
How soon we forget. But so that we donโt, letโs please travel back in time to November of 2018. Memories of what happened then will hopefully further wake people up to the abject stupidity of lockdown as the path to enhanced health.
Back then John Allen Chau, a Christian missionary from the United States, made his way to North Sentinel Island. He was murdered upon arrival.
North Sentinel is 500 miles east of India, and itโs speculated that somewhere in the range of 100 to 150 people live there. No one knows for sure. The North Sentinelese descend from African migrants who settled on the island 50,000 years ago.
Chauโs body was apparently โriddledโ by arrows launched from yes,ย bows.ย North Sentinel Islandโs civilization is of the Stone Age kind. Per the very excellent Tunku Varadarajan in aย Wall Street Journalย account from 2018, โtheย Sentineleseย are the worldโs most isolated and inaccessible people.โย
To some of the fanatics who so naively bought the run-and-hide from the coronavirus concept in total, the Sentinelese are likely very healthy people. How could they not be? So isolated are they that no one even knows the islandโs actual population. As for an outside understanding of its language, forget about it.
Chau was seemingly the latest to try and get to know the Sentinelese, to bring religion, but as he approached with an eye on converting them to Christianity, the arrows flew and his life ended. About the murder, itโs crucial to understand the why behind it.
The answer is very simple. Their isolation has done the North Sentinelese no favors in a health sense. As Varadarajan put it, โContact with the outside world โ with men like Chau โ would likely kill off the Sentinelese. Think flu, measles, chickenpox.โ
Aiming to maintain the existence of their most primitive society, the Sentinelese had no choice but to kill a certain giver of virus and disease who naively thought he was source of good. Not only did Chau break Indian law, in making his way to North Sentinel his very existence threatened the lives of something on the order of one hundred people.
Precisely because the North Sentinelese have been so isolated for so long from the outside world, their immunity is nil. Though missionaries like Chau came to them in peace, it was as though he arrived with an AK-47.
Chauโs murder is yet another gentle reminder of how backwards the lockdowns were. Hide from a virus? To do so would be for cities, states and countries to set themselves up for something much worse down the line. As the North Sentinelese remind us, isolation weakens the human body precisely because it limits the exposure to the myriad human-spread viruses that paradoxically strengthen the immune system.
Oxford professor Sunetra Gupta, one of the authors of The Great Barrington Declaration, has long argued that globalizationโs genius has been understated. Itโs not just that the division of labor has enabled relentless specialization among the worldโs workers, itโs not just that people โbumping into each otherโ have spread ideas and processes that have driven even greater economic advancement that has easily been the greatest foe of disease and death, globalization has also fostered a great deal of physical, in-person interaction among productive, specialized people increasingly possessing the means to see the globe.
As a consequence they havenโt just seen the world. In a health sense, theyโve spread viruses around the world. With more and more of the worldโs inhabitants moving around the globe, so have viruses. The spreading hasnโt weakened the global population, rather itโs strengthened it. Immunity is most notably achieved naturally, and itโs achieved much more quickly when people are constantly interacting with other people.
The North Sentinelese havenโt been so lucky. Wholly isolated, the islandโs inhabitants have long been separated from the crucial human interaction that fosters immunity. That they must kill outsiders who approach them is a reminder that viruses donโt go to sleep, get bored, or run away; rather theyโre a forever concept.
That they are calls loudly for the very human interaction that politicians and experts have tried to outlaw over the past year. Historians will marvel at their foolishness.
Itโs not just that lockdowns and other forced isolation destroyed so many jobs, so many businesses, and that they drove all sorts of other human tragedies of the alcohol, drug, and suicidal variety as discussed in my new book releasing today, When Politicians Panicked. Lockdowns furthered the rather backwards notion that our health is improved if weโre separated from one another. Not at all.
Isolated people arenโt saved from what threatens their health as much the inevitable infection from the threat is delayed. Worse is what the isolation means over the longer term. The North Sentinelese are a very real reminder of how cruelly bankrupt the run-and-hide strategy is as a broad form of virus mitigation.
Reprinted from Forbes
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