Diary Blog, 10 May 2020

Yesterday evening, went out to Waitrose. First outing for 4 days. Roads fairly quiet but not empty. It was after 1900 hrs, though.

At Waitrose, the car park almost empty, though a source told me that a Tesco supermarket, in another and more populated area 21 miles away, had been packed earlier in the day. Different factors though: that other area is quite suburbanized, is on a major “A” road, the time of day was earlier, and of course Tesco is more popular than Waitrose anyway, being slightly cheaper.

At Waitrose, the Handmaid’s Tale militia (Waitrose “marshals”) were few, in fact I saw only three loitering outside or cleaning shopping trolleys. There have been as many as half a dozen in recent weeks. There was no line to get into the store; in fact there were almost no customers at all.

Inside, disappointed to see no last-minute offers at 10% or 5% of the usual price (I can be rather a scavenger), but for once no shortages. All the usual suspects were available: bread, dry pasta, rice, pasta sauce, even bleach. I think that the shopping public has decided that the “panic buy” emergency is at an end and so there is no need to join the throng. In any case, in my area, many people must be sitting on mountains of loo paper, kitchen roll, pasta and rice.

Still, there is still a background panicked atmosphere around. I saw one silly woman wearing a thick scarf very loosely wound round her mouth and neck. Very unlikely to make any difference whatsoever to getting or not getting the Chinese virus. Even more ludicrously, I saw another and even more silly woman driving out of the car park, alone in her car and wearing a face mask! So…she is afraid that she might transmit “the virus” to…herself? Or is she afraid that, somehow, the air that comes into the car might harbour “the virus”? Which is impossible.

Tweets seen

Some recent tweets by Peter Hitchens, who is worth reading because he is one of the few who has stood up against the Government-sponsored “virus” panic (etc) which has recently swept “the nation” (which latter does not exist any more, but let’s leave that aside).

“The virus that turned up late”

Covid-19 is no more than a nasty, but basically normal, viral respiratory infection, though you’ll be regarded rather as a mullah regards a blasphemer if you say so. Why is this?

After all: it is precisely because its symptoms seemed so similar to viral pneumonia that the initial outbreak in Wuhan was missed until the numbers built, and it is now clear that we have been missing Covid-19 cases diagnosed as pneumonia in Europe at least as far back as December, probably earlier. In the vernacular: it looks as though it was bubbling away for ages before we noticed.

and

There are really only two particularly unusual things about the Covid-19 epidemic: the timing of its arrival and the lockdown some countries declared. And if we ask “Covid, where is thy sting?”, it is lockdown that will sting: in the UK, the death-toll of people not turning up to hospital with cardiac issues (admissions are down 50% across the country) is now unmissable in the weekly non-Covid excess death figures published by the ONS, now running over 3,000 per week just for England and Wales. The downstream toll from missed cancer diagnoses (referrals are down 67%, as stressed by Professor Sikora) is heartbreak yet to come.

This is to say nothing of the toll on education, liberty and the economy. We’ve given up everything we should hold dear for a virus that just turned up three months later than similar viruses normally do.”

https://hectordrummond.com/2020/05/09/alistair-haimes-the-virus-that-turned-up-late/

Some of the comments appended to that blog post are also of interest:

It’s also a consequence of the media being increasingly dominated by young people, who thus have no sense of historical perspective. We see it in the climate change debate – weather events that are bog standard in any sort of medium to long term time span are immediately termed ‘unprecedented!’ by the media, whose attention span (and personal experience) hardly goes back more than a decade or so. Thus the idea that something that happened in the 1990s could be relevant to what is happening today would be laughed at.” [from above blog post comments section]

Life today driven by demands of the minority of vocal pathetic snowflakes’ demands for “no-risk”. Just look at the headline today about the Unions not wanting to go back to work until they ‘feel safe’. This is the language of infants.” [from above blog post comments section]

Three points. Lockdown started AFTER peak infection and peak hospital admissions. Continuing infections/deaths occuring despite weeks of lockdown because hot spots of infection unaffected by general population, they are in hospitals and care homes. Sweden, Japan, S Korea, Taiwan had no lockdown, considerably less deaths than UK.
Lockdown has had minimal effect on the normal bell curve of infection/deaths.” [[from above blog post comments section]

A “free country”?

Meanwhile, away from the toytown police state imposed on the British people, and in the real world:

Five boats carrying 82 migrants were intercepted in the English Channel on Saturday as people smuggling gangs stepped up their operations during the good weather conditions.”

“It means a total of 227 people have been brought from Calais to the south coast of England in 13 small boats within just two days.”

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/05/09/record-numbers-migrants-intercepted-cross-english-channel/

[Daily Telegraph]

My view about “lockdown”

It is clear that some countries which have had little or no “lockdown” have done much better than the UK in dealing with the Chinese virus, and have at least tried to save their economies from ruination; others, on far more strict “lockdown”, such as Italy and Spain, have done worse than the UK (per capita) and now face economic meltdown.

I blogged from the start that (as the UK Government said before crazed advisers caused it to go mad) the only known way to safeguard yourself from getting this virus is to keep thoroughly washing hands with soap and water (or gel, if in transit). The other “measures taken” have been driven by public relations rather than any scientific facts. I mean the “2-metre social distancing”, the facemasks, the “stay home” mantra. As to those three aspects, it may be that a tiny number of people have been protected by such measures, but at what cost?!

Meanwhile, the London Underground has stayed open, though (you couldn’t make it up!) with reduced numbers of carriages, thus making the conditions even more friendly to “the virus” (and other viruses and bacteria). And let’s not forget the influxes into the UK: air passengers allowed in freely, and migrant-invaders “caught” in the Channel or on beaches, then directed to free shelter, food and cash, and allowed to mingle freely with the unwilling host population.

As for “Protect the NHS”, well the sacred cow has been protected, but at the cost of thousands of lives: those often elderly people bundled up and shunted off back home (to often-inadequate home care), sent back to residential care homes where they and other residents have been dying in droves, while the “clap for NHS” rabbits have been virtue-signalling on cue every week (though not as many ever did it as the propaganda would suggest, and the display has almost died out now; where I live, it was always only a tiny minority doing it).

Then there are the uncounted thousands who have died and will die because “lockdown” has delayed or cancelled consultations, treatment, surgical operations etc.

One may laugh at Boris-idiot and his “government of fools”, but these opportunists are killing people, by their half-measures but also by their over-reaction and by their sheer ineptitude and negligence.

I do not think that “lockdown” is very useful, and in any case I think that the Chinese virus is far more widespread than at first thought. It probably started to infect people in the UK in January or even last December. Neither do I think that the “social distancing” measures are hugely useful. What I do think useful are closures of crowded nightclubs, pubs, busy cafes, sports venues, pop concerts and (which was never done) closure of public transport in crowded cities like London. Places where people are jammed together and may breathe over each other.

My bottom line? Whatever the truth of any of the above, either way, the fact is that “lockdown” (especially) has huge economic effects, despite and even to some extent because of the ameliorating measures put in place by Rishi Sunak.

The Government has scared people silly, unnecessarily. Now, the public is only gradually getting used to the idea of not being under a kind of house arrest, only gradually getting used to the idea of going back to their —in many cases, boring— jobs. The 80%-of-pay furlough payments (capped at £2,500 per month) add up to 100% of pay for those making under £36,000 a year and who pay for transport to and from their usual work.

Apart from the niggling restrictions, the civil rights aspects and the sheer boredom, the “lockdown” has, thanks to furlough payments, not been too bad for many. However, the Government simply cannot indefinitely bribe much of the public not to work, not at that level.

For me, that is the bottom line, beyond all of the medical, scientific and other arguments around “lockdown”: it simply cannot be maintained endlessly, because it cannot be paid for.

Many have accepted “lockdown”, as a temporary measure, because they are not suffering financially. Indeed, that is what the furlough payments (etc) were designed to do. Furlough alone is costing £8 billion per month. By way of comparison, the NHS, with 2 million employees, costs £11 billion per month to run.

I doubt that the Government will authorize furlough payments after the end of June. Maybe until the end of July. Not later. Then those furloughed will either return to work or, in many cases, go onto the”Universal Credit” dole.

We do not know yet the full economic cost of the Government’s imposition of a toytown police state. Everything has been frozen: redundancies, sackings, domestic property evictions, commercial property legal actions for recovery of rent; and so on. We do know that the “ruthless entrepreneurs” and “hardnosed private enterprise” chancers, like Branson, have all been demanding, or begging for, money from Government. Many will beg without satisfaction.

Airlines (and so airports) may be uneconomic for months, for years. Ground support companies as well. Retailers may soon be failing by the hundred, by the thousand, not only from “lockdown” itself but because people will have less money to spend and may prefer to spend what they do have safely, via the Internet. Fancy a holiday in Spain or Italy? I doubt it. Not for a year or so, anyway. Ferry companies will also struggle. The list continues.

Quelle surprise…

Nine in 10 people do not want the lockdown to ease immediately – with 50 per cent happy to stay off work if they are getting paid or receiving government subsidies.

As Boris Johnson prepares to unveil his ‘exit strategy’, a poll found just 4 per cent believe the draconian restrictions should start to be lifted now, and another 7 per cent were not sure.” [Daily Mail]

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8304983/Nine-10-Britons-NOT-want-lockdown-end-immediately.html

So half the workforce are “happy” to stay off work so long as they are still getting paid? Well, there’s a shock (not).

The Daily Mail graphic is interesting, if accurate:

A poll found just 4 per cent believe the draconian restrictions should start to be lifted now, and another 7 per cent were not sure

So hardly any of the public (4%) want an end to the “lockdown” nonsense immediately (well, it’s not the first time I have stood as part of a small but worthy minority), more than a quarter think that the end of this month would be best, but a fifth think that the end of June would be best (!), while nearly a quarter prefer the end of July or even later!

I doubt whether many presently content to sit at home indefinitely, or at least for another month, so long as they still get paid, are aware of the probably lasting damage that this is doing to the UK economically. They will only notice it when it hits home in terms of no job, no home, no future for their children etc. By then, the virus may be in the past, but the negative effects of “lockdown” will be very much around.

Boris-idiot’s speech

Sitting in my car earlier, I heard a Radio 4 broadcast of a 10-minute speech by the person currently posing as Prime Minister. I should say that it was somewhere between mediocre and poor. A half-hearted attempt to reprise Churchill in 1940 fell very flat. Johnson called Coronavirus “the most vicious threat to the UK I have seen in my lifetime”. So it seems that the Soviet Union, the Warsaw Pact and the Cold War passed “Boris” by?

Johnson seemed overwhelmed. This was not the easy prime minister stuff he wanted to do. He gave the impression of being not quite big enough for the role. His speech was pedestrian, forced, unconvincing. An overgrown schoolboy pretending and posing and whistling into a cold wind.

As for Johnson’s movement on “lockdown”, too little by far. He also went through a list of matters which only served to underline his incompetence and that of his Cabinet.

What Johnson does not seem to understand is that people are not waiting for his permission to do things such as drive places, walk through parks or national parks, or on beaches. Or maybe he does understand that he, the Government and the toytown police are losing control. His remedy? To make “lockdown” easier before people just ignore it.

Oh well, at least that stupid “Stay at home; Protect the NHS; Save lives” slogan is now dumped. Dump the weekly “clapathon” too!

Van der Valk

Another episode of the new Van der Valk. Slick compared to the mid-1970s original, a more developed storyline (in 2 hours compared to the original one hour), but somehow slightly missing the heavy Dutch atmosphere of the original 1970s stories.

In fact, I have just read on Wikipedia that the 1970s original was revived in 1991-92: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_der_Valk

I did not know that the series continued after the 1970s. As to that Dutch atmosphere, both productions were/are British, though filmed on location. I myself was first in Amsterdam in 1975, and made subsequent visits in the 1980s.

One aspect that seemed to be unnecessary in the new production was the introduction of a young black detective in a semi-comic role. Out of place.

Overall, I should award the new production 4 out of 5 stars. It is well done for the most part, though it suffers from the same problem as the first Van der Valk, namely the characterization of the title character. Somehow insubstantial or vacant. What makes him tick? Compare Van der Valk to Inspector Morse, Lewis, Endeavour, Wallander etc. Point made, I think.

Tweets seen

Seems that I am not the only one appalled by how out of his depth Boris Johnson seemed today:

and to date there are 117,000 more tweets in the same vein.

35 thoughts on “Diary Blog, 10 May 2020”

  1. These mainly ideological Tory libertarian types who whinge about the economic cost whilst disregarding human lives in many cases I have no respect for UNLESS they advocated for very tough border controls at airports and ports etc BACK IN FEBRUARY/EARLY MARCH when it was clear this virus was going to sweep the planet and cause utter chaos.

    Maybe, just maybe, if we had those ultra-tough border and travel restrictions the virus wouldn’t have entered this country in the first place!

    Still, when have these dogmatic Tory ‘we must have freedom from the state’ libertarians EVER supported effective border controls? After all, one of the PRIME ways a state exercises its potential power IS through border controls and ideologically they would be against state power!🙄🙄🙄☹️😞

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  2. As you say, we STILL don’t have effective immigration controls DESPITE being non-EU members now and despite a once in a century worldwide health pandemic!

    That says all you need to know about Priti Useless/Prit Vacant and this wretchedly incompetent ‘government’ of cretins! Priti was only appointed for two reasons: 1.) She has a vagina and not a penis 2.) She is an ethnically Ugandan Asian person.

    Does anyone out there really still believe Tory lies about ‘getting tough on immigration’? Please, don’t be so naive! We now have surefire PROOF they are lies! If they won’t appear during a worldwide viral health pandemic they are NEVER going to appear!

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  3. South Korea has border controls! It has a nationalist, pro-South Korean government. East Asian countries like South Korea and Japan don’t go in for the PC globalist values of the misnamed Conservative Party.

    In the last few days, the government has CLOSED DOWN several nightclubs in Seoul which had bern allowed by them to re-open after new clusters of COVID-19 infections had appeared.

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  4. I wouldn’t be easily dismissive of people who are scared. They are maybe silly in some cases but we do have to remember we are afflicted with a Tory government with staggering levels of incompetence and that doesn’t contribute to the easily frightened not being scared. It is an understandable emotion with this crew in power!

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  5. Having a PM who is more befitting the role of Coco The Clown entertaining small kids in a circus at Christmas Time does not help the confidence levels of people.

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  6. This crisis should teach us in the West and here in Britain in particular that national borders ARE important and by controlling them properly you CAN keep nasty illnesses and people OUT so potentially preserving the health and safety of your citizens AND sometimes the value of your economy.

    Pretty sad that the CONServatives still don’t get it!🤬😡☹️😞

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  7. It is time Priti was sacked and replaced with someone more competent if that is possible! Mind you, there is little point in sacking her if the globalist, open-borders ideology is still there! It is also time the not fit for purpose Home Office was broken-up with the immigration and border control part hived-off into a new, specific ministry called the frankly Orwellian 😂 Ministry of Immigration and Border Control.

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  8. Or it could be called the Ministry of HOMELAND Security like a department of the US government is called or is that too non-PC and, dare I say it, nationalist-sounding?🙄

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  9. According to Wikipedia’s article on this pandemic, Kiribati, Tonga, Samoa, Palau, Tuvalu, Micronesia, the small French-owned islands of Wallis and Futuna and North Korea don’t have any recorded cases of Covid-19. Whilst North Korea is probably lying, the others instituted ultra-restrictive travel restrictions to them many weeks ago and therefore don’t have the virus.

    National borders WORK! They consequently don’t have economy-throttling lockdowns as Peter Hitchens doesn’t like. I didn’t see or hear him to my knowledge advocating we take similar measures in this regard in February/early March

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  10. We could have closed our borders like them apart from that bloody one we have with the Republic of Ireland since we have to abide by that ruddy Good Friday Agreement rubbish. A now supposedly wholly sovereign country should be able to control ALL its borders not just some of them!😡🤬

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  11. An end to the lockdown is a bit of a misnomer. Even after it ‘ends’ there will still have be quite a few restrictions in place like cinemas shut, football stadiums closed etc. We are NOT going back to ‘normal’ for quite some time yet.

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  12. South Korea’s government in the last few days has ordered nightclubs in one part of the capital, Seoul, to be closed due to hotspots of renewed infections appearing. The government had previously allowed them to re-open.

    Peter Hitchens would presumably be against the South Korean government exercising state power in this way?

    I really can’t place him ideologically. In certain circumstances he seems to be a US style libertarian ‘freedom from big government’ nutter whilst in other ways he is a traditional social conservative ie advocating the return of a decidedly non-libertarian measure like hanging.

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    1. I have no idea whether Hitchens does think that way, M’Lord of Essex. I myself think that closure of nightclubs is necessary. Same for pubs and anywhere where many people congregate and breathe over each other.

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  13. Germany recently eased their lockdown but now their infections are on the rise once more. How does Peter ‘we must have freedom from the state’ Hitchens explain that?

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  14. Whilst I will admit I am no fan of Boris Johnson, I think Peter Hitchens should refrain from comparing him to the leader of North Korea. If we are to believe the Wikipedia article on the viral pandemic, that country still has no reported cases at all! Admittedly, we are taking about a regime that is not exactly averse to lying but, in this instance, they could be telling the truth so perhaps there is something to be said for North Korean methods of suppressing viral pandemics?

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    1. M’Lord of Essex, I doubt that North Korea has no infection, but there are reasons to suppose that deaths are few. No doubt anyone thought to have it is detained somewhere; North Korea has no tourism and almost no business travel; almost no North Koreans travel for any reason; there is relatively little travel within the country; the capital city is almost closed (no-one can even visit without a permit); as far as I know, there are few pubs, cafes, let alone pop concerts!

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  15. He should announce hugely increased fines for non compliance (on a sliding scale depending upon personal wealth) and yes the threat of imprisonment for the most blatant disregarders of lockdown measures.

    If you announce a lockdown as a government the population must think you BELIEVE in it!

    Britain needs to shed its infatuation with US-style libertarianism because it is, with few exceptions, basically a philosophy of anarchism some have given a more respectable sounding name to.

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  16. Peter Hitchens really needs to stop insulting Kim Jung-Un. Whatever else may be said about him, at least the bloke has some leadership qualities unlike the ham actor/buffoon/clown in No.10.Apparently,
    people are now more confused than ever about what exactly they should be doing after the ‘dear Leader’s’ rambling and incoherent ‘speech’ and poundshop Churchill act. North Korea’s people know what their government expects of them.

    God, what an almighty idiot we have for a PM!🤬😡☹️😞

    There truely is NOTHING there under that shaggy mop! For god’s sake, why can’t he just be honest with himself, for once, and just admit he isn’t up to the job? Get Jeremy Hunt in IMMEDIATELY!

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  17. Can’t we [redacted]? The bloke must be on hard drugs or an alcoholic like Churchill was. He is just so fucking awful it would be unbelievable if this wasn’t the United Kingdom and our knowledge that British politics is one of the most degenerate political scenes in the world .

    Seriously, who are the fucking stupid Tory Party members who elected this abject cretin to be this country’s PM?🤬😡

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  18. Capital punishment needs to be re-introduced as a mater of priority even if it is to be used for just one person. I, for one, would gladly do the deed. Why can’t this GRADE-A MORON just fucking GO? EVERYTHING he touches goes wrong and the idiot has only been PM fo a few months so far! Just how much more wrong can he do with the remaining part of his term?🤬☹️😞😡

    We nearly had a result a few weeks ago but no Britain certainly isn’t the ‘lucky country’ as Australia used to be called!😡☹️😞

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    1. M’Lord of Essex:
      It must be the first time I have agreed with anything said by Miriam Margolis! What were those words of Shakespeare? Something like “it is expedient that one man should die for the good of the people”. Was that Brutus (or Cassius) in “Julius Caesar”?

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  19. If only this entire utterly wretched ‘government’ with barely a functioning brain cell to share between them had gone down with the virus, died, then even the Queen would have had to have seen sense and appointed a military government to take over.

    Yes, living under a military dictatorship would be far better than this lot!

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  20. I am PROUD to say aloud I did NOT vote for this bunch of wholly incompetent tossers and Coco the DEADLY Clown in December.

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  21. The KILLER clown needs to be locked-up or a more drastic course of action will have to be used against him.

    The now very seriously mixed messages this government of morons is sending-out will kill thousands more. Mind you, some people ignore all messages from government as people flocked to the seaside despite until very recently being told to explicitly STAY AT HOME.

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  22. The Tories MUST see sense and get rid of him with immediate effect. ONLY by having a serious PM like Jeremy Hunt will this dire situation improve. Many are not listening to the government purely because they regard Boris as the sick joke that he is and laugh at anything he says.

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  23. Even if the government were ultra-precise in its messaging to the populace having a non-serious and non-authoritative PM (unlike Jeremy Hunt would have been) simply doesn’t help matters. We need someone with some serious leadership credentials and Jeremy is the man who can fit the bill. They don’t need to go through another leadership election just put Jeremy in the job!

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  24. No, I’m not. I’m certainly not saying he is perfect as that is evidently not the case but at least he would have made for a plausible credible PM which would be good at anytime but particularly now when we have a worldwide viral pandemic the likes of which haven’t been seen since the Spanish flu a century ago. The country is crying-out for a serious, calm, collected and authoritative person to be in charge at this time that we can look-up to and trust and out of all Tories in the Commons Jeremy Hunt fits those attributes the most.

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  25. Jeremy comes from a very elitist background (eg Charterhouse Public School) but despite that he isn’t flashy or arrogant and can relate to ordinary people.

    He made a better job of being Foreign Secretary than the spaffer from Eton did…

    Isn’t Jeremy related albeit it distantly to Sir Oswald Mosley – not that I am suggesting Jeremy shares some of Mosley’s opinions!

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