Scottish Daily Mail

COVID BRITAIN 2024 Don’t clean your teeth... save the NHS

- LITTLEJOHN richard.littlejohn@dailymail.co.uk

THE date is March 1, 2024, and Britain is about to enter its fifth year of lockdown. Despite the entire population being vaccinated every six months and the death toll from Covid-19 falling to zero, scientists are still warning that it is too early to ease restrictio­ns.

At the Old Bailey, anti-lockdown campaigner Piers Corbyn is jailed for life after being found guilty of failing to wear a mask in his own bathroom while cleaning his teeth. Corbyn was arrested during a dawn raid by armed police executing a warrant under the new Contagious Diseases (Safety of Ablutions) Serious Offences Act.

A civic-minded neighbour using nightvisio­n binoculars rang Scotland Yard’s dedicated Covid Narkline after spotting a maskless Corbyn through a frosted glass window spitting toothpaste into the sink and rinsing it down the plughole.

Despite the fact that there is no evidence of anyone falling ill after contractin­g a toothpaste-related Covid variant, scientists have warned that if a single droplet of human saliva contaminat­es the water supply, it could result in hundreds of millions of horrible premature deaths.

At yesterday’s five o’clock news conference, Prime Minister Boris Johnson declared that the blanket policy of ‘Stay Home; Stop Cleaning Your Teeth; Protect the NHS’ had been a roaring success.

Hospital admissions and deaths from Covid have now fallen to nil for the fourth year running. So have admissions from all other illnesses, since routine operations for everything apart from coronaviru­s remain suspended — just to be on the safe side.

This has had the added benefit of freeing up hard-pressed NHS staff to do absolutely nothing, as there are now no patients in hospital anywhere in the country — a statistic which the Prime Minister boasts proudly makes Britain’s health service the envy of the world.

Ever since everyone in Britain was ordered to stay indoors and wear a mask 24 hours a day, after the fourth spike in 2021, Covid has been successful­ly eradicated.

BuT still the long-serving Health Secretary Matt Hancock and the Government’s top advisers insist it is too risky to allow a resumption of what we used to think of as normal life . . .

OK, so I exaggerate. up to a point. But how much more hysterical and illogical can the Government’s response to the pandemic get? There are already demands to force us to wear masks in our own homes. Some fanatics want face coverings made compulsory outdoors, too.

Police are urging friends, neighbours, even young children to grass up anyone they suspect of breaking the increasing­ly bizarre lockdown rules.

Transgress­ors face heavy fines, from £200 up to £10,000. How long before mandatory prison sentences follow? And given that most of us have effectivel­y spent the past ten months behind bars, would we notice? Still, better get used to it.

Case numbers appear to be falling, but sadly deaths hit record daily levels this week. Thankfully, vaccinatio­n is proceeding quickly, although not without hiccups, but just as we’re getting our hopes up, ‘the science’ claims this is not the be-all-and-end-all.

Doubts are being raised over the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine if the second jab is not given after three weeks, as originally planned. We’re also told there may not be enough vaccine to go round for the forseeable future.

That deceptive light at the end of the tunnel may be just another burglar’s torch. While Boris blusters about keeping restrictio­ns going till summer, the Two Ronnies want some kind of lockdown to stay in force until next year at the earliest. Everybody back in your box.

That cadaverous Jeremiah Chris Whitty (and it’s goodnight from him) says that despite vaccinatio­n, we should all carry on wearing masks and maintainin­g social distancing until — well, how long is a piece of string?

Apparently, once Covid is beaten, flu will make a comeback. So what? We’ve been living with flu for generation­s without resorting to panic measures.

What’s different now is that too many people have tasted power during this pandemic and they’re not about to give it up any time soon without a fight.

The scientists, so-called ‘experts’, civil servants, Toytown politician­s, coppers, covid marshals and selfappoin­ted covigilant­es are having a field day throwing their weight around. At the beginning of June, just as the first corona restrictio­ns were being eased, I warned you that the New Normal would be ten times worse than lockdown.

As I’ve been telling you for decades, once you give anyone any authority, especially if it comes with a hi-viz jacket, they will always . . . well, you know the rest. I don’t want to rain on the vaccinatio­n parade. The scientists at Oxford and elsewhere — as opposed to ‘the science’ — have played a blinder. Funk beyond the call of duty.

But if you think that when everyone’s had the first and second jabs we can get back to the Old Normal, I’m here to tell you we won’t. Ever.

People will still be required to social distance in five, maybe ten years’ time. Who knows? Fancy face masks are here to stay, not just a transient fashion fad.

Working From Home will become a way of life for millions. Along with long-term unemployme­nt for millions more, as thousands of recently profitable businesses go to the wall, never to recover. The notion that our ghost town centres will be revived in a hurry with affordable housing and a continenta­lstyle cafe culture is for the birds.

Even though the tree-hugging bike lane zealots suffered a setback with the defeat of London’s mayor Genghis Khan’s insane anti-car Streetspac­e scheme in the High Court this week, they’ll be back everywhere. They won’t give up without a fight, either.

Get set to spend even more time stuck in your own backyard.

Public transport services will be slashed to the bone and become ever more expensive. Air travel will struggle to recover, despite pent-up demand. The economist Milton Friedman got it right when he said there’s nothing more permanent than a temporary government programme.

DISHI Rishi is already finding it politicall­y virtually impossible to reclaim his stop-gap Covid largesse. Free school meals all year round and other expensive social handouts are here to stay.

No ambitious politician dares take away anything which has come to be seen as an entitlemen­t. Life’s a ratchet not a pendulum.

Sorry if this has been a column to slash your wrists by. I hope I’m proved horribly wrong.

The lasting, most depressing thing about this pandemic — tragic loss of life aside — is the way our assumption­s about liberty and democracy have been turned on their head. And repeated scaremonge­ring has persuaded far too many people to accept it’s for their own good.

This was once a country where you could do what you liked as long as it wasn’t specifical­ly proscribed by law. Now we’re required to do only what we’re told by ministers who make laws on a whim and hand the police new powers without even bothering to put any of it before Parliament.

Covid has permitted an allegedly Conservati­ve Government to create a punishment culture in which people constantly have to ask whether they are ‘allowed’ to do this, that or the other.

Better brush your teeth while you still can.

Welcome to the New Normal.

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