One year into ‘15 days to flatten the curve’, why are we still tolerating authoritarian government clampdowns on our daily lives
By: Rachel Marsden
In the 12 months since states first started ordering citizens to stay at home under the pretext of Covid, we’ve come a long way. Particularly in our understanding of how illiberal our politicians can be and how supine we are.
One year ago, at noon on Tuesday, March 17, France went into total lockdown for 
the first time. Until then, Covid-19 was something of which we were faintly 
aware – background noise in our daily lives that was mostly relegated to Wuhan, 
China. But we all had that one moment when we realized that it was about to hit 
home hard. 
In my case, that instant came two days before the lockdown, when the local 
outdoor pool posted a sign on the door drastically reducing the total user 
capacity to just 100, right before closing entirely the following day. On March 
16, French President Emmanuel Macron addressed the nation to announce what he 
described as temporary measures, to be implemented for at least 15 days. Only 
essential trips outside the home would be allowed. Period. Case closed. All in 
the interests of protecting the French healthcare system, the long-suffering 
victim of perennial government cutbacks, from being forced onto life-support as 
it tends to be nearly every year during flu season.
The government’s drastic actions successfully convinced many citizens at the 
outset of the lockdown that the coronavirus must be on par with the plague. 
Macron opened the first few paragraphs of his national address with the phrase, 
“We are at war.” Yet even the government didn’t really know what it was dealing 
with at that point or how to handle it. The fear mongering was, however, 
sufficient for people to panic and to accept whatever restrictions the 
authorities wanted to impose on them. “Stay home, save lives” and “15 days to 
flatten the curve” became the primary propaganda catchphrases. 
Then emerged the now-infamous French self-authorization form, mocked around the 
world. (It wasn't until the second lockdown or the first or second nightly 
curfew that more people realized that they could really just tick off anything 
that they wanted since there was no real way for the authorities to verify 
claims, and that, in practice, police weren't too interested in policing people 
for the “crime” of simply being on the streets.) 
The handiwork of government bureaucrats, the form aimed to fit each allowable 
activity in our daily lives into a neat little box. One box for an hour of 
exercise, once a day, within a 1km radius from the home. One for a grocery run. 
One for a doctor’s visit. Public transport was reduced to a trickle as everyone 
was ordered to work from home with the exception of a limited list of workers 
that the government defined as essential. 
The term “essential worker” itself is offensive, particularly coming from 
government authorities whose income is a direct result of taxes imposed on the 
hard work of those it apparently considers unessential. The other irony is that 
when only the most essential workers as defined by the government were permitted 
by the state to do their jobs – the grocery store clerks, the maintenance 
workers and repairmen, the nurses and caregivers – it became clear how little 
their pay reflected their true value to society as defined by the government.
To offset the sudden perceived lack of societal gratitude via inadequate pay 
as these workers were shoved to the frontline of the state's newly declared 
"war", many citizens stood at their window every night and clapped or banged 
pots and pans to cheer them on. This simple act of mindless groupthink is a 
testament to the cult-like follower mentality, lack of critical thinking, and 
total suggestibility to which so many succumbed under the weight of 
state-sponsored fear porn. 
And anyone not responding by adopting the dominant narrative became a target of 
scorn – even entire nations, as was the case with Sweden, as it decided not to 
participate in the hysteria and to take more of a wait-and-see approach rather 
than to preemptively curtail people’s basic freedoms.
Only when this is all long over will we objectively be able to assess which 
national strategy worked best – and if the virus even gave a damn about any of 
the various machinations imposed by governments. Perhaps the measures just led 
to different paths that ultimately will end up in the same place in terms of 
deaths when all is said and done?
As we sat at home and the original two-week lockdown dragged on for the eventual 
two months here in France and elsewhere, our computers and TVs became our 
windows to the world: stories abounded about various countries – most notably 
the US – intercepting and stealing other nations’ protective equipment, in some 
cases by redirecting the plane carrying it right on the tarmac. 
Globalist utopia went out the window and suddenly it was every country selfishly 
for itself. We’re now witnessing the same phenomenon with “me first” approaches 
to the vaccine supply. The European Commission president, for example, has 
complained of a US and UK vaccine export ban. It must’ve been a rude awakening 
for European leadership to learn that some countries will actually put their 
national interests first when push comes to shove. 
And the entire past year should also have taught us average citizens the 
importance of maximizing our own personal independence and self-sufficiency, and 
of constantly pushing back on freedom-hijacking restrictions that have proven 
far too easy to take away and still have yet to return. Hey, maybe they'll be 
back in yet another year.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN