Governments start to talk about being able to lift some restrictions in the weeks ahead, and we all breathe a sigh of relief. Not merely for the possibility that work may start up again for some of those laid-off, that a wider range of shops might open, that at some point we might be able to sit in a cafe for 10 minutes — but also, in Australia, because we are approaching it from a place of less than a hundred deaths, a hospital system which never became overloaded, and a government which, though it has used this crisis for political advantage, has at least responded rationally to the threat.
I was in the US as the lockdowns began across the world, and as Donald Trump and Boris Johnson strutted across the stage, blowing their populist thought-bubbles, releasing the bats from right-wing wonks’ belfries, and the feeling was alarming.
So I’m grateful that, for the moment, we have a rational government, whatever its political stripe, though I’m not going to gush over it, like some on the left have, because it’s obvious that the crisis is also being used for a political-culture war.
But praising the basic rationality of the government (much of which, I have no doubt, is the product of Labor premiers in the national cabinet locking in Morrison, as the Attlee and the Labour members of Britain’s wartime national government locked in Churchill during WWII) is simply a prelude to the question we need to ask: what is going to come out of this crisis that will lay solid foundations for a system ready for the next crisis?
The corporate and ideological right want to construct this as a once-in-a-century event, you know, like the once-in-a-century fires we’re getting every five years, or the once-in-a-century drying up of eastern Australia’s major river system that we’re told to get used to.
The latest signups to this dingbat death-squad are Pru Goward and, of course, Elizabeth Farrelly (rule-proving exception to the [John] Quiggin principle that not all right wingers are death-cult capitalists, but all of the latter are from the right).
They’re not only in denial about the dilemma we face in reviving full social life; they, and many others, are in denial about what this virus portends and what may come next.
After all, COVID-19 isn’t anything new, as the virus’ full name — SARS-CoV-2 — makes clear. Perhaps calling it SARS-COVID-19 would have been better to establish continuity with the SARS outbreak of 2003.
Since that time, we have had two flu outbreaks, an ebola outbreak, and another coronavirus MERS (Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome). The circulation of coronavirus roughly coincides with globalisation going to a new level in 2001, when China joined the WTO, and India abandoned the last vestiges of nationalist economic and social policy, and went for full neoliberalisation.
Globalisation, in the developing world, had been a preserve of a tiny elite, travelling, doing business, etc. Now it began to reach into the hinterland of these vast populations — and into an Africa emerged from Cold War dominance by client dictators. The world was now really on the move.
Remember how weird the idea of Chinese international students was? And then Chinese tourists? How Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, were suddenly a destination for corporate careerists in the way only Hong Kong had been? First-stage neoliberalism — the ’80s and ’90s — hadn’t been a real globalisation at all. Now it was here.
Now it is here and part of the package is a virus, with an exponentially widened field of mutation and recombination to develop in.
It’s a measure of how frightening this is that large sections of the elite are regressing to the mythical and childish act of finding concrete baddies to blame for the trashing of our lovely lives. “If only China had…” “If only the WHO had…”
Magical solutions are proposed: “Let’s close down the wet markets!” people say, without bothering to find out what a wet market is. “China must change its animal eating culture” — ignoring that MERS, a far more lethal coronavirus, emerged from the Middle East, and was briefly called “camel flu” or “camel virus”, because bats had transferred it to camels.
Bats, the epidemiologists tell us, are sources of such viruses because they have very strong immune systems, so viruses develop in a super-efficient manner to get around them. A nasty cold for a bat is lethal to us. This has presumably been occurring for centuries or longer, limited only by the non-mobility of very large sections of humanity.
Which means humanity has a dilemma for which there is no easy solution — especially not the bumper-sticker slogan “herd immunity” which the death-cult dingbats like to ‘eave about.
Not only is there strong evidence that SARS-COVID-19 can reinfect those whom it has passed through once or more, there is the possibility of the global virus — what is really a singular organism, now omnipresent — developing until it hits on a new combination of effects.
The lethality of a virus is a byproduct of its mechanism of spread. Ebola uses only body fluids, so it turns the body into a rotating sprinkler of everything inside of them, until the sufferer dies, having soaked someone else in blood, vomit or shit along the way.
There’s an obvious trade-off between infectiousness and lethality, as the common cold (rhinovirus) demonstrates. But what if coronavirus hits on a modified mechanism of spread — say, a form of coughing so unstoppable and so projective that sufferers’ lungs break apart faster than now? What if such a disease had a 3%, 5% mortality rate and did not spare children?
At that point, it should be obvious that the modified form of everyday life we have now — even in lockdown, a lot of us probably circulate more than a lot of women and older people did in the 1950s and before — could not continue.
The distribution of food and other essentials would have to be managed by the state to minimise risk, health care would have to be brutally and cruelly triaged, and mobility would have to be subject, effectively, to military control.
As a society we need to have a plan for that, and to regard SARS-COVID-19 as a prelude and rehearsal to a viral event that would mark a categorical historical change in human life.
Should the state be unwilling to do this, out of the deep denial that still permeates a state devoted to the preservation of capitalism at all costs, then a coalition of public epidemiologists, economists, political scientists and disaster experts should form, create such a plan and make it public.
The only responsible act, for those who believe that the “human project” is worth continuing, is to make such a plan, with a clear-eyed view of nature’s indifference to our desires.
The world is a beautiful place and worth fighting for, to quote Papa Hemingway, but the fight you face is never the one you thought it would be.
Yes, we should look to the possibility — and no more — of some very gradual, very limited and very reflexive opening up of the lockdowns. But only if such a measure does not serve as a host-body for the hubris of imagining that this viral event is an exceptional historical moment.
It may simply be that “the viral” is an inevitable stage of history for any mammalian species that develops a mobility beyond its pre-cultural evolved habitats. We need to recognise the potential epochal character: the moment when we lose our aeons-long status as this planet’s apex predator, and must learn the caution and humility that guarantees the survival of all the rest of the animals.
Yes Guy, “bring out the dead”- has it really got to that? You make some good points in this article but perhaps none better than “it’s obvious that the crisis is also being used for a political-culture war”…bingo. It’s almost as though the Left are seeing the current events as a precursor and a step forward for their new dawn. Never let an opportunity slip by? Something better than before. Nothing wrong with that, except the Left should be careful what they wish for.
@NortateeM ..Bring out your dead is so dead n dusted Middle Ages …As a highly technological scientific modern nation state country, we don’t have even the historical luxury of that ..We don’t have scarcity ,but we have far more ‘precariousity’ …The laws of physics ,chemistry ,biology aren’t Left/Right, or whatever direction you want to wing it…The thin veneer of modern civilization is even thinner than the thin veneer of the biosphere .And thank goodness that modern Enlightenment has given us that enlightenment .
Your modern enlightenment is a lamp of darkness.
Nortate
In this article im not seeing it as a ‘new dawn’ im seeing the collapse of radical possibility. You think i equate an emergency authoritarian reorganisatiin with socialism? Er, no
I agree with the article as this is something I have talked about since the late 70s when I returned to Australia unknowingly having contracted an arbo-virus and, nearly unconscious, I was allowed to enter Australia without any question being asked. I took myself straight from the airport to hospital where I was placed in intensive care isolation.
Stuff has improved since then, but not much. The crazy people debate opposing border control shows this clearly. It is true we are comfortable with stopping foreigners into Australia but cannot abide fellow Australians being treated the same way.
The major lesson from this past year is that, despite to response to this outbreak being led by the public health in each state, no state, either Labor or Tory, has started to reverse the massive budget cuts that public health has suffered over the past 8 or more years.
The reality is that we are not, structurally, better prepared than we were 12 months ago. We have learned things but not the main lesson. That lesson is that public health should be apart from government, be appropriately funded and that the private sector should have no role in carrying out public health responses.
Mother Nature has her ways of bringing us to heel,
It doesn’t matter what you believe or think you know or feel,
For she is the one who writes the laws by which the race is run,
And if we cannot abide her rule, our race cannot be won.
Coronavirus is so small it hardly can be seen,
It’s travelled the world from pole to pole to places I’ve never seen,
It’s travelled the world from pole to pole with misery, grief and pain,
And it’s closed the door on a world we’ve known that we never shall know again.
Well said Guy.
The disconnection of the US population from the reality of the rest of the world, makes the term Planet America an extremely good analogy of their relationship with the natural world and the world that the rest of us live in.
The fact that Sars-Cov2 can reinfect people who have had it is highly likely, as the two or three other corona viruses that cause the common cold do just this. Sars-Cov2 will be impossible to eradicate because of its high infectivity and low mortality rate, but it will most likely go the way of the other cold viruses and the flue and become an issue for mainly the older people or the imuno-compromized..
Your speculation about a super Sars-Cov2 however is fanciful and whilst I understand where you are coming from, speculating about such possibilities may not not be the best way to approach the topic. There is a lot of good stuff on the internet about viruses. One particularly good site to start is with TWiV, “This Week in Virology A podcast about viruses that make you sick.” The site is run by Vincent R. Racaniello (born January 2, 1953 in Paterson, New Jersey) who is a Higgins Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Vincent gets other experts on the program and they have been doing weekly run-downs on the covid-19 epidemic particularly in New York. They also have strong connections with Wuhan and other countries such as Germany. Vincent also runs a series of lectures on You Tube called Virology 2020. If you watch a few of these you will be totally amazed at what viruses are, what they do to us and what we can do about them.
There are also a lot of scientific papers being published on the current pandemic as most organizations are making them freely available instead of the exorbitant $US35 they normally charge. Some of them are unintelligible to the layman, but a lot of them have abstracts that are quite readable. These are also a good source of factual information.
There has been a lot of stuff in the US media about “shock horror” the Sars-Cov2 virus is mutating. Well as Vincent’s podcast and lecture series points out this is the absolute norm for all viruses, but only very rarely or in people with chronic viral infections like HIV do the mutations cause major disease. Viruses do mutate at a much greater rate than animal cells. This is mainly because most of them don’t have proof reading of genetic replication. So the rate of mutation is orders of magnitude greater than animal cells. But the mutations don’t create new viral monsters.
Until there is a vaccination against Sars-Cov2 the situation it will remain as it is now. Lockdown is essential. The herd immunity people bang on about requires at least 80% of the population to get the disease and it won’t go away permanently. It’s behaviour will be just like its cousins which have brought us about 15% of all of the common colds. The other 80% is caused by the rhinovirus. There are a few others in the mix of common colds, but rhino and his mate corona make up the majority.
Additionally it is becoming clear that most prepubescent children who contract covid-19 have very mild symptoms and thus will go undetected giving them the potential to be anonymous spreaders of the disease. You don’t have to be a virologist to understand the implications of this with respect to reopening schools.
Even though the pandemic is flattening in the rich persons countries, the pandemic is far from over. Countries such as India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Africa will all have their turn and their capacity to contain the disease is pretty well nil. Looking at the number of confirmed cases for these countries will be a waste of time as the amount of testing per head of population will be negligible. I suspect the death rate will be horrendous. Vaccinations will be impossible to administer to this population which runs into a couple of billion. It’s not just about the cost, but about how you could physically make the stuff in those quantities and then get it into the population.
I don’t think Sars-Cov2 will be the end of civilization, but for the Empire of Planet America it is the end of the beginning.
Additional.
Looking at Australias covid-19 deaths it turns out that the disease is much more dangerous for men that woman.
The raw mortality data shows 43 men and 26 woman or 62% men 38% or a Men/Women ratio 1.65.
When an analysis that takes account of the greater number of woman alive at the very old age groups (ABS 3101.0 Australian Demographic Statistics 2019) it turns out to be a ratio of 2.0.
Why no outrage at this by the identity politics brigade. You can bet if it were women who were more at risk we wouldn’t hear the end of it.
Just like there are two men for every woman murdered, but that somehow gets overlooked as well.
I suppose it’s because men make much poorer “choices” than women such as picking the wrong sex.
Ok boomer.
Sorry
What does “OK Boomer” refer to?
Too cryptic for me.
While I can’t speak speak for Bob, I was puzzled as to why you’d follow up a reasonable piece of on-topic commentary with an “additional” MRA flavoured bit of waffle.
I agree with this assessment. Covid seems capable of evading vaccines and immunity, reinfecting us again and again for years. How will society function? What are the implications for human population growth?
Minimal, unless you mean the neologism, negative growth.
In reality we are facing a return the world of our grandparents, pre penicillin when a scratch could kill and person to person contact was necessarily limited.
We have the technology. Cerebrally.
Yes, better get out my hoop skirt!