Sandydragon wrote:Son of Mathonwy wrote:Sandydragon wrote:
I quite agree that the messaging is awful, or at best confusing. But when you read comments like ‘covid isn’t that dangerous’ and ‘rules are there to be broken’ you realise that even if the messaging had been good, there are still gigantic twats out there who are too selfish for everyone’s good.
And without a national lockdown with common controls, the current situation is too difficult to police which makes the regulations effectively unenforceable.
If your messaging is clear and consistent (and consistently applied) it leaves purveyors of bullshit like the Sun with less freedom to undermine it. It also makes the police's job easier.
Whilst I agree that the government has made a total hash of this, groups of people partying in public and private aren’t helping to contain the disease. The rule of six has been in place across England for a while yet there is plenty of evidence for that being ignored. There has to be some personal responsibility in all of this.
While there is always a risk of dickheads, the mishmash of government response has fuelled them. If you look at the first lockdown, the rules were generally pretty well stuck to because the government made a play for it being a matter of patriotism and national pride - we were "Protecting the NHS" and channelling the Blitz spirit and breaking the rules wasn't enforced by police punishment as much as they were by social shaming and peer pressure. People felt it was important, but also that we were genuinely all in it together. Then we changed tack and started prioritising other things - first Dominic Cummings's political career, then saving the entertainment industry and Eat Out To Help Out, then it was town centres and making sure Pret a Manger didn't go out of business and getting back to the office, then going to pubs was all fine and in fact encouraged, then Stanley Johnson not having a mask and that not being a problem.
The government have gone from what was actually a pretty solid start to skipping from policy to policy, all of them giving the impression that things are going back to normal and we beat it. Is it any wonder that they're having a tough time convincing idiots to take it seriously again when they've had the summer of implying that COVID is less important than eating in restaurants, going to the pub, and buying sandwiches from Pret?
I think they stand an outside chance of getting the national response back again by emphasising that this lockdown is "to save Christmas" (although I'd imagine there's a few Muslims a bit fucked off given that Eid Al-Mubarak was apparently unimportant enough to be cancelled with just a few hours' notice), but they're going to need a good 75% of people buying in before it's become a matter of obloquy to be caught breaking it.
Puja