Recently I’ve done a lot of research
into the role of public sector unions in driving the coronapanic debacle in
Britain. I’ve written a long essay on the topic; ‘The Unions and the
U-turns’. And I’ve created two videos; the first was called ‘The Unions and the
Coronapanic’, and the second was called ‘The Scandalous Cause of
the Third Lockdown’. Since then, I’ve received a lot of comments and questions,
and I’ve done some more research, uncovering some shocking new information. So
I’ve decided to write another essay on the topic, to fill in a few gaps and
provide a few updates.
If you haven’t read my other essay, or
seen the videos, don’t worry. All you need to know is this: unions drove every
single escalation of the coronapanic debacle in Britain by making demands or
threats to the government, with the government repeatedly caving in. The
National Education Union (NEU) played an especially prominent role, driving all
three lockdowns.
Here’s a quick summary of the details
I’ve disclosed in the essay/videos:
The first lockdown happened in March
2020 after the NEU threatened the government with unilateral schools closures.
The masks on public transport mandate in the summer of 2020 happened after the
RMT, the rail workers union, threatened to strike. The masks in shops mandate
in the summer of 2020 happened after USDAW, the retail workers union, lobbied
the government and allegedly threatened industrial unrest. The second lockdown
happened in November 2020 after the NEU called for a ‘circuit breaker’.
Christmas 2020 was heavily restricted after the British Medical Association
(BMA) furiously lobbied the government to tighten the Covid rules. The third
lockdown happened on January 4 2021 after the NEU orchestrated a massive
teaching mutiny to stop the government from reopening schools; the government
panicked and locked the whole country down later that evening, to cover up the
mutiny. The first and the third lockdowns lasted as long as they did because
the teaching unions refused to go back to work as normal. The masks in schools
mandates, as well as other deranged measures in schools, including testing,
bubbles, isolating, and more, were all driven by teaching unions, with the NEU
centrally involved. And Covid vaccines were rolled out in schools, against the
advice of the JCVI, because teaching unions demanded the measure.
Overall, the picture is clear, albeit
incredible: the whole coronapanic debacle has happened because the government
has repeatedly capitulated to demands and threats made by unions. If those
demands and threats hadn’t been made, Britain would have remained free.
I said that in this essay I want to
fill in a few gaps. The main area I want to look at is the events leading up to
the first lockdown.
You will remember that in early March
2020 the government started off pursuing a herd immunity strategy. Boris stuck
to his guns on this for two weeks. As late as March 12, his chief science
advisor Patrick Vallance was on TV explaining and defending herd immunity.
But the government was on the brink of caving in at that point, under pressure
from unions. I now know that the unions were active around Covid 19 earlier
than I had previously thought, as far back as February, and they started making
threats in the second week of March, also earlier than I thought.
On February 12, the Chief Executives of
every local authority in England, Wales and Northern Ireland received a letter signed by the secretaries of GMB,
Unite and Unison (three unions with a combined membership of 3.2 million) and
the 'Employers Secretary' of the Local Government Association. The letter gives
notice of various government agencies that would ‘monitor the evolving
situation’ regarding Covid 19. After a few short paragraphs detailing some
further resources, the letter offers a terse reminder of the rules on sick pay:
‘An employee who is prevented from attending work because of contact with
infectious disease shall be entitled to receive normal pay.’ The letter then
signs off by saying: ‘In the event that an employee is required to self-isolate
or is placed in quarantine, the provision above should be applied.’ Obviously,
this is not inherently unreasonable. But there is something slightly ardent
about the letter; it gets to the point a little too eagerly. The message now
sounds like a call to arms, given what we know happened: public sector workers
developed a maniacal obsession with the spread of an infectious disease, to the
point of self-isolating without being ill, and even demanding the right to hide
at home on full pay for a year.
I’ve also unearthed a press release in which the GMB Union talked
about ‘briefing’ its members on Covid 19 ‘in early February’. I don’t know what
was said in the briefing. But clearly the unions were waking up to the threat,
or perhaps I should say the opportunity, of Covid 19 much earlier than the
general public. And no doubt the government will have known that the unions
were on the case. I have often wondered why the government was somewhat
restrained in its defence of herd immunity. In the first two weeks of March, we
saw ministers fall into a pattern that quickly became entrenched: they refused
to rule out escalating the Covid response, in case they needed to cave in
further down the line. If the government knew that there were rumblings from
the unions as early as February, no wonder ministers hedged their bets from the
start. The hedging will have included the notorious £119 million
advertising contract that the government took out on
March 2 for the forthcoming coronavirus campaign. The contract spelled out
three potential tiers of messaging, from less severe advice (wash your hands)
to more severe advice (stay home). Presumably, ministers knew that they
wouldn’t be able control how far the coronapanic escalated; it would depend on
the reaction of the public and the public sector.
By the second week of March, unions
were openly pressuring the government. The first instance may seem trivial, but
it had a knock-on effect that was far from trivial. On March 9, Unison started complaining about cleaners being
asked to do a ‘deep clean’ in schools. The issue can be traced back to
February, when two schools in England – one in Cheshire, the other in
Middlesbrough – were closed after their pupils had returned from
a trip to Italy. A few pupils had shown ‘flu-like symptoms’; the schools
reopened only after a deep clean. On March 9, Unison insisted that any member
of staff responsible for ‘decontaminating’ a school should contact their Unison
rep to ensure that the school conducts a ‘risk assessment’ and provides PPE,
including face masks. This intervention from Unison was unhelpful, to say the
least. The message coming from the government was that Covid 19 was a mild
disease and that the spread of the virus among non-vulnerable people was no bad
thing; on the contrary, the spread would help us achieve herd immunity sooner,
enabling vulnerable people to come out of hiding sooner. Unfortunately, in
schools, a completely different mentality was brewing, according to which the
working environment was potentially so contaminated that it couldn’t even be
cleaned normally. No wonder teaching unions went on to become the most insane
Covid lobbyists of all.
The next day, March 10, another union
kicked off, along related lines. GMB began complaining that its NHS members
were receiving a lack of adequate protection at work. In a press release, the union declared:
‘GMB members working in the NHS say
they are being exposed to coronavirus patients but that they have not yet been
provided with advice, training, protective clothing or hand sanitisers by NHS
trusts.’
A ‘GMB Organiser’, Helen O’Connor, is
quoted as saying:
‘The anger amongst our NHS members is
growing and they are calling for immediate action and resources to deal with
the risks they face or they will not come into work.’
Needless to say, that last remark is
shocking. I don’t know how high up this mutiny went within the NHS hierarchy,
but medical staff refusing to come to work without adequate PPE was a
significant escalation of the coronapanic debacle. PPE for health workers
became a cause célèbre in the media over the next few weeks,
and other unions soon weighed in on the issue, including Unison, which has
nearly half a million members working in healthcare. The government was forced
onto the back foot very early by the furore over PPE.
And, perhaps most importantly, there
was powerful symbolism involved in this early furore. The idea that medical
staff urgently needed extreme protection, protection which the government was
failing to supply, created the impression of a terrifying plague that ministers
weren’t taking seriously enough. In turn, the furore over PPE will inevitably
have fanned the flames of future union mutinies, providing an implicit
justification for them. The episode will also have fed into the ‘Protect the
NHS’ narrative which cowed the public so effectively during the lockdowns.
Granted, I am not an expert on infection control in healthcare settings. I do
not know what was the appropriate PPE for any medic during any stage of the
pandemic. But I do know that socialist unions should not have been dictating
the issue.
By March 13, Boris was starting to
crack. That day, he revealed that mass gatherings would be banned. He admitted
that there was no scientific reason for the ban; the only reason, he said, was
to avoid placing a ‘burden’ on public services. He specifically mentioned the
‘emergency services’ being stretched by mass gatherings. But I have now
discovered that there was another source of pressure on Boris at that time. On
March 13, the RMT, the rail workers union, issued a threatening press release. (The RMT is the same union that
forced the masks on public transport mandate later that summer by threatening
to strike.) In their March 13 press release, the RMT complained about what they
called a lack of ‘leadership’ around coronavirus both regionally and nationally.
Mick Cash, the RMT’s general secretary, said: ‘The union will take whatever
action is required to protect the well-being and livelihoods of our members.’
The press release also spoke of the RMT joining forces with some unnamed London
Underground unions. So more than one transport union was kicking off. No doubt
the RMT will have been concerned about the ‘burden’ that mass gatherings would
place on the transport system. Given the timing, we can assume that Boris
banned mass gatherings at least in part because he was trying to placate the
RMT and other rail unions.
And that was just the start of Boris’s
U-turning. From March 13 to March 18, the government’s herd
immunity strategy crumbled spectacularly, ultimately sending the whole nation
into lockdown. Each day, there were important developments leading to that
outcome.
On March 14, the NEU wrote an
open letter to the government asking why all
schools weren’t being closed. In this letter, the NEU said to Boris: ‘We now
see that you may take legal powers to force schools to remain open even when
heads and teachers think there is good reason to close.’ Clearly, there was a
battle taking place between the government and the teachers. Boris wanted to
keep schools open, and he said this many times in public over the next few
days. And you can appreciate why he held this view. Schools were central to the
whole outlook of Britain. Closing them would have a profound effect, not just
on the kids but on the parents who would struggle to get out to work if their
kids were at home in the daytime.
Bearing this in mind, Boris’s next move
was significant. On March 15, the day after the NEU had kicked off, he made a
telephone call to someone rather unexpected. A short press release on the government’s official
website indicates that Boris telephoned… the Prime Minister of Japan. Now
that’s a bit weird, isn’t it? Why telephone the Japanese PM, of all people?
Here’s what I think the reason is. In Japan, the government closed all the
schools at the start of March, but kept the economy open. This was a very
unusual arrangement. I don’t know of anywhere else in the world where the
schools were shut but there wasn’t a full lockdown. Perhaps this arrangement
was viable in Japan because gender roles are still quite traditional in
Japanese culture; basically, the women are encouraged to stay home and raise
the kids. Even so, there are reports that Japanese parents were unhappy
about the disruption caused by the schools closures. Presumably Boris phoned
the Japanese PM to find out know how much political damage closing the schools
without a lockdown had caused. A similar decision in Britain was bound to cause
even more political damage, because British mums are more likely to go to out
to work than their Japanese counterparts.
Whatever happened during that phone
call, the prospect of closing schools was obviously on Boris’s mind on March
15, and he was obviously exploring the possibility of keeping the economy open
in the face of an ongoing mutiny by the teachers. Alas, Boris was about to face
another forceful ramping up of pressure. What I am about to convey to you is
extremely important information that almost no one is aware of.
On March 16, the TUC made a remarkable
intervention into the proceedings. The TUC is a federation of unions,
representing the majority of unions, 48 in total, with members working
throughout the economy but mostly in the public sector. The combined membership
of the TUC is 5.5 million people. In other words: a very powerful lobby,
especially given its embeddedness within the governing structures of Britain.
On March 16, the TUC held a webinar in which two presenters communicated
various demands to the government. Watching the webinar, a few points stand
out. First of all, there’s the fact that the TUC was making ‘demands’. Not
suggestions. Not even requests. Demands. The unions have been using this kind
of bossy menacing language towards the government throughout the coronapanic.
Another thing that stands out is one of
the specific demands made by the TUC. They wanted ‘full pay for workers
affected by schools closures’. This is interesting because among the TUC’s
affiliated unions, there are nine unions with teaching members. I think it’s a
fair assumption that all nine teaching unions were pressuring the government to
close schools, with the NEU publicly spearheading the campaign, and the TUC acting
as a sort of central hub. And note the presumptuousness of the TUC talking
about schools closures, when the government was at this point still trying to
keep schools open. The teaching unions must have been very determined, indeed
confident of getting their way.
Also note the phrasing: full pay for
workers affected by schools closures. The TUC wasn’t just talking about full
pay for people who worked in schools, but for any workers
affected by schools closures. This will have resonated with Boris following his
phone call to Japan. He will have known that closing schools would send a
shockwave through the whole economy. Parents would face huge inconvenience, and
here was the TUC demanding full pay for anyone affected. As one of the
presenters explains: ‘We don’t want anyone to be going without an income during
these difficult and uncertain times.’
This point is related to a more general
demand made by the TUC. They wanted the government to provide economic
subsidies during the pandemic to mitigate any disruption faced by workers and
their employers. To this end, the TUC wanted ministers to ‘Immediately
establish a task force including trade unions, so that we can work together
with employers and the government agencies to safeguard jobs and industries’.
Well this is all very interesting,
isn’t it, because, a week later, the government announced a furlough scheme
which aimed to do exactly what the TUC had demanded. The TUC later described
furlough as a 'big win', one which was achieved after 'intensive negotiations' between 'the TUC and
other unions' and the government. The Confederation of British Industry was
also involved in the negotiations, perhaps helping to crystallise the
'taskforce' that the TUC had demanded. I don't know if any government-union
taskforce was ever formally established, but I do know that the first
mention of government intervention to support working parents and protect jobs
and industries came from the TUC. And the TUC got their way.
Of course, you may question why the government would listen to the TUC on this matter. The next revelations from the webinar are even more explosive. When discussing the role of union reps during the pandemic, a presenter suggests ‘thinking about industrial action you can take’. Obviously this statement speaks for itself. And it’s very damning. What an outrage that the TUC was encouraging its reps to think about industrial action at a time when the nation was supposed to be pulling together. And it gets more damning. Later in the webinar, the presenter specifies exactly what sort of mutiny the TUC has in mind. Speaking about the UCU, the academic union, she says:
‘Some branches are already talking
about using the Health and Safety Act to refuse to carry out duties, and we
will post specific advice on that after the webinar. It’s quite technical and
we want to make sure people are getting things right. Any union could make the
same demand on an employer, or organise industrially for a work from home
policy.’
Wow. There’s a lot to take in there.
Let’s go through it carefully. First of all, note the nature of the mutiny:
employees using Health and Safety legislation to refuse to carry out duties.
Second, note that this mutiny was already being talked about, and probably
already happening, at branch level in at least one union. Third, note that the TUC was proposing a similar mutiny in other unions, albeit using carefully crafted language to avoid responsibility.
Fourth, note that the TUC was talking about unions organising industrially for
a work from home policy. Later in the seminar, the TUC indicates that even
people who can’t work from home, e.g. cleaners and security staff, could demand
full pay while avoiding the workplace. The presenter uses the phrase ‘forcing
of the employer’s hands’ to describe this overall mutiny.
It’s shocking, isn’t it? Basically the TUC was stoking up a huge unofficial strike, executed by way of unionised workers pressuring their bosses
into allowing them to stay at home on full pay, on so-called Health and Safety
grounds. And all the while, the TUC had the absolute nerve to demand government
financial intervention to mitigate the effects of the mutiny.
Granted, you could argue that the TUC’s
webinar might not have been that impactful. I don’t know how many people
watched it live, and it seems that only around 1400 have watched it on YouTube.
But then again, you have to remember: many of the people who watched the
webinar will have been reps, who then stirred up further trouble at branch
level. And the TUC gave the impression that it was talking about events that
were already happening, presumably reflecting the general mood among its
affiliated unions. Also the TUC probably used other media such as emails to
communicate the information presented in the webinar (which included powerpoint
slides). In fact, two days earlier, on March 14, the TUC had issued a newsletter to all its member
unions. The newsletter called for the government to set up ‘an emergency
support package for workers affected by the virus’, and to create the
union-government taskforce mentioned in the forthcoming webinar. We can assume
that the scale of the TUC work from home mutiny was large.
Indeed, in the webinar, the TUC
disclosed that the UCU had "formally called for universities to close". The presenter says ‘for
example’ when discussing the UCU demand, which makes you wonder if
other unions made similar demands behind the scenes. And let’s remember
that the RMT had kicked off on March 13, while the NEU and other teaching
unions had been agitating since March 14 for schools closures. There’s no doubt
about it: unions were causing big trouble for the government in mid-March
2020.
So that was the backdrop to the next
significant event on Boris’s road to capitulation. At 8pm on March 16, the
government held a press conference, five hours after the TUC
webinar. With Boris flanked by his main science advisors Patrick Vallance and
Chris Whitty, the press conference was a turning point for the government and
the country, featuring a dramatic ramping up of the coronapanic measures. The
occasion had an air of unreality about it. Many of us knew something wasn’t
quite right, but we couldn’t quite put our finger on it. Now I think I know
exactly what was wrong: the entire press conference was one monumental exercise
in spin.
In order to show this, first of all let
me run through what was conveyed to us at that crucial press conference on
March 16.
The headline message was that the
government was now asking us to avoid all non-essential travel and
non-essential contact. We were asked to work from home where possible and avoid
social venues. This was obviously a huge escalation. But it was also qualified
in a couple of ways.
For a start, it wasn’t a legal ruling.
It was guidance, not a lockdown. Patrick Vallance clearly stated that they were
merely ‘recommending’ the measures. Boris said he was issuing ‘very strong
advice’. And the advice was itself caveated. Boris stated that avoiding
unnecessary social contact was ‘particularly important’ for vulnerable people.
In other words: sticking to the guidance was less important for some people
than for others. You’d never say that about an actual law, say, the law against
arson. The guidance was somewhat flexible.
Taking this into account, the social
distancing guidance outlined by the British government on March 16 wasn’t
substantially different from the guidance that had been issued by the Swedish
government. Sweden famously remained open, because its measures around social
distancing, avoiding travel, and working from home were all voluntary. Let’s
also remember that the schools remained open in Sweden, largely because the
Swedish teaching unions were compliant. On March 16, Boris said he wanted to
keep the schools open in Britain. I quote: ‘We think it's better we can keep
schools open for all sorts of reasons.’
Of course, the press conference also
contained a lot of fearmongering. Boris and his advisors kept talking about the
‘fast growth’ phase of the virus; we were ‘accelerating up the curve’ of
infections, apparently. We were also told about ‘new numbers’. The new numbers
had come from a paper published on the same day by Professor Neil Ferguson, who
was predicting that half a million people could die from Covid 19. After the Q
and A, journalists were ushered into an off-camera briefing where
they were shown graphs and statistics about the terrible death toll that was
allegedly in prospect if the government didn’t take drastic measures to stop
the spread of Covid 19. By wheeling out Ferguson’s predictions at the March 16
press conference, the government launched him and his work into national
prominence.
But curiously, even the fearmongering
was qualified that evening. Chris Whitty in particular seemed to go out of his
way to downplay the threat from Covid 19. He said that for the ‘great majority’
of people, it would be a mild illness; many people wouldn’t even know they were
ill. He said that the great majority of deaths would be among people who were
already in poor health. And he talked about the harms that social distancing
itself would cause, thus putting the minimal risks of Covid 19 in perspective.
So there were some curious contrasts at
the government’s March 16 press conference. The measures were being ramped up,
but not in any legal sense. And, likewise, the fearmongering was being ramped
up, but we were also being told that Covid 19 was generally a mild illness.
And there was another curious contrast.
As well as telling us ALL to avoid social contact, Boris and his advisers
rolled out some social distancing measures that were targeted at specific
groups. We were told that whole households should isolate if one person had
Covid. And we were told that vulnerable people should isolate for the next 12
weeks. It was a bit strange to be presented with these targeted measures when
we were ALL supposed to be social distancing. Again, the drastic message was
combined with significant qualifications.
What was going on?
Well Boris will have known that the
unions were up in arms. He will have known about the RMT making threats, the
education unions agitating for schools closures, the UCU trying to shut down
universities, and the TUC encouraging its 5.5 million members to pressure their
employers into allowing home working. Boris had two options on March 16: he
could tell a lot of angry people to stop misbehaving and get on with their
jobs, or he could pretend that he was in charge of events. He chose the latter.
He was like a bystander who suddenly runs out in front of a parade and pretends
to be leading it. He issued the work from home guidance on March 16 because he
needed to give the impression of being proactive about something that was going
to happen whether he liked it or not. I think he just bolted the work from home
guidance onto the more targeted measures that he had originally intended to
present that day. At the same time, he could hardly advise working from home if
he wasn’t consistent about social distancing. There was no point people working
from home if they were just going to go out to the pub in the evening; hence
Boris also advised us to avoid social venues. There was a knock-on effect where
the measures expanded because he couldn’t advocate one without the other. All
in all, the March 16 press conference was an extremely cynical exercise in
spin, with the government advising us to avoid all social contact so that the
government could avoid confronting the unions.
When you understand this, watching the
press conference in hindsight is a creepy experience. You can see Boris,
Vallance and Whitty trying to present a coherent picture, but the overall
message has obviously been cobbled together in response to the unions. For
example, we’ve already seen that Boris said we were all supposed to be social
distancing, but that it was ‘particularly important’ for vulnerable people to
do so; the phrase ‘particularly important’ was like a bridge between the
ludicrous bolted-on message and the sensible message that the government had
originally intended to convey.
Another example is that Vallance tried
to link the advice against attending social venues with the previously announced
ban on mass gatherings. You can hear that he’s talking like a spin doctor, not
a scientist. He says: ‘Gatherings are important, big or small, so you get the
whole thing together; it's not just the size of the gatherings, it’s all
gatherings which become important’. They become important?
What a strange phrase! I guess he meant: they become important when you’re
being bullied by unions and you’re trying to seem coherent.
Above all, you can hear that the three
men were obviously very keen to explain their sudden U-turn on herd immunity,
to hide the fact that they had caved in to the unions. Boris asked ‘Why now?’
as though he was pre-empting the question before journalists asked it. The
three men kept talking about the importance of getting the ‘timing’ right. They
told us that the government hadn’t acted before now because they didn’t want to
‘act in advance of need’. Now was the right time to abandon herd immunity, we
were told, because now we were accelerating up the curve; there was a ‘fast
upswing’. A lot of metaphors were flying around that day! Perhaps that’s
because, beneath all the metaphors, the change in policy made no sense
whatsoever. The whole idea behind herd immunity was that Covid would be a mild
disease for most people. For this reason, mass infection was to be welcomed;
ultimately it would enable the vulnerable to come out of hiding. Abandoning
herd immunity because there was an upswing in infections was incoherent.
The men also talked about ventilators,
which was obviously another line agreed in advance. We were told that a
shortage of ventilators was why the government suddenly had to U-turn. Yet
nobody had mentioned ventilators in the previous weeks or months. The
government could easily have manufactured all the essential medical equipment
during that time. And we haven’t heard a peep about ventilators ever since,
because you can’t keep trotting out an obviously fixable problem every time you
cave in to union demands.
Whitty also came up with a couple of
even more creative excuses for the U-turn. For instance, he said Covid was now
a ‘very global disease’; supposedly, we needed to take a different approach now
that Britain wasn’t one of the first countries affected. But that made no sense
either: what difference does it makes to the spread of a disease in Britain if
it also happens to be spreading elsewhere, e.g. Peru? The government was
already requiring international travellers to self-isolate if they developed
symptoms after arriving in Britain. And anyway, when the government first
decided to pursue herd immunity, they already knew it was a global pandemic. Or
maybe I’m missing the point here: maybe there’s an important difference between
a global disease and a ‘very global disease’.
Whitty also claimed that he was ‘proud’
of the NHS for ‘delaying this’, as though herd immunity would have been
abandoned sooner if the NHS hadn’t done such a great job. But again, the claim
made no sense: the whole point of herd immunity was that delaying the spread of
the infection was a bad idea, not a good idea.
Watching the press conference back, you
get the impression that the three men were neurotically obsessed with
justifying the timing of the measures, like naughty little boys trying not to
get caught. At one point, Boris made some remarks about the progress of the
disease in London. Let me quote him at length:
‘It looks as though London is now a few
weeks ahead. So, to relieve the pressure on the London health system and to
slow the spread in London, it’s important that Londoners now pay special
attention to what we are saying about avoiding non-essential contact, and to
take particularly seriously the advice about working from home, and avoiding
confined spaces such as pubs and restaurants.’
I hope you are beginning to get a feel
for the shiftiness of it all. Consider that phrase ‘It looks as though’. It’s
just ludicrously imprecise, given that all this advice was supposed to be
scientific. And again we see that measures that were supposed to apply to
everyone were being emphasised for specific people, namely, Londoners. But most
importantly, it’s very, very fishy that Boris chose to emphasise London at this
particular time. Remember: three days before, the RMT, the rail workers union,
had said they would take whatever action is required to protect their members.
In the press release on March 13, the RMT had complained about 'inertia' at
regional and national level, but they had noted specifically that they were
joining forces with London Underground unions. Clearly London was a hub for the
unrest among rail unions. No wonder Boris told Londoners to pay special
attention to the social distancing advice. His comment about the London health
system should be taken with a pinch of salt. He was trying to smooth things
over with the London rail unions. He urgently wanted to get Londoners off the
Tube in case he was faced with industrial action.
And there’s more that’s creepy about
the March 16 press conference, around this issue of timing. Boris said that the
measures he has outlined are the ‘right package for this particular moment’.
Vallance, similarly, talked about doing things in the 'right combinations' at the 'right time'. Looking back, this is just laughable. The idea that science can
tell us the right combinations of draconian restrictions to take at the right
times to stop the spread of a cold is just ridiculous. What does the word
‘right’ even mean in this context? How many right combinations are there? What
would a wrong combination look like? What would the right combination look like
at the wrong time? Or vice versa?
Looking beneath the spin, it’s obvious
why this idea of combinations was useful to the government. What measures the
government took would depend on what measures the unions were demanding at any
particular time. The very randomness of the idea of the right combinations was
in fact perfectly designed to reflect the randomness of the demands the unions
were inclined to make. Throughout the whole coronapanic debacle, we’ve seen the
government plucking combinations of measures out of thin air, based on the
arbitrary whims of the unions.
So at the March 16 press conference,
the government offered many spurious justifications for the sudden U-turn. But
there was one justification that trumped all the rest: the idea that half a
million people could die from Covid 19, according to new research published by Neil Ferguson that
day. This potential death toll was alarming, and it has been credited with
driving the government’s coronapanic measures in mid-March. But hang on! I hope
by now you will be suspicious of the accepted narrative. Given that the
government was desperately trying to justify the timing of the new measures, so
that nobody would find out that ministers were in fact caving in to the unions,
I think it’s highly likely that Ferguson’s research was wheeled out to supply
such a justification. In other words, the conventional narrative is back to
front: the government’s decision to U-turn caused them to focus on Ferguson,
not the other way round. Wheeling out Ferguson was a colossal exercise in spin.
And that’s a colossal scandal if true.
But it fits the facts. The government knew about Ferguson’s results at least a
week before March 16. Ferguson himself has admitted it. Let me quote him:
‘The government were aware of what our
results were showing certainly in the previous week, and some of the results in
the previous two weeks.’
And if that bombshell isn’t enough,
Ferguson adds an even more damning comment. He says:
‘The paper came out that day partly
because there was pressure on government to be showing the modelling informing
policy making’.
You can see the smoke billowing from
the gun. The pressure was political; the government was trying to appear to be
in charge, trying to appear to be rational, when the truth was quite the
opposite; they were caving in to the demands of lunatic unions. Ferguson's
research was wheeled out to spin the U-turn.
Let’s also remember that Whitty and
Vallance were the architects of the herd immunity strategy. They too will have
known about Ferguson’s research in advance, so presumably they were now
standing up and promoting his barmy ideas solely because they were under
political pressure to do so. Of course, you could argue that Whitty and
Vallance had change their minds, but it doesn’t seem likely. As far as I can
see, neither of them independently gave any indication around the time of the
March 16 press conference that they supported a sudden U-turn into the lunacy
of social distancing.
And neither of them looks very
comfortable during the press conference. They can’t have been very happy about
being told to rip up their previous advice and start rationalising lunacy.
Whitty seemed especially uncomfortable. At one point he asked: ‘You might say
why with a disease which the great majority of people are going to recover
from, and most will have a mild or non-noticeable disease, would we want to do
anything at all?’ It’s a very good question! Often Whitty seemed contemptuous
of the whole idea of supressing a cold through short term draconian
restrictions. He said: ‘This is going to go on for a very long time, and we
should not be under any illusions that if we just do this for a couple of
weeks, that will be sufficient’. It’s quite poignant hearing those honest words
back, isn’t it?
Another relevant fact here: there is
a buzzfeed article quoting a ‘source’ who
suggests that both Whitty and Vallance favoured a return to the herd immunity
strategy as soon as possible. Interestingly, at the press conference, they both
emphasised the need to develop a test to establish how many people had had
Covid 19 asymptomatically. Whitty said such a test would be ‘transformational’.
I think this test was important to he and Vallance, because they will have
assumed that as soon as they could get a better insight into how many people
had had the disease asymptomatically, they could revert to their original herd
immunity strategy. They could potentially show that Britain was already far
down the path of herd immunity, and, in doing so, they could put a stop to the
nonsense of suppressing a cold through social distancing. Sadly, reason didn’t
prevail, and the nonsense continued even when the test was available. But the
important thing here is that Whitty and Vallance clearly wanted to prove that
the March 16 guidance was ludicrous. They were backing the guidance grudgingly,
because the government’s spin machine required them to do so.
And don’t forget about the journalists
being ushered aside and shown Ferguson’s data after the press conference. This
move had all the hallmarks of a spin operation. The government will have wanted
the headline writers to be in no doubt that there was a so-called scientific
reason for the U-turn. And, indeed, if you want a pseudo-scientific doomsday
prediction, Ferguson is the man you want to call on. He has a track record of this sort of thing. During the
Swine Flu outbreak, one of his models predicted that 65,000 people could die –
the final figure was below 500. During the BSE panic, Ferguson warned the
government that 150,000 people could die. Six million animals were slaughtered
as a precaution – in the end, 200 people died. And during the Bird Flu
outbreak, Ferguson outdid himself and said that 200 million could die – the
true number was in the low hundreds. When faced with a massive union mutiny in
mid-March 2020, you can imagine Boris thinking *We’re gonna have to U-turn, and
we’re gonna have to spin like crazy, with some scary statistics; let’s let
Ferguson loose*.
Actually that scenario is probably not
even as scandalous as the full truth. The government probably directly
influenced the content of Ferguson’s paper. This might sound fanciful but in
fact it’s normal procedure, judging by a recent exchange on Twitter between the
journalist Fraser Nelson and Graham Medley, who is a Professor of Infectious
Disease. Referring to the prospect of restrictions over the Christmas period in
2021, Nelson asked Medley why modellers hadn’t considered the possibility that
the Omicron variant is mild. Medley replied: ‘We generally model what we are asked to
model. There is a dialogue in which policy teams discuss with the modellers
what they need to inform their policy’. That’s a jawdropping statement. Having
heard it, we’re entitled to wonder if such a ‘dialogue’ took place in March
2020 between the government and Ferguson. We’re entitled to wonder if Ferguson
was asked to produce doomsday predictions because this was what the policy
teams needed to inform their policy.
That’s speculation. But there is
evidence strongly suggesting that the government influenced Ferguson’s paper in
at least one way. The evidence concerns the issue of schools closures. At the
March 16 press conference, Boris, Whitty and Vallance all kept emphasising that
schools closures may be necessary at the right time. Boris said closing the
schools was something the government was keeping ‘under review’. Remember that
the NEU had been openly agitating for schools closures since March 14, probably
with the support of the other eight teaching unions. The NEU had even alleged
that the government was exploring legal action to keep the schools open. So
when Boris talked about schools closures as something that was under review on
March 16, he was being shifty; keeping schools open depended on whether or not
the teaching unions backed down.
Here’s why this issue points towards a strong likelihood that Ferguson’s research was influenced by the government. Astonishingly, in Ferguson’s paper, he too endorsed the shifty idea that the government ‘may’ need to close schools. Indeed, the claim can be found in the paper’s abstract – the part of the paper that journalists were most likely to read. Ferguson notes that suppressing the virus would involve social distancing and whole households isolating, to which he adds: ‘This may need to be supplemented by school and university closures’. Oh, fancy that. Exactly the sort of message you would want to hear if you were a politician readying yourself for a possible capitulation to mutinous teaching unions. And let’s also not forget that the UCU, the academic union, was trying to shut down universities at that time. Ferguson’s message was right on cue there too.
This matter is so grave, I won’t rely
on sarcasm to make the point. Ferguson’s paper was supposed to be a serious
scientific document modelling a pandemic. We were entitled to expect rigour and
precision, especially when we were being asked to participate in the nightmare
of social distancing for an unspecified period of time. Yet when it came to
schools and universities, the most that Ferguson’s paper was able to say was
that they ‘may’ need to close. Where was the precision? And if the whole point
of social distancing was to prevent mass death, wouldn’t closing schools and
universities have been an essential precaution? Granted, Ferguson did try to
quantify the potential effects of closing schools and universities, arguing
that the closures may not be necessary because the NHS might be able to cope
without the closures. But, still, the argument is a little too convenient.
Apparently, Ferguson’s modelling just couldn’t quite say for sure whether the
NHS would be tipped over the edge if schools and universities remained open.
And nor did he address the most obvious objection: if the hospitals had started
filling up with 80-year-olds, no scientist in their right mind would have
blamed it on the virus spreading among young people. I cannot see any way to
make sense of Ferguson’s equivocation over closing schools and universities
other than by assuming that the government required him to include the
equivocation in his paper.
It’s not as if Ferguson wasn’t capable
of making confident assertions about schools closures. Later in the paper, he
declares ‘school closure is predicted to be insufficient to mitigate (never
mind supress) an epidemic in isolation’. In other words: closing schools while
leaving the economy open – the Japan option – would be insufficient, according
to Ferguson. Exactly the line that the British government ended up taking.
We’re entitled to wonder if Ferguson was instructed to include this point too,
given the obvious whiff of collusion around the idea that schools ‘may’ need to
close.
And it wasn’t just schools closures
where Ferguson opened the door to a government climbdown. Several times in the
paper, including in the abstract, we find Ferguson peddling the idea of
‘combined’ measures – the same idea the politicians kept peddling. Granted,
there is an element of truth behind the idea. Obviously the more stuff you shut
down, the fewer opportunities people will have to mix socially. But it would be
more accurate to speak of ‘cumulative measures’. The word ‘combinations’ seems
to suggest some extra property that individual measures acquire when joined
together, like a flurry of different punches that floors a boxer. And it’s very
telling that the new measures Ferguson discussed as potential combinations just
happened to tally up with the measures that were on the government’s radar at
the time: possible schools and universities closures, to placate the unions,
and a social distancing policy, again to placate the unions, along with whole
household isolation and shielding the vulnerable. If Ferguson had thrown in
some analyses of other specific measures – for instance, shutting down cinemas
or sports clubs or dating apps – his concept of combinations might have seemed
less fishy. We’re entitled to ask if the government instructed him to talk
about combinations because the concept was useful to the government.
All in all, the Ferguson episode
reminds me of the so-called sexed-up dossier that led to Britain’s
participation in the Iraq war. BBC reporter Andrew Gilligan famously alleged
that the intelligence officers who had compiled the dossier had been pressured
by the government to include scary claims, including the infamous claim that
Saddam Hussain could unleash weapons of mass destruction in 45 minutes.
Politicians wheeled out the dossier to support the decision to invade Iraq, a
decision that had in fact been made on other grounds. Likewise, Ferguson’s
paper may have been sexed up to justify the government’s decision to mandate
social distancing and (possibly) schools and universities closures, while all
those decisions would in fact made on other grounds, namely, caving in to the
unions.
Anyway, whether or not the government
sexed up Ferguson’s paper, his research was almost certainly wheeled out on
March 16 in order to spin a U-turn that was based on massive union unrest.
There is one more piece of evidence that suggests this. It comes inadvertently
from the testimony of Dominic Cummings who was involved in the decision-making
process at that time. In interviews, Cummings has claimed that he and two data
scientists, the brothers Ben and Marc Warner, persuaded Boris to change his
mind about herd immunity. Cummings says: ‘It was like a scene from Independence
Day with Jeff Goldblum saying the aliens are here and your plan is broken,
you're going to need a new plan’. This interaction is supposed to have happened
on March 14.
Do you believe that Cummings was the
one who changed Boris’s mind? Well, glossing over the fact that Cummings uses
an example from science fiction to illustrate the scene, I’m
not even convinced Cummings believes his own account, because he admits that
Boris was still sceptical in the days that followed. In my opinion, Cummings is
telling an obvious lie. But then if Cummings is lying, why didn’t Boris correct
him publicly? Presumably, the reason is that Boris wasn’t keen to have any sort
of public discussion of the events leading up to March 16, because any
retrospective scrutiny of that period could place him in very hot water. The
awkward truth, which neither man will have wanted to admit, was that unions
drove the government into the measures on March 16. Cummings felt emboldened to
claim that he was the hero of the hour because he knew Boris wasn’t going to
dare contradict him.
As well as claiming that Boris remained
sceptical after March 14, Cummings has also claimed that there was no government
plan to lockdown on March 16. This seems plausible: no indication of a
forthcoming lockdown was given at the press conference. Boris certainly gave
the impression of not favouring legal enforcement. He said: ‘Most people would
accept that we are a mature and grown up and liberal democracy where people
understand very clearly the advice that is being given to them’. At one point,
a journalist basically came out and asked Boris if there would be a lockdown.
Boris didn’t say yes. But he did say ‘we’re keeping all measures under review’.
He then immediately added ‘particularly, people will be thinking about schools
closures’. That’s interesting because we know that closing schools was another
thing which the government said was under review. And we know that Boris was
trying to avoid closing schools, so we can assume that keeping lockdown ‘under
review’ likewise meant trying to avoid lockdown. Tellingly, Boris then added:
‘there is an argument about schools closures’. That’s also a revealing choice
of phrase, because there was indeed an argument taking place – between the
government and the teaching unions.
And we now know that the government
lost that argument. The very next day, March 17, the mutinous teachers upped
the ante. The NEU wrote another open letter to the government, this time
explicitly demanding the closure of all schools, and threatening to support any
Heads who unilaterally closed schools. Furthermore, I have been told
anecdotally that in mid-March many teachers were handing in Section 44 letters
to Heads, in line with the wider work from home mutiny being stoked by the TUC.
Meanwhile, on March 17 a petition from parents and teachers calling for schools
closures reached almost 640,000 signatories. (I have also discovered that
the PCS Union - the civil service union - reported that they 'met the Cabinet Office'
on March 17, 'to raise concerns about the impact the coronavirus outbreak is
having on our members'. More pressure on Boris.) On March 18,
the day after the NEU had openly threatened unilateral schools closures, the
government caved in, announcing that all schools would close. On Friday March
20, the same day the schools shut their gates, the government announced that
the rest of the economy was closing too. Looking back at the March 16 press
conference, we can see clearly why Boris immediately mentioned the prospect of
schools closures after he was asked about the prospect of a lockdown. Both
prospects were 'under review' because they were, in practice, equivalent.
Following his phone call to Japan on March 15, Boris had obviously concluded
that trying to keep the economy open without schools would cause too much
chaos. The schools closures plunged Britain into lockdown.
So there you have it. March 13 to March
18: five decisive days leading to a manmade catastrophe. And of those five
days, March 16 was especially pivotal. It was an inflection point. On one hand,
Boris announced drastic measures that day, in order to hide a massive union
mutiny that was already taking place. The RMT was making threats, the UCU was trying to shut universities,
and the TUC – a federation of 48 unions – was stoking a work from home mutiny.
On the other hand, Boris was also trying to hold back the tide that day, trying
to prevent schools closures, to avoid a full lockdown. The guidance he issued
on March 16 was his last throw of the dice. If he could get the country on
board with voluntary social distancing, maybe the teachers would be less
anxious about the spread of Covid; maybe they would agree to keep the schools
open. It didn’t work. Within 48 hours of saying that the schools ‘may’ need to
close, the government had decided that schools definitely did need to close,
thanks to the NEU’s determination to force the issue.
Britain’s coronapanic debacle was
caused by a union mutiny in March 2020. If you still doubt this, imagine a
parallel universe in which the unions didn’t mutiny. Imagine if the unions had
recognised that Boris’s herd immunity policy was both wise and humane. Imagine
if the unions had understood that young and healthy people had an obligation to
keep the economy going, to protect the vulnerable. Imagine if the unions had
accepted that they had no right to demand special treatment when the virus was
infecting people indiscriminately. Imagine if the unions had pledged to do
everything within their power to keep Britain open and protect children from
harm. Do you really think the government would have abandoned herd immunity in
those circumstances, after holding firm for two weeks? Yes, the media was
stoking fears, and there was widespread panic throughout Britain, but it wasn’t
until the unions started kicking off in mid-March that the government started
caving in, in eerie synchrony with the specific demands being made by the
unions.
And, of course, as I have showed in my
essay and my other videos, the government has carried on caving in to specific
union demands – masks on public transport, masks in shops, masks in schools,
the second lockdown, the third lockdown, last year’s ruined Christmas, and
vaccines in schools. All were union driven. And the government is still caving
in to the unions. This winter, we’ve seen the RMT demand masks on trains again
and USDAW demand masks in shops again; we’ve seen the government cave in. We’ve
seen the BMA and NHS Confederation pressuring the government to enact Plan B,
including Covid passes; we’ve seen the government cave in. In the process,
we’ve seen Boris claim that a new variant of Covid necessitated the new
measures, the same mendacious excuse he used for the third lockdown. There
always seems to be a new variant ready to hand when a capitulation is in
progress. Needless to say, no one involved in the sham has bothered to
emphasise that Omicron is a particularly mild variant of Covid.
Recently I’ve discovered that NHS
Confederation has been ‘working closely‘ with NHSX, the organisation that
built and designed the Covid Passes. By way of this partnership, the NHS has
lobbied the government to mandate Covid passes, because the new technology will
boost vaccine uptake, and vaccines are highly profitable for the NHS. The BMA
has also been heavily involved in lobbying for Covid Passes. The whole damn
scheme is extortion, pure and simple. At the same time, we’ve seen Boris
himself calling for a national vaccination campaign to supress the Omicron
variant. Having spun his way into the coronapanic debacle, he’s still trying to
spin his way out, using vaccines as an exit strategy. No wonder a PM who places
so much emphasis on vaccination hasn’t been able to resist the pressure from
the NHS over Covid passes. Meanwhile, with Covid vaccine propaganda emanating
from both the government and the NHS, and with both sides ignoring evidence of
the adverse effects of the vaccines, the public is stuck in the middle, being
jabbed up to the eyeballs and treated like collateral. Horrifyingly, Boris has
even called for a national conversation about mandatory Covid vaccination.
Let me tell you now: I will never
submit. I will not be forced into taking a vaccine for a cold.
Finally, we’ve seen the despicable
teaching unions kicking off again, demanding the return of cruel and deranged
Covid measures in schools, including masks in corridors. The teachers are still
callously disregarding the welfare of the kids, and the government has
capitulated again. As I write, the teachers are rearing up for a showdown with
the government in the New Year, just like last January, when Boris sent the
whole country into lockdown to cover up the fact that the teaching unions were
refusing to return to work. Whether the schools reopen properly this January is
anyone’s guess.
It’s an unrelenting shambles, an
unspeakable disgrace. The fundamental problem is that the government won’t
confront all these insane union demands. To confront the unions properly, Boris
would have to say: ‘We don’t need to take any new measures’. But then the
socialist lunatics in the unions would start calling him a 'butcher' again.
He’d have to start defending herd immunity. And he’s not going to do that,
because if he defended herd immunity now, he’d be confessing that he should
never have abandoned the policy in the first place; he’d be confessing that the
whole coronapanic debacle was a monstrous overreaction. He’s in far too deep to
come clean. That’s why it’s so crucial that the public understands what really
happened in mid-March 2020, and what has been happening ever since. Those of us
who understand that the whole debacle has been union-driven need to educate the
rest of the public. When the public understands that none of this madness was
ever necessary, they will demand that ALL the Covid rules are discarded.
Democratic pressure is our only hope of escape. And telling the truth about the
unions is the only way to generate the required democratic pressure.
People often say that Boris has failed
to stand up to the unions because he is weak. I don’t know. Maybe he is, maybe
he isn’t. What I do know is that you can’t decide one way or
another without taking into account the parliamentary arithmetic Boris has
faced since the start. Let us remember that a British PM is ‘first among
equals’. No PM can exercise power without parliamentary support. A PM can try
to generate that support, but there are no guarantees of it. And let’s also
remember that the Labour Party has consistently advocated restrictions, as have
many members of Boris’s own party. All it would have taken was around 40
Conservative MPs withdrawing their support for Boris at any point and he would
no longer have had the support of a majority of MPs. It’s also worth noting
that on March 13, 2020, Jeremy Hunt, Boris’s former leadership rival, was
openly calling for schools closures and social
distancing. Boris would surely have faced a serious leadership challenge if he
had lost the support of parliament in the early stages, or indeed at any point
since. Hunt also went on to back the NEU in October 2020 over the
union’s demand for a circuit breaker – a demand which very likely caused the
second lockdown. And on January 2, Hunt called for schools to stay closed. He even
repeated the call on January 4, 2021, the day that the
NEU was mutinying. After the government caved in and closed the schools, the
NEU went as far as thanking Hunt for his support. Bearing all
this in mind, parliamentary arithmetic has probably been another reason the
coronapanic debacle has dragged on for so long. The PM has been hemmed in by
Covid zealous MPs as well as Covid zealous unions.
Actually, it’s possible that parliament
undermined Boris in the most palpable way at the start of the coronapanic.
During the March 16 press conference, a journalist asked Boris ‘Do you think
Westminster can stay open till July?’ Boris’s response was intriguing. He said
the ‘The speaker and all parties and the leader of the House of Commons are
working together to find a way forward’, adding: ‘There may be more to come on
this’. I wonder what went on behind the scenes. Whenever the PM has declared
that a course of action ‘may’ happen during the coronapanic, it’s usually
because he’s fending off pressure in the background. Were MPs trying to force
though a work from home policy? If they were, it would certainly have added
significantly to the pressure that drove Boris into his U-turn. Notably, 80 MPs
are members of GMB, which has recently been trying to force MPs to wear masks.
I think we are entitled to wonder if GMB played a role in closing down
Parliament in March 2020.
You might argue that Boris was right to
cave in to all the pressure at the start because it was better for him to stay
in power and try to turn things round than be unseated by a Covid zealot such
as Hunt. But the longer the whole debacle has gone on, the harder it has become
to make that argument; Boris’s lies have become more and more farcical (we’re
facing a ‘tidal wave of Omicron’), and more and more repellent. Indeed, you
might also argue that Boris should have walked away from power and fought back
from the sidelines rather than collude in any of this lunacy. I personally
would have walked away. But in a way, the issue of what Boris should or
shouldn’t have done isn’t that important. Far more important is the issue of
what we should do now. If Boris won’t tell the truth about caving
in to the unions, the onus is on us to tell that truth. Unless we the public
supply the democratic pressure, the PM and his colleagues will just carry on
covering their backsides, refusing to talk about the immense crime that has
been inflicted on the British public since March 2020.
And the problem is not just the PM and
his colleagues. All MPs have supported this madness at one point or another,
and all are still keeping their heads down. I don’t know of a single MP who has
ever openly said ‘The entire coronapanic debacle was unnecessary and wrong; the
government should have stuck to herd immunity instead of caving in to the
unions’. As things stand, we still have a democratic mountain to climb to get
out of this mess. Indeed, we haven’t even reached base camp yet, because, never
mind the MPs, I hardly know of any journalists who openly say
that the government should have stuck to herd immunity. Even the anti-lockdown
journalists generally don’t say it. The vast majority of anti-lockdown
journalists didn’t support Boris on herd immunity at the time, so now they
don’t want to talk about this sensible policy and why Boris abandoned it. The
whole topic of the government caving in to the unions is awkward for any
journalist who failed to stick up for freedom when it mattered. Most anti-lockdown
journalists are still insisting that the original lockdown was justified. Their
main complaints seem to be that the lockdown shouldn’t have lasted so long and
the government has been too heavy-handed ever since. I think this is an abject
stance to take. The journalists are quibbling about how much mistreatment the
British public deserves. None of this Covid madness was ever justified or
necessary, and all journalists should come out and say it.
Other anti-lockdown journalists take a
different approach to ignoring Boris’s herd immunity phase. These journalists
think that the pandemic, and the world’s pandemic response, was in fact planned by
way of an international conspiracy – the whole thing was a ‘plandemic’, so the
theory goes. According to the most popular version of the theory, there was a
single mastermind behind the plandemic, a German academic called Klaus Schwab.
An employee of the WEF, Schwab has long advocated shutting down the global
economy and restarting it in a greener fashion – he calls this proposal a
‘Great Reset’. Supposedly, Schwab conspired in secret with politicians and
officials around the world to make his Great Reset happen in March 2020.
Supposedly, Covid 19 was deliberately released, then the world’s countries
locked down by way of a prior agreement.
I’m sorry, but I do not buy it. Yes, I
know that in the summer of 2020, politicians rallied round Schwab’s Great Reset
concept, because it offered them a chance to put a positive spin on their Covid
crimes. Yes, I know there has been opportunism on a global
scale, for example from pharmaceutical companies, international organisations,
the Chinese Communist Party and no doubt Klaus Schwab himself; we certainly
need to investigate all this opportunism. And yes, I know that the panic about
Covid 19 was global, leading to similar policies being enacted all round the
world. But similar does not mean the same. Covid policymaking hasn’t been the
same everywhere. Some places didn’t lockdown; other places locked down then
admitted it was a mistake. And there was blatantly no plan to lockdown in
Britain. Boris pursued herd immunity for two weeks, before caving in to the
unions. You could hardly imagine anything that looked less planned than those
chaotic five days in mid-March when the government U-turned.
In fact, when it comes to the
relationship between Britain and the global picture, the plandemic theory
probably gets things back to front. Despite not planning any Covid measures at
all, Britain ended up helping to drag the whole world into Covid lunacy. On
March 16, the British government issued a joint statement with the other G7 leaders
announcing that they’d all work together on a ‘coordinated international
approach’ to Covid 19. In his press conference that day, Boris even claimed
that Britain was leading this international effort. The G7 is a group of
countries comprising Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the USA,
seven of the world’s most powerful economies. In their March 16 statement, the
G7 countries declared that they were committed to taking the ‘necessary public
health measures to protect people at risk from Covid 19’, and to ensuring ‘the
stability of the global economy’. The statement added: ‘We call on the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group and other International
Organizations to further support countries worldwide as part of a coordinated
global response’.
At first sight, a coordinated global
response may sound very much like a plandemic. But the comparison is
superficial. The key point is this: the G7 venture wouldn’t have happened
without the buy-in of Britain and the USA, and both of these countries tried to
resist imposing any Covid restrictions at home, never mind abroad. Boris
originally thought the best thing to do about Covid 19 was just to wash your
hands. And Trump was no less nonchalant. When asked by a reporter on February
29 how Americans should 'prepare' for the virus, Trump replied: 'I hope they
don't change their routine'. He declined to impose a national lockdown in the
USA; states ended up in lockdown only because of decisions made at state level.
If Boris and Trump had got their way, Britain and the USA would have remained
free, which means that the G7 intervention was ad hoc, not planned.
Also, it’s important to note that the G7 statement on March 16 made no mention
of lockdowns. We know that Boris was still trying to avoid lockdown at that
point; he was calling for voluntary social distancing, nothing further. And
Japan never locked down. The G7 countries, including Britain and the USA, ended
up playing a significant role in exporting Covid restrictions around the world,
including lockdowns. But this was far from being a planned global lockdown.
So why did the G7 leaders work
together? A major part of it was probably safety in numbers. The leaders will
have known that the stakes were extremely high and that their decisions around
Covid would be heavily scrutinised. Although the G7 statement made no mention
of lockdowns, the leaders were clearly moving towards greater intervention, be
it voluntary measures or legal measures. Either way, there would be a lot of
disruption for the G7 countries. By moving together, and bringing other countries
along too, the G7 leaders wouldn’t be so exposed. In addition, global
coordination will have had economic advantages for the G7 countries. ‘Financial
stability’ was probably a euphemism for not being economically outcompeted
during the pandemic. Perhaps the G7 countries, working with the IMF and the
World Bank, offered other governments incentives to impose Covid restrictions;
the incentives might have included debt relief or cheap credit.
That last point is speculation. But the
speculation can be taken a step further, based on other factors. We know that
the March 16 press conference in Britain was a spin operation. We know that
Boris escalated Britain’s pandemic response to hide a union mutiny. We can
assume that he joined forces with the other G7 countries to add further
credibility to his bogus policymaking around Covid. But all this points to an
intriguing possibility. What if the G7 countries were all facing union
mutinies? What if the G7 countries joined together because they were all trying
to hide these mutinies? What if the G7’s pandemic response statement was
essentially just a bigger version of the spin operation that Boris was
undertaking in Britain?
I can’t prove any of this, because I
don’t know how much trouble unions have caused in other G7 countries, or the
timelines involved. There has definitely been union unrest in Canada and the
USA, especially from the teaching unions, but I don’t know if this was a factor
at the start of the pandemic. More research is needed; I call on lockdown sceptics
worldwide to investigate the role of the unions in their own countries and get
in touch with me.
However, at this point, I do have one
more bombshell revelation to make, and it’s on the topic of union unrest in the
G7. Remember the TUC webinar I mentioned earlier? In that webinar, the
presenters talked about trade union members handing in section 44 notices to
force through working from home. But the presenters didn’t just talk about this
kind of mutiny happening in Britain. They said it had happened somewhere else
too: in Italy.
Italy! Italy was the second country to
lockdown, and, according to the TUC, in early March there was industrial unrest
among Italian trade unions. You cannot help but wonder if the Italian lockdown
was a spin lockdown, just like Britain’s lockdowns. You also cannot help but
wonder if the Italian teaching unions played a decisive role, just like in
Britain. The schools closed in Italy four days before the national lockdown was
announced.
Let me propose a theory. It may prove
true. It may not. I call it the ‘coagulation theory’. Coagulation means
bloodclotting; I am using this as an analogy for economic shutdown. We know
that in Britain unions were trying to unilaterally shut down workplaces before
the government went out front and pretended to lead the process. We know that
there was similar unrest in Italy. Let’s speculate that union unrest happened
in all the G7 countries. Let’s speculate that the G7 countries all decided not
to confront the unrest but to mould Covid policy to fit the union demands. And
let’s speculate that the G7 countries all decided to back each other up in
doing so. Let’s also speculate that they then marshalled the various mechanisms
of international cooperation, especially financial powers, to make sure that
other countries around the world fell into line. If I’m right about this, then
the global Covid response led by the G7 was the biggest political spin
operation in history. Naturally, none of the leaders and officials who were
involved in all this terrible corruption would have wanted to talk about it.
And in turn, their reticence would explain why the global coronapanic has been
so difficult to reverse.
You could summarise my 'coagulation
theory' as follows: trade unions coagulated individual G7 countries, then
individual G7 governments accelerated the process, then the G7 countries joined
forces to coagulate the rest of the world, and the world hasn’t uncoagulated
yet because the leaders are still covering each other’s backsides.
However, a caveat: I am always telling
people not to assume that all the Covid madness had a single cause, so I should
take my own advice. Maybe some of the G7 governments didn’t require a union
mutiny to push them into their Covid policies. Maybe, worldwide, there were
governments that didn’t require a push from the G7 countries. Maybe there was
simply a lot of mimicry happening between governments worldwide, in keeping
with the global panic that was also spreading by mimicry. Maybe the G20
countries played a significant role too; at the March 16 press conference,
Boris said he was working with the G20 as well as the G7, although there was no
formal joint statement made by the G20 countries on that day. Finally, there’s
evidence that the Chinese Communist Party has been pushing lockdown policies
worldwide. The global picture is complex, naturally.
And, anyway, I don’t want to dwell too
long on the global dimension of the whole debacle; there’s a risk of getting
bogged down in speculation. One of my main gripes with the plandemic theory is
that it’s so dismal. I’m not even convinced that the plandemic theory is all
that different from Covid lunacy itself – they both involve paranoia about a
hidden global threat. Endless unsubstantiated speculation about an overwhelming
global plandemic just demoralises people. And in their demoralised state, they
become flippant, and passive. Plandemic speculation has become a form of virtue
signalling, as though people are saying: ‘I care so much about this gigantic
global problem, but it’s so gigantic, and it’s all planned out, so there’s
nothing I can possibly do about it’. I also think many of the people who
support the plandemic theory are trying to exonerate themselves for tamely
surrendering their freedom at the start; much easier to tell themselves that
they were swept up in a global plan. I think they’re still surrendering.
They’re surrendering to the unionised socialists who have driven all this
lunacy in Britain.
One of my followers on Twitter made a
perceptive comment about this. She said blaming the coronapanic debacle on a
plandemic is much less awkward than confronting your fellow countrymen who have
participated in the debacle – your friends, your colleagues, your boss, your
child’s teachers, your doctor, and maybe even your family... the list is likely
to be long. Whether we like it nor not, we will need to have these sorts of
confrontations if we want to get free, because Britain’s coronapanic debacle
began domestically, and it is being perpetuated domestically.
No country has ever freed itself from
communism by banging on about the international aspect of communism. The same
goes for any country that wants to free itself from all this Covid lunacy: each
country needs to get its own house in order. That’s why I generally focus on my
country, Britain. Indeed, I think the British lockdown sceptics who ignore
what’s happening in this country are being especially remiss. In Britain, we
have a unique opportunity to demonstrate that the whole coronapanic debacle was
corrupt from the start. We know that the leading scientists in Britain favoured
herd immunity, for good reason. We know that the government followed their
advice faithfully until there was a potent union mutiny, whereupon the
government caved in. We know that the only reason the government escalated the
coronapanic measures in mid-March 2020 was because of pressure from unions. We
know that the road to lockdown should never have been taken.
Let’s recap the main events on that
road:
First, on March 10, medical staff from
GMB threatened to mutiny, citing inadequate PPE for NHS workers. Other unions
soon waded in on the issue, and the scene was set; the government was accused
of not taking the pandemic seriously. Gradually the government caved in under
pressure from unions. Mass gatherings were banned on March 13, following
threats from the RMT, the rail workers union. Meanwhile, a huge work from home
mutiny was being stoked by the TUC, a federation of 48 unions. At the same
time, the UCU was trying to shut down universities, and the
teaching unions were agitating for schools closures. There were probably other
mutinies too, behind the scenes. Faced with this situation, the government went
into spin overdrive, holding a press conference on March 16 in which Boris,
Whitty and Vallance desperately tried to justify a U-turn on herd immunity. To
this end, they wheeled out Neil Ferguson’s preposterous paper with its doomsday
predictions and its advice on ‘combinations’ of measures. Moreover, the paper
itself was likely influenced by the government, including Ferguson’s claim that
schools ‘may’ need to shut. The next day, March 17, the NEU threatened
unilateral schools closures and, the day after that, March 18, the government
caved in, announcing that schools did indeed need to shut. This was the
decisive capitulation, and it plunged Britain into lockdown. On March 20, the
day that the schools shut their gates, the government announced that the rest
of the economy was shutting too. The result: nearly two years of lunacy and
spin. Unions have been making demands and threats ever since mid-March 2020,
and the government has kept on caving in, while the public has been dragged
into hell.
There is a repeating pattern, and it’s
happening in plain sight. A union pressures the government to implement a
certain measure, then the government says the measure is under review, then,
more often than not, the government caves in and implements the measure because
the union won’t back down. We cannot go on like this. We cannot keep watching
all this lunacy unfold while hardly anyone will talk about what is actually
happening. Politicians and journalists are still skirting around the truth:
that the entire coronapanic debacle has been union-driven and pointless.
Lockdowns, social distancing, masks, mass testing, track and trace, mass
vaccination, Covid passes, and children being subjected to unbelievable
cruelty: it has all been pointless and wrong. Herd immunity was the right
policy, and it was abandoned because of mutinous unions. It’s high time we put
these facts front and centre of the national conversation about Covid 19.
It’s also high time that lockdown
sceptics stopped pretending that all this was planned. There was no plandemic.
Quite the opposite: Britain’s original plan was sensible, and the lockdown was
unplanned. People who support the plandemic theory often call me ‘parochial’.
They say ‘Yes, Ben, but who is behind the unions?’ My reply
is: sure, we need to consider that question. But we mustn’t lose track of our
priorities. When you’re witnessing a crime, you don’t sit around speculating
about who is ‘behind’ the culprits. You deal with the culprits, and you
investigate possible collusion in the process. When we properly confront the
unions that have driven the coronapanic debacle in Britain, I have no doubt
that their crimes will be shown to have a global dimension, and this will need
to be dealt with in turn. But obsessing about the whole world while British
unions continue to run amok is only making things worse for us in Britain.
Moreover, if we don’t get our own house in order, we will leave ourselves prone
to the opportunism of the globalists. The plandemic theorists who believe that
this whole nightmare unfolded by way of a global plan are in fact creating a self-fulfilling
prophecy; the globalists will prevail if we keep assuming that they have
already defeated us.
In Britain we can show that none of
this Covid madness was ever necessary. Let us seize the opportunity. Let us
talk about herd immunity, the sensible policy that the government abandoned.
Let us talk about the government capitulating to the unions, and capitulating
repeatedly, spinning every time. Let us break the vicious cycle, rip this
entire thing apart, so that nothing is left of the coronapanic debacle in this
country. Let us put it all behind us.
Britain could be the first country to fully free itself from Covid lunacy. The first domino to fall. Let us apply the democratic pressure that will make it happen.
Thank you for reading my essay. If you appreciate my work, please consider funding me on patreon, or via a one-off paypal donation.