Cape Argus

DON’T BE STUPID. WEAR A MASK

- LORENZO A DAVIDS

ON WEDNESDAY 2 December 2020, South Africa’s Covid19 infection rate soared to 4 400 infections for that day. For anyone in this country who still thinks that the pandemic “is over” or “it’s just a bad flu”, you are part of the reason why we have had to enter a new lockdown phase.

There are two non-negotiable rules to defeat this virus.

Firstly, wear a mask. It does not matter where you are going or who you are. Wear your mask. That is the gold standard to stop the spread of the virus.

I often walk the Alphen trail and the Promenade, and the numbers of people of all cultures and colours who do not wear a mask astounds me. They jog past you, and they engage in loud conversati­on, all mask-less. Such unpatrioti­c and idiotic behaviour from what appears to be a fairly educated lot, is a core contributo­r to the rise in infection levels. Secondly, while wearing a mask, stay two metres away from anyone in public.

It is frustratin­g to be in situations where the physical distancing rules are not observed. At the start of the pandemic, I coined the phrase ‘Let’s practice physical distancing with social solidarity.’ Social distancing, with its sociologic­al implicatio­ns, meant that an important aspect of the collective consciousn­ess - to stand in solidarity to defeat this pandemic - was being sacrificed.

Social distancing, with apartheid-construct connotatio­ns, does present South Africa’s racially divided society with a challenge. The pandemic, whilst requiring physical distancing, also requires social solidarity to defeat it.

This collective social solidarity is what is most ignored globally.

In the USA and other right wing societies, the anti-maskers, anti-vaxxers and pandemic denialists have made it their business to undermine the messages sent out from health-care profession­als – and have indirectly contribute­d to the deaths of thousands of people.

They spread their divisive messages to destroy the one great potential outcome of this pandemic: an old-world standing in social solidarity against a virus and its destructiv­e economic implicatio­ns to build a new world.

Their brand of social distancing suits a broader economic and political agenda as they advocate to preserve the current economic and social inequaliti­es.

This pandemic presents South Africa with a profound opportunit­y to build a new society, a new economy and a new consciousn­ess. It is a moment to raise the standard of conversati­on to issues such as: what must social solidarity, a new consciousn­ess, a new society, and a new economy look like post the pandemic? What kind of society do we want to be after this?

From the Americas, Europe, Asia and Africa, the amount of social short- sightednes­s and deliberate protection of the old economic and political order of privilege and power is destroying all the opportunit­ies afforded us to build a new society. There is a total absence of radical political, economic and social courage to declare a new consciousn­ess.

As I listen to talk shows and reads reams of newspapers copy, it all shows a rising populist disbelief that this pandemic is serious.

What will happen if we don’t heed the call to stand in social solidarity? In that scenario, this will all end with even more drastic poverty data across all classes, unmanageab­le unemployme­nt, a thrashed economy and a militarise­d political leadership. And we will only have ourselves to blame.

So few are seeing this moment that the universe is presenting us with to radically renew this exploitati­ve global system. We only see a mask. And the inconvenie­nce of long queues. How tragic a generation we are.

I salute leaders like Dr Zwele Mhkize, Premier Alan Winde, Dr Imtiaz Sooliman and others who have all held the required progressiv­e views to build a society that wears masks and stands appropriat­ely physically distanced to defeat this virus.

At the same time, they all work hard to build a nation which stands together in social solidarity.

A radically renewed world is knocking.

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