Friday 19 June 2020

Boris was right to want to avoid lockdown, but then bottled it

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I agree with Fraser Nelson's article in the Telegraph and am terribly ashamed of how my country clings to the lockdown. It's a sort of Stockholm syndrome. Is that also the explanation for the way people back home kowtow to the Black Lives Matter movement?


Boris Johnson was right the first time. He resisted lockdown for as long as he could, regarding it as a draconian, untested experiment that might cause far more harm than good.
Far better, he thought, to ask people to keep their distance, work from home, self-isolate if anyone in their household fell sick. Why pass needless laws and ask the police to pursue workers, lovers and dog-walkers? It’s better, he said, to level with people. Give them the facts, offer advice and trust them to do what’s right.
Only now do we know how well this was working. Most people were staying home on government advice (and their own concern). The virus seems to have peaked by lockdown on 23 March. None of this was known at the time. Instead, we had panic and Prof Neil Ferguson saying that 250,000 would die unless rules were mandatory. So politically, the Prime Minister had no choice.

2 comments:

  1. Is that also the explanation for the way people back home kowtow to the Black Lives Matter movement?

    The British kowtowing to BLM is just another example of British kowtowing to America. Britain has been taking the knee to the United States since 1945.

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  2. Yes you are, sadly, completely right. I want us to be independent of America and Europe.

    ReplyDelete