colinjallen
Members
- Oct 31, 2012
- 284
- 178
While I would agree that governments and special interest groups create "fictions and accumulated unspoken inconsistencies" that suit their own needs, with Brexit possibly being the most impressive of these in recent UK history, I am not convinced that there has been "a plainly consistent denial of the quantitative, as announced by those who announce the quantitative itself, to an audience plainly experiencing the contrary", at least with regard to COVID-19.I think that we have moved a way beyond the situationism of the 1960's into a plainly consistent denial of the quantitative, as announced by those who announce the quantitative itself, to an audience plainly experiencing the contrary.
We are simply a further 50 or so years into the construction of fictions and the accumulated unspoken inconsistencies that that state engenders, aided by new technologies.
You may disagree, but I would be interested in your response to my edits to your interesting post.
I think that one of the problems with such an assertion is that "the audience" only experience what they experience, which is narrow and limited; another, when directed at the pandemic, is that "the quantitative" is, of necessity, historic, rather than being current or an entirely reliable guide to the future. People, even (or perhaps especially) experts, will interpret that data according to their own specialism and training; for example, public health specialists will generally err on the side of actions that they perceive as protecting public health.
Regarding your edits:
[what is perceived as]: Perceived by who? Would letting the virus at its height (or what was hopefully its height) rip through an unvaccinated population have been better for public safety? In the purest sense, we can never "know" that.
[finance sector of the]: Disagree; all the sectors that are either of "interest" to members of the government and those who fund them or which are perceived as being essential to maintaining the support of their voter base. However, the finance sector may well be the most significant of the former.
[insider]: Yes, especially the back benches, which the current government seemed to think it could take for granted. We now see the wonderful spectacle of the potential successors to the fornicator-in-chief being told what to do by the 1922 Committee and others in order to gain their support. Essentially, UK government policy on the pandemic is now being formed by a group of backbenchers.
[by maintaining the fiction that tax and spend actually happens, and that this is being managed responsibly]: tax and spend does happen, so that part is far from being a fiction. Is it managed responsibly? That is arguable with individual answers probably being dependent on one's political and economic viewpoints.
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