximately. There is a small portion where the order returned. The population repeated after 3 years. The cycle was of 3 years. As r grows more and more, the cycle splits into 6, 12, 24 and then chaos again.


Logistic Bifurcation map
Logistic Bifurcation map. Source: .

You might be thinking, it looks like a fractal. Well, it is. The large scale features are repeated on a smaller scale.

Probably the most famous fractal is the Mandelbrot set.


Image for post
Mandelbrot Set. Source: .

Well, there’s a surprise for you. The bifurcation diagram is actually a part of the Mandelbrot set.


Logistic Map Bifurcations Underneath Mandelbrot Set
Logistic Map Bifurcations Underneath Mandelbrot Set. Source: .

Cool, right?

What the heck is a Mandelbrot set?

It is based on the simple equation, Zₙ₊₁ = Zₙ² + C. So, pick a number C, any number in the complex plane, then start calculating Zₙ₊₁ starting from Zₙ = 0. Now, iterate this equation again and again and again and again and… You get my point.

Now, if the number blows up to infinity, then that number (what we assumed as C) is not a part of the Mandelbrot set. But, if that number remains finite after unlimited iterations, it is part of the Mandelbrot set.

For example, if C=3, after the first iteration, Zₙ₊₁=3. After the second iteration, Zₙ₊₁=12. After the third iteration, Zₙ₊₁=147. After unlimited iterations, Zₙ₊₁ will be infinity. So, 3 will not be a part of the Mandelbrot set.

Again, if C=-1, after the first iteration, Zₙ₊₁=-1. After the second iteration, Zₙ₊₁=0. After the third iteration, Zₙ₊₁=-1. After the fourth iteration Zₙ₊₁=0 again. The value of Zₙ₊₁ oscillates between -1, and 0. So, -1 is a part of the Mandelbrot set.

The picture of the Mandelbrot set just shows the boundary between the numbers that cause the iterated equation to blow up and those that cause it to blow up. What the Mandelbrot set doesn’t show is how these equations remain finite. So, we iterated the equation thousands of times and plotted on the z axis the iteration actually takes. So, the side view of the Mandelbrot set is actually the bifurcation diagram.

All of the numbers in the main cardioid end up stabilizing on a single constant and the numbers in the main bulb oscillate between two values. In the smaller bulb, they oscillate between four values and so on. The chaotic part of the bifurcation diagram happens on the needle of the Mandelbrot set. Now, look at the medallion in the middle of the needle part. That part is when the bifurcation plot stabilizes for a small window.

How beautiful and mind-boggling this is!

Now, I claimed that this equation determines the population of a species. Is this true? Well, yes. Especially in laboratory conditions. Not only this, the equation applies to a huge variety of different areas of science and often those areas of science are unrelated to each other.

Albert J. Libchaber’s work on fluid dynamics first confirmed this equation. His experiment included a small rectangular box with mercury inside. Then he used a small temperature gradient to induce convection, just two counter-rotating cylinders inside his box. He published his findings in a named ‘Period doubling cascade in mercury, a quantitative measurement’. The findings were astonishing.

An article of states,

“Libchaber used a simple pen plotter to record the temperature, as measured by a probe embedded in the top surface. In the equilibrium motion after the first bifurcation, the temperature at any one point remains steady, more or less, and the pen records a straight line. With more heating, more instability sets in. A kink develops in each roll, and the kink moves steadily back and forth. This wobble shows up as a changing temperature, up and down between two values. The pen now draws a wavy line across the paper.”

Libchaber measured the temperature of the fluid inside with a probe on the top of the box. He saw a periodic spike in the temperature. It’s similar to when the logistic equation converges to a single value. But then, as the temperature increases, a wobble can be seen on those rolling cylinders at half the original frequency. The spikes in temperature also went back and forth between two different heights. He kept increasing the temperature and he saw period-doubling again and again.


Image for post
Results of Libchaber’s test. Source: .

Not only this, period-doubling could be seen in many other experiments, like the response of our and Salamander’s eyes to flickering lights. Also, a lot of researchers have found our period doubling in a dripping faucet. For example, at first, you see only one drop at a time. Then two drops at a time. Then four… You achieve chaotic behaviour from a dripping faucet just by adjusting the knob.

Now if the bifurcation diagram already looks spooky to you, hold on, we got more. Physicist Mitchen Feigenbaum divided the width of each bifurcations section by the next one. That ratio closed into a number. It’s 4.669. That’s like, 4.6Nice.

Jokes apart, the number 4.669 is now called the Feigenbaum constant. The bifurcations come faster to the right but the ratio is always approaching to this fixed value of 4.669.

Now, 4.669 is thought to be a fundamental constant because it doesn’t relate to any other existing physical constant in the universe. But wait, not only the equation I wrote at the beginning of this article obey this. Any equation that has a single hump (for example, Xₙ₊₁ = sinx), if you iterate it again and again, you will be bifurcations. Even the ratio of when these bifurcations occur will be the same, 4.669.

The bifurcation diagram and the Feigenbaum constant is thought to be universal. Because it appears in so many places in mathematics and physics. This universality is truly amazing.

So, yeah. That’s the equation that rules the universe. Well, let me correct myself a bit. It’s not just an equation, it’s the bifurcation diagram and the Feigenbaum constant. So, that’s an equation that has a single bump behaves the same way.

I hope more researches are made in this field and the Feigenbaum constant is checked in more phenomenons in nature. Only that way we will be able to unravel its true power.

This article is heavily inspired by an article on , a video by , and Libchaber’s paper, named ‘’.


Samrat Dutta

Written by

Developer, designer, writer, data analyst, AI specialist. https://www.patreon.com/SamratDuttaOfficial https://www.instagram.com/samratduttaofficial

Cryorus

Great exposition, this is also why the #Asynsis principle is an elegant new green, design law of nature and culture.

Here's my QED, first published in AD Magazine in 1994, and as shared on TED conferences, plus how we can apply it via #MetaLoop…...

5

Well done. thanks for the examples. Only one criticism: it appears that your essay had been nidely edited until this paragraph when the wording began to deteriorate: "Now if the bifurcation diagram already looks spooky to you, hold on, we got more…...

5

3

I think this article misses some really important aspects, because although the equation shows the process from determinism to chaos it doesn't rule the world. Rule is the operative word.

This is because it's not the only thing going. The presence of…...


1/28/2021

ABC de la corruption systémique


Comment et pourquoi nos gouvernements nous mentent : ABC de la corruption systémique

Le saviez-vous ? Les mesures brutales qui nous sont imposées par nos gouvernements ne sont ni utiles ni nécessaires. En prétendant l’inverse, ils continuent à abuser de notre crédulité et de notre bonne foi, tout en mettant à genoux nos sociétés et en détruisant la vie de tant de nos concitoyens.

Vous trouvez cette introduction choquante ? Alors ouvrez votre esprit et accrochez votre ceinture… Voici un résumé glané sur le net présentant fort bien ce dont il s’agit :

 

Voyez-vous cet homme dont le portait figure en tête d'article? Il s’appelle John Ioannidis. C’est le plus grand épidémiologiste du monde. Oui, du monde. Il est professeur à Stanford, avec un H-Index de 200+, et ses travaux sur la méthode scientifique sont parmi les plus cités en recherche clinique.

Eh bien, voici ce qu’il pense du confinement : « plus on avance, plus on constate que les bénéfices supposés du confinement sont des artefacts dus à la modélisation, ils ne sont pas vrais » ; « les confinements sont une mesure extrême, nous savons qu’ils produisent des dégâts incommensurables sur les gens, leurs vies, leur santé, leur santé mentale... ».

Le Pr Ioannidis vient de publier avec son équipe une étude où il a comparé les politiques sanitaires de différents pays. Conclusion : il n’y a aucune différence de performance entre les pays qui ont confiné et les autres. L’alternative confinement / laissez-faire est une alternative fausse : nous n’avons pas à choisir entre « une mesure difficile mais efficace » et « sacrifier les gens à l’économie », car les confinements ne marchent pas, un point c’est tout. Il serait donc temps d’isoler les malades, exiger des tests pour tous les voyageurs et de protéger correctement les personnes à risque, ce qu’on fait toujours peu ou pas après un an.

 

Cette étude rejoint la pile de toutes les précédentes concluant à l’inutilité de ces mesures insensées et brutales.

Or que fait le Conseil fédéral, pourtant informé que sa décision signera l’arrêt de mort de centaines de milliers de commerces, restaurants et entreprises dans le pays ? Eh bien il confine et ferme les commerces et les restaurants !

On reconnaît enfin (même l’OMS !) que les tests PCR utilisés à tour de bras sont faussés et ne devraient jamais être utilisés autrement que comme outil diagnostic dans le cadre d’une consultation médicale.

Or que fait le Conseil fédéral ? il décide de tester à tours de bras, investissant 1 milliards de francs (pas perdus pour tout le monde donc) dans cette décision irresponsable et inutile !

L’imposition du masque a des effets négatifs majeurs pour la santé (en particulier des enfants et des jeunes) sans avoir montré d’utilité en population générale (ce que rappelle même l’OMS). Dans le même temps, une étude chinoise vient de montrer que les personnes Covid+ asymptomatiques ne sont pas contagieuses et la Suède connaît une décrue réjouissante des « cas » sans avoir jamais confiné, fermé les commerces ou masqué.

Or que fait le Conseil fédéral ? il continue d’imposer le port du msasque !

L’ivermectine montre une efficacité précoce, curative et prophylactique remarquable, supérieure même à l’hydroxychloroquine pourtant déjà efficace. Ce médicament est extrêmement sûr, facile d’usage et ne coûte à peu près rien.

Or que fait le Conseil fédéral ? Il continue de mettre des bâtons dans les roues au traitement des malades du Covid et de tout miser sur le « vaccin génique » uniquement !

Les expérimentations médicamenteuses ou vaccinales sur la population sont contraires à l’éthique et rigoureusement interdites par le droit de la santé -notamment international.

Or que fait le Conseil fédéral ? Il avance à marche forcée dans la généralisation d’une expérimentation génique à risque, à large échelle !

Les données avancées par les firmes vaccinales sont incomplètes, bidouillées ou même fausses.

Or que fait le Conseil fédéral ? Il s’approprie le discours publicitaire de Big Pharma sans changer une virgule !

 

Il est difficile en effet de faire cas d’autant d’absurdités. On peut certes accorder le bénéfice du doute à nos autorités et mettre ce cortège de décisions absurdes et destructrices sur le compte de la maladresse ou de la stupidité. Plus le temps passe, plus on est obligé de constater que l'explication est un peu courte…

A vrai dire, le seul éclairage (hélas) qui mette en lumière la cohérence délétère de ce cortège d’absurdités est celui que nous développons ici depuis de longs mois, à savoir les effets tragiques de la corruption systémique prévalant dans le domaine des politiques de santé.

 

Cette situation est tellement hénaurme que je comprends fort bien que tant de personnes  préfèrent s’abstenir d’y réfléchir en se contentant du discours mensonger des autorités et des médias. Un entrepreneur genevois actif dans le domaine de l’immobilier (par ailleurs intelligemment critique quant à l’impact économique des mesures imposées) le résuma récemment fort bien ainsi sur un réseau social : « Ne connaissant rien aux virus ni aux vaccins, écrivait-il, je m’en remets aux autorités et aux médecins, en qui j’ai confiance ».

Position qui serait pleine de bon sens et de sagesse si les autorités et le monde médical en question étaient en effet intègres et dignes de confiance. Ce que ce monsieur ignore (comme la quasi-totalité des gens), c’est que cela fait longtemps que ça n’est plus le cas : la santé est l’un des domaines d’activités les plus corrompus et crapuleux qui soient.

 

Le fossé est tel entre la réalité des choses et l’image naïve qu’en a la population, intensivement désinformée, que cela produit en retour un violent clivage dans la société.

Les Suisses en particulier préfèrent encore se bercer de la douce illusion que les choses sont différentes chez nous, que nos ministres sont des hommes et des femmes honnêtes qui ne trahiraient jamais la confiance de la population. Qui prennent le tram comme tout le monde et avec qui on pourrait manger la fondue en toute simplicité. Et qui ont sincèrement le bien commun à l’esprit.

Il est plus que jamais urgent d’ouvrir les yeux : la réalité telle qu’elle se déroule sous nos yeux est que nos autorités conduisent nos pays au désastre et à la ruine. Nos ministres ne sont pas des braves types, ce sont les fossoyeurs de notre démocratie, trahissant la population au service d’intérêts crapuleux.

Cet énoncé est certes d’une grande violence. Non en lui-même, mais parce qu’il soulève le voile sur une réalité qui est bel et bien violente à ce point.

Je mesure que je vais continuer à ne pas forcément me faire des amis en l’énonçant une fois de plus. L’écart est désormais si grand entre l’illusion que préservent à tout prix tant de nos concitoyens et l’étendue de la forfaiture dont se rendent coupables nos autorités, politiques et sanitaires qu’il est certes plus facile de considérer d’emblée comme des « inepties » ou de l’ « émotionalité » ce qui relève à l’inverse d’une analyse implacable de la situation…

 

Ce qu’une connaissance réelle du sujet montre, c’est que :

1/ Nos « politiques de santé » sont configurées selon le profit que les maladies permettent de réaliser. L’essentiel de la morbidité et de la mortalité en Occident est dû à un cortège de maladie chroniques qui seraient à 80% évitables ou réversibles si on s’occupait de la santé de la population !

2/ Les gouvernements, les autorités de santé, les hôpitaux, les sociétés médicales et l’enseignement sont infiltrées à tous les étages par l’industrie pharmaco-vaccinale, qui les tient docilement sous son influence.

3/ La corruption est « systémique », c’est-à-dire qu’elle ne dépend pas de la corruption de tel ou tel responsable ou de telle ou telle institution. Elle utilise par ailleurs de nombreux moyens légaux disponibles, en plus des moyens illégaux.

4/ La recherche est massivement truquée et falsifiée, en particulier dans les principales revues médicales, qui publient en fermant les yeux des études-bidon commandités ou produites par l’industrie.

5/ Les médecins croient de bonne foi prescrire des traitements utiles et efficaces alors que ce n’est souvent pas le cas. Les conséquences de la « mauvaise médecine » qui en découle est désormais la troisième cause de mortalité en Occident.

6/ Cet état de fait a été identifié par des autorités comme la Commission européenne ou le rapporteur des Nations-Unies, le Sénat français, les centres d’éthique des meilleures universités, les rédacteurs des principales revues médicales elles-mêmes, mais : dans une situation comme celle que nous vivons,  tout le monde fait semblant que cela n’existe pas et que l’affirmer reviendrait à tenir des théories complotistes !

7/ Le résultats des courses : des centaines de milliers de morts évitables, des économies en ruine, des populations terrifiées et un agenda désormais mondial pour un Grand Reset qu’aucune population n’a choisi.

 

Je viens de tourner à la demande de Reinfocovid une petite série de trois vidéos sur ces phénomènes que je ne cesse d’essayer de rappeler et qui pèsent de tout leur poids sur le réel que nous subissons depuis une année.

Je livre ici le fruit de 20 années de recherche sur ces douloureuses questions, avec une petite somme de références pour les citoyennes et citoyens désireux d’en avoir le cœur net.

Car tout ce que j’avance est bien sûr documenté et sourcé.

L’omerta régnant au sujet de ce que je vais vous présenter est si absolu (dans les médias, les parlements et les gouvernements comme dans les sociétés médicales et les universités-) que ce simple élément confirmerait si besoin était l’étendue de l’indignité.

 

Imaginez par exemple notre pays se trouvant à organiser un grand événement sportif (comme les Jeux Olympiques ou la Coupe du monde de football) dans un contexte où l’industrie des paris sportifs  (comme cela est arrivé sous certaines latitudes) corrompait et truquait systématiquement le résultat des compétitions.

Les meilleures revues auraient signalé le problème de longue date, les centres d’éthique des universités l’auraient analysé et fait connaître de long en large, tout ce que la société civile compte d’ONG l’aurait dénoncé ainsi que nombre de sportifs eux-mêmes, sans oublier Interpol , avec une montagne de jugement pénaux démontrant l’inconduite criminelle de cette industrie et la corruption qu’elle met systémiquement en œuvre.

Imaginez encore malgré cela le Conseil fédéral in corpore, avec le Parlement et la presse unanime derrière lui, inaugurant le grand événement en louant l’esprit sportif, le fair-play et la probité de ces magnifiques compétitions. En encourageant la population à jouer le plus possible aux paris sportifs, bien sûr irréprochablement honnêtes.

Avec des fédérations sportives corrompues et complices, dont aucun membre n’oserait prendre la parole pour dénoncer les turpitudes en cours de peur des conséquences. Avec une presse unanime pour stigmatiser avec brutalité les quelques critiques et les lanceurs d’alerte, qu’elles désigneraient à l’opprobre public comme étant des « complotisss » malgré la montagne de preuves à disposition (sur lesquelles elles s’interdiraient bien sûr la moindre investigation.)

Plutôt moche, non ?! Et pourtant, dans ce scénario, les autorités ne joueraient qu’avec notre innocence, notre bonne foi et notre porte-monnaie.

Dans la crise du Covid, elles jouent avec nos vies, notre santé, nos moyens de subsistance…

 



Au sujet des maladies chroniques évitables :

https://www.who.int/chp/chronic_disea...

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23974..."


à 0:45 : instances décisionnaires infiltrées par d'anciens de l'industrie pharmaceutique http://thierrysouccar.blogspot.com/20...

https://www.lefigaro.fr/vox/politique...

https://www.lepoint.fr/editos-du-poin...

à 5:42 : la majorité de ce qui est publié est faux

https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicin...

https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2013/09/09/...

https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2014/01/31/...

https://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journa...

https://www.nature.com/news/biotech-g...

https://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/371/b...

à 1:40 : guerre du Vietnam et en Irak

https://www.france24.com/fr/20150320-...

https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inciden...

à 3:31: Peter Gotzsche https://www.routledge.com/Deadly-Medi...

à 5:00 : amendes de Pfizer de 4 milliards de dollars

https://violationtracker.goodjobsfirs...

https://inside.uncc.edu/news-features...

https://www.france24.com/fr/20090903-...

https://www.corvelva.it/fr/approfondi...

https://francais.medscape.com/voirart...

à 6:45 : Tamiflu

https://www.bmj.com/tamiflu

rapport sénat pour la vaccination H1N1 de 2009 : https://www.senat.fr/rap/r09-685-1/r0...

 

 

 

 

Anthropo-logiques

  

Coronavirus Cranks

 


Rise of the Coronavirus Cranks

I am no lockdown junkie. I’d like to get that straight before I explain why the most extreme variant of lockdown scepticism is rebarbative and destructive. I will never forgive the government for dragging out the first lockdown for 14 weeks, pointlessly exhausting the public’s patience and sowing the seeds of the non-compliance we see today. I think the second lockdown was an unnecessary overreaction to a surge in cases in the north-west that was being dealt with by local restrictions. I think the 10pm curfew was counter-productive and the tier system was clumsy and unfair.

I always thought “circuit breakers” caused unnecessary hardship and had no chance of nipping the problem in the bud, as their advocates claimed. It was criminal to not reopen the schools in June and I’m not entirely convinced they should be closed now. I scorn the likes of Piers Morgan and “Independent” SAGE who would have had us in lockdown all year if they’d had a chance. No amount of comparing Sweden to its immediate neighbours will persuade me that the Swedes didn’t have a better 2020 than most Europeans. Contrary to folk wisdom, you can put a price on life and it can’t be denied that most of the people who die of COVID have had a good innings.

I mention all this in the hope of establishing that I am not some wobbly-lipped pantry boy who’s scared of a bit of flu. I am a libertarian at a free market think tank who has spent most of his working life critiquing the excesses of the nanny state. I do not secretly harbour thoughts of creating a police state or bankrupting the economy.

Nevertheless, I don’t think it is necessarily a bad idea to prevent tens of thousands of people dying this winter from a disease for which we now have multiple vaccines. I had hoped that we could muddle through with local restrictions, but the emergence in December of an extraordinarily infectious new strain put an end to that. The number of COVID cases doubled in the first half of December and doubled again in the second half. Much of London, Kent, and Essex seemed impervious to even the stringent tier 4 restrictions. We did not need a model from Imperial College to see which way this was going. In London and the south-east, there are now more people in hospital with COVID-19 than at the peak of the first wave. There are more on ventilators too, despite doctors using mechanical ventilation less than they did in the spring. It is going to get worse for some time to come. We had to get the numbers down.

Source: https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/

And so I reluctantly support this lockdown for the same reason I initially supported the first one, as a last resort. It seems to me to be the only way to ensure that everybody is able to access healthcare, whether they have COVID or not. As soon as it has achieved its goal, I will press for it to be lifted. I am fully aware of the social and economic havoc lockdowns cause. We will spend much of the remaining decade picking up the pieces.

I suppose my position is boringly centrist. If you want a more invigorating take, you might be drawn to the Zero COVID strategy supported by “Independent” SAGE or the plan laid out in the the Great Barrington Declaration to shield the vulnerable and achieve herd immunity the old-fashioned way. Both of these options carry significant downsides and have now been made redundant by the vaccines, but whilst these ideas might have been flawed or unrealistic, they were not crazy. The former had worked in New Zealand and the latter had been the preferred policy of the chief medical officer until the hasty U-turn of March 2020. These were ideas that reasonable people could debate without being considered cranks.

But now, in the final months of this nightmare, the conversation among many of the noisiest lockdown sceptics has become decidedly cranky. The debate unfolding on social media is not so much about how to deal with COVID-19 as about whether COVID-19 exists at all. Mention the latest official COVID statistics on Twitter and you will be inundated with replies from recently set up accounts telling you that the people who tested positive for COVID-19 do not actually have COVID-19 and those who are recorded dying from it probably got hit by a bus.

This would scarcely be worth worrying about if it were not spilling out into the real world. “Lockdown sceptics” have been recording footage of empty hospital corridors which they then post on YouTube as evidence that the health crisis is being manufactured. It saddens me to admit that this kind of thing is coming from people on my side of the argument, people who are anti-lockdown. Grifters, conspiracy theorists, and bad faith actors have been tolerated for too long by lockdown sceptics. You can draw a straight line from those who talked about a “casedemic” a few months ago to the crowds of protestors outside hospitals today screaming that “COVID is a hoax.”

Although debates about the lethality of the virus and the effectiveness of restrictions on social contact have been circulating on the margins since the spring, September was the point at which these talking points began to attract widespread attention. Ivor Cummins, a former Research and Development manager at Hewlett-Packard, first crossed my radar several years ago when he was promoting the low carb diet. At the time, he struck me as a relatively harmless nutritional entrepreneur with a mildly amusing name and a book to sell. He was an annoyance to scientists and dietitians who found his claims risible, but he was not a menace to public health. Cummins came to wider prominence on September 8th, 2020, when he published a 37-minute video entitled “Viral Issue Crucial Update Sept 8th: the Science, Logic and Data Explained!” In this presentation he claimed that “the epidemic largely ended around May/early June” and asserted that around 80 percent of Europeans were “already de facto immune” to the novel coronavirus. He claimed that increases in testing had created large numbers of false positives, leading to a “casedemic” in which the number of infections appeared to rise but there was “no mortality” because “the epidemic’s gone.” It attracted a million views on YouTube within days.

Cummins argued that the spring outbreak would have faded away naturally without non-pharmaceutical interventions such as lockdowns. Herd immunity, he theorised, had been largely achieved and he insisted that there would be no second wave. In the winter, he said, we would see “a natural rise in the virome [the combined total of viruses in the human body]; we’ll see influenza, we’ll see more impacts on hospitals, we’ll see SARS-CoV-2 rising again, but that will be more normal winter resurgent [sic] of influenza like prior years.” Cummins dismissed those who warned of a second wave in France and Spain, where case numbers were already growing, and described the rising caseload in the US as a “double hump” caused by the southern states experiencing their first wave. He assured viewers that the American spike was already on the wane. Within two months, France and Spain were recording more than 400 COVID deaths a day and the US was climbing its biggest “hump” yet, with every state except Hawaii experiencing uncontrolled community transmission.

Twelve days after Cummins’s video went viral, Michael Yeadon, a former Pfizer scientist, wrote an article for the Lockdown Sceptics blog arguing that the vast majority of positive tests for SARS-CoV-2 were false. If a test produces a non-trivial rate of false positives, he wrote, and if testing is performed at random on a population with a very low prevalence of a disease, it is possible for the majority—or even all—of the positive results to be false. Although he did not use the term, he was describing a familiar scientific concept known as the base rate fallacy. He was not wrong in theory, but he then went further. Based on the assumptions that 0.1 percent of the population had the virus and that the PCR test has a false positive rate of 0.8 percent, Yeadon made the striking claim that “almost every positive test, a so-called case, identified by Pillar 2 [testing in the community] since May of this year has been a FALSE POSITIVE. Not just a few percent. Not a quarter or even a half of the positives are FALSE, but around 90 percent of them.”

The mathematics were correct so long as Yeadon’s assumptions were correct, but they were not. People in Pillar 2 are not tested randomly. Many of them get tested because they have symptoms. People with symptoms are obviously more likely to have the virus than a random member of the public. The Office for National Statistics conducts a separate random weekly test which was reporting a prevalence rate of around 0.1 percent at the time. Strangely, Yeadon did not question the ONS figure and instead used it as the basis of his calculation. He did not draw the obvious conclusion that if the false positive rate of the PCR test was 0.8 percent, the ONS should find positives at least 0.8 percent of the time. Put another way, if every single positive test reported by the ONS was wrong—a far-fetched assumption—the false positive rate could not possibly be more than 0.1 percent. Moreover, the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in Britain was not low. Fewer than a thousand tests a day were coming back positive in July, but by the time Yeadon’s article appeared, they were exceeding 5,000. The number of tests performed each day had nearly doubled in this period, but that could not explain a fivefold increase in reported case numbers.

Yeadon’s concerns, which had always been largely theoretical, were now irrelevant and would become more so as the number of cases rose in the autumn. The claim that 90 percent of positive PCR tests are false was a back-of-an-envelope calculation based on flawed assumptions, but it was seized upon by COVID sceptics and given fresh impetus three days later when British foreign secretary Dominic Raab appeared on Sky News to explain why the UK was not testing inbound travellers at airports. “The challenge,” he declared, “is that the false positive rate is very high. It’s only seven percent of tests will be successful at identifying those that actually have the virus.”

The clip duly went viral on social media but its central claim was totally implausible. Even Yeadon had only claimed a 0.8 percent false positivity rate. Although conspiracy theorists were convinced that Raab had accidentally let slip the truth, the mundane reality was that he had misunderstood the data on which he was relying. He was referring to a report by Public Health England which claimed that only seven percent of infected travellers would be identified through airport testing. This happened to be wrong. PHE made the hopelessly unrealistic assumption that infected travellers who were symptomatic enough to test positive would not get on a plane in the first place and that only seven percent would become symptomatic in the course of the flight.

Subsequent analysis by other academics found that testing at airports would identify between a third and two-thirds of cases, but that is not the main point here. The point is that PHE’s findings had nothing to do with false positives and Raab was wrong to use the phrase. If anything, he was talking about false negatives, but the COVID sceptics had Raab’s words in black and white and decided it was more likely that a widely used diagnostic test would have an insanely high false positive rate than that an unscientific politician would get his scientific terms mixed up during a live interview.

The false positive meme should have faded into obscurity by the end of October when more than 20,000 cases a day were being reported and the number of people in hospital with COVID-19 had risen tenfold. Instead, it became the foundation of an alternative theory of the pandemic. During the summer months, it had become tempting to believe that the pandemic was over, as both Cummins and Yeadon claimed, and that only a “casedemic” remained. Maintaining this belief in October, when the death rate had risen to a level last seen in May, took a certain amount of mental agility but a significant number of people were able to do it. The core ingredients of this alternative theory are as follows:

  1. The PCR test has a staggeringly high false positivity rate, meaning that the great majority of “cases” (the word is usually enclosed in derisory speech marks) are either asymptomatic or fake.
  2. Most of the people admitted to hospital with COVID-19 tested positive after they arrived, either because they caught the virus in hospital or because they were misdiagnosed with the unreliable PCR test.
  3. For the same reason, most of the people who are counted as COVID-19 deaths were admitted for treatment of another illness which killed them, or just happened to die within 28 days of testing positive (by one official measure, any death within 28 days of a positive test is classified as a COVID death).
  4. Lockdowns don’t inhibit the spread of the virus in any meaningful way and therefore do not reduce the COVID death count.
  5. Lockdowns cause a large number of avoidable deaths, not only in the longterm from unemployment, poverty, and missed cancer screenings, but also in the short term, e.g., from suicide.

So long as you believe these five tenets, you have a theory with almost impregnable circular logic. The acid test of the casedemic theory is whether the number of people being hospitalised and dying with COVID-19 increases after the number of positive tests increases. It clearly does, but true believers dismiss this as another mirage created by the false positives.

A rise in the number of excess deaths would be compelling evidence that the people dying “with COVID” had died of COVID and would not have died of anything else that year. The ONS has recorded excess mortality every week since mid-October, with the north-west hardest hit at first followed by London and the south-east more recently. In total, there were 71,731 excess deaths in England last year and 76,610 people had COVID-19 mentioned on their death certificate. Coincidence? Why yes, say the sceptics. They claim that the excess deaths were not caused by COVID-19, but by the lockdowns themselves. In any case, they say, the rate of excess mortality is lower than it was in the spring and the current rate is not without historical precedent. Any suggestion that there would have been even more deaths without lockdowns is dismissed as impossible because “lockdowns don’t work.”

With the delusions of September colliding with the reality of a second wave that will kill more people than the first, true believers have had to double down or flee the scene. Many have doubled down. Ivor Cummins, who once insisted that there could be “no second wave without a second virus” now claims that he “foretold the second wave” and has shamelessly accused governments of not preparing for it. Yeadon, who claimed in October that the pandemic was “over” in London and was “most unlikely to return” still insists that PCR testing is “wildly unreliable,” but has made his argument more technical so his lay followers have to accept it on trust.

As the HMS Casedemic slowly sinks into the ocean, the arguments used to keep it seaworthy stop making sense even on their own terms. COVID-19 has now killed more than 0.1 percent of the population in 20 countries, including Britain, but that has not stopped COVID sceptics claiming that the infection fatality rate (IFR) is 0.1 percent or lower. This would obviously require more than 100 percent of the population to have had the virus and is a particularly odd claim coming from sceptics who believe that most cases are false positives. Since the IFR is derived from the number of deaths and the number of infections, a lower number of infections would produce a higher IFR. Some sceptics believe that so few people have had COVID-19 that the IFR should be closer to 100 percent.

Cummins, who has raised over £148,000 to make a documentary about “one man’s remarkable rise to prominence as a ‘go to’ COVID commentator,” is having to perform a particularly difficult balancing act as he seeks to reassure his fans that the second wave of COVID-19 is nothing more than the normal “winter resurgence” of seasonal viruses that he predicted. His followers and subscribers seem not to mind his failed predictions and general inconsistency. Cummins recently suggested that the lack of excess mortality in Ireland last year was evidence that the panic over COVID-19 was overblown. Simultaneously, he has claimed that lockdowns in the UK have killed tens of thousands of people. Ireland spent longer in lockdown than the UK and yet the Emerald Isle seems to have mysteriously avoided the lockdown deaths that have supposedly plagued Britain. Ireland has also suffered far fewer COVID-19 deaths, but that cannot be explained by their lengthier lockdowns because—you guessed it—lockdowns don’t work.

If we define lockdowns as laws commanding people to stay at home except for essential purposes, the claim that they don’t work is either trivial or wrong. It is trivial if it meant to tell us that lockdowns merely push the problem into the future, and wrong if it is meant to suggest that they do not reduce the infection rate. As the standard of discourse has deteriorated, the latter interpretation has dominated.

The logic behind lockdowns is difficult to refute. If you reduce human interaction, you will reduce the virus’s ability to spread. In countries where mass testing is in place, you can see the effect very clearly. Within five to 10 days of a lockdown being introduced, the infection rate falls. A dramatic recent example is Ireland which went into lockdown on December 31st after seeing an almost vertical rise in cases. We saw the same thing in Wales in October and in England in November. In country after country, you can tell when a lockdown began by simply looking at the case numbers on a graph. Of course lockdowns don’t make the epidemic disappear and of course there are less restrictive policies that can reduce the caseload, but the claim that they don’t work at all is, to put it charitably, disingenuous.

Source: Our World in Data

In the heads-I-win, tails-you-lose world of the hardened denier, countries which lock down and have few deaths are proof that COVID-19 is a paper tiger, but if COVID-19 deaths fall after a lockdown comes into effect, the death rate was going to fall anyway because the virus was tired or herd immunity had been reached. In countries such as Britain which have managed to combine sporadic lockdowns with a high death rate, the claim is that the deaths are not due to COVID-19, but to the lockdowns themselves. And yet, if lockdowns are indeed the true cause of excess mortality, the COVID sceptics need to explain why there has been no excess mortality in countries such as New Zealand and Australia which introduced lengthy and draconian lockdowns and experienced very few COVID-19 deaths. They can’t. Nor can they explain why excess mortality has been highest in the regions of the UK that have had the most COVID-19 cases. And while they believe that people are dying at home because the NHS has been turned into a “COVID Health Service,” they cannot explain how creating more COVID patients is going to help on that front.

If tens of thousands of deaths have been wrongly attributed to COVID-19, then we are left to wonder what it is about testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 that makes people so much more likely to die within 28 days? Why are so many doctors recording COVID-19 as the main cause of death on death certificates if these people actually died of cancer or got hit by a truck? Why is the government using a diagnostic test with a 93 percent false positive rate and why isn’t that test producing false positives 93 percent of the time? And if lockdowns produce no appreciable health benefits, then why are governments voluntarily cratering their own economies for no reason?

The claims made by Cummins, Yeadon, and other supposed authorities are demonstrably nonsensical and yet they are eagerly lapped up by an army of social media disciples who have adopted the yellow smiley face as a badge of their scepticism. The smiley symbol is supposed to represent optimism in the face of adversity, but instead it makes the whole movement look decidedly cultish, creepy, and faceless, like the children in John Wyndham’s Village of the Damned. This disconcerting impression is reinforced by their tendency to say exactly the same things over and over again. Misleading graphs and blatantly doctored images are circulated with abandon, spreading far beyond the hub of hardcore believers and planting doubt in the minds of normal people.

Doubt is at the heart of this phenomenon, and it is being unscrupulously exploited. Can we prove that every death attributed to COVID-19 was caused by COVID-19? No. Some of them almost certainly weren’t. How many deaths were caused by lockdown? No one knows. Has the government ever specified precisely what the false positive rate is? No. Can we prove beyond doubt that the decline in case numbers seen around the world shortly after lockdowns were introduced would not have taken place anyway? No. How could we?

Some data simply don’t exist. Definite proof is only to be found in mathematics. In life, as in court, you can only exclude reasonable doubt. Those who cling to unreasonable doubts cannot be persuaded by facts or logic. The smiley crowd are persistent in asking questions about trivial issues for which there are no definitive answers, but have no answer to the most fundamental questions asked of them in return. Smileys generally won’t spell out the conclusion that their “scepticism” leads them to because they know how contemptibly stupid it would sound, but the scenario must go something like this:

A virus that has killed millions of people, including 50,000 in Britain last spring, suddenly disappeared, and so the government approved a highly inaccurate diagnostic test to keep the panic going because Boris Johnson has always wanted the public to wear face masks or something. Very few people actually have SARS-CoV-2 and even according to the official figures only two per cent have it at the moment. As luck would have it, a hugely disproportionate number of them happen to be admitted to hospital and die from something else, thereby producing scary death counts which are corroborated by corrupt doctors.

Another stroke of luck for the government is that last year happened to have the largest number of excess deaths since 1940. This could be due to lockdown deaths, whatever they are, or some other epidemic unrelated to the coronavirus. Have you noticed how few flu deaths there are this year? Bit suspicious, isn’t it? One possibility is that despite a drastic reduction in air travel and an unprecedented amount of social distancing, hand-washing, mask-wearing, and self-isolation, Britain is suffering from an exceptionally severe flu season, with flu deaths being wrongly classified as COVID-19 deaths by corrupt and/or incompetent doctors.

Pretty far-fetched, isn’t it? And that’s before we get to the theories about Bill Gates and the Chinese Communist Party that are on the lunatic fringes even in the smiley universe.

What is driving this insanity? Almost all COVID sceptics admit that there was a pandemic in the spring which killed tens of thousands of people in Britain. Why, then, is it so hard for them to accept the overwhelming likelihood that the same coronavirus is doing what viruses do and spreading rapidly in the winter? This is perhaps the most puzzling and interesting aspect of the whole phenomenon. The casedemic theory is just one of many daft ideas that have been thrown around in relation to COVID-19 in the last 12 months. Why has it not been quietly forgotten like so many others? How has it managed to survive, spread, and mutate with all the tenacity of the virus itself?

The answer, I think, lies in despair. Since March, there has been a sense of living in a nightmare from which one cannot awake. The non-pharmaceutical interventions introduced to contain the virus—especially lockdowns—have been soul-destroying. The economy is battered beyond belief, redundancies have gone through the roof, and there are more grey weeks of a cold winter lockdown to endure. On the other hand, we also have a potentially lethal and frequently debilitating virus infecting at least 50,000 people a day, hospitalising 4,000, and killing close to a thousand. That, too, will go on for weeks and, assuming you believe in germ theory and exponential growth, these figures would be much worse if we resumed normal social contact.

It’s an awful situation to be in. It’s a zero-sum game in which disease and death is traded off against misery and poverty. Until the first vaccine arrived in December, COVID scepticism offered people a way out. If the dangers of the virus were being overhyped by fearmongers, and lockdowns were entirely ineffective, then societies could reopen secure in the knowledge that there was nothing that could be done to reduce the death toll (which would, in any case, be a fraction of what we were told). The comforting lie that trade-offs could be avoided has proved irresistible to those who have surrendered to confirmation bias and constructed a parallel and preferable version of reality.

In this project, they have been ably assisted by the ignorance and statistical illiteracy that pervades Twitter. People who are not used to dealing with statistics have been trying to familiarise themselves with concepts and figures they’ve never seen before and don’t properly understand. Words and phrases are confidently repeated by those who don’t really know what they mean. There is no shortage of stupidity on Twitter, but this is something different, something almost transcendent. The inability to absorb or even acknowledge the most basic facts is beyond anything I’ve seen before.

But perhaps it’s not inability. Perhaps it’s just a refusal to face the reality of agonising choices. It is an extreme form of motivated reasoning, the flip-side to which is total credulity when presented with claims that suggest that there is no problem, no trade-offs, no pandemic, only malevolent governments and elites who could end the nightmare any time they wanted, but prefer to terrify their populations and needlessly wreck their economies instead.

We are in a no-win situation. The trade-offs are horrible. And so, when confronted by someone who tells you that’s it’s all fake, that the hospitals are empty and the test doesn’t work and the disease is basically harmless and the government is lying, who wouldn’t want to believe it? What could be more appealing than the idea that the thing we hate is causing the problem we’re trying to solve?

It would be nice if the hospitals were empty and the hundreds of thousands of people being infected each week were false positives. But we don’t live in that world, we live in this one. The smileys are not bad people. They are not necessarily unintelligent people. They are unhappy people wearing a mask of happiness, confused and beaten and searching for an easy answer. They want someone to flick a switch and make everything normal again. Who doesn’t? The trouble is that there are no easy answers this time.

 

Christopher J. Snowdon is head of Lifestyle Economics at the Institute of Economic Affairs and the author of Killjoys and Polemics. You can follow him on Twitter @cjsnowdon.

 

Comments

  1. I fully agree with the author that too many people hold beliefs on this subject that are misleading, highly naive, or even gross nonsense, and that this can lead to an overly careless approach to a dangerous pandemic, rejection of reasonable countermeasures, and thus unnecessary suffering.

    Notwithstanding the above, I would like to point out one aspect of the current implementation of lockdowns and similar measures that seems worthy of criticism nonetheless and that is not addressed in the article: How the state now intervenes in the private daily lives of its citizens in an incredibly drastic way that would have seemed almost unimaginable until recently.

    Who would have thought not even ten months ago that our governments would dictate to people whether they are still allowed to meet with their family and friends? Where and with whom they are allowed to celebrate Christmas? At what times and on what grounds they are still allowed to leave their homes, and with whom their children are allowed to play?

    This is not to say that it is not wise to be cautious about these things. This is about how the government now uses its power to coerce people and punish dissenters.

    Which inevitably leads to scenes like in this video of Canadian police officers busting an “illegal” family reunion during the New Year’s holiday in Quebec:


    Or this video, where police in Scotland enter a home and arrest the parents in front of their children, who are screaming in fear, after a neighbor ratted them out because “there were too many people inside”:


    (more about this here)

    Is this really the kind of society we want to live in? How willing are we to pay that kind of price?

    Less than a year ago, such scenes would have been considered absolutely unworthy of a liberal society. Today, one might wonder how much of a safety buffer remains for a society in which this kind of situation is apparently becoming the accepted new normal. Historical fascism also arose as a response to a (real or perceived) threat to society that supposedly could not be countered in any other way than by all people submitting their liberties to a central leadership in favor of the common good.

    And all those who think that it is appropriate for the government to subject people to such measures because the situation demands it should at least be honest enough to admit that they only care about values like liberalism and personal self-determination as long as the weather is nice, and that they are willing to throw them under the bus as soon as circumstances require it.

  2. Critiquing the most extreme members of any movement is always like shooting fish in a barrel.

    A balanced article would have considered the average age and health of those that have died of Covid. Some attempt at assessing the QALY impact of lockdown would allow us to assess the trade-offs.

    It has been notable that the media coverage has lacked international perspective beyond the most superficial comparisons of case rates and death counts. It would be interesting to know the approach taken in other countries with respect to school exams and to everyday healthcare provision.

    It is pointless pointing to Ireland as an indicator of the apparent absence of lockdown deaths, without an assessment of their health system’s approach relative to the broad shutdown of non-Covid NHS services.

  3. I will never forgive the government

    Had I been a better person, I would have let this slide. As I’m not and the thinly veiled contempt in this piece rubbed me the wrong way, I have to point out that this quote from the beginning of the article is a particularly meaningless and virtue signalling statement.

    And so, when confronted by someone who tells you that’s it’s all fake, that the hospitals are empty and the test doesn’t work and the disease is basically harmless and the government is lying, who wouldn’t want to believe it? What could be more appealing than the idea that the thing we hate is causing the problem we’re trying to solve?

    I think this is completely backwards! Some people are more scared of government overreach than the disease. In that case, there not being a disease at all is the absolute worst case scenario. It seems to me that exaggeration is more likely to be rooted in fear than wishful thinking.

  4. There are many possible views on lockdowns and mask mandates (other than those presented in this article). My view, for example: a loss of .1% of the population is a risk-level that I (at age 66, BTW) am willing to accept. The amount of masking and business closure here in the USA is not acceptable (to me) because this is not “living.” I’d rather take my chances.

  5. Mmm. Well written article, but I rather dislike the idea that all skeptics should simply be seen as cranks. For example, who are the cranks in our day and age? Were people wrong to question climate change? Is Greta Thunberg a voice of reason? Was Al Gore? Which science do we trust? Is WHO, which has supported then rejected lockdowns, our savior? Is Big Tech, which modulates speech on the coronavirus, our leading health authority, and does it act purely altruistically? Honestly, name me the person who truly knows what the goddamn hell is going on, or someone who we know for sure isn’t operating with a hidden agenda.

  6. I think most of the facts are in on lockdowns versus no lockdowns. California and New York have locked down their economies yet Florida has never locked down. The death rate in Florida which has, as we all know, a very aged population, is lower than both New York and California. My self absorbed governor is n New York, chock-full of hubris, said in his press conference three weeks ago that the spread from indoor dining socially distant was 1.4%. The spread in households was 74%. Please tell me how locking down and eliminating indoor dining with safeguards made any sense at all. This is what we are dealing with in New York. Gross incompetence by a governor whose direct orders killed well over 8000 nursing home residents and then he wrote a book praising his performance and the left cheered him on. Yikes!

  7. Lockdowns are, and always have been, an inappropriate way of dealing with a respiratory virus. Because of the way the virus spreads such measure can only delay and not stop infections. Unless, of course, everyone in the world could be kept in strict quarantine for longer than the life cycle of the virus.

    Outbreaks of diseases caused by respiratory viruses have been a regular winter phenomenon since the dawn of time. But never before has so much effort has been made in documenting to course of the disease by governments, then the medical profession or the MSM. Most of us, therefore, have no context to put the events of 2020. Since the excess deaths, as a proportion of the population*, in 2020 was lower than for any year before 2010 I firmly believe that had the government not panicked and not ordered the first lockdown in March then we would be able to look back on 2020 as just another “bad flu’ year”

    The lesson that we all should learn from 2020 is just how dangerous the hubris of government is.

    *Using raw numbers instead of proportional ones is just the sort of misinformation the MSM excel at.

  8. Lastly, age- (and perhaps co-morbidity-)related excess deaths are absolutely critical to the lockdown discussion.

    Yes (per the article), it is claimed by many that the full population IFR of covid is < 0.1%. Yes, many countries and cities (NYC ~0.2%) already have a total population fatality rate of > 0.1%, with likely full-population exposure at low to mid 10’s of % (according to antibody studies which currently show 20%-60% previous exposure). These are not inconsistent statements, according to the following.

    Covid kills the elderly and otherwise infirm at an IFR about 8 orders of magnitude greater than children. The elderly and infirm are mostly clustered in enclosed care facilities. Infection rates or events of covid are correlated with indoor concentration of infected persons (care homes and hospitals unfortunately are perfect environments for spread). Care facilities have seen the majority of covid-related deaths.

    It has been established that the IFR is massively age dependent - something like 0.0003% IFR for <14 and 30% IFR for >80. Removing known co-morbidities from the equation increases the age correlation (since of course older age itself is correlated with chronic medical conditions, including those that are considered covid co-morbidities).

    Anyhow, thought I would attempt to correct the formal stats presented in the article.

    As a concrete example, in Indian slum areas, serology studies of many months back showed antibody prevelance at >50% (!) but relatively low excess mortality rates. The slum full population IFR was calculated as something like 0.003%. How can this be? Well high exposure is hardly a surprise in dense urban areas with little opportunity for good hygiene practices - hence the high antibody prevalence. Why the low fatality rates? Perhaps a combination of youth-dominated demographics, and unusually low prelavence of important co-morbidities - almost no obesity, low rates of hypertension. Also possibly high natural vitamin D levels - sunny environment and mostly outdoor lifestyle.

    Even assuming similar per-demographic mortality rates in different parts of the world, it still could be, and likely is, true that developed countries with flat (elderly-skewed) demographics will end up with full-population IFR that is orders of magnitude higher than that of developing countries with wide population pyramids (youth-skewed).

    Treating covid with a 1 policy fits all (ages and/or countries) is criminally negligent for all ages except the middle-aged (40’s odd). For the elderly (and highly at-risk) the criminality is lack of focused protection. For the young, the criminality is loss of opportunity (schooling and beneficial employment).

  9. There are four good reasons why we need the cranks.

    1. The media has relentlessly pushed a single narrative.
    2. That narrative will never allow the views of these so-called cranks to be expressed, except when ridiculing those views
    3. The cranks may be partly right, or sometimes right
    4. We will never know if the more reasonable views are right, unless we can hear from those who disagree

    And then there is this:

  10. Snowdon asks:

    [I]f lockdowns produce no appreciable health benefits, then why are governments voluntarily cratering their own economies for no reason?

    There are plausible alternative theories for this behavior, and as a libertarian you know this. They are plausible for the reason that Western governments have already, for decades, led their countries into steady plunder, wealth concentration, and liberty limitations, far beyond reason. The evidence is solid that the vast majority of top members of Western governments simply don’t care about the well-being of their constituents. That’s where the skeptics start. So, like the boy who cried “Wolf!”, the [magnanimous tool | Machiavellian weapon] of logic today begins severely handicapped.

    And of the skeptics:

    This disconcerting impression is reinforced by [skeptics’] tendency to say exactly the same things over and over again.

    and so, throwing his hands up in frustration, asks

    What is driving this insanity?

    Even the lay audiences are now well-trained in the techniques of successful evidence-free assertion-making. They have seen how, and how well, their “leaders” use bait-and-switch. Once trust is lost, propaganda from above deflates, and propaganda from below proliferates, because all people – capable or not – start coming up with their own ideas and their own ways of pushing them. So now Western governments are flailing (and failing) wildly in their attempts to shepherd their flocks.

    This communication war must, somehow, be turned back into communication diplomacy. How, without decades to spare, I don’t know.

  11. If you lie to the people, again and again, they will stop believing you. Shocking, huh? It has been a blizzard of lies, incompetence and corruption.

  12. Snowdon asks:

    [I]f lockdowns produce no appreciable health benefits, then why are governments voluntarily cratering their own economies for no reason?

    There are plausible alternative theories for this behavior, and as a libertarian you know this.

    Yes, it’s disappointing that Snowdon doesn’t grapple with the alternatives presented by both observation and thinking about these decisions in the context of public choice theory. There’s the “do something” bias of governments - both elected officials and unelected civil servants - when confronted with a problem. That’s there even if the solution does little to address the problem or badly fails a cost-benefit test.

    Think of the matrix of outcomes as hospitalizations and deaths increase.

    • Lockdown and they still increase? Either “the lockdown prevented far worse” or “people just didn’t follow the rules enough”. We’ve seen both of these non-falsifiable answers given on many occasions.

    • Lockdown and they decline? “Ah ha, the lockdown worked”. And again, we have no direct comparison to what would have happened without a lockdown.

    • Don’t lockdown and they increase? From the media, and the academic experts who get quoted in stories: “This result is due to government inaction. Thousands of deaths could have been prevented”.

    • "Don’t lockdown and they decline? Crickets from the media. I think that the U.S. national media only remembers that Florida and several other states exist when their respective COVID numbers get worse, not when they get better. Or - if forced to confront the situation - people and businesses took actions that were the same as a lockdown.

    Add to the mix that public health officials and academics have no sense of how the economy works. That’s both in theory and in practice. Their lived experience is that an entity magically deposits a paycheck every pay period, so there’s no intuitive sense of relying on paying customers as the way to earn a living. They also don’t seem to be much of multi-variate thinkers about lockdowns and COVID, even within their field of broader health outcomes. And, of course, the tendency for extreme predictions - hello, Mr. Ferguson - to be covered preferentially by the press.

    Underlying all of this is the reality that guiding lockdown policy gives them technocratic power of which they’d never dreamed prior to 2020. It has to be intoxicating to be in charge of so much of how society functions.

  13. This is a piece clearly from someone who has worked from home and enjoyed the lockdowns. This was a big test of science and philosophy and we have failed on both counts.

    a) The science was very clear: there shall be no lockdowns for flu-like viruses. The last they were tried was for Ebola in 2014 and an evaluation showed that they did not help (targeted quarantines did help). Substantial literature existed in the past to refute the idea of indiscriminate lockdowns, also because these infringe human rights. Snowdon obviously cares not for basic freedoms.

    b) The argument of lockdown opponents is not against social distancing per se. Voluntary social distancing and hand hygiene are a part of good practice, as followed by Sweden. They too had lockdowns but these were not coercive. That coercion is the real problem, not social distancing.

    c) Australia should never be cited as an example: it is nothing short of the most inhumane totalitarian society in the world today, not a role model for anyone in the civilised world or for anyone who considers himself human. Those of us who have lived through living hell in Melbourne and locked up in Australia like chicken in a coop (borders closed for a year), with wide-scale police brutalities on the young who underwent the most extreme mental torture ever, know that this is the worst form of civilisation in human history. That a few (extremely elderly) lives might have been saved from a natural cause is no excuse to cause such extreme harms. And hundreds of people have also died FROM lockdowns - See my complaint to the International Criminal Court for details. We do not authorise a government to take the life of person X while trying to save the life of person Y.

    d) Are we going to do this for all other pandemics in the future? Is this our new “science” - divested entirely from consideration of humanity and liberty? I’m afraid I will never support such “science”. There are thousands of smarter ways to deal with pandemics than the way we have dealt with them in the West, copying Jinping’s totalitarian program.

    I see from this article that the IEA might have now effectively become a promoter of police brutalities and totalitarianism. This is extremely unfortunate given the good impression I once held of this institution.

  14. Here is an even less contentious fact. 1% of Americans die every year.

    That figure is skewed compared to life-expectancy only because of immigration.

    Here is a simple compute. Take any country’s life expectancy, say 75 years for most developed countries. Divide 100 by that number for any country, e.g. 100/75 = 1.3%. That is your ambient full-population annual death rate.

    Covid has been with us for a year already and we’re arguing whether it’s IFR is 0.3% or 0.1% etc.

    It’s an order of magnitude less than the ambient mortality rate.

    Yes, this is what the world has managed to manufacture a fanny wobble, an existential crisis, call it what you will, about.

    Is our generation just a bunch of pansy’s? Which I think is the world that the author was trying to use when he substituted it with the unprecedented ‘pantry’ in this context.

    By comparison, 50 million people died of ‘Spanish Flu’ in one year when the population of the world was 1/10 of what it is now.

    In modern terms that’s equivalent to 500 million people dying.

    What do we have after a year of covid-19? Yes, 2 million deaths.

    And we have completely changed our lifestyles and life choices because of it.

    Shame on us, I reckon. Pansy boys we all are, as is the author who really should take some lessons in statistics before he pontificates again.

  15. (repost warning)

    Article a few weeks ago about how the hospitals were overwhelmed because of COVID. Written by reporter Denis Campbell.

    Articles from 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 about how hospitals are overwhelmed (of note is the fun fact that 6 of the 8 scare articles about how hospitals are overwhelmed are by the same Denis Campbell).

    image



    And people wonder why the sheep no longer trust mass media?

Continue the discussion in Quillette Circle