Tag Archives: Pandemic

My Submission to the Covid Inquiry

QU ONE: LOOKING BACK
My father died on 15 March 2020 of a heart attack. He lived in the UK and my mum phoned at midnight to tell me he was lying dead on the kitchen floor. What should she do? Could I come over? I said yes, of course.

It soon became apparent, however, that if I flew to England there was no way of knowing when I would be able to return. A pandemic had just been announced by the WHO and travel restrictions were starting to be put into place on the 16th. Could I leave my wife and children alone for who knew how long, and take the risk of flying into an epicentre? I decided to stay in Aotearoa and look after my family. Luckily my brother also lives in the UK and was able to help my mother navigate the autopsy, cremation and managing the financial affairs in the bureaucratic chaos that the UK was becoming.

That was very hard for us all. It was 3 years later that I was able to see my mother and visit my father’s grave.

Many people suffered as a result of the pandemic, many far worse than me. But no one is to blame. Well perhaps we all are. There are too many people on the planet and maybe nature is trying to bring us back into balance. In any case, in humanitarian terms our government’s response was largely the right one, and many thousands of people are still alive because as a nation we chose to follow the science and the evidence we had at the time. It angers me that some people would try to belittle that, or deny that covid was real or as serious as it was. I recall following the John Hopkins University website and watching the numbers of fatalities tracking up. I read up as much as a lay person can reasonably expect to about the efficacy of the vaccines and the value of lockdowns. As someone who is instinctively sceptical about vaccines, it became obvious to me that the vaccine saved lives. Yes being vaccinated carried risk. Like all medication, some people suffered side effects. But the evidence was clear that the risks from not being vaccinated were far greater. I think NZ was very lucky to have leaders who made good decisions on our behalf. Other countries with poor leadership suffered great loss of life compared to us.

Not every decision was perfect. I think the way lockdown was imposed placed real hardship on small businesses and advantaged large corporations. I think the way subsidy money was handled was open to abuse and again the money disproportionately went to the wealthiest corporations. The economic impact could have been more equitably handled. We could have used it as an opportunity to bolster local self reliance rather than more dependence on long supply chains. We could have used it to promote health and well-being alongside vaccinations messaging instead of allowing it to be seen as an either/or. We could have done more to promote equitable access to essential medicines on a global scale. Lost opportunities.

Also some of the communications were poorly messaged. While the regular updates were great at keeping people informed, phrases like ‘single source of truth’ and ‘social distancing’ (as opposed to the more accurate ‘physical distancing’) were not helpful. The government could have done more in countering misinformation.

Having said that, it was hard to predict the sheer craziness that would erupt, fuelled by international money funding local grifters. That they managed to pull in so many well-meaning people who had justifiable questions about the impacts of the policies is an indictment on Government communications. That some became cult followers living in an information bubble and disbelieving anything that contradicted their viewpoint is a tragedy.

I am a decision-maker in a large organisation. We introduced a vaccine mandate for all staff who interface with the public. We lost people over it and were heavily criticised by a small number in the community. Front line staff faced verbal and physical abuse because of those decisions, although we did our best to maintain services for all, vaccinated and unvaccinated alike. It was a difficult decision but I have no regrets about the stance that we took. Our priority was to safeguard the health and well-being of our staff and our community. Most people in our community understood why we took the position we did and supported us. People absolutely have a right to choose whether or not to receive a vaccine, or any other medical treatment. They do not have a right to put others at risk. Choices have consequences – not as a punishment, but in terms of minimising the potential impacts on others.
The lesson for me in that is that it is easy to read too much into the strongly held opinions of a small number of people. Their concerns shouldn’t be ignored, we should learn from them, but we shouldn’t over-react or think they represent the views of most people. This inquiry will no doubt hear lots of submissions from militant anti-vaxxers. Some of those will misrepresent what happened, deny the scientific evidence, and fabricate events, either deliberately or simply because they truly believe things that are false. For example I had a friend who I trust tell me that their partner had adverse effects from the vaccination. The partner denied it when asked, and from their story it seemed like it was an exaggeration of events. I do not think they meant to lie, but that their perceptions were so biased as to mislead them.
So it is up to you, the commissioners, to look honestly, soberly and robustly at the evidence and provide some impartial answers to people’s many questions. No doubt whatever you say, you will be criticised and attacked. I encourage you to pay no attention to that and just present your views as honestly and impartially as you can. Thank you.

QU TWO: LOOKING FORWARD
As I mentioned in the first question, I think the things we need to learn are:
1. To think holistically and in an integrated way. For example, how can we use an emergency such as a pandemic, and its recovery, to achieve multiple social-economic aims such as boosting local economic self-reliance and circular economies, encouraging individual health and well-being alongside pharmaceutical interventions, looking after our most economically vulnerable instead to defaulting to throwing money at the wealthy.
2. I would like to see us do more as a national to support the freeing up of pharmaceutical IP rights to allow more equitable access to essential medicines such as vaccines across the globe. Too often NZ seems to take a position on the world stage of bolstering corporate rights over the rights of people to access medicine, and the common wealth of the body of scientific knowledge.

3. We need to be better prepared to counter misinformation by global actors driven by ideology rather than by scientific evidence.

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My thoughts on the Covid Vaccine

So either there is an actual virus sweeping the planet and killing millions of people – (as has happened before) and public health officials are trying to get everyone protected by vaccinating them as quickly as possible, and trying to stop people spreading disinformation that will lead to many unnecessary deaths

or

a global cabal of public health experts and doctors who have spent their lives learning how to prevent and treat disease are actually lying about how dangerous the virus is and/or about how best to treat it, and are conspiring to inject everyone with a killer substance, hiding the evidence, getting scientific journals to publish fabricated studies and suppressing more effective underground treatments because they want to… um… kill all the people? Sell masks?

One of these sounds more likely than the other.

But perhaps there is a third option.

There clearly is a Covid pandemic happening and it is scaring the kak out of medical people. In desperation to get a vaccination out, things were rushed. There were confused messages. That has left legitimate questions in some people’s minds, but in the concern to get people protected, tolerance for those questions has been low. All in all an unhelpful dynamic.

Many people are legitimately suspicious of pharmaceutical companies. Pfizer etc are in it to make money after all. They have the resources and expertise to develop the treatments, but they need to be kept in check by government regulators and good oversight. This is a constant tension. That’s why we need independent (peer reviewed) research, not company marketing.

Like all things, the vaccination carries risks. But it is clear from the independent research that the vaccination is a LOT safer than the virus, for most people. Websites that allow people to self-report side-effects can imply otherwise but not everyone who reports is telling the truth, and not all symptoms are caused by the vaccine. It’s best to rely on robust reports that test and investigate the data – which means Ministry figures. Unless you think that the entire medical profession (doctors, nurses, public health experts) are conspiring to hide vaccine deaths for some reason, which makes no sense to me.

At the same time, the relative risks for children and young people are not as clear. More solid information would be helpful.

But all in all the vaccine seems like the best response we have. Some people are touting unproven remedies, but what evidence there is seems to come from places desperate to try anything because they can’t get enough vaccine. I don’t see that they are better, more like an inferior alternative.

But I do agree with people who say that we should have more health promoting information from the Governmentl. Again, it’s not an alternative to the vaccine, but always good advice. We have to overstand health and well-being in its holistic fullness.

Then there is the politics. Some government’s have used this pandemic as an opportunity to cover up their incompetence and make a grab for power. In Aotearoa a few people have tried to drum up a following by playing this up, but as far as this country goes, it doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. People have claimed that the Government has passed laws to make vaccination compulsory, or to force people to participate in medical experiments, or remove the Bill of Rights. I read the act. They haven’t.

Was the virus made in a lab? I’m not sure it matters. If you weren’t already horrified at micro-biological weapons research, what’s the difference? In any case, humanity has been due for a pandemic for a long time. We are out of balance with the rest of life and we either get IN balance, in a hurry, or we pay the price. This pandemic, or the next one, or food insecurity, or something else entirely will soon end this short lived civilisation if we do not radically transform it.

Perhaps what worries me most about this vaccination debate is all the confusion and disinformation. The ones who benefit from the babble are the people behind a REAL conspiracy – one well documented and well-known. The conspiracy to defend and protect a dysfunctional global economic system based on inequality and exploitation, that is destroying the web of life on which human existence depends.

Challenging THAT is much harder work than refusing a vaccine. It means we have to do more than share posts on Facebook or Twitter. It means we have to change ourselves and how we live, and it means we have to change the system that we are all so dependent on.

We urgently need to restore balance and harmony. That’s what we are here for, I&I, in this time.

Give thanks for Life!

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