Until we start helping people instead of hectoring them, Lockdown 2 will be at risk of falling apart

In the midst of the 1918 flu pandemic, with his pregnant wife lying near him, infected and close to death, WB Yeats wrote the famous lines from his poem The Second Coming: “Things fall apart; / the centre cannot hold; / mere anarchy is loosed upon the world”. His words are a fitting description of our own predicament. As England enters a second lockdown, people are tired and frustrated by restrictions that seem to bear no fruit. They are becoming fractious and divided; many who supported the first lockdown have fallen silent, while those who object to lockdown measures are becoming more flagrant in their opposition. The optimism of early summer feels like a distant memory.

A recent report on the BBC website captured this growing sense of dissent and disarray. Headlined “COVID in Scotland: Police break up hundreds of parties every week”, it picked out five examples of parties and gatherings to illustrate a supposed tide of excess. Two of the examples explicitly mentioned students, while the other three referred to large gatherings without identifying those involved.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Billionaires backed Republicans who sought to reverse US election results

Guardian analysis shows Club for Growth has spent $20m supporting 42 rightwing…

Rising production costs lead to 4.4% rise in UK shop prices

Fresh food inflation at 8% after increases in fertiliser, animal feed and…

How to make your own luck and turn a mistake into the best thing ever

Seeing meaning in the unexpected can help turn mistakes into opportunities, says…