The Canadian Covid Myths: Same As It Ever Was
"What happened was a relatively small group, a cartel almost, of very powerful scientific bureaucrats took over the whole apparatus of science — at least as far as the public eye is concerned — dominated the media, dominated the message to politicians, and as a result, we had a catastrophic response to COVID. And we're going to be paying the costs of that for a very long time.”— Dr. Jay Bhattacharya
Toronto: On this trip back to the centre of the universe after time in the U.S. it’s been striking how many of the people we’re encountered still think it’s 2020. From masks to vaccines to PCR tests the talking points remain largely the same as they were when Covid-19 started its rampage. TV audiences still wear masks, vaccinations of children as young as two are bragging points, and PCR test results are still gospel.
Conversations with heathy 20-somethings— the least vulnerable cohort— still reveal people who’ve had every shot and booster, had Covid-19 nonetheless, yet still believe vaccines saved them from death. These virtuous positions are held as tightly and proudly as they were in the days of peak Covid-19 when people walking alone on a beach were vectors of death, and refusing multiple vaccinations was justification to remove civil rights. Refusing masks? You’re killing grandparents!
And the message is: there’s no point in conducting investigations into the PM or others who foisted this mess on Canada.
Meanwhile, in another part of the Woke forest, Mayor Eric Adams of New York City is saying, “we are putting out a clear call to all of our shops, do not allow people to enter the store without taking off their face mask.” Retired White House chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci concedes, “vaccines don't protect overly well against infection.”
FBI director Wray admits, “the FBI has for quite some time now assessed that the origins of the pandemic are most likely a potential lab incident in Wuhan.” Yes, the narrative is changing everywhere, but this piece of SoOnt. is blissfully chasing the same catechism.
Some admit to a tiny smidgin of self-awareness that the settled science is unravelling. Yes, the vaccines weren’t as perfect as advertised. Maybe the lockdowns were a tad too intrusive. But they’re not going to go full Truckers Convoy, either. The exchange goes something like, “The people who refused to take the vaccines are Trumpists.”
“Yes, but the anti-vaxxers were right about the lack of peer research.”
“They’ve been working on SARS vaccines for 20 years, so there’s been a lot of research.”
“They still have no vaccine for SARS after 20 years. Why should we think they got a Covid-19 vaccine in just six months?”
“Maybe they’re not perfect. But I’d have died without them.” Etc.
It’s as if conforming to now-accepted practice in the the U.S. and Europe will make them FOX News anchors. The common denominator in all this refusal to admit defeat is the media bubble hived around southern Ontario. While other Canadian media markets are hollowed-out or non-existent— forcing their citizens to social media for their information— southern Ontario remains wedded to the reliably liberal news sources they grew up with.
They still have the same players they had 20 years ago. The four dailies prevail, the local network affiliates are intact, and talk radio thrives. Conservative thought is buried deeper than the Eglinton crosstown subway. Alberta is a synonym for The Wild West. And never is heard a discouraging word— except about Doug Ford.
The movement from honest debate to “we must confront disinformation” has been seamlessly completed in many of this area’s progressive cohorts. Closing the information loop has resulted in a self-satisfied voting bloc that refuses to consider that they were fooled. The recent examples of the Globe&Mail’s Bob Fife and others are a reminder that outside a few inquisitive reporters— Rick Westhead of TSN is an example— there is little coverage that colours outside the lines. And so the Covid-19 narratives gang-rushed in 2020-21 remain sacred texts.
There is a strong pushback in certain sectors of social media, but the easy messages come from the sources the PM keeps propping up when their business models collapse. And no one on social media is getting government grants for tweaking the tail of PMJT.
Hoping for change? We got approved messaging this week from the Ottawa consultant class that examining in-depth how the PM and provincial premiers cratered democracy is a loser in the next federal election. We are told the public has no appetite for exposing the costs of politician and bureaucrats who, the words of Dr. Bhattacharya, “we're going to be paying the costs of that for a very long time.”
Move on, we are told. They want other shiny objects. How much you want to bet that the next shiny object is a climate shutdown? Fool me once…
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Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada's top television sports broadcaster, he’s a regular contributor to Sirius XM Canada Talks Ch. 167. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his new book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via http://brucedowbigginbooks.ca/book-personalaccount.aspx