Ideology and
Coronavirus
Eric Zuesse,
originally posted at Strategic
Culture
There
are two polar-opposite approaches for dealing with the challenge of
coronavirus-19: libertarian proposals prioritize the economy above the public’s
health, whereas socialist proposals prioritize the public’s health above the economy.
Libertarian countries rely on developing “herd immunity” to the disease, in
preference to imposing social distancing and “lockdowns," which aim
instead to reduce the spread of the infection. Unlike socialist measures, the
“herd immunity” approach doesn’t need any regulations, because it allows the
disease to spread so that the people who survive it will become predominant; it
allows survival-of-the-fittest to take its course, so as to develop a ‘strong
herd’. Social distancing, etc., countervail that goal, by protecting the
public from the virus. To use both approaches simultaneously
is to contradict oneself. Developing a “herd immunity” to coronavirus-19 (or
Covid-19) might turn out to be impossible, but, if it is
possible, then the only way to do it is to “let nature take
its course.” Anyone who isn’t naturally immune to the infection must be
immunized against it; and, since there isn’t yet any effective vaccine against
this virus, everyone who catches the disease mustn’t be isolated, but instead going
out among the public in order to expose as many people as possible to the
contagion, so as to enable non-immune people to die-off, and thus to
leave only the immune people. This approach is considered to
be optimum for the owners of corporations, because it allows them to continue
doing business and making profit, regardless of how many employees aren’t
showing up for work — any such employees will simply be replaced. Only workers
and consumers suffer the disease, death, and other losses — that’s how the
libertarian approach works. It is maximum freedom, for the owners of
corporations.
Among
the countries that immediately rejected the libertarian approach were Taiwan,
China, South Korea, Japan, and Venezuela, all five of which nations took the
socialistic approach even at the very start. In an article on May
11th, I documented the astounding success of those five countries (Taiwan,
China, South Korea, Japan, and Venezuela) in dealing with this crisis, and the
equally astounding failure of the libertarian United States in dealing with it,
and you can see all of that there, with links to all of the
evidence. (And here is where all nations’
data on Covid-19 today can be found and compared, all together on one page, so
that the performance of each nation can easily be compared with that of every
other nation and with the global averages — it’s the daily international scorecard
on coronavirus-perfomance.)
I
excluded Vietnam from considetation because their ratio of tests per million
population was too low, and because too little information had been published
about the reliability of their data, but then on May 15th, the BBC issued from
a superb journalist, Anna Jones, “Coronavirus: How 'overreaction'
made Vietnam a virus success”, and her interviews with
experts on the situation in that country indicated clearly that the stellar low
coronavirus-19 numbers in Vietnam are the result of a great government there,
not of a cover-up.
Another
country that now clearly has one of the world’s best records in its handling of
this coronavirus is Thailand, whose daily new cases peaked on March 22nd and
are now down to low single digits, which is amazing for a population of 70
million. Their ratio of total cases
per million (which might be considered to be the ultimate
measure of success or failure) is only 44. Another such country is Cambodia,
and their infection-ratio is a stunningly low 7. For comparison: China’s
infection-ratio is 58. South Korea’s is 218. Venezuela’s is 36. Vietnam’s is 3.
Japan’s is 131. All of these countries with low infection-ratios have taken a
socialistic approach to the crisis, instead of a libertarian appraoch to it. By
contrast: here, in order are those same infection-ratios for the 10 countries
that have the largest total number of cases: U.S. is 5,039; Brazil is 1,644;
Russia is 2,361; Spain is 6,040; UK is 3,790; Italy is 3,792, France is 2,796;
Germany is 2,149; Turkey is 1,848; and Iran is 1,618. And, at the extreme high
end is Qatar at 14,679 (that’s 14,679 cases per million inhabitants, and that
infection-ratio has been steadily getting higher, and still isn’t going down.
So: an enormous difference exists in the degrees to which the various countries
have succeeded or failed in their handling of this virus. And the socialistic
approach is vastly more effective than is the libertarian approach.
The
libertarian approach minimizes the imposition of regulations, and instead
relies on “nature” to take its course, “survival of the fittest,” as being the
best way to ‘protect the herd’. It’s opposite to the socialist approach, which
consists of governmentally imposed rules, or “laws,” that aim to minimize the
amount of suffering — not only of the corporate owners, but of the entire
public. Of course, every country has laws, but in a socialist country, the
government’s right to make and enforce laws is more respected, whereas in a
libertarian country, the right of individuals (and especially of
stockholders) to violate laws is more respected. This has nothing to do with
the distinction between dictatorship and democracy. For example, Marxist
countries, such as was the Soviet Union, are dictatorial socialist, whereas
democratic socialist countries such as is Denmark, are, indeed, democratic, not
at all dictatorial. And fascist countries, such as the three Axis powers during
WW II were, are dictatorial libertarian (or dictatorial capitalist).
Another
word for “libertarian” is simply “capitalist” or “free-market,” but no country
is entirely free-market, not even those Axis countries were:
capitalistic countries only favor the rights of capital — the owners of corporations
— above the rights of workers and consumers, and so respect property-rights
above civil rights (the rights of workers and consumers) and therefore they
allow corporations much more freedom to abuse and cheat their workers and
consumers — that’s a freer market; it is laissez faire.
(Capitalism
is the same as corporationism, because it refers to the
owners of corporations: the “capitalists.” In capitalism, only the owners are
actually represented; workers and consumers are not represented but only
manipulated — or else any resisting or incompetent workers are fired — by the
owners. Corporations were invented around the year 1600 so as to transfer all
personal criminal liability away from owners onto their workers and customers,
so that only workers and customers could become sentenced to prison. Prior to
1600, only bankers enjoyed such limited
liability. Stockholders and bondholders have limited liability — they’re liable
only for monetary losses up to the extent of what they have invested in the
corporation, but not for any crimes that their employees and other agents of
the corporation perpetrate on behalf of further enriching the corporation’s
owners. That’s the limited-liability function, for which corporations were
invented: it protects
owners from liability for crimes that their agents are paid to commit on their
behalf. Whereas mere employees can lose everything including their lives,
owners can lose only what they have invested in the corporation. For example:
America has the world’s highest percentage of its residents
who are in prisons, and virtually none of its prisoners own, or even
control, any corporation. In fact, almost all of them are poor. This is a
libertarian country.)
Consequently,
applying the terms “socialist” versus “libertarian” here concerns the extent to
which the government sets the rules regarding what is considered acceptable in
order to protect the public from coronavirus-19 infection, versus the extent to
which violation of such rules is considered to be acceptable. In a country
where violation of the governmentally established rules is treated as being
acceptable, there are effectively fewer actual rules and enforcement of rules
than in a country which has been adhering more to socialism regarding Covid-19
policy. A libertarian country is more accepting of law-violators regarding
coronavirus policy, than is a socialist country, regardless of whether or not a
given country is democratic or dictatorial. For example, Denmark is socialist
but democratic, whereas Cuba is socialist but dictatorial; and Switzerland is
capitalist but democratic, whereas today’s United States is capitalist
but dictatorial. Whereas both America and Switzerland are
libertarian, both Cuba and Denmark are socialist. But no country fits 100% into
any of those categories; in politics, everything is only a matter of degree,
never (except, perhaps, under the Axis powers during WW II) actually polar on a
given measure (and those — the Axis powers — were 100% capitalist; i.e., pure
libertarian, meaning that workers and consumers had no rights — only the
powerful did).
On
May 13th, Axios headlined “Coronavirus likely forced 27 million off their
health insurance” and reported an analysis which estimated this
to be the number of persons who had lost their health insurance in America
because of the soaring unemployment which has thus far resulted from the virus.
On 10 September 2019 — just prior to the virus — the Wall Street
Journal had reported “The number of
Americans without health insurance climbed to 27.5 million in 2018,” and so the total
number of health-uninsured Americans now is around 55 million, which is 17% of
Americans — and many of America’s “health-insured” have only extremely limited
health ‘insurance’, so that perhaps only 50% have health-insurance which is
actually comparable to what 100% of the residents in all other industrialized
nations (in all of which, healthcare is a right instead of a privilege) have.
The
fewer people who have health-insurance, the larger percentage of the public
will need the income from work in order to be able to pay for their healthcare,
and this makes them virtual slaves of their employers. It’s for reasons like
this that the American model is extraordinarily libertarian, and that this model
results in almost a third of the entire world’s Covid-19 cases currently being
in the United States, which has only 4.2% of the world’s population.
The
Axios report closed: “The coronavirus is blowing up health insurance at a time
when people need it most.” Destroying health-insurance will inevitably increase
Covid-19 deaths. Since America is the only industrialized nation where there
are residents who don’t have any health insurance, America is an extreme case,
which is extremely likely to be the worst industrialized nation during the
coronavirus crisis. After all: even a non-citizen resident can
receive or transmit a communicable infection. America is systematically the
most vulnerable industrialized country for any communicable disease to thrive
and spread. And this shows up in America's shortened life-spans.
As
I headlined at Strategic Culture on May 5th, “America’s
design causes it to fail the coronavirus-19 challenge.”
That
is why the chief U.S.
scientist who was responsible for advising the Government on the coronavirus-19
threat got booted by the Trump Administration and then on May 14th warned
the U.S. Congress “that without
a stronger federal response, the coronavirus threatens to make 2020 the
‘darkest winter in modern history’.”
As
I argued on May
11th:
In other words: the supposed either-or choice (trade-off) that the
libertarian U.S. regime and its propagandists assert, between either
controlling the epidemic (continuing the “lockdowns” etc.) or else preventing
economic collapse (“reopening the businesses” etc.), is fraudulent. The exact
opposite is the actual case: in order to minimize the economic damage,
controlling the epidemic is basic — whatever is sound policy for the public’s
health is also sound economic policy.
—————
Investigative
historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They’re Not
Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and of CHRIST’S VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event
that Created Christianity.
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