2021: The year that proved it’s a big mistake to trust the government
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — The year 2021 is ending exactly the same way it began: with everyone
breathing a sigh of relief that it’s over and hoping that 2022 will be much
different. I hate to be the bearer of bad news but relying on the status quo to
lift everyone out of the status quo isn’t exactly a winning strategy.
As we all rang in the last new year nearly 365 days ago, all attention was
focused on the fact that the prior 10 months had been dominated by worldwide
lockdowns and restrictions amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The vaccines were meant
to be game changers on which governments could rely instead of lockdowns in
2021. Two doses were all each of us needed for a return to normal, they said.
While the roll-out was occurring, country after country in the so-called
democratic western world hitched a digital identity pass to their vaccination
plans. The initial rationale was that those who had the jab wouldn’t spread the
virus to others, so digital identity controls could be used to reassure everyone
inside a particular venue. Leftists particularly jumped aboard the idea since
they apparently love safe spaces.
Except that the safe spaces ultimately leaked as infections broke out inside of
them.
So, the narrative shifted to the jab at least preventing serious illness if you
do catch COVID in your safe space surrounded by other true believers. Except
that everyone seemed to forget that even without the jab, an overwhelming
majority of people never got super sick from COVID. There were, however, also
some people who didn’t feel so good after taking the jab. Anyone who had such an
adverse reaction was promptly denounced as an “anti-vaxxer” — musician Eric
Clapton being a prime example when he gladly took the jab but then fell ill and
demanded answers.
Except that with the full complicity of government, anyone demanding answers or
questioning risk factors so they can weigh personal pros and cons and open a
debate with others who may have similar experiences to share, has been
marginalized. Attempts to even open a debate have resulted in those deviating
from the official narrative being censored across social media platforms and
publicly vilified.
The only proof that any thinking person should need of the true effectiveness of
government strategies and micro-management is that we’re in exactly the same
boat at the end of 2021 as we were at the end of 2020. And now the
government-issued QR codes for travel and access to everyday venues under the
guise of public health are taking on a life of their own.
In 2022, we’re going to find out if their existence is truly meant to be a
time-limited public health measure — or if our governments have leveraged the
opportunity to roll out a system that is destined to persist beyond any pressing
health-related concerns.
In any case, those who are best off in society as we head into the next year are
those who are the most independent — fiscally, geographically, and
professionally. Governments have forged ahead with jab mandates that ensure QR
code passes for all, even as arguments in favor of their effectiveness grow
increasingly questionable. Those who are least effected are those who have
managed to reduce their exposure to any such obligations.
Meanwhile, no doubt Afghans who relied on government — both their own and
America’s — wish they hadn’t, when President Joe Biden finally did what should
have been done years ago and withdrew militarily from the country after 20 years
of war. American audiences were also shocked when the end-result of two decades
of investment resulted in depressing images of Taliban fighters celebrating as
they took over abandoned U.S. military bases in the country. Again, anyone who
trusted the longstanding conventional Washington narrative that everything was
under control was sorely disappointed.
And at the end of this year, a British high court ordered that Wikileaks founder
Julian Assange could be extradited to the U.S. after the Biden administration
persisted in seeking his transfer to an American prison. This, despite Yahoo
News publishing evidence in September of a CIA plot to kidnap and assassinate
him. Although Assange did little that was much different from other media
outlets in publishing secrets provided to him by a Pentagon source — much in the
same way that former military analyst Daniel Ellsberg provided Pentagon Papers
secrets which were published by the New York Times — he faces serious legal
jeopardy. All this was occurring as Biden himself hosted a “Summit for
Democracy” to defend democratic values, including specifically freedom of the
press. Assange’s treatment doesn’t bode well for any bona-fide truth-tellers or
free-speech practitioners who may have been relying perhaps a bit too much on
the U.S. government to come to their rescue — unless of course they sing Uncle
Sam’s tune.
If there’s anything that we should have learned this year, it’s that your own
welfare in 2022 depends on you — and all of us — reducing our dependence on
those who serve us platitudes about looking out for our best interests.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN