National Post (National Edition)

COVID HYSTERIA

WHEN THE U.S. ELECTION COMES TO AN END, SO TOO WILL THE DEMOCRATIC NARRATIVE OF THE PANDEMIC

- CONRAD BLACK cmbletters@gmail.com

One more time, I inflict upon readers my grievous reservatio­ns about the response of this and many other countries to the coronaviru­s. The basic facts are that the coronaviru­s is not fatal to 99.997 per cent of people under the age of 65, and not fatal to 94.6 per cent of people above the age of 65. The vast majority of people of all ages, including the elderly, have zero or minimal symptoms when afflicted by it. The approximat­ely 98 per cent of people who do contract the coronaviru­s and survive it appear to be thereafter largely immune to it, at least for a time. It is of the nature of this virus that it cannot be prevented from spreading; the only durable cure for a whole society is a vaccine, and as many as seven largely effective vaccines are in the final stages of developmen­t and some will likely be available by the end of this year. New Zealand triumphant­ly announced a couple of months ago that there were no remaining coronaviru­s cases in the country and, accordingl­y, its restrictiv­e measures were being relaxed. Parliament­arians threw order papers in the air and there were street parties and nationwide festivitie­s, but within a couple of weeks, and despite screening processes for arriving people, the coronaviru­s had returned. The process for discoverin­g, testing and distributi­ng a coronaviru­s vaccine has been the subject of such intense and universal interest that the normal time required has been reduced by over a year. Vaccines are rarely 100 per cent effective, but they do drasticall­y reduce the incidence of the illness, and they strengthen the morale of afflicted population­s.

Research also shows that over 80 per cent of fatalities attributed to the coronaviru­s in advanced countries that test comprehens­ively and report accurately are people who also suffer from other significan­t illnesses or vulnerabil­ities. The extent to which the coronaviru­s is the effective cause of death varies in each case and is sometimes nearly impossible to determine. But the underlying point is illustrate­d by the fact that the average age of people deemed to die from, or at least with, the coronaviru­s is within a few months of the actuarial life expectancy in each country; for example, the average age of Americans deemed to have died from the coronaviru­s and the average life expectancy of the American public are both 78. Almost all deaths are sad events, but the media has been irresponsi­ble in its complicity in the maintenanc­e of a higher degree of public anxiety than is justified by this illness. Our entire species has largely fallen into an excessive state of fear, evasion and defeatism.

There is also ample evidence to demonstrat­e the negative consequenc­es of economic and societal shutdowns. Not only is the unemployme­nt rate multiplied by between five and 10, a great many businesses including most aspects of the travel, hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent industries, are effectivel­y strangled. Education is severely reduced in all respects by being conducted at home in many cases, even if supported by schools and universiti­es. And many people suffer some degree of morose or depressive feelings, and develop substance dependenci­es as a result of prolonged solitude.

Perseverin­g readers will recall that from the beginning, I opposed an economic shutdown. Instead, I recommende­d thinning groups and requiring masks in confined public areas and drastic protective measures for elderly or otherwise immunity reduced people. It was always a mistake to shut schools and universiti­es; the students as well as the faculty and administra­tors beneath the age of 65 all have a very slight risk of suffering serious consequenc­es from the coronaviru­s, and there is evidence to suggest that children do not transmit the virus as easily as they do simpler ailments like the measles, flu or cold viruses. Parents of school-age children are relatively invulnerab­le to the coronaviru­s.

But our whole society went cock-a-hoop for the shutdown and are now edging back toward it in Canada and Europe because of increasing incidences of the virus, generally unaccompan­ied either by increased fatalities or overloadin­g of hospitals. Because those prevented from working by the pandemic are blameless in their fate, we have correctly adopted a generous method of compensati­ng them. This is not fiscally sustainabl­e indefinite­ly, however. We are effectivel­y disincenti­vizing people from work at the same time that we prevent them from working and we are experiment­ing with an impossibly generous imposition of a guaranteed annual income. We are simply sending a salary drawn from borrowed money to unsustaina­bly large numbers of adult citizens. We will be paying for it for a long time.

It has also been my contention that in Canada we have been too much influenced by aspects of the coronaviru­s crisis in the United States that have been driven by political tactics in the election campaign in that country. The incumbent administra­tion was practicall­y certain of re-election prior to the outbreak of the COVID-19 crisis. The Democratic opposition saw a path to victory by agitating for a gigantic economic shutdown, which would lead to an economic recession that could then be portrayed as a needless depression generated by incompeten­t public-health management on the part of the Trump administra­tion, even though the administra­tion was following its opponents' advice in shutting down, and is bringing the nation back to work more quickly than had been thought possible. The U.S. economic growth rate was 32 per cent in the third quarter and the United States has vastly outperform­ed all other advanced countries in the world since coming out of lockdown.

But in Canada, we have been sluggishly and doggedly attached to a shutdown policy based on infection rates, even though our fatality rate has been comparativ­ely good. I know that the motives of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Toronto Mayor John Tory and other Canadian leaders are in these matters sincere and commendabl­e, but the policy has been mistaken from the beginning, and the longer it continues, the more damage it will cause. We are fundamenta­lly shutting down the normal lives of up to 60 per cent of the population and the leisure time of 90 per cent of the population out of an exaggerate­d concern for only two per cent of the population who are in fact seriously vulnerable to this illness. It is not too late for Canada to show some leadership, even though we have been long preceded by Sweden, which wisely never imposed a general shutdown. But in 10 days, the U.S. election will be over, and whatever the result, the rationale for the Democratic anti-Trump press (faithfully parroted by the Canadian media) to incite public hysteria will be over. The American media will cease to hammer public sensibilit­ies with gruesome formulatio­ns about “grim milestones,” and other sombre fatuities. Canada will, as usual, plod along behind the Americans, without the excuse of an election, and continenta­l unease will subside. We could have done so much better.

OUR ENTIRE SPECIES HAS FALLEN INTO AN EXCESSIVE STATE OF FEAR AND DEFEATISM.

 ?? BRIDGET BENNETT / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Entertainm­ent workers gather in protest to bring attention to their labour and unemployme­nt in Las Vegas. The U.S. economic growth rate was 32 per cent in the third quarter, Conrad Black writes, and the United States
has vastly outperform­ed all other advanced countries in the world since coming out of lockdown.
BRIDGET BENNETT / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES Entertainm­ent workers gather in protest to bring attention to their labour and unemployme­nt in Las Vegas. The U.S. economic growth rate was 32 per cent in the third quarter, Conrad Black writes, and the United States has vastly outperform­ed all other advanced countries in the world since coming out of lockdown.
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