Lord Sumption: The Truth About Lockdown is Becoming Impossible to Deny – It Was a Disaster
Lord Sumption has written a piece for the Sunday Times about the lockdown policy that could be called ‘I Told You So’ – or, since some anger is surely justified, ‘I F***ing Told You So’. Here is an extract:
It was always obvious that you could not close down a country for months on end without serious consequences. The shocking thing that emerges from Sunak’s interview is that the government refused to take them into account. There was no assessment of the likely collateral costs of lockdown. There was no cost-benefit analysis. There was no planning. In government the issues were not even discussed. Sunak’s own attempts to raise them hit a brick wall. Ministers took refuge in evasive buck-passing, claiming to be “following the science”.
Yet the critical question was never a scientific one. It was a political question, in which the likely hospital admissions and deaths from Covid were just one element. The scientists said it was not their job to think about the social or economic implications of their advice. They were right about that. The problem was it turned out to be no one else’s job.
We are still paying for this negligence, and our children and grandchildren will be paying for it for decades to come. In 2020, U.K. GDP fell by nearly a tenth, the biggest hit to the economy for at least a century. According to Treasury estimates, 460,000 people left the workforce never to return. The policy took a wrecking ball to the public finances. The IMF estimates that government spending rose by more than £400 billion, or about £6,000 for every man, woman and child. Most of this was unproductive spending. It went on paying people for not working and supporting businesses forced to cease operations. At one point, in the spring of 2020, the government was spending about twice as much on compensating for the lockdown as it was on the NHS. Borrowing rose to £330 billion, a peacetime record.
Then there are the non-financial costs. Other mortal conditions went undiagnosed and untreated. In October 2020, after four months of lockdown, the Office for National Statistics reported more than 25,000 excess deaths at home from conditions such as cancer, heart disease and dementia. A year after the last lockdown ended, the NHS still has a vast backlog. Excess deaths, 95% of them due to conditions other than Covid, are running at about 1,000 a week. There has been a huge impact on mental health, with children and the poor worst affected.
Children lost two terms of face-to-face schooling. The closure of schools, training establishments and universities slowed the accumulation of skills, reducing productivity. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has estimated the cost to the economy at somewhere between £90 billion and £350 billion. The best-off, with plenty of resources at home, will probably recover. Those who are already disadvantaged will be permanently damaged. Existing inequalities will grow a lot worse.
The lockdown was an experiment in authoritarian government unmatched in our history even in wartime. Not only did the government assume powers over the lives of citizens that it had never previously claimed. In government, decision-making was concentrated in the hands of the prime minister, a man with notoriously poor judgment and little taste for detail. The cabinet was kept out of the loop until near the end. Discussion of fundamental issues was ruled out in the name of collective responsibility.
Sunak blames the government’s hysterical public messaging for aggravating the economic impact of the lockdown. Other countries did not stoke public fear in this irresponsible way. It has, he says, contributed to making the U.K.’s recovery the slowest in Europe. That is no doubt true. But there is a more serious criticism. Throughout history, fear has been the chief instrument of authoritarian rule. During the lockdown it was what enabled the government to silence dissent and inhibit discussion.
Worth reading in full.
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First reaction – better late than never.
I assume you are referring to The Times. Lord Sumption was saying it right from the beginning.
Second reaction – what sentences should be imposed for these crimes?
What was the tariff at Nuremberg and Tokyo war trials?
A welcome return from Lord Gumption.
The buck stops with Bunter who, bullied by President Micron, then, arguably constitutionally improperly, if not illegally, bullied the entire nation.
Any government that employs either him or his egregious henchmen, Hancock and Gove, in the future should pay with its life at the polls.
This will only be achieved by the noble Lord and others as senior and like minded continuing to speak out until the whole country wakes up to the full scale of the stupidity and incompetence that has been perpetrated.
Not surprised that the most liked comment on the Sunday Times article is the one trying to discredit the article. Shows how far down the rabbit hole many have fallen.
Every single consequence of lockdown was foreseeable and the longer lockdowns lasted the more they became inevitable.
That nobody in government, Whitehall, PHE and the execrable NHS was either capable of spotting this or courageous enough to raise their concerns speaks volumes about our governing classes.
Given that those few who raised concerns about wider health, societal, educational and economic harms and who offered better solutions were aggressively lampooned as ‘science deniers’ by a bought and paid for media and state apparatus like the 77th Brigade suggests to me that the grounding on the rocks of HMS Great Britain was deliberate.
Rehearsal for Net Zero and compulsory insect consumption.
I always said we were been driven by fear and incompetence. I just maybe never realised the scale.
But SAGE is not composed just of scientists. It is stuffed with charlatans who wish to destroy us. So let’s destroy them and the top “scientists” who recruited them. Let’s stop pussyfooting about and blaming a bunch of puppets.
Lockdowns, Net Zero, Ukraine and Migrants. The lunatics running this show have lost the plot, utter idiots
https://rumble.com/vhoz5l-australian-newscaster-makes-mincemeat-out-of-brat-greta-thunberg.html 10/10
That made me laugh out loud. Thanks.
Hmm doesn’t he think that anyone questioning the death jabs is a nut job?
I’m available to write the article “I f***ing told you so” to Lord Sumption on hehalf.of those of us who stood firm on the the jabs and the abomination of vax passports.
I’m not going to forget how he not only rushed off like a lemming to get a jab but then spoke about vax passports as a price worth paying for getting society back to sone semblance of normality.
Sorry, but the man is a twat.
And referred to the unstabbed as ‘refusniks’. A man with his command of English would have been well aware of the connotations associated with such a word.
I tend to agree Stewart. He was in a position to speak up earlier and forcefully. He did neither. As you say he even made the case FOR much of the crap.
His position in society makes him virtually untouchable but he failed to make use of that privilege for the good of his fellow men.
He did speak up early and forcefully – he was one of the few.
His views on the vaxxing are/were a terrible misjudgement that I hope he time he recognises.
IMO on balance it’s inaccurate to call him a twat, because of his early and articulate opposition to lockdowns and his grasp of the tradeoffs between liberty and safety.
On balance, I think that’s a very fair comment.
He spoke about about police over-reach right at the start, and deserves credit for that.
Heaven knows what was going through his mind about the stabs. Perhaps he was in thrall to ‘The Science’.
Anyway, time to twist the knife in the lockdown protagonists now.
As has often been said on here, ‘Never Forgive. Never Forget.’
Also, notably, the main individuals I recall who spoke out early against the lockdowns – Lord Sumption; Peter Hitchens; Brendon O’Neil – were all silent when in came to the stab coercion.
Even this site ATL was, by my perception, slow to recognise the dangers of the stabs and stab coercion back circa early 2021.
Brendan O’Neill actually pushed the stabs and wrote a frankly horrific piece, published in Spiked, declaring that Care Home Workers should be mandated to suffer the injections or lose their jobs.
We are still waiting on O’Neill’s apology.
Indeed.
Yes, Hitchens made a serious error of judgment there, which I found uncharacteristically like a fit of pique, not thought through, and sadly I’ve not seen him revisit that position.
I think LS/DS has been pretty strong about vaxx passes/bullying etc from the start, less good on being sceptical about the mass vaxxing until more recently.
Don’t understand Hitchens. Fit of pique may well be correct.
I recall BTL criticising ATL quite heavily for what appeared to be a neutral stance on the stabs in the early days (e.g. early 2021), when it was already quite clear that there was no neutral stance – the stabs were dangerous, and with the peaking covid cases in each country as the stabs were rolled out apparently pretty iffy on effectiveness as well (we now know they are worse than useless).
To its credit, BTL on here was on to the scam straight away. Shame nearly all the posters from those days have now gone.
My reading of the Hitchens vaccine episode is that he was fed up with being the lone voice in the wilderness – he has been doing this for a very long time indeed and probably covid was close to the last straw.
Yes, there have been a lot of really good BTL comments and commentators here over the years.
I thought he had the stab as soon as he could, so he could travel abroad, and afterwards he kept very quiet about them.
I recall now, I even penned a little poem at the time, which I allowed to grace the LDS forum:
So farewell Peter
You’ve been with us from the start
But now we’ve reached the looming cleft
Where our lonely path must part
It was a warm and sunny winter’s day
The awful news did fall
Which hangs around our roof tops
Like a dreaded funeral pall
It was just a little vial
It was just a little prick
I hope all is right with you
I hope you don’t get sick
For from that seeming capsule
Did bequeath a dread transition
From far-seeing oracle
To controlled opposition
Others ask you questions
Whence your gain or loss
But it’s really nothing to do with me
I couldn’t give a …
I firmly believe like Ben Frankiln did that it’s a false trade off.
Yup. As Sumption said in one of his interviews “liberty is not absolute”, but I tend to think it should be almost absolute – only deprived of liberty after being convicted by your peers of a serious crime.
Gove/Cummings the chief architects must be made an examples of. In the time of Henry the VIII they’d have been beheaded as Thomas Cromwell was, here their crimes against citizens are so grievous such a punishment would be entirely justified.
Gove is a member of the Bilderburg Group. Don’t know to whom Cummings has affiliations.
I’m not sure what Cummings’ affiliations are except to himself. He strikes me as a control freak type with a strong technocrat streak. The covid “pandemic” presented him with an opportunity for glory – something important to achieve that would allow him to exercise his tendencies under cover of an “emergency”. He would naturally favour the “something must be done” position on the basis that it’s his job to identify and manage the execution of the the “something”.
Cummings believes that ‘expertise just hasn’t been tried yet’, rather than ‘we’ve had enough of experts’.
Indeed, especially of course his expertise.
I think it is important to establish who it was who suggested, who supported and who agreed that Neil Pantsdown Ferguson was annointed as The Settled Science.
His cv of responses to other similar challenges, never less than an order of magnitude exaggerated (and up to five orders of magnitude) wasn’t a secret. He was chosen deliberately by someone. Most likely by some Corbynist Civil Servant wanting to lead the gormless Tories into a trap. (As in Windrush?)
But whoever chose him was being deliberately malicious. They should find him/her/whatever a particularly dark and damp dungeon in the Tower. If they can’t find the axe.
And all the others in the decision tree who thought it appropriate, or couldn’t be bothered to question it, should be similarly rewarded, up to and especially Bunter.
And that is just for starters.
I just want to see SOMEONE held to account. Ferguson might be a good start. Then, of course, Farrar….
‘… in which the likely hospital admissions and deaths from Covid were just one element.’
Death rate had peaked in first week of March and started to decline: hospital emissions a few weeks earlier. So no action was necessary nor could be effective.
How is it the ‘scientists’ were unaware of this and neither they nor the Muppets in ‘Government’ could read their own simple data?
Instead everyone was distracted with ludicrous computer modelled predictions, and rising numbers of positive tests – misleadingly called ‘cases’ – due to rising number of tests, most without symptoms therefore not CoVid, confirmed by wholly unsuitable and reliable PCR testing.
‘Other countries did not stoke public fear in this irresponsible way. ‘
Well I was living in France at the time and the French Government certainly did its best: worse, self-signed permits to go out, strictly policed and enforced mask wearing – even in the street – long term closure of leisure activities (when they were open in the UK), curfews and the Passe vaccinal designed to make normal life impossible without being vaccinated with the prescribed number of doses (and compulsory for school children).
It wasn’t just the UK, it was coordinated internationally with the only outlier being Sweden.
Not quite the only outlier. Belarus and Tanzania and South Dakota didn’t have much in the way of restrictions.
I believe the Governor of South Dakota initially asked to be granted emergency powers and the legislature voted it down by a large majority, and she became a lockdown sceptic not long after.
Sadly, the President of Tanzania, John Magafuli, was murdered for refusing to co-operate with the Davos Deviants, as were a couple of other heads of state.
The murky road to lockdown, Part 1
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/the-murky-road-to-lockdown-part-1/
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You can always rely on Jonathan Sumption to hit the nail on the head. Now to get them into the dock.
Sunak would not be slightly coming out as a diluted lockdown sceptic if he didn’t believe that it would gain him votes and public favour. This should be a huge sign that the zeitgeist has changed and public opinion (outside of the well-informed milieu of DS/LS) has turned. I hope so but I’m not so sure. Sunak may be playing the wrong “Trump” card.
Worth a look
https://youtu.be/L_0dWo_fo00
I agree, definitely worth a look and listen. Thanks very much for sharing the link
Those in positions of authority be it our MPs, councillors, LA employed, managers of care homes/healthcare workers, school staff, church leaders etc that followed guidelines without question (often censoring and vilifying those that did) have shown themselves to be cowards incapable of protecting our young/old, vulnerable – they allowed harms including safeguarding issues to be swept under the carpet as they virtue signalled their support for Covid-19 restrictions and measures – we should hold their feet to the fire as they try to cover over their part in what was done/ignore and turn a blind eye now, pretending they never believed in lockdowns etc 😡
Once they’ve apologised they should then withdraw from their posts as have shown themselves to be unsuitable for the roles they were employed!
It isn’t acceptable to just blame Johnson. There was a Quad making the political decisions on Covid: Johnson, Gove(+Cummings until he was sacked), Sunak and Handcock.
The 4 of them are culpable and should be charged with Malfeasance in Public Office. As should Vallance and Whitty.
There must NEVER be another lockdown. We need a Bill of Rights which makes our Civil Rights inviolable under any circumstances, except war.
I seem to remember Sumption was all for vax mandates and passports though. Not so clear sighted to be able see through that bit of authoritarian power wielding.
Isn’t this the point? Sumption did indeed rally against lockdowns throughout, but it was an entirely qualified rally – ie end lockdowns asap but ONLY on the basis that everyone gets stabbed asap. He was tacitly blaming jab sceptics throughout and who knows, probably still is. Thus in my view he is as culpable as the rest of them.
Lord Sumption should temper his triumphalism by reflecting on the fact that he did not make the right points at the time. Most people could feel there was something the matter with the absolutist position he took for the primacy of civil liberty. If covid had been smallpox or ebola, with 30% fatality rates, and transmission by person-to-person proximity, lockdown would have been justified. But covid was neither of those things and we knew right from the start that it wasn’t. We knew in mid April 2020, when Prof Sir David Spiegelhalter published his analysis of the first 500 ‘covid’ death certificates, that only the extremely age-frail and unfit were at mortal risk. We knew in Apr-20 from the Diamond Princess cruise ship that at most 20% of the population were susceptible. We knew in 2020, from Prof J. Ionnidis’s calculation, that the death rate for fit-and-well people aged under 65 was 0.01%. (That is 1 death in 10,000 cases.) There was a further point which, scandalously, is missed, hardly mentioned at all, even now. We knew that the platform for lockdown, the theory of asymptomatic transmission, depended on Drosten’s egregious single case of a woman flying in to Germany… Read more »
Great Post.
My concern is that polls sugest that Johnson is still currently the most popular leader of the Conservatives do these people who want him back not realise the damage he has done to our country? Sunak went on a giveaway of our tax money without sufficient controls costing us fraud to an estimated value of £11 billion, Johnson has also piled on the problems with his ridiculous aim of nett zero. Why would anyone want these clowns in any position of our government?