Workingman wrote:We are in the UK and it is governed by incompetents.
So, yes, it is mainly the stupid assed government's fault, but I do admit that they have been aided and abetted by society's morons.
Reading Today's
Guardian article on Matt Hancock's press briefing was revealing.
Especially when you get to the bottom where a very large slice of criticism was given to the press. Wherever you go the press has one and only ONE agenda. To tell you how badly the UK government is doing.
I do not deny that things have been a bit bumpy, but how many other countries have built a major reception centre, let alone have another 2 scheduled to be built in order to deal with a ramp up in serious cases? Let alone carried out the extensive legislation changes required to put in force the controls required to bring the outbreak to a decline and, eventually, stop.
The closest to what we see, today, with the federal UK and country based assemblies, is the US and Germany. The US is, truly, shambolic, with no central coordination, states going it alone and other states refusing to go it alone and demanding central solutions. Germany may look better than us right now, but cases per 1M population are higher and deaths are racking up at an ever increasing rate. Whilst the German society is, generally, more staid and law abiding, this contagion is too virulent for that to work too much longer without some serious effort. Yet, we learn, that Germany was very late in ordering its 10,000 ventilators and found the only way they could get them was to block the rest of the EU orders from being fulfilled until Germany have what they need.
The UK, on the other hand, recognising the issue, chose to manufacture in country. The UK will receive ventilators starting Monday and at an ever increasing rate to match the situation. Germany? Well you'd have to dig into the local German press for that and it doesn't look totally unshambolic there either.
I take an excerpt from the Guardian article.
He couldn’t exactly promise how many of the tests would be antibody and and how many antigen, but 100,000 was the hill he was prepared to die on. No more bullshit. No more obfuscation. A real target with his job on the line if he failed to deliver.
To add to the distinct air of the surreal – it’s so rare to find a politician behaving like a grownup – he even allowed journalists follow-up questions. Normally, the minister fails to answer the question and swiftly moves on to the next one. But now Matt was positively inviting interrogation. Had he been clear enough? Do you want more details? Most of the hacks were so startled by this new openness, they didn’t actually have any prepared follow-ups and ad-libbed. For once it was the media doing the waffling.
For reasons best known to itself, the BBC got bored with such an informative press conference and cut to the weather forecast halfway through. Apparently it’s going to be a nice weekend to stay indoors. But Sky persevered to the end and Matt extended the press conference to a record-beating 80 minutes. In more ways than one, he had raised the bar considerably for other ministers in the coming weeks.
When you talk about our government being shambolic. Consider the source. Or all of them.
This Guardian article was strangely honest for the press of the day. That is something I find with the Guardian though. They may not be my political cup of tea, but they have a brutal sense of honesty when faced with this kind of performance. Which is why they stay on my list of papers I read.