Time for the COVID-19 lockdown threats and citizen-policing to stop
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — It’s been a year since French President Emmanuel Macron announced in
a nationally televised address that “we are at war with the SarsCoV-2
coronavirus.” An entire year of suboptimal living has trickled through time’s
hourglass. Some have tried to sensibly go about their daily lives while being
citizen-policed, harassed and lectured by paranoid, self-righteous fellow
citizens under the pretext that everyone else’s basic freedoms represent a
potentially deadly risk to their own survival.
For example, someone sneezed in the water at the local outdoor pool here in
Paris the other day — one of about four swimming pools that remain open to serve
more than 12 million Parisians during the current partial lockdown and 6 p.m.
curfew period. Sneezy was promptly lectured by a lifeguard about the need to
bring tissues with him poolside. (Are they really that naive to not know what
else people discharge in swimming pools?) Patrons entering or leaving the deck
area were yelled at by security staff for failing to wear masks into and out of
the showers. No one should need a study on the effectiveness of soggy Kleenex or
masks to understand that sanitary theatrics have become a safe haven for
hypochondriacs, previously closeted fascists and bored busybodies.
The entire last year has catered to such people, to the detriment of everyone
else. Some of us didn’t wait around for the government to dictate how we should
protect ourselves from viruses. COVID-19 wasn’t even the first contagion to
overwhelm French hospitals. Nearly every year in recent memory, a nasty seasonal
bug has resulted in headlines about Paris hospitals being unable to cope. But
some of us didn’t spend our time harassing others to wash their hands or giving
people a death stare when they sneezed or coughed. Instead, we took a page from
the well-worn playbook in Asia and loaded up on masks for flu season. When
COVID-19 came along, we were ready. But most weren’t — and subsequently looked
to government to protect them.
Governments are only too happy to oblige. Having carte blanche to micromanage
citizens’ daily lives under the guise of saving them from imminent danger is a
nanny-state dream. It gives politicians the opportunity to take center stage,
pound the podium, wave their arms around, look steely-eyed into the camera and
adopt a grave tone in front of a captive audience. For once, they appear to be
justifying their existence.
In that context, Macron plunged country into one of the strictest lockdowns in
the world for an initial two weeks, which then dragged on for two months. In
that time, we were barely able to leave our homes with the exception of a
grocery run or one hour of exercise, once a day, in a one-kilometer radius from
home.
Who could have imagined that one year later, we’d still be waking up every day
to headlines in French newspapers evoking the specter of yet another lockdown.
This represents a colossal failure on several levels.
First, for the European Union, upon which member states such as France have
relied to assure an adequate vaccine supply. That supply apparently hasn’t
materialized. Just over 5 million French citizens (out of 67 million) have
received at least one vaccine dose, according to Health Ministry statistics —
partly due to a supply problem originating with the EU.
Second, for France itself, which can’t get the supply that it does possess into
the arms of people fast enough to avoid lockdown talk.
Third, for the pro-lockdown crowd, which can’t seem to find any solutions for
resuming daily living — or accepting that others want to — despite having an
entire year to figure out a way to adapt.
One year into this fiasco, all the solutions to resume daily life are clear and
present. One can choose to vaccinate, lock oneself at home until vaccination, or
lock oneself down indefinitely. Those are the choices government should be
communicating to people rather than constantly evoking the potential for another
sweeping state-imposed lockdown to distract us from the fact that the government
itself has failed to take adequate measures to bolster its resources.
Government has no more right to impose lockdowns on people to offset its own
inadequacies than one has the right to scream at an Uber driver to get to the
airport faster simply because of a failure to leave adequate time for the trip.
On some level, it seems like Macron himself understands this. For the past
several weeks, he has resisted imposing another lockdown despite the parade of
officials publicly evoking it. Instead, the French president seems focused on
transferring intensive care patients from overwhelmed hospitals to underwhelmed
hospitals and demanding an acceleration of vaccinations.
Macron needs to stay that particular course. The pandemic is now entirely
government’s problem and should no longer be downloaded onto the backs of
citizens. It’s time to wash (or sanitize) our hands of it and stop policing each
other’s behavior.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN