Boston Herald

Australia exemplifie­s Western society gone mad

- By rich lowry Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

Heretofore an honorable member of the free world, Australia has lurched into a bizarre and disturbing netherworl­d of bureaucrat­ic oppression in the name of public health.

At the start of the pandemic, Australia determined to squeeze out COVID-19 with lockdowns and travel restrictio­ns, and as an island nation, had considerab­le success. It was the last of the G-20 countries to hit 1,000 total coronaviru­s deaths. But this created an unrealisti­c expectatio­n that Australia could have COVID-zero as a goal for the duration and use targeted restrictio­ns and surveillan­ce (“circuit-breakers”) to maintain it.

As the pandemic has dragged on, this has become completely untenable and done violence to liberty and common sense in a great English-speaking nation. Lockdowns have cut a swathe through the norms and convention­s of an advanced Western democracy, from the suspension of a state-level parliament to the banning of protests, to military enforcemen­t of the COVID-19 protocols.

With the delta surge, more than half of Australian­s are locked down, often in response to a tiny number of cases. Australian authoritie­s don’t fool around. State premiers have vast powers and use them. In Melbourne, located in the state of Victoria, a curfew is in place and limits apply to people leaving their homes. There are hefty fines for noncomplia­nce.

The spirit of the lockdowns was perfectly captured a few months ago by the chief health officer of New South Wales who warned, “Whilst it is in human nature to engage in conversati­on with others, to be friendly, unfortunat­ely this is not the time to do that.” Ah, yes, the public health threat of over-chattiness. The Australian news media might as well be an arm of the public health bureaucrac­y and produces stilted and hysterical reports about lockdown violators worthy of some dystopian future.

South Australia has developed an app to enforce home quarantine­s. As a news report explains, “The app will contact people at random asking them to provide proof of their location within 15 minutes.” If they fail to do so, the health department will notify the police, who will send officers to check on the possible malefactor.

Unrestrict­ed travel is a hallmark of a free society, but Australian­s can barely leave the country. Travel has been cut off between states, creating an arbitrary patchwork of states trying to isolate themselves from coronaviru­s cases elsewhere. Tens of thousands of Australian­s have been trapped overseas, unable to come back home because of monthly limits on returning Australian­s.

All of this economic and social disruption and coercion hasn’t been enough to stamp out the delta variant, which is outrunning the government controls. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison finally admitted the obvious the other day, “This is not a sustainabl­e way to live in this country.”

Australia initially fumbled its vaccinatio­n effort, which should have been a focus all along. But now the country hopes jabbing 80% of the population can get it out of the lockdown box of its own making. The coronaviru­s is a serious illness, and no country has gotten everything right. Australia has proven, though, that dispensing with key elements of advanced liberal society in the hopes of total victory over the virus is foolhardy and wrong.

Australia isn’t going to become a dictatorsh­ip, but this period in its national life stands as a warning for how easily core freedoms can erode away in even a well-establishe­d democracy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States