In what is an increasingly febrile and tribal debate about pandemic restrictions, maintaining a nuanced position on the impact on basic freedoms of government lockdowns is a risky endeavour.
The version from the right and the government, backed by News Corp and The Australian Financial Review, is that Victoria’s lockdown and state border closures are a disastrous left-wing assault on the economy.
That version is carefully edited to leave out that a non-Labor state like Tasmania is every bit as aggressive on border closures, and that Scott Morrison’s own North Korean-style border blockade is far more economically damaging than people being unable to visit Queensland. But don’t sweat the detail.
The version from the left is that any criticism of Daniel Andrews or the Palaszczuk government is part of a corporate death cult that would sacrifice seniors for the sake of shareholders, combined with a government playing politics with the greatest crisis since the war.
That version is edited to omit the absurd excesses of the Andrews government and its police force, including handcuffing and arresting people in their homes for Facebook posts, citywide use of numberplate recognition technology to track motorists, mobile surveillance cameras and a dramatic expansion in police powers.
Confusingly, this is a Freaky Friday role-swap of traditional positions in what passes for the national security debate.
In national security, the right — self-styled advocates for small government — are enthusiasts for ever-greater state power and hardline policing at the expense of basic rights, relaxed about police raids if they’re aimed at journalists or opposition politicians, and regard any critic as a supporter of terrorism, while the left are automatically suspicious of government claims about the need for crackdowns and resistant to increased powers for security agencies.
Health security and national security, though, are just variants of the same idea — that a government official, possessed of greater expertise and knowledge than the public, can and should be able to suppress basic freedoms in the name of defeating a threat to the whole community.
Just to strengthen the analogy, they both involve a resistance to disclosing information to the public. Morrison spent much of March refusing to release the modelling that formed the basis of the “national cabinet’s” decision-making, on the basis that the public couldn’t handle it, before relenting in April. Now Andrews is refusing to release the modelling that informs his decisions.
All very reminiscent of national security — especially that, in both cases, we can legitimately suspect that political considerations are driving at least some decision-making, and the “operational secrecy” is intended to hide that, not protect the populace. Plus, more generally, our politicians and bureaucrats, more than most around the developed world, prefer to keep the rest of us in the dark.
At least, as economist Saul Eslake recently noted to Crikey, with national security — according to the government — there’s some sinister would-be terrorist or spy who might benefit from “operational information”, whereas it’s not as if coronaviruses are sitting around watching Dan Andrews’ press conferences to work out how best to attack us.
The reversal of health and national security roles partly reflects who is affected by government actions. The right is relaxed about national security because white people, at least until recently, never had to worry about the attention of security agencies. But white people are treated no differently to radical Islamists under a pandemic lockdown; privilege counts for nothing when everyone is confined to their homes. There’s nothing like being subjected to apparently arbitrary police power to convert enthusiasts for Laura Norder into civil libertarians.
The other part is that we don’t have a developed public discourse around civil rights and protecting them from governments. Our rights policies and debates focus more on the government itself regulating interactions between people, rather than preventing government from infringing on citizens’ basic freedoms.
Accordingly, watching politicians, journalists and lawyers in Australia try to discuss issues affecting basic freedoms is, with only a handful of exceptions, like watching children perform Shakespeare.
As I’ve noted many times before, we don’t have a deep civil society with the capacity to seriously push back against government overreach; some bodies notionally committed to freedom are funded by corporate interests so come to debates with bad faith and inconsistency; and the debate about a bill of rights — something that unites even the most adversarial of tribes in the United States — is marked here by partisanship and culture warring.
The US, though, is founded upon and marked by a scepticism of government and a fascination with ways to limit its power — at least domestically, and primarily in relation to white people; black Americans and other minorities have rarely been afforded the kind of basic protection from government overreach that white Americans assume as their right.
That’s very different from white Australians, who have always relied on government to protect and support them and instinctively feel aggrieved if such backing isn’t forthcoming. And very different from Australian companies, which have always sought to use influence and cash to secure their own protection and support.
Ultimately Australians may be too addicted to government to ever properly protect themselves from it.
If we’re going to cite the US as an example of how things ought to be done, you really should include even more sophisticated nations like Somalia. Power through the barrel of a gun and all that.
I think one reason for the support of lockdown as opposed to national security is that it’s far more evident that lockdowns are a necessary step to stopping the pandemic spiralling out of control, whereas the national security in light on the war on terror seems more about appeasing people’s fears rather than actually doing much to keep people safe. If terrorism was as great a that as SARS-COV-2, the anti-terror precautions (provided they worked) would have more political merit.
Of course there are ways the lockdowns could be done better – hopefully lessons are learnt for next time around. A focus on liberties would be good, though, and hopefully it becomes a bipartisan conservation. I would hate for liberties to be only what the right fringe held incoherently about, because that’s a surefire way to make left-wing activists see it as a problem.
Nothing is evident about lockdown yet.
Revisit this in about 4 to 6 months when it becomes evident that virus numbers are starting to soar again.
Another lockdown should fix it, shouldn’t it?
I’d be very surprised if nothing has been learnt from the lockdowns, from Victoria, from around Australia, and from around the world. If not, then we are really in a sorry state given the vast resources put into educating people to become scientists who specialise in this sort of thing.
Add to that the number of countries that have declared that, whatever, the circumstances, a 2nd lock-down (for them) is not going to happen.
They may change their minds. The UK is right now contemplating a second lockdown.
You seem to be missing the point. The virus WILL appear and reappear in any location where it has appeared previously. That lock-downs are not a viable long term solution will sink in eventually.
The recovery is very high regardless of the method of surpression. The worst that it can do is zap the +70 year olds and that isn’t going to happen.
And nothing is evident about no-lockdown yet. The virus numbers are already soaring in Europe. There have been statements in some countries along the lines of ‘there won’t be another lockdown’, but let’s see what happens when numbers soar to the point where health systems struggle to deal with them. No need to ‘fix it’?
Meanwhile Sweden stays swedish.
Intelligent, responsible citizens make a yooog difference.
I wonder if we could purchase some from IKEA?
Apparently intelligent, responsible citizens were thin on the ground in Sweden. Their COVID strategy gave them one of the highest per capita death rates in the world for no gain. They’ve done no better economically than their neighbours.
At circa 96% complete recovery, post infection, are you inclined to a bet? Even in the USA the likelihood of infection is under 2%. Besides, only the +65 group are at risk.
Haven’t seen any health systems struggling anywhere yet.
Maybe instead of locking down society and wrecking whole economies we could build covid centric healthcare facilities to deal with any potential outbreaks? Focusing on the 96% to ease their symptoms a bit and try and save the 2% at risk.
I believe our emergency departments are essentially empty and have been for several months here in Melbourne. I wonder who didn’t get treated and subsequently died from one of the several dozen illnesses worse than covid.
The press and the pollies bang on about infections whereas the relevant statistic is admissions to hospitals. The discussion is becoming religious.
I would agree that it was a perfectly usable tool for ‘flattening the curve’, an emergency measure, but politics has moved beyond that. Now there is a focus on fully eliminating or suppressing the virus. We are 6 months into various measures that were to ‘slow the spread’ with no end in sight. The other states haven’t faced a test of their pandemic plans like Victoria so we don’t know if they’re even using the time we bought with mass inconvenience and in some cases, our freedoms like protests.
Slowing the spread was supposed to let us get ready and not be overwhelmed. Yet when time came to manage an outbreak a state was overwhelmed. Places like South Korea show management of outbreaks to stop them getting out of hand is possible in big cities, so having to go into Stage 4 should be seen as a response to an unfortunate failure.
The right don’t care to argue that, they’re part of the problem. And it took so many successive governments to get here, many opportunities to be prepared for a pandemic squandered.
I think the Vic government deserve flack for what has happened, but it isn’t entirely their fault that they couldn’t pull off their earlier attempts at less restrictive and targetted measures. They did, after all, have the only manufacturer of medical grade PPE at the start of the pandemic. Might have helped if the other states were able to contribute to supply. Maybe we would have encouraged masking up immediately.
Dan Andrews might not have to do a presser about so many deaths if the aged care system could cope with a disease this infectious. This was already an issue before the pandemic. Staff in facilities go to great lengths to try prevent outbreaks of all kinds, because they rip through the residents and staff if they start. We now know some preemptive action was taken, it was just no where good enough.
I could go on, but I will sum up my point as it isn’t a matter of health vs liberty, but health and liberty. These are only mutually exclusive for a tiny minority of people too inflexible to tolerate and accept some restrictions in an emergency. For everyone else, we do what we gotta do and all strive towards being able to live ‘normally’ in our own way.
“The Government, backed by News Corp and The Australian Financial Review”, have all had a lobotomy that has erased all culpability for protecting our boarders, once people have arrived. After the Ruby Princess debacle, they duck shoved overseas arrivals to the States; where it was notably mishandled in Victoria, but never forget it was a Federal responsibility.
Likewise the disaster in Aged Care Homes is another Federal stuff-up, so there are significant reasons to suggest that Morrison & Co have a lot to answer for.
So whilst the “lefty” supporters of Andrews may seem to be over the top in defending him, they are only too aware that he is attempting to correct issues that should have been addressed and resolved by the LNP, not deployed to criticise the Victorian Government.
Sorry, Andrews is indefensible. The biggest creater of problems and the meanest crusher of his people.
Andrews has only got one ball, Sutton, he’s got none at all.
You could say that by arguing about Left and Right that freedoms will be left right out with no rights left.
Keane’s right to say the debate about civil liberties and rights here operates at an abysmal level that mostly misses the point, but his endorsement of the USA in this respect is way out of date. So far as it was ever true it was in the past, now it is dead. There’s an excellent article on The Atlantic website now, “How the Government Lost Its Mind”. The whole thing is immensely depressing. One small example: “…Americans’ all-time ignorance of the fundamental structure of government has become visible in recent surveys revealing, for example, that nearly 75 percent could not name the three branches of the federal government at all.”