The Cairns Post

We’re the envy of the world

-

MOTHER’S Day should always be a time to stop and to give thanks for all our blessings. The greatest of them, of course, is the life that our mothers gifted us.

We’ve actually had more than usual to be grateful for on Mother’s Day, despite the fact that many of us can’t actually visit our mums because of the social distancing needed to keep them safe.

Not only have we got through the corona crisis, thus far, with fewer than 100 deaths, but we can now see the light at the end of the tunnel. Not for us, here in Australia, the tens of thousands of deaths endured in Britain and America – thanks to early bans on flights from China and the eventual fair dinkum hotel-based quarantini­ng of all incoming passengers rather than the earlier sham home-based isolation.

Around the world, almost 300,000 families have lost someone they love due to this virus so while it might be easy to be ‘glass half empty’ this weekend given the many restrictio­ns we’re still be stuck with, I prefer to be ‘glass half full.’

There’s no escaping the reality that measures necessary to protect us from this pandemic have led to a million more unemployed Australian­s since mid-March, and have put nearly five million people onto the JobKeeper payment. But we don’t have bodies piling up in hospital corridors or people refused treatment because there isn’t an intensive care bed for them and, for that, we need to be grateful.

It’s a bit rich for critics to complain about how successful Australia has been and to lament that it’s cost billions. What do they want – a death tally like Britain’s 30,000, or the 70,000 in the US to justify the expenditur­e?

The whole world would want to be where we are now; and given our lockdown has been less than two months, provided we keep up the handwashin­g and the distancing, and we stay the course when it comes to our borders, life can now start to return to normal.

As Australian­s, regardless of our personal politics, we can be proud and grateful for the job our leaders have done; huge pressure, so many unknowns and the unenviable choice of health over the economy when both bring their own devastatio­ns. Panic buying aside, we can also be proud of the way just about all of us have kept calm and carried on through this fraught period in history – from the health workers, to the supermarke­t workers, and rest of us who stayed home.

On the back of the ‘Road map to Recovery’, announced by the Prime Minister, there’s now a path back to a fully functionin­g economy and, Treasury estimates, a restoratio­n of 850,000 of the jobs that the coronaviru­s has taken away. What route each state takes, will be decided premier by premier. But the destinatio­n is the same. It’s the sort of Australia we had, eight weeks or so ago, before this virus spread like wildfire. The PM said back then, that it could be six months to get through this crisis – now it’s looking likely that it will be a lot less – but then Scott Morrison is a canny politician and he was always likely to underpromi­se and over-deliver.

Given some premiers’ over-dependence on “expert advice”, and the natural caution of doctors, I was worried that all we’d get from the National

Cabinet on Friday was a statement of principles and more motherhood, like ‘we’re all in this together.’ But provided the premiers now act, Morrison’s robust insistence on a step-bystep process should get us back to normal, or as normal as it can be, in the absence of an effective vaccine or the virus disappeari­ng.

Some scientists say that we have to accept that a vaccine for COVID-19 may never be found.

But that doesn’t mean there won’t be more effective treatments, over time, to deal with any infections, nor should it mean a locked up a life. It might just mean a more careful one.

It’s all too easy sometimes when you comment on the news of the day to focus on our hardships rather than our successes; and on what’s gone wrong, rather than what we got right. To get to where we are now, even though there’s still a long way back economical­ly, is a mighty achievemen­t from our politician­s – all of them – and from the Australian people, who by and large have cheerfully accepted the restrictio­ns needed to get us through.

Many weeks ago, I said that this virus would be a real test of our national character. I don’t know about you, but I reckon we’ve passed it.

Peta Credlin is a Sky News presenter.

 ??  ?? LEADER: The PM said that it could be six months to get through this crisis.
LEADER: The PM said that it could be six months to get through this crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia