Right and left has been replaced by sane and insane

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard, chief health officer Kerry Chant and Deputy Police Commissioner Gary Worboys arrive for the Covid update on Sunday. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Bianca De Marchi

You could with relative ease make some rough judgments about who was on which side of politics until almost the present by where someone stood on particular issues. But first it was global warming that entered into the equation. There partisan divides were determined by whether someone thought they were in some kind of peril due to a warming planet and a subsequent melting of the glaciers. This warming was always round ten years ahead, as it has been for four lots of ten years which have never led to any serious evidence that the planet is heating. The only evidence has been the normal ebb and flow of temperatures and the regular recording of record temperatures somewhere on the planet, which occur all of the time.

Parties of what were once called the right are now filled with these people, as are, of course, parties of the left. Some of us on the right (most I hope) understand that AGW is nonsense, while absolutely no one on the left is allowed to doubt any of this even for a second. But parties of the right have to cater to their warmest constituencies or can never win an election.

Now we have Covid which has never appeared more dangerous that a bad flu. But however lethal it is or it isn’t, it has terrified all kinds of people so that parties on both sides of the former right-left divide now must promise to save us from what has always been a phantom menace, which is disappearing each day more and more. You can see this divide on the editorial page of The Oz just today.

First this, by Claire Lehmann: The ethical dilemma posed by vax ‘objectors’.

In 1885, Montreal suffered an outbreak of smallpox that would go on to kill more than 3000 people, which was at the time around 2 per cent of its population. During the outbreak, an eccentric physician known as Dr Alexander Ross circulated a pamphlet urging people to reconsider getting vaccinated against the infectious disease. The pamphlet, which has been preserved by historians and can be read online, states in bold letters “do not be alarmed by the smallpox!”, “thousands have had their health ruined (by vaccination)” and “many children are killed outright!”. This early pamphlet is a masterful example of the key rhetorical devices used by anti-vaxxers, devices still used today, often to great effect.

You see, all these people who are skeptical about Covid-vaccine safety are just like those ignorant people back in Montreal 140 years ago. But then we have this, from Nick Cater, who also begins by delving into the past, although not quite so deeply: No sign of ‘normal’ as fear infects our leaders. He takes a different tack entirely.

Two years ago, influenza A was ripping through South Australia. By early July 2019, 20,000 South Australians had tested positive to the virus and 86 nursing homes were infected. Perhaps the Premier and his chief health officer were asleep at the wheel a few months earlier when the warnings came that it was going to be a shocker of a flu season. Think of the lives that might have been saved if Steven Marshall had slammed the borders shut, frightened everyone witless and warned them they would be arrested if they stepped outside their own homes.

On July 7, 2019, 37 new flu deaths were announced in South Australia, bringing the total to 82. The state’s chief public health officer, Nicola Spurrier, called a press conference to remind South Australians to wash their hands and cough into their elbows if they were caught without a tissue. “It’s very unfortunate to see this number of people that have died,” she said, “however, the influenza virus this year is not considered to be any more deadly than the viruses in the past.”

The killer flu of 2019 claimed more than 800 lives in Australia, most of them elderly and most in nursing homes. Yet the authorities refrained from panic. There were no daily press conferences and no breathless reporting of the latest number of infections, which in NSW alone were averaging 826 a day in the first two weeks of July.

Both Claire and Nick would have once been seen as on the right side of politics. Meanwhile, the left is using Covid, along with global warming, to drive its socialist agenda, with plenty of those supposedly on the right doing everything they can to help.

Fear around the virus was “way out of proportion to the actual threat”

Picked up at Small Dead Animals in Canada, but it’s about us, and includes the video above of Chris Kenny: Fear and Loathing Down Under. The note with the video on Youtube reads as follows:

The Menzies Research Centre’s Nick Cater says the “fear factor” over COVID-19 is “out of hand” after a poll revealed people believe on average there is a 38 per cent chance of dying from the Delta strain.

Mr Cater said it was clear to him the fear around the virus was “way out of proportion for the actual threat” but the figures are surprising. “I had no idea until I saw this polling conducted this week that it was that high … that people actually think there’s a 38 per cent chance of them dying from the Delta variant,” he said.

He said a main cause of the fear is the government’s actions which causes unnecessary panic in the public. “It’s natural that people are fearful, but I think their fear is only exaggerated when governments do really exaggerated things … like locking down for one case in South Australia. “Of course people are going to start thinking this thing’s dangerous.”

While I’m at it, I will include a number of comments from SDA.

We’ve all been promised … granular data … by our unelected Ministers of Health. Deep State bureaucrats dedicated to “keeping us safe”. But what they are NOT doing is “keeping us informed” … they’re keeping us FRIGHTENED. Why? Because it’s a proven methodology to keep us obeying the centralized State. Their words don’t match the data. Not even close. Their words don’t match the science … not even close. This is all FEAR PORN rhetoric … without a speck of science. Kinda like how our West Coast Heat Wave is part and parcel of our 2-year “drought” which is all “caused” by global warming and our sinful cooking with Nat. Gas.

They can call it a vaccine, but, from their own literature, it does not do any kind of job of preventing the illness. Call it an experimental gene therapy as it does not have full approval or testing anywhere in the world. Those getting the jab are the trial. And with the number of people getting COVID after the jab, and the number of adverse reactions, in previous times, it would have been stopped post haste.

It’s a rotating circus. The Powers that Be are going, “They aren’t acting scared enough, we must lie to them!” The Mob are going, “They are lying to us… we can’t trust a word they say….”

Just another day in the fall of Western Civilisation

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From an exhibition at Flinders Street Station – Patricia Piccinini’s Epic New Exhibition At Flinders Street Ballroom – whose installation was the price Dan Andrews paid for the Upper House Parliamentary support from Fiona Patten. And who is she?

From 1990 to 1992, Patten was a sex worker herself. Her initial encounter began at Tiffany’s Palace in Canberra, where she had intercourse with a client when another worker was unavailable….

Patten eventually lost interest in her work, which had also interfered with her social and professional life. After working as a female escort in Cairns, Queensland, Patten quit sex work in 1992 and continued in sex education….

In 2009, Patten founded the Australian Sex Party.

Sexualizing children (paedophilia even perhaps). It may not be obvious what I am getting at but will point out that the man cradling the young girl was in a different room from the picture of the slightly order girl with the child in her arms.

I might note that these pictures, which were taken by me at the exhibit, are also shown from different angles in the link to the exhibit above. Whoever put the show on display sees the same bits of the exhibit as worth reproducing, although undoubtedly for different reasons from mine.

Whispered warnings

Let me start with this from the US where the above diagram is found: 6,985 Dead from COVID Vaccine Across the US and 411,911 Adverse Reactions Reported – Now a Top 50 Cause of Death in the Country.

The number of deaths linked to vaccines this year has absolutely skyrocketed. According to the CDC’s own data, in 2021 n the first 3 months, the VAERS website recorded over 1,750 deaths due to vaccines in the US.

As it turns out, the major reason to buy the papers nowadays or to watch the news, specially the ABC, is to find out what the priority list of lies has become. So, for example, this: British health chiefs quietly sneak out warning that Pfizer and Moderna’s vaccines may cause heart damage in ‘extremely rare’ cases. The only rarity here is that there has even been a warning given.

British health chiefs have quietly released a warning that Pfizer and Moderna‘s Covid vaccines may cause heart damage, MailOnline can reveal.

Fears about the mRNA jabs’ links to myocarditis have grown in recent weeks, following a string of cases in young adults and children in Israel and the US.

Now the UK’s drug watchdog has updated its safety information to accept that the condition is a possible side effect of both vaccines, without a formal announcement.

Then there’s this, and as you read bear in mind that becoming seriously ill is different from actually dying. From Children face just a one in 500,000 risk of dying from Covid, studies show amid growing row over whether youngsters should be given vaccines.

Children face an ‘extremely low’ one in 500,000 risk of dying from the coronavirus, researchers have found.

In England, just 25 under-18s have died from Covid, which equates to around two in a million, experts said.

Young people with pre-existing medical conditions, like heart disease and cancer, and severe disability, which can include cerebral palsy and autism, have a higher chance of becoming seriously ill from the virus.

Obviously the answer is to lock down out cities, as reported here: Two weeks into lockdown, Sydney has its worst day for virus cases this year.

What’s new in the vaccine racket?

These are comments on a discussion of a new “vaccine” created to deal with Covid found at Instapundit. Lots of money to be made by some of the most unscrupulous people ever landed upon the body politic.

For a virus for which has a “survivability rate” well in excess of 99%, and for younger and healthier persons, approaching 100%, the calculations need to be on relative risk reduction. That means for me, nearly 70, the RRR is well less than 1%. For example, if my infection fatality risk is 1% and the effectiveness of reducing my infection fatality risk is 67% (estimate for J&J by Lancet) then my relative risk reduction is 0.66. Why would I want to assume the risk of an unproven and, based on news reports, potentially risky vaccine (not a vaccine but that’s for another discussion) and take on a risk of adverse affects up to and including death, for a miniscule – and possibly non-existant – benefit? It’s not about medicine. We’re now in the sociological control realm.

Although the mRNA technique is still relatively novel, the vax problems with clotting and heart damage, etc, don’t seem to mRNA related as much as spike protein related (knock on wood), as Astra Seneca and J&J have had similar problems. So before rushing to Novovax, does it target the spike protein by introducing it too. I still say w Pfizer and Moderna, apart from younger people and COVID survivors just not getting vaccinated, dropping the 2nd dose would sidestep most of the horrible reactions, usually triggered by the provocation of the 2nd dose. But none of the goddam “authorities” are even acknowledging that. Rather a few more people die here or there than risk their presumed aura of technocratic infallibility. F*ck ’em all.

NovaVax is “more traditional” only in that it doesn’t cause your own cells to produce the spike protein, which all three existing vaccines do (including the JNJ vaccine). The NovaVax vaccine itself causes the immune system to respond. The NovaVax COVID vaccine is a two-injection (21 days apart) vaccine. OK, so what’s in the NovaVax vaccine? The NovaVax NVX-CoV2373 vaccine is made up of protein sub-units from the SARS-CoV-2 virus already attached to a carrier. The proteins were developed using NovaVax’s recombinant nanoparticle technology. Or, if you’d like more specific information: “We have developed a recombinant nanoparticle vaccine constructed from the full–length, wild-type SARS–CoV-2 spike glycoprotein (GenBank gene sequence MN908947, nucleotides 21563–25384) optimized for the baculovirus-Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cell expression system.” The NovaVax “Matrix-M” nanoparticle adjuvant technology is a significant part of how this vaccine achieves its efficacy. The Matrix-M technology will be seen in several other vaccine offerings that NovaVax is bringing to market: A “traditional” vaccine, it is not.

It is different in how it causes the immune system to react. But Dr. Malone was quite indistinct in his description of what he meant by “traditional.” It isn’t a killed/modified/live virus vaccine, which is the vaccine technology that so many people here at IP define as the only technology that can be called “vaccine.”

I’d just like the option NOT TO TAKE A VACCINE FOR A COMMON COLD. Is that really too much to ask?

If you don’t like the mRNA tech, NovaVax looks about the same and is just a protein plus adjuvant (immune boost), similar tech but different adjuvant to the Prevnar pneumonia vaccine.

If they are spying on Tucker Carlson then no one is safe

And you can go here for more: The NSA leaked surveillance details of Tucker Carlson to the media. And then as a follow up there is this: Check Out All The Blue Check Morons Who Swore The Corrupt Intel Community Would Never Spy On Tucker Carlson.

They will lie to us endlessly counting on half the population willing to stay onside with these communist totalitarians.

The silence of the lambda

Our elites are some of the stupidest people ever to have risen to the top of our social tree, not to mention how evil they are. They are determined to corral us into some kind of socialist viper’s nest and are using Covid to the fullest extent that they can. But the little bugger just won’t play ball: A worrying new strain of COVID-19 has been reported in the UK as scientists remain uncertain whether it could be resistant to vaccines.

Global health experts are concerned an ‘unusual’ mutation of the Lambda variant could be resistant to vaccines.

The Lambda variant, formally known as C.37, was first detected in Peru, and is responsible for more than 80 per cent of the country’s cases.

A study at the University of Chile, Santiago, looked into the effect of Lambda on workers who had received two doses of China’s CoronaVac Vaccine.

Results suggest Lambda is more infectious than Gamma and Alpha and is better able to escape the antibodies produced by vaccines.

“We observed an increased infectivity mediated by the lambda spike protein that was even higher than that of the D614G or the Alpha and Gamma variants,” the study wrote.

“Our data show for the first time that mutations present in the spike protein of the Lambda variant confer increased infectivity and escape to neutralising antibodies elicited by the inactivated virus vaccine CoronaVac.”

Don’t expect to find any of that in your local paper. Instead, this is what our media will do.

And you know what? After labda comes something else.

A LAMBDA UPDATE: First this from the comments which I thought was genius, except when I went to find it, it wasn’t there. So I will try to replicate it myself:

The next version if they follow along with the Greek alphabet will be the Xi version, which would be very ironic.

As in:

ΞξXi 

Like it, but I am a classical scholar, as in classical economic theory.

Found it! He said it much better than I did.

They seems to have skipped a few letters of the greek alphabet to get to Lambda. I suspect the next variant might be labelled the “Xi” variant which would be ironic.

And there is more on this lambda version’s imperviousness to vaccines: Lambda Covid variant’s ‘unusual’ mutations puzzle scientists. From the Financial Times even:

Lambda, the latest coronavirus variant to draw the attention of the World Health Organization, is worrying officials in Latin America and puzzling scientists because of its “unusual” set of mutations.

Might add in this highly recommended comment which seems to cover the waterfront:

COVID scare article. FT needs to pop up a few a week otherwise everyone will think is time to go back to normal life.

Normal life! You’ll have to remind me what that is.

A discussion of the many failures of Keynesian economics

This is an article written in 2009 replying to an article that criticised something I had written prior to that. My own article reprinted below was titled, Picking losers and was in reply to this written by James Guest. My original article that set this exchange in motion was published at Quadrant and titled, The Dangers of Keynesian Economics, dangers which are endless and only getting worse. There is nothing in the least dated in the article reprinted here even if the names are now different and the circumstances have now changed. For all that, governments are still stealing from the poor and middle class to give to our so-called public servants along with the rich.

The difference between myself and James Guest seems to come down to whether one actually believes markets work or, instead, thinks that we cannot count on them for growth and prosperity and that the government must come to the economy’s rescue to keep things ticking over. 

There has been, let us agree, a major dislocation in markets across the world. Jobs are being lost in 2009 at a rate we have not seen for sixteen or seventeen years. It’s not good, you wish it were better, but it’s the way things are. 

Moreover, these occurrences are not unknown but take place with a kind of regularity that makes their visitation unwelcome but not completely unexpected. Economies are subject to the cycle, and in the downturn firms that cannot make a quid disappear. 

So what do we do now? Do we have our domestic entrepreneurs decide where the best use of our resources would be, or do we leave it to Kevin Rudd and Co? Do we let people who have a market-focused desire not to lose their money make such decisions, or do we pass the baton onto a bunch of politicians and public servants who, if a productive economy is still our aim, are almost by definition incapable of deciding how our resources should be put to use. 

Let me therefore say exactly what Richard Posner is quoted as saying so there is no need to infer anything about my thoughts. The stimulus is very expensive and may well do major long-term damage to the economy. 

We are already looking at a budget that we are told is going to squeeze billions out of every hollow log the government can identify. The Government has committed large amounts of money on various projects of its own that it now must fund by raising taxes and imposts at every turn while winding back various benefits that had been provided in the past. 

How can any of this be a good thing? We are socialising more and more of our economy, putting decisions into the hands of those who have no genuine competence to make productive decisions. It will rescue some now at the expense of many more later on. 

James Guest quotes my writing that “it is clearly difficult to get the message across that spending money on anything at all is not the road to growth.”  It just seems to me that in his reply, he confirms just exactly that. 

He signs on to the expenditure on insulation without I am sure having done a moment’s worth of analysis himself. He writes: 

If the program were using resources which would otherwise be used in a more productive way that would be a ground for criticising it but that is not likely to be the case because the contracts to insulate houses and the budget spending tap for them can be turned on and off very quickly.  

OK, then. Come to the end of the project. There will then be many houses with insulation and there will be the debt the government incurred in having all this work done. You can say the same about the school auditoriums that are being built on the same principles. But what there won’t be is a single dollar of additional cash flow in the hands of government which it can use to pay off that debt. 

This is in complete contrast from a well chosen, properly costed private sector project of the same sort. In the private sector, such activities are designed to be self funding from the eventual cash flows that accrue when the project is up and running and earning its keep. 

On government project of this kind, however, there really never is a time when the debts are paid off. Only when some form of austerity is forced on public revenues because of the need to pay off the interest on the debt do the debts eventually disappear. 

And all the while the resources that are being used in these loss-making government projects are not being used in profit-making activities elsewhere. There are therefore the large but invisible losses to the economy of all the activities that were not done because the government has decided to direct our limited and scarce capital and labour into projects of its choosing. What we are losing are the projects that would have been supported on the market by people who would actually have been willing to pay for the goods or services when they were finally put up for sale. 

From the way James Guest writes, you would think we were in the midst of the Great Depression. You would think that we are wrestling with mass unemployment rather than a minor downturn in activity that, were it left to work itself out, could at least in Australia, be over and done with by the start of next year. 

We do not have a quarter of the labour force unemployed, as we did in 1932. That a forecast unemployment rate of between 7-8% should be a trigger for a spending frenzy shows a lack of proportion, and little regard for the long-term consequences that piling up such debt may cause. 

The problem once again seems to come back to macroeconomic theory as it is now taught. All spending is good no matter what it’s on. You put the various outlays under the labels consumption, investment or government – the C+I+G of modern theory – and forget about what you are spending the money on. It is really all the same, so the particulars apparently don’t matter. 

Public sector construction projects, without an increase in value relative to their costs, is a loss-making enterprise, just as it would be in the private sector. Running deficits for a net loss in value is like a giant Ponzi scheme. 

Macro theory tells you that there are multiplier effects. Even if the original outlay loses money, it is said, all of the secondary expenditures on various goods and services do their part to keep the economy growing. 

But if the initial expenditure loses money, then all of the secondary expenditures that hang off it are contributions to an overall loss-making project. Imagine if every one of the related expenditures had been part of a single enterprise. The fact that this spending is broken down into individual payments to various enterprises only disguises the fact that whatever is being produced is not leading to the creation of enough value to repay all of the costs. 

The economy is not creating enough additional value to validate the increase in the total level of spending. Something, somewhere will have to give. 

There is then the US.  The American stimulus package puts in place an immense increase in expenditure and a massive increase in debt. Yet James Guest believes that Obama’s $800 billion package is so paltry that it is “hardly going to touch the sides”. 

Is there really no sense of just how much sludge in the crankcase this expenditure will create? What will it take for it to be understood that economic growth occurs not in the spending but in the goods and services produced? 

It is true that a large part of the wealth we thought we had has disappeared. It was paper wealth, bundled up in asset values that when actually tested on the market, turned out to be a mirage. That says to me that our economic structure had become distorted and that some rearrangement of our economic structure is now required. 

Into this readjustment process we are now going to interpose government direction of expenditure on assets that will never pay for their own keep and we are doing so without an ounce of evidence anywhere to show that they will. 

We are creating the conditions for a very slow recovery in real incomes and another downturn to follow whatever upturn we now manufacture. Because of our spending today, the basis for a truly sustained period of growth and prosperity may continually elude us. 

Each and every job in the private sector must create value for those who employ. In the public sector, around the first 30% of expenditure might be productive in that sense, but the rest is taxpayer funded admin and transfers. I don’t say it is necessarily without value or purpose, only that it is dependent on taxpayer funding to allow these activities to occur. 

But what can be said about the extraordinary expenditures governments are now taking on to spend the economy into recovery? These are deficit financed without a thought in the world on how to pay them off. 

It is the timeworn role of governments to pick losers. It is what governments can be expected to do for which they have had much practice. I cannot think why they should be encouraged further along this road than they have already gone.

Scare-mongering politicians, the media and covid are a lethal combination

Covid FACTS is an interesting summary of where we are now at, or at least more factual than most of what you read nowadays. This is mostly about Australia, and where I look at things differently it is over whether vaccination has had any effect on the death toll, which I highly doubt. Still, this is a useful approach to thinking about the political mess we are in. And it is a political mess, not even remotely a medical crisis.

As reported on October 20, [2020], 73 per cent of Australians who have died with COVID-19 had at least one (and often multiple) other pre-existing comorbidities, death certificate data reported by the Australian Bureau of Statistics show.

These included dementia (41 per cent), chronic cardiac conditions (32 per cent), diabetes (17 per cent) and hypertension (16 per cent). The average age of COVID-19 deaths in Australia is 85 years – above the age of life expectancy.

Yet our scare-mongering politicians and bureaucrats have terrified millions of relatively healthy and non-elderly people to believe they are at serious risk of dying or getting very sick from the virus….

In the face of hysterical daily news conferences by premiers to announce case numbers and obliging media hyperventilating, it’s largely been forgotten that – so far – nobody who has caught COVID-19 in Australia this year has died. Barely anyone is seriously sick….

Total recorded deaths in Australia last year were broadly steady at 141,116 as registered by February 28, 2021, according to preliminary ABS data. Because of COVID-19-related restrictions such as social distancing and lockdowns, respiratory disease deaths fell 16 per cent as influenza and pneumonia cases plunged in a mild flu season.

But offsetting that was cancer deaths rising 4 per cent, dementia deaths jumping 7.3 per cent and diabetes deaths increasing 9.1 per cent.

With our political leaders and health bureaucrats consumed by COVID-19, they have neglected other health problems and may have shifted deaths to other causes because of cancelled health check-ups during lockdowns.

How we get out of this mess is now getting more difficult to work through. There is money to be made and political agendas to fulfil, with half the population stupid enough to be spooked by all of what is going on.