Professional Documents
Culture Documents
In the words of Rahm Emanuel, former Chief of Staff to Barack Obama, “never let a good crisis go to
waste.”
Emanuel first said this during the 2008/2009 financial crisis… meaning that politicians can use a crisis
as an opportunity to push through radical ideas that would otherwise never be accepted.
Late last month, Emanuel uttered the same words on ABC News This Week, admonishing politicians to
not let this crisis go to waste either… and use it as a springboard to pass sweeping policy changes while
people are too terrified to care.
And at this point in the pandemic it’s pretty clear that plenty of governments are absolutely not letting
this crisis go to waste. Here’s a roundup of what’s happening around the world:
He wanted to bring back hangings for criminals convicted of murder and rape.
After being elected, Duterte said that drug traffickers, drug dealers, and even drug users should be shot
dead in the street.
Other government officials insisted Duterte was exaggerating, just using theatrics to get his point
across.
But sure enough, thousands of alleged drug dealers and users have been killed since 2016. Some were
killed by police, and others by vigilantes.
Now the Philippines, like most of the world, is on lockdown to try to prevent the spread of coronavirus.
And in Duterte’s own words, “if there is any trouble” enforcing the lockdown, or people who ignore
the rules, police should “shoot them dead.”
This is happening at a time when Hong Kong is experiencing its second wave of Covid outbreaks. So
the government started requiring new arrivals to strap on a wristband in order to ‘geofence’ people into
their quarantine areas.
Once you arrive to your destination (your hotel, apartment, etc.) you have one minute to walk around
so that the GPS tracker can map out the perimeter. And if you leave the area, the authorities are
immediately alerted.
This is probably going to become the standard in the West, and I’ve been told by a source in Hong
Kong that the World Health Organization is trialing these bracelets for release in Western countries.
It’s called the “Home Quarantine” app, and it’s required for people returning to Poland from abroad
who must self-quarantine for 14 days.
When the app requests a photo, users have twenty minutes to upload a selfie from inside their home, or
the police come knocking.
After Russia’s Duma (parliament) voted in early March to allow Vladimir Putin to defy constitutional
term limits and continue to seek re-election as President, the government has now deployed a network
of 100,000 cameras with facial recognition in the streets of Moscow to track individuals who are
supposed to be in quarantine.
Furthermore, even spreading what the government deems as ‘fake news’ about Covid-19 could result in
up to five years in prison.
The government suspended both domestic flights and train travel, apparently not realizing that millions
of people would be stranded and unable to return home to self-quarantine.
Unsurprisingly, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this week that supply chains in India have also
started to break down, causing shortages of certain foods.
Massachusetts, Alabama, and Florida have abandoned medical privacy laws, and officials are now
informing the police and paramedics which homes have a resident who tested positive for coronavirus.
All 50 guests, plus the minister performing the service, and the bride and groom, were arrested and
hauled off to jail.
Understandably, I imagine many readers might think, “Well that was stupid and a little bit selfish to
hold a public gathering at a time like this.”
I agree. But it’s hard to ignore the fact that basic freedoms: freedom of assembly, freedom of worship,
freedom of speech, privacy, etc. have gone out the window, all over the world.
Laws and constitutions everywhere are being violated. And while most of the discussion about this
pandemic is ‘when will the public health emergency subside,’ and ‘when will the economy go back to
normal,’ there’s hardly any discussion about “When will our freedoms be restored?”
It’s hard to imagine they’re going to stop the GPS tracking, the facial recognition, the criminal ‘fake
news’ penalties, and the countless other ‘emergency measures’ anytime soon.
Think about it– 9/11 was nearly two decades ago and we’re still dealing with the freedom-eroding
consequences of that event.
So we have to be honest with ourselves about this pandemic– the longer these freedoms are restricted,
the more unlikely they’ll ever be restored.