I Can Only Look Back in Anger - Five years later, the architects of the Covid Era’s lockdown insanity deserve only our contempt.

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It occurs to me, reading Jack Butler’s reminiscences on the five-year anniversary of the Covid Era’s kickoff, that I’ve never written a single word here about my own experience with Covid. One reason for that is I’m not paid to write about my personal life. Another is that, in many ways, I already did so once — on Twitter/X, where I’ve been typing in an unceasing (and suicidally undeleted) whirlwind for over a decade now.

Day by day, event by event, my experience of lockdown has been captured there forever, frozen in the amber of the moment when it happened, recorded for posterity. Memory can often be a tricky thing — just ask any lawyer who has cross-examined an eyewitness — so it’s interesting for me to review, as I just now have, my thoughts from that era when news of the pandemic spiraled into utter chaos, as lockdowns went into effect, Trump went out to give daily briefings alongside Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx, and our world irrevocably changed. (For one thing, I am reminded that I watched a lot of movies during lockdown — both the entire Bond and Mission: Impossible franchises start to finish.)
I well remember reading news about an ominous new infection out of China from the internet back in December of 2019, but near as I can tell I only officially lowered the boom on February 25, 2020, half a month before U.S. authorities did:
There is every reason to think this will become a truly global pandemic. And the idiots comparing it to seasonal flu will look stupid when the reality that it’s 20x more fatal than typical flu becomes apparent. It’s also a huge black eye for China, deservedly so.
Well said, earlier me! (This is why you preserve your tweets, incidentally; it obviates the need for a diary or daybook.) Reading further, I am reminded that my initial attitude was bemusedly and mulishly obedient, a grudging “whatever, let’s just try to make the best of a bad situation.” But this is when I start to feel an acute twinge of pain, and it becomes hard to go beyond that without pausing for a deep breath. Because I remember what happened next. I remember what was taken from me. I remember what they took from my son. And I am once again painfully overwhelmed by the lone true emotion that dominates my memories of the Covid Era: rage.

This is the real reason I haven’t written about Covid. I cannot summon memories of that era without becoming furious at what I suffered through, without reliving the sense of utter betrayal from all authority we experienced during that period. I have never felt more despairingly abandoned, and in fact actively oppressed, by every level of government than in those dark years. For some people — say, those lucky enough to live in Florida — this matter is largely one of political principle. For me it is deeply personal.

Understand that I live in Chicago. (Moving is not an option.) Life here during the pandemic years — and the closely related Floyd riots, which unmoored my city into a free-floating existential despair it has yet to recover from — left deep psychological scars on me and my family alike. Most of the time my wife and I treat it as a dark, black cloud of madness and sorrow whose details we no longer wish to remember. It’s in the distant past now. It’s over. I don’t want to talk about it. I don’t need to talk about it.

But I must talk about it, at least once, if only to exorcise it. I have a son. He has special needs — a genetic disorder so rare there are only 25 clinically documented cases — and in particular he suffers from severe speech delays and articulation issues. When lockdown went into effect back in March 2020, he was a year and three-quarters old. Our awareness of the magnitude of his challenge was only just dawning upon us at that point, and my wife and I made a sober calculation that since he would not be entering preschool until at least the fall of 2021, we could probably tough it out until then.

“Until then.”

What we hadn’t counted on was progressive-driven Covid insanity actively interfering with our son’s development, to the point where it felt like the entire city was perversely conspiring against us and all other parents who live here. My boy was enrolled in a slate of therapy services at the time — physical, speech, etc. — and I cannot properly articulate the agony I felt, as a father, at the way therapy providers here inevitably followed official city/state government policy (as “best practice”): I want you to imagine the value of “speech therapy” given while wearing a mask, to a child who desperately needs to be able to see lips move in order to learn to articulate sounds. I want you to ponder the quality of “remote” physical therapy for a child who cannot yet walk. (I ask you to do these things because it hurts too much for me to dwell upon them any longer.)

I want you to imagine a city with all of its public parks bolted or zip-tied shut for over a calendar year. My memory is that the spring and summer of 2020 were unusually gorgeous and temperate. That memory is tinged with fury — because my son never got to experience it. Only then just beginning to walk, and suddenly desperate to run around and experience the world, his near horizons were arbitrarily limited to the world of our own apartment. (We did not have a car yet.) The best we could do was take him to an open field and let him toddle around. The joylessness of those experiences — with two beautiful parks that he loved, complete with slides and swings and jungle gyms, bolted shut right nearby — has remained with me ever since.

Chicago instituted lockdown protocols along with most of the rest of the nation in mid-March 2020; Chicago exited lockdown completely only in the summer of 2021. And public schools remained in quasi-lockdown status for far longer: The implacably powerful Chicago Teachers’ Union staged a successful wildcat strike as late as January of 2022 to prevent the city from eliminating masking requirements for schoolchildren “without it being bargained for.” (Translation: “Give us more money and we’ll drop this gun.”)

This time Mayor Lightfoot ignored the union’s demands but granted them a delay (during Omicron season). When March 2022 — a full two years after the anniversary of the first lockdown — rolled around, I was so grateful that I could finally send my son back to school without a mask that I tweeted about it. Because my son could not wear a mask — you literally could not get him to keep one on, in any event. Sure, the teachers were still screaming about it (I remember hearing their side of the story every morning on NPR), but I was just thrilled that my little buddy was going to be able to get back to work on his speech handicap without being gratuitously supplied with the verbal equivalent of cement shoes.

A week later my son was returned home to me one day from school by his teachers, weeping disconsolately. A mask had been forcibly tied to his face, and he was clawing desperately at it to try to get it off. He did not stop crying for an hour.

There is a line in Hamlet that, although I had read it countless times before, I never properly understood until that exact moment: “Now could I drink hot blood.” I hope to God that none of you ever feel the sort of spasm of rage that actually makes a man briefly contemplate Shakespearean violence, because when it comes in the context of people who have harmed your helpless special needs son, you begin to think mad thoughts. Needless to say, my son no longer attends that school. But this was also the part of my Twitter history I least enjoyed revisiting; it’s no fun reliving the victimization of your child.

People without children quite reasonably think of the Covid Era in terms of personally lost time and opportunity — bad for most people, but surprisingly tolerable for a minority. Parents understand the world differently. I rage over the Covid Era as time stolen not from me but from my son — arbitrarily and with no scientific reason, for the sake of mere blue-state politics — when he needed it the most. He can never get that back. The pain of it will haunt me until the day I die.

n anecdote to conclude. During an unseasonably pleasant stretch of weather in the fall of 2020, I finally had enough, and started hopping the fence with my son at my local (still-locked) park, just so I could get him on the swing set for a few minutes. The next day a fellow dad joined me with his small child. The day after that, a cop walked by us outside the gates as I was swinging my boy, and I knew I was dead-to-rights, expecting a citation.

Instead, he asked me how my day was going, and laughingly dismissed my being inside the park. “This is total bulls***,” is all he said, as he walked along. Everybody knew it was a joke. And yet most of us played along. (I didn’t, but I’m a Republican in Chicago.)

I will never forgive the people who did this. I will never know all of their names — I do know the names of Chicago city politicians, Randi Weingarten, the Chicago Teachers’ Union, and the CTU’s handpicked mayor Brandon Johnson, however. (I treat them accordingly.) I will not let go of my hatred for these people. I could do it if only my own vanity or interest were at stake — I actually have a very difficult time holding a grudge — but never on behalf of my son, who has no voice to speak in his own defense. I want only to remember who caused this, who allowed this, and to insist these people be blotted out of public life and civic responsibility for all eternity. I have said my piece on the Covid Era, and it will be the last time I speak of it.
 
I guess since the whole thing has such a small impact on me and everyone around me that I'm neutral about the entire thing. I certainly had a much greater level of anxiety during the early part of it since no one really knew what the fuck was going on, and that wasn't fun, and getting COVID wasn't any fun, but wasn't that bad. Having it do some permanent damage to my sense of smell is no fun, but it isn't awful. No one I knew died or got severely ill. I had just quit my position at my current employer at the end of Feb. 2020 so I got the benefit of all that enhanced unemployment. My significant other was work-from-home, which she liked much better than having to go in and deal with assholes in person. I really enjoyed being to spend all that extra time with my dogs and cat. I watch a ton of awful TV. I 100%'d Skyrim.

I did get cabin fever a few times. A man can only be inside his house for so long without going crazy. When that happened I would just get in my car with my dogs and drive around. It was basically like what I imagine a post-Rapture situation would be like. Empty streets, no one else around, businesses closed. It was a little creepy. Fortunately, by driving and not stopping anywhere, I wasn't breaking any rules since I wasn't coming into contact with anyone else.

I guess it wasn't as bad for me as for many because my state only had lockdown for ~90 days, which was tolerable. One adverse effect of the lockdown was the death of a number of small, local businesses, which I really didn't like. The big stores moved right in to occupy those spaces soon after, which to me always had a very off feeling to it.
 
If I'm being charitable, it wouldn't be until Floyd overloaded his fent reactor in late May and all hell broke loose that I'd hold it against people for not noticing, because that was the first time we had completely irrefutable evidence that this was 100% political and 0% science on live TV for anyone to see.

Shoutout to anyone who realized the instant the Dems changed their tune from "hug a chinese" to "LOCK ALL THINGS DOWN NOOOOOOOW" seemingly in a matter of 24 hours that this was a complete scam, but I don't think most people were that paranoid before COVID even if they were after.
By April 18th we were about a month into "two weeks to flatten the curve" and the associated lockdowns, particularly in blue states. We had already seen outdoor gatherings across the country being canceled even though they could be conducted in a socially distant manner. We already had the data that the virus was disproportionately harmful to the elderly and children were the least likely to suffer consequences from the disease, but schools were shut down. We already had the rapid 180 on whether or not the virus was even a thing and whether it was racist to say it came from China morph into full-on panic and alarmism from the "trusted experts".

Blehar is a typical sheeplike National Review 'conservative' who cares more about making sure he still gets invited to urbane cocktail parties as 'one of the good ones' than forming his own opinions and going against the tide of consensus. When actual threats to the liberty of the citizenry from a runaway bureaucratic state came knocking at his door, he was too scared even to continue peddling his own listless, butchered version of Reaganism, yet now he acts indignant about it.
 
Doesn’t really matter if Blehar is an idiot or not, the point he’s making still stands - there was no scientific basis for the lockdowns, the masking or the school closures, making the limitations on civil liberties all the more egregious.

My country didn’t even lock down and I’m still angry. Angry at the people who demanded Daddy State lock us down anyway, angry at colleagues who wanted coerced vaccines, angry at friends who Münchhausened their kids into believing they have Long Covid. Can’t even imagine what it must’ve been like to live in a blue state. I’m guessing I would have been sectioned by now.
 
Good. Feel it. Feel it properly. What will you DO with it?
Most of the time my wife and I treat it as a dark, black cloud of madness and sorrow whose details we no longer wish to remember
No. Not good enough.
I want you to imagine the value of “speech therapy” given while wearing a mask, to a child who desperately needs to be able to see lips move in order to learn to articulate sounds. I want you to ponder the quality of “remote” physical therapy for a child who cannot yet walk. (I ask you to do these things because it hurts too much for me to dwell upon them any longer.)
Absolute fucking insanity. Utter complete insanity. Children HAVE to be able to see faces for them to develop proper speech and responses.
want you to imagine a city with all of its public parks bolted or zip-tied shut for over a calendar year.
This is so ironic because we have a church here colloquially called the Wee Frees who were mocked mercilessly for practices like shutting the play parks on a Sunday.
Now could I drink hot blood.”
Again, good, you’re feeling injustice and rage. In times past when your ancestors felt this, what did they do? Did they seethe incompetently on twitter or did they ‘raise the black flag, spit on their hands and start slitting throats…’ * how will you channel this rage? Will you press for change? For accountability? For a full public inquiry?
you begin to think mad thoughts.
They aren’t mad. You’re just a domestic animal conditioned to feel that any thought of being outside the cage is madness
‘A time will come when men will go mad. And when they see one who is not mad they will attack him, saying, 'You are mad; you are not like us.’
Isn’t the state good at this? They hurt us all, took our freedom and we cower like beaten dogs, rather than ironing that black flag nicely and sorting it out. We are hopelessly domesticated, fat, lazy, and they will walk over us again and again and again until we make them stop.

* HL Mencken for any met glowies reading, it’s a quote not an incitement.
 
The teacher unions were sending surveys out to teachers every time administration started planning for return to in-person instruction.

There would be no option to say one was in agreement with such a proposal. It was all rating level of concern and safety, and there was never an option for "completely utterly not concerned at all, please let's just get on with it." One would also be asked what resources, policies, and materials they'd need to feel safe coming back to work. No option to say I don't need shit.
 
That's a lot of text, and I do see what you are trying to say, but...

I won't speak to the situation outside the USA, but within the USA this justification simply does not fly post Floyd. The Floyd fallout showed the the very government that was supposedly scared shitless of hospitalizations simultaneously was encouraging mass gatherings with close contact for thousands of people, which would, according to the other words coming out of their mouths, supposedly cause mass hospitalizations they were supposedly scared shitless of.

This isn't a matter of years, 2021/22, this is June 2020, not 6 months after the first case and the top is just showing their whole ass.
This was what made me completely dismiss covid. I actually took it seriously when the first reports from China came out, at that time, US MSM was saying covid was a nothing burger. When everyone started taking it seriously here, I braced myself for the wave of covid hospitalizations and death. 2 weeks to flatten the curve sounded reasonable at the time...

...but then it didn't happen, there were no mass waves of death, even a month later, yet everyone was still freaking out and screaming about wearing masks and social distancing. By then I wasn't sure if this shit was serious or not, it was hard to get information at this time due to censorship and a fear mongering media blitz.

Up until the BLM protests, I was of the mind that maybe covid wasn't as bad as originally thought, but the government was doing its best to cope with a unique and evolving situation. Plus, even though there weren't mass hospitalizations and death, I did personally know a lot of people that got seriously ill with covid, way worse than a typical cold or flu, so I didn't want to outright dismiss it as a threat, even if it certainly wasn't as bad as the media made it sound.

But then I saw the media promoting BLM protests and encouraging people to go to it. The same media that shat itself when people gathered to protest covid lockdowns, claiming that they were putting people's lives at risks and spreading covid and deserved to go to jail, were now saying this was BLM protest was ~different~ and I guess the covid virus knew the difference between BLM protestors and lockdown protestors. That was a wakeup call for many.
 
I live in Florida. Restaurants and gyms reopened June-ish 2020. Schools back in August 2020. We didn’t have riots, and masks pretty much became voluntary everywhere other than schools and gov buildings fairly quickly, I’d say fall 2020. Schools got rid of masks statewide in September 2021. And yet we did great, people didn’t get into fistfights over masks because it didn’t feel as forced, and we’re #1 in economy and education today.

The measures taken elsewhere resulted in either no better or worse outcomes, and their kids are ruined for life. Clearly most covid nonsense was either useless or harmful.
 
Others looked at lockdowns like a deliberate attack on their individual freedoms, a direct plan to issue in a dystopia where a people's commisar will sit and manage how you take a shit on the toilet. Unfortunately the idiots from both sides were completely through every insitution (like teachers and government) and acted much as idiots do, without thought and purely emotionally.
Thankfully the idiots that thought it was an attack on their individual freedom were completely wrong and all their conspiracy theories about vaccine passports and concentration camps were just that: conspiracy theories. While the idiots from individual freedoms side were completely through every insitution and caused untold damage using their immense institutional power protecting against things that didn't happen, "The lockdowns ... did achieve their purpose" and everyone lived happily ever after.
 
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