Coronavirus gives government a scary carte blanche
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Greetings, fellow quarantined, from the exclusion zone previously
known as France!
It would be interesting to hear governments explain why the flu has never
justified the kind of freedom-killing measures that are taking hold around the
world. The coronavirus has killed far fewer people than the conventional flu
kills each year. The World Health Organization estimates that the flu is
responsible for 290,000 to 650,000 deaths a year. As of Tuesday morning, there
had been 185,067 confirmed cases of coronavirus worldwide and 7,330 deaths,
according to Johns Hopkins University’s Coronavirus Resource Center.
A week ago, there were 1,412 confirmed cases of coronavirus in France, and 30
people had died. As of this writing, there have been 6,633 cases in France and
148 deaths. We’re still a long way from the numbers attributed to the flu, which
kills far more people annually despite a vaccine being available and ubiquitous.
Why have we been subjected to a daily coronavirus death count when we don’t ever
see one for the flu?
Governments are taking drastic measures with little logical explanation for the
discrepancy between coronavirus policies and (nonexistent) flu policies. Last
week in France we were enjoying movies, restaurants and public parks. Even
French President Emmanuel Macron was spotted at the theater with his wife on
March 6. The theater owner said Macron told him that despite coronavirus, life
should continue and, with the exception of at-risk individuals, daily routines
shouldn’t be modified.
A few days later, home printers all across France are churning out forms labeled
“Certificate for Personal Trips.” Unless you want to run into trouble with
French authorities, who are now locking down every square inch of the country,
this paper must be presented to them at checkpoints.
Filled out with one’s identifying information and signed, the personal-trip
certificate entitles the bearer to leave home for one of a few select reasons.
Either you’re performing a professional activity that can’t be done remotely,
going to a grocery store (where lineups outside are mandated to ensure social
distancing inside), going to the doctor or attending to an urgent family matter.
You can also go out for brief individual exercise (with or without a dog), but
it must be within close proximity of your home.
The negative reaction to this document in online comments suggests that many
people in France still vividly recall the ambiance here during World War II.
Macron said multiple times in an address to the nation Monday night that France
is now at war — against a virus. Anyone who questions the proportionality of the
coronavirus measures being taken is typically met with the same rhetoric being
issued by the government.
Dissenting voices are needed in every crisis, if only to keep government powers
in check. Basic freedoms are being taken away under the guise of a national
emergency, despite very little consistency in the words and actions of the
leaders who declared it.
For example, the day before ordering total confinement of 67 million French
under military watch, Macron insisted that everyone get out to the voting booths
en masse for municipal elections. Why wasn’t this virus considered serious
enough to cancel local elections, yet hours later people needed a permission
slip from the government to let their dogs relieve themselves at the end of the
block?
There is no logical answer to such inconsistencies, nor to why governments
apparently feel no need to offer one. People here in France haven’t been
panicking or waiting for the government to save them. They’re personally
balancing their individual freedoms with the risk of infecting themselves or
others. Knowing that “zero risk” doesn’t exist, is the price of zero freedoms
worth paying — in ANY instance?
After being told to get out and vote, Parisians headed to open-air parks later
in the day. Macron was reportedly upset by images of people out in the fresh
air, touching each other. What’s next — the government peeking into bedrooms to
ensure that you keep an appropriate social distance from your spouse?
We aren’t being told what the measurable criteria will be for the return of
freedoms that have been suspended. And how dare you ask when people are dying.
In previous national emergencies here, such as terror attacks, people were more
skeptical about relinquishing personal freedoms for the sake of the nation’s
collective security. In this case, you risk being treated as a delinquent or
misanthrope if you’re one of the few voices questioning it. And that’s a scary
carte blanche to give any government for any reason.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN