TheOstrich wrote:Oh absolutely - no clear minds, no clear direction, prevarication - and let's face it, no change after nearly 18 months.
I'm struggling to work out what new and innovative policy they could suddenly pull out of the hat in the middle of a world wide pandemic which is crippling economies and hampering trade?
On the other hand, if you look for it, the UK continues to build trade relationships with the rest of the world, mange the fall out of the EU exit, try to handle the NI situation and, generally, get on with what they promised the country they would do, get Brexit done. It is not over and won't be over for at least another 8 years. Just because the press don't want to report that the government is actually out there doing what they said they would do is no reason to suppose they are not.
Meanwhile the vaccination continues, the lockdowns are going away and the country slowly comes out of stasis.
What are we offered in alternatives? Well they could lock us down harder to make sure nobody dies, whilst at the same time give us more freedoms because the lockdowns are really unpopular. Work that one out.
Just about everything the opposition parties have been saying, over the last 18 months, has cancelled itself out over time. You talk about flip flopping from the government, the opposition is flip flopping so fast it is about to spin off into orbit. But they should be treated as a serious alternative to the government. Why? Well, because! Because what? Because they're not Bojo.
Yeah right. I simply do not listen to them.
Did the government do a good job at the beginning of the pandemic. No. Did any government? Yep, China. Want a gun stuck in your face? Go to China and they'll oblige. The rest? No, most of them really didn't do any better. Or there would be no second and third waves.
On the other hand did the government focus on the exit path and drive to it ruthlessly? Yes it did. Did it spare any money in getting there (unlike the EU), no it did not. Is it on track to get the whole country vaccinated and out from under this yolk of Covid? Yes it is.
It is worth looking back at an op ed written in Bloomberg as countries prepared to lock down last Christmas.
This is the first sentence.
Every country has at one point dared to believe they’ve figured out how to beat SARS-CoV-2, until reality sets in.
It was about the stress on the "Swedish" model as a second wave ravaged Europe.
Some key points to take away.
The U.K.’s misguided flirtation with a hands-off “herd immunity” strategy in March led quickly to a U-turn and tough restrictions. France and Spain promised they’d never repeat the draconian lockdowns they imposed early on — only to break their vow when test-and-trace systems failed to keep pace with summer vacation contagion.
It’s tempting to gloat over Sweden’s failures and the attitude of its top epidemiologist, Anders Tegnell, who is by turns curiously inflexible (he opposes face masks) and unpredictable (his U-turns on guidelines for children). But maybe Sweden is simply falling into the norm for this public health crisis. After all, Germany, a bright spot of Europe earlier this year, is going through a similar reversal of fortunes. Its daily deaths are hitting their highest levels since the start of the pandemic, prompting Chancellor Angela Merkel to call on Germans to rein in Christmas celebrations in an emotional speech. Switzerland, too, is being hit harder this time around.
The reality is that all countries have had to learn from mistakes
And finally
Until vaccines get rolled out at scale, the danger for people everywhere will be imagining they’ve got this virus beaten.
Very prescient. As Israel, the UK and the US are proving to the world at large. 2022 will be a very different year from either 2020 or 2021 as far as UK government goes.