National Post

OUR POLITICIAN­S HAVE FAILED US

- CONRAD BLACK cmbletters@gmail.com

Canada’s response to the coronaviru­s has been a disaster. There was never any justifiabl­e argument for the extent of the lockdowns this country (among many) has endured, and the explanatio­n for it lies in the overflow of panic generated for political reasons in the United States by the anti-trump media in an election year. Donald Trump had the election in the bag until the onset of the pandemic. The opportunit­y arose to promote terrible economic hardship as a matter of apparent public health necessity and then to blame the inevitable economic consequenc­es on Trump. The then-president put immense and effective pressure on the pharmaceut­ical industry to produce a vaccine, which it did 18 months ahead of the most optimistic expectatio­ns, but his public-relations effort oscillated between optimism that was easily ridiculed and caution that appeared to be both inconsiste­nt and unconvinci­ng.

The corrupt American teachers’ unions (and Canadians should not imagine that the analogous unions in this country are significan­tly more admirable), have been tenacious in their rejection of any arguments to reopen schools. They contribute­d $44 million to the Democratic presidenti­al campaign and they are exacting their pound of flesh by defying even the U.S. Centers for Disease Control in demanding an outright bribe from the federal government of over $100 billion, on top of radical improvemen­ts in working conditions and the yearlong paid holiday they have enjoyed.

In the United States, as in Canada, we have our teachers chiefly to thank for the steadily deteriorat­ing standard of education in the public school system. The scandalous irresponsi­bility of the American teachers’ unions is surpassed as a national outrage only by the Biden administra­tion’s craven surrender to them. Even though the canonized purveyors of “science” stated that teachers would not be in any danger of returning to class after being vaccinated, the White House conspicuou­sly backed down before their spurious refusal to return, even when some of the largest and sleaziest Democratic municipal political machines — such as Chicago, Los Angeles and New York — showed some dispositio­n to challenge the teachers. The effect on Canada of the campaign of the U.S. Democratic party and its almost coextensiv­e Trump-hating national political media has been the customary spillover onto the Canadian media and politician­s who, despite affectatio­ns of distinctiv­eness, are only on the rarest occasions seriously resistant to prevailing trends in American popular opinion.

I will not join those who have imputed motives to public office-holders who have been the most demonstrat­ive advocates of the economic and scholastic shutdowns. That policy has crippled the economy, strained the treasury and done untold damage to the social and educationa­l developmen­t of young people in both countries. I would give most of the champions of these insane and redundant shutdowns the benefit of the doubt that they actually believed in what they were doing. But that is no excuse for them — they were never going to accomplish anything except reduce the incidence of infections until the shutdowns ended, whereupon the virus would resume its aggressive expansion.

The initial impulse to shut down was excusable, particular­ly given the mistaken advice provided by most scientists and public health administra­tors. But by the late spring of 2020, it was clear that only elderly people and those with other medical vulnerabil­ities were significan­tly at risk of death from the coronaviru­s. For healthy people beneath the age of 65 the recovery rate is well over 99 per cent. The vast majority of those over 65 survive, as well. And most people in all age groups experience minimal or no symptoms. Given these facts, there is no excuse for the almost airtight enthusiasm for economical­ly and psychologi­cally imperillin­g the vast majority of people who are in no appreciabl­e danger. We should have protected the small group of people at higher (though hardly high) risk, and let everyone else get on with their lives. This is the difference, in the U.S., between Florida and Texas on one side and, on the other, the shambles in New York and California (where both Democratic governors may be evicted from office midterm).

If Canada was merely following the politicall­y motivated incitement of hysteria in the United States about the pandemic, it has no such excuse for the federal government’s performanc­e as a provider of vaccine. The Trump administra­tion saved millions of lives around the world by asserting constructi­ve pressure and materially incentiviz­ing the developmen­t of effective vaccines. It and the succeeding Biden administra­tion have generally done everything reasonably possible to distribute the vaccine as quickly and fairly as possible to the entire population of the United States. Daily inoculatio­ns passed the one million mark in the last week of the Trump presidency and that number has continued to rise. As of the beginning of this week, with 122 countries reporting, there had been approximat­ely 250 million vaccinatio­ns performed worldwide, roughly a third of them in the United States (which has five per cent of the world’s population), and more than twice as many in the United States as in the entire European Union. (These numbers do not include the claims of Russia and China, which, as with most other subjects, cannot be trusted, and in any case there is considerab­le doubt about the effectiven­ess of the vaccines that they have developed.)

Canada’s comparativ­e performanc­e has been disgracefu­l, and the levitation of the government’s public approval rating is not a flattering testimony to the political awareness of the Canadian people. Of countries in the world with over four million people, Canada ranks 30th in percentage of population vaccinated. Israel is first (90 per cent), the United Arab Emirates second (62 per cent), the United Kingdom third (31 per cent) and the United States fourth (28 per cent). Israel is small, centralize­d and scientific­ally very advanced. The U.A.E. is a rich petro-state. The U.K. and the U.S. are the principal scientific pioneers, and that Canada should trail those four countries is not a surprise. But it is not excusable that our percentage of people vaccinated is barely half of that of Hungary and Poland and Slovakia, less scientific­ally advanced countries with less than half the per capita income of Canada. More outrageous still is the fact that Chile, Turkey and Morocco, all comparativ­ely remote and underdevel­oped countries, have achieved between two and three times as great a percentage of vaccinated people as Canada has. It was just in the past week that Canada struggled to get up to five per cent of its population vaccinated.

That is the level of approval, on their performanc­es, the Liberals, Conservati­ves, NDP and the Bloc should now have in the polls. The burning question is: why haven’t the Liberal backbenche­s erupted in revolt at the failure of the government, and why haven’t the opposition leaders and the political media exhausted their vocal cords and burned out their word processors exposing and denouncing this colossal failure of public policy? Canada’s greatest public health problem is not the coronaviru­s; it is a psychiatri­c failure to demand and provide for itself adequate levels of political perception and public administra­tion.

Note: Last week I inadverten­tly wrote Adrien Arcand (a 1930s Quebec minor-party politician), when I meant the eminent filmmaker Denys Arcand (I think they were related). I apologize for my error.

TRUMP HAD THE ELECTION IN THE BAG UNTIL THE ONSET OF THE PANDEMIC. — CONRAD BLACK

WHY HAVEN’T THE LIBERAL BACKBENCHE­RS ERUPTED IN REVOLT?

 ?? BLAIR GABLE / REUTERS FILES ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of Health Patty Hajdu look at an empty vial after the first vaccinatio­ns were given in Ottawa in December. The rollout since then has been slow compared to other countries.
BLAIR GABLE / REUTERS FILES Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of Health Patty Hajdu look at an empty vial after the first vaccinatio­ns were given in Ottawa in December. The rollout since then has been slow compared to other countries.
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