Liberals Turning Against the Lockdown Left

“The left, including the U.S. mainstream media, has always pushed a hysterical approach to both Covid spread and severity. But chinks in the armor are now appearing as it becomes clear that many want a permanent Covidocracy โ€“ lockdown forever and ever, amen.” ~ Michael Fumento

Science issues unfortunately sometimes become political issues, the most prominent example of which, as polls show, is โ€œglobal climate change.โ€ Itโ€™s not a flat โ€œI believe; I donโ€™t believe,โ€ as the mainstream media would have you think, but distinctions are clear. Likewise, aspects of Covid-19 have also become politicized, including vaccines but most especially lockdowns and the various mechanisms of anti-social distancing. 

The left, including the U.S. mainstream media, has always pushed a hysterical approach to both Covid spread and severity. But chinks in the armor are now appearing as it becomes clear that many want a permanent Covidocracy โ€“ lockdown forever and ever, amen.

Writing in the May 4, 2021 Atlantic, โ€œThe Liberals Who Canโ€™t Quit Lockdown,โ€ Emma Green admits what many of us suspected, including anti-Trumpers, that โ€œFor many progressives, extreme vigilance was in part about opposing Donald Trump.โ€ Indeed, a survey that Bill Maher would later cite of American media coverage of the pandemic showed a significant fall-off of the โ€œWeโ€™re all gonna dieโ€ articles right after the election.

She also gently chides some of her fellow liberals stating, โ€œEven as scientific knowledge of Covid-19 has increased, some progressives have continued to embrace policies and behaviors that arenโ€™t supported by evidence, such as banning access to playgrounds, closing beaches, and refusing to reopen schools for in-person learning.โ€

Green says this may actually be encouraging a sort of backlash on the right. โ€œThose who are vaccinated on the left seem to think overcaution now is the way to go, which is making people on the right question the effectiveness of the vaccines.โ€ Maybe you and I donโ€™t think that way, but there is a logic to it.

She also takes a swipe at the National Institutes of Allergies and Infectious Diseases director, who regardless of his personal politics, has become quite the liberal Covid guru. โ€œAnthony Fauci recently said he wouldnโ€™t travel or eat at restaurants even though heโ€™s fully vaccinated, despite CDC guidance that these activities can be safe for vaccinated people who take precautions.โ€ Heโ€™s giving ammo to those reaching into their pouches.

Citing a poll this spring from the University of North Carolinaโ€™s Marc Hetherington, Green notes that โ€œ43 percent of very liberal respondents believed that getting the coronavirus would have a โ€˜very badโ€™ effect on their life,โ€ compared to a third of those identifying as liberals and moderates.โ€ This is not a political question and therefore it appears that those on the far left are simply more afraid ofโ€ฆ something. That is, perhaps Covid-19 specifically, viruses generally, germs generally โ€“ or maybe of life. Maybe that could help explain their apparent eagerness to forfeit freedoms for safety or the perception of safety.

Indeed, โ€œFor this subset, diligence against Covid-19 remains an expression of political identityโ€”even when that means overestimating the diseaseโ€™s risks or setting limits far more strict than what public-health guidelines permit,โ€ she says. She goes on to show polling data indicating that liberals apparently arenโ€™t just acting more scared, they truly are. Fear is in the liberal makeup, as it were. 

And she does acknowledge that, quoting a liberal analyst, โ€œSome progressives believe that the pandemic has created an opening for ambitious policy proposals. โ€œAmong progressive political leaders around here, thereโ€™s a lot of talk around: Weโ€™re not going back to normal, because normal wasnโ€™t good enough.โ€

Too bad she didnโ€™t use this quote thatโ€™s been making the rounds, courtesy of โ€œaward-winning poet, activist, author & leaderโ€ Sonya Renee Taylor: โ€œWe will not go back to normal. Normal never was. Our pre-corona existence was not normal other than we normalized greed, inequity, exhaustion, depletion, extraction, disconnection, confusion, rage, hoarding, hate and lack.โ€ So yes, support for another โ€œright-wing conspiracy theoryโ€ that at least some on the left see in the pandemic as the equivalent of the resignation of the Czar during the dark days of World War I and therefore it serves their purpose to exaggerate the threat. 

But fortunately Sonya Renee Taylor is no Lenin, nor has a Trotsky at her right hand. Meanwhile, โ€œthe empireโ€ might be a bit shaken but itโ€™s not collapsing, so itโ€™s hard to say that such sentiments are either widespread or influential. Only that, yes, they certainly exist and yes, as I have noted elsewhere, public health groups and authorities often have a Marxist bent. Heck, the Director-General of the WHO is a Marxist, and his predecessor was almost certainly a member of the CCP.

Meanwhile Bill Maher, who often plays the role of the anti-left liberal, struck somewhat harder than The Atlanticโ€™s Green. Last August he concluded his HBO show, Real Time with Bill Maher, with a swipe at those ignoring the Covid-19 and obesity connection, out of a sense of political correctness. He specifically criticized Fauci, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, then surgeon general Jerome Adams, Deborah Birx, and CDC Director Robert Redfield.

But it wasnโ€™t until his April segment, โ€œGive it to Me Straight, Doc,โ€ that he unlimbered his formidable big guns. He said the pandemic was being presented as โ€œWorld War Z,โ€ and railed against the โ€œscared straight approach,โ€ which he also characterized as โ€œYou canโ€™t handle the truth!โ€ a la Jack Nicholsonโ€™s famous line in A Few Good Men. โ€œIf you lie to people even for a very good cause, you lose their trust,โ€ Maher observed.

But he said that was hardly the only motive, citing the American mediaโ€™s โ€œIf it bleeds it leadsโ€ mentality. โ€œThe more they can get you inside to watch their panic porn, the higher their ratings,โ€ he said. 

He noted (as I observed above) that a recent analysis by the National Bureau of Economic Research showed that while other countries had a mix of Covid news (specifically as high as 60 percent early last year to less than 40% this year), the U.S. national media reported more than 90 percent bad news for most of the pandemic, falling somewhat to 80% after. 

โ€œWhen all of our sources have an agenda to spin us, yeah, you wind up with a badly misinformed population,โ€ he said, and while he mocked some extreme conservative views he lashed out hardest on liberals as supposedly the โ€œhigh information, by the science people.โ€ He noted that a December Franklin-Templeton Gallup survey showed Democrats fared much worse with the question โ€œWhat are the chances that a person infected with Covid must be hospitalized?โ€ declaring โ€œAlmost 70% of Democrats are wildly off on this key question.โ€ He added, โ€œShouldnโ€™t the liberal media have to answer for โ€˜Why did your audience wind up believing such a load of crap about Covid?โ€™โ€ (Republicans also overguessed the risk, but not by nearly as much.)

โ€œI donโ€™t want politics mixed in with my medical decisions,โ€ he said. 

The mediaโ€™s two favorite Covid-19 demons are the Texas and Florida governors, but Maher pointed out โ€œTexas lifted their Covid restrictions recently and their infection rates went down, in part because of people getting outside โ€ฆ letting the sun and wind do their thing.โ€ (Emphasis his.) I have written on the apparent protective effect of Vitamin D against Covid. He also lauded Floridaโ€™s governor as obviously highly knowledgeable about Covid-19 and that GOP governors generally โ€œprotected the elderly way better than the governor of New York,โ€ alluding to Andrew Cuomo ordering that Covid patients be put into long-term health care facilities.

He then returned to the obesity-Covid connection that I had just addressed in another publication as โ€œThe Third Rail of Covid,โ€ using the same expression. It not only shows that overweight and obese people are more likely to be hospitalized or die with Covid, but โ€“ this just in! โ€“ research shows theyโ€™re also more likely to contract the virus โ€“ meaning theyโ€™re not just suffering, theyโ€™re spreading the suffering. Endangering others takes this to a whole new level.

โ€œI think a lot of people died because talking about obesity has become a third rail in America,โ€ he said. โ€œImagine how many lives would have been saved if there had been a national campaign,โ€ encouraging weight loss as a defense against Covid he said. โ€œBut weโ€™ll never know because the last thing we want to do is say something insensitive.โ€ 

He concludes by repeating his message about the Covid-obesity connection being essentially ignored: โ€œInstead, we were told to lock down. Unfortunately, the killer was already in the house. Her name was Little Debbie.โ€

Still, as Maher noted, thereโ€™s been a good amount of Covid kookiness on the right, and indeed some on the right have embraced pandemic hysteria. An influential right-wing writer friend promotes the view of โ€œGlobal Cosmopolitans,โ€ a self-described group of โ€œelites,โ€ urging a rapid campaign to vaccinate the entire world against Covid-19. Never mind that it took 25 years to eradicate smallpox, a rather more serious disease, and The Polio Eradication Program is now in its 33rd year. Decades behind schedule, itโ€™s now been set back even further by, yes, the Covid focus.

No political persuasion has a monopoly on pushing an agenda or on the mass psychogenic illness (mass hysteria) weโ€™ve been seeing over the last 14 months and unfortunately, that will continue to plague us.



Post on Facebook


Post on X


Print Article