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Is the new government narrative to blame the public/put pressure on the public with rules a deflection tactic?

149 replies

User158340 · 11/01/2021 21:37

Now, we're in a really bad place with Covid this month and it's serious. The government are largely responsible given the decisions they've made and Boris's cowardice in making the decisions that need making until it's too late.

Now they seem intent on blaming the public for this. Is a lot of this smoke and mirrors to turn people against each other, rather than blame the government?

OP posts:
HariboBrenshnio · 11/01/2021 23:33

It's perfect for the government to blame the public, and in turn have us all blame each other. It's how they'll probably win the next election. When actually, they never shut the boarders during the first lockdown which countries who contained the virus did.

They spent billions on a shite track and trace, they pushed eat out to help out, they moved people off hospital wards into care homes without testing, they had to be lobbied to provide school meals in holidays while paying their mates millions to provide laptops to households that never turned up.

They put London in tier 2 when rates were rising while keeping the north essentially locked down all year with no extra financial help. They didn't extend the furlough scheme in October until AFTER companies had made redundancies due to the scheme ending.

They literally told us schools were safe and the NEXT DAY shut them.

All this time the boarders have still been open with no restrictions other than quarantine guidance that they don't follow up.

They put us through years of austerity while they got richer, so when hit by a pandemic we don't have the beds nor staff to handle it.

They stood up and told us all what Cummings did was fine AND let him hold his own bloody press conference while giving him a pay rise.

The list is utterly endless but yes, it's those minor rule breaks that caused the situation we're in..

RedMarauder · 11/01/2021 23:43

This government is surrounded by advisers who use "divide and conquer" to win elections.

In regards to this pandemic 99% is the government's fault due to confusing rules, boundaries for a particular tier/school closure not being transparent, them breaching the rules, their general nastiness to normal people meaning people are not supported to isolate, etc.

1% is the public for those who should know better but wearing masks improperly, deliberately not taking bubbles seriously and traveling when they don't need to.

BlairCorneliaWaldorf · 11/01/2021 23:44

Does it matter? We’re in the shit. People just need to take it seriously and do as they’re told.

How exactly is blaming the government going to help right now?

As for those blaming Cummings, how thick are you? Anyone seriously breaking the rules because he did would be breaking them anyway. He provided an excuse for a bunch of dick heads (many of whom seem to be on here) when they would have easily found something different fo justify their ridiculous actions.

blueangel19 · 11/01/2021 23:46

It's amazing how "but Corbyn" still gets brought up.

Imagine the trauma he caused.

EreLongDoneDoDoesDid · 12/01/2021 00:01

I 100% agree with you @User158340. Everything happening now is as a result of this governments very poor decision making since the end of the summer.... it’s been a catalogue of errors.

First it was Eat Out to Help Out, which encouraged large groups to get together indoors. Absolutely understandable that the public would embrace this after the spring lockdown, we all needed some fun, so I don’t blame anyone but the government for encouraging it with the scheme. Then Boris pushed that campaign to get everyone back into their offices, then it was pack kids into schools with no distancing or masks. Then when CW and PV said at the start of October that everything was picking back up again the government dithered and didn’t use half term sensibly to try and get numbers back down. That lead to that absolute joke of a press conference on Halloween, where Boris announced the lockdown that wasn’t, and aside from “non essential retail” closing (which seemed to be a much smaller amount of businesses than back in the spring) not much changed. Then, we came out of lockdown in the first week of December and people, understandably, panicked about their Christmas shopping and we had a week of all being crammed back in the shops and Boris announced that Christmas was going to be a five day free for all. Presumably not long after announcing this, Whitty, Valance and JVT sat him down and explained in words of one syllable why this wasn’t going to work, so five days before Christmas Boris gravely went on telly to tell us that Christmas was cancelled as the numbers climbed.

Ever since then the numbers have gone from bad to appalling to terrifying and Boris and co. look increasingly haunted and inept. Clearly at some point in the past week one of them had the bright idea to blame the public, so now the narrative has changed and it’s not the huge catalogue of errors that Boris has lead for literally six months that’s gotten us here but friends meeting for a stroll and a sit on a bench and kids playing on climbing frames and roundabouts.

It’s all absolute bollocks, the numbers are where they are because until three weeks ago our schools were packed with superspreading kids sat centimetres from one another in overcrowded and undistanced schools and two weeks ago families were mixing with one another to celebrate Christmas at the PMs behest. Our churches and mosques and temples and synagogues are still open. So are estate agents and branches of B and M.

This government are clown car-crash and absolutely everything about where we are now is because they haven’t got a clue of where to even begin in sorting any of this out. It’s not the public not following rules, it’s the government reacting to events as they happen and not having in the foresight to look two weeks ahead.

LilyPond2 · 12/01/2021 00:02

OP, yes.

IdblowJonSnow · 12/01/2021 00:05

Totally agree OP. Got it in one re the deflection.
Cowardly fuckers.

DfEisashambles · 12/01/2021 00:06

They are deflecting.

Their mixed messages gave leeway to this.

BananaPop2020 · 12/01/2021 01:42

@EreLongDoneDoDoesDid absolutely spot on summation

lovelemoncurd · 12/01/2021 01:54

Unfortunately we can't separate out government actions from the way the public is behaving. Many people lost trust in the government and its messages after the Cummings incident.

Yes it's a while ago now but it was the turning point. With better leadership we would be in a better place now.

MercyBooth · 12/01/2021 02:25

Totally agree with the OP and @HariboBrenshnio and @EreLongDoneDoDoesDid

Can i just add that he was hours late re. the Halloween press conference.
Why did they have their summer recess after telling us we are living in unprecedented times? Surely as this is the case they should have worked through it.

The way they behaved over Christmas was awful. Telling everyone they could have rules on seeing family relaxed and then spent weeks emotionally blackmailing and guilt tripping people into not doing it (a well known presenter really went for it then fucked off abroad over Christmas after telling people to sacrifice Christmas for the greater good) I found the way this was done incredibly psychologically abusive. A "sorry folks. It cant be done" earlier on would have been less emotionally abusive.
And please before anyone says, i have experienced both emotional and financial abuse in a relationship and i found this worse. I didnt live with the bloke in question so i walked away. I couldnt/cant walk away from this!

User158340 · 12/01/2021 06:21

It's clever what the government are doing here and cynical.

If the government were as adept at covid policy and crisis management as they are spin and deflection we wouldn't be in this crisis.

OP posts:
Goodbye2020Hello2021 · 12/01/2021 06:35

I think some people are determined to blame the government for everything with no acknowledgement that these are unprecedented times and we would have been even further up shit creek with no paddle if Corbyn had won the last election.

CORBYN?
What the F has Corbyn got to do with any of this? Bloody hell.

Goodbye2020Hello2021 · 12/01/2021 06:37

Mercy : a well known presenter really went for it then fucked off abroad over Christmas after telling people to sacrifice Christmas for the greater good

Who was that?

Goodbye2020Hello2021 · 12/01/2021 06:40

I’ve just googled ‘Piers abroad Christmas*...
How did I know?! Sixth sense.

Ginfordinner · 12/01/2021 06:42

It is the fault of the government and the public IMO.

LivinLaVidaLoki · 12/01/2021 06:52

I completely agree OP.

I know 4 people who caught it.
One at work
Two in the hospital (both had numerous negative tests before testing positive after a few weeks)
And my brother, who caught it in a care home.

Tbh currently it's believed that between a quarter and a third of people in hospital with covid, caught it in there. That care home outbreaks have more than doubled in two weeks.

But no, cases are high and hospitals are full because two women went for a walk in a park.....

DemolitionBarbie · 12/01/2021 06:54

Yep. They've underfunded the NHS, fucked up over Christmas/eat out to help out, paid £12 to a mate for test and trace that doesn't work, unnecessarily landed us in brexit chaos at the worst possible time, squandered huge amounts on PPE contracts for their chums.

But they want press coverage on whether people went 5 miles from their house instead of 3.

DemolitionBarbie · 12/01/2021 06:55

You can tell they know it's bad because Allegra Stratton was brought in to do press conferences like in the US, they built a media site for it at great expense, but nothing has happened as they don't actually want to be asked questions.

Eve · 12/01/2021 07:01

Completely

Look at this article from the BMJ yesterday very kindly shared by someone on another thread.

research shows 90% compliance - but that doesn’t make suitable tabloid headlines

blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2021/01/07/pandemic-fatigue-how-adherence-to-covid-19-regulations-has-been-misrepresented-and-why-it-matters/?fbclid=IwAR0Zaf1nzlw8qPZ9BxbN-diucRL2J3tUPQKTISz9x50wr4DB56bNmXy1_OA

Pandemic fatigue? How adherence to covid-19 regulations has been misrepresented and why it matters
January 7, 2021

As England and Scotland start another period of lockdown, we all have to come to terms with following stricter covid-19 restrictions, most likely for a relatively long period of time. The notion of behavioural fatigue associated with adherence to covid restrictions (so-called “pandemic fatigue”) has been a recurrent theme throughout the crisis. It was invoked before the first wave in March 2020 as a reason to delay restrictions. [1] It was invoked in October 2020 as a reason to delay the imposition of the circuit-breaker which SAGE had called for on 21st September. [2,3] It was invoked in December 2020 as a reason to loosen restrictions over the Christmas period. [4] In October, a Google search found some 200 million mentions of the term “pandemic fatigue”. [5] By now, the figure has risen to over 240 million. It is a term that has entered both the academic and the popular lexicon in 2020.

Linked to the notion that people in general will find it hard to adhere due to shared human psychological frailties is the idea that when particular individuals break the rules, it is due to their particular psychological failings. They are either too weak, too stupid, or too immoral to do the right thing. Hence, terms like “covidiots” have become almost as familiar as “pandemic fatigue.” This feeds into a widespread narrative of blame whereby the spread of infections is explained in terms of individuals and groups who choose to break the rules, rather than failures of public health response.

The narrative of blame is exemplified in the language used by politicians. For instance, in his televised address to the nation on 22nd September 2020, the UK prime minister Boris Johnson spoke of people “flouting” and “brazenly defying” covid restrictions. [6] It is also exemplified in a media focus on particularly egregious examples of violations such as raves and large house parties. [7] All in all, this narrative explains the worsening pandemic in terms of widespread non-adherence to rules which is a function of poor psychological motivations, which in turn are particularly prevalent in some people and some communities.

Each of these assumptions is both problematic and indeed dangerous.

Let’s start with levels of adherence. To the surprise of many, adherence to stringent behavioural regulations has remained extremely high (over 90%), even though many people are suffering considerably, both financially and psychologically. [8] Equally, despite anecdotal observations about growing violations and polling which shows that people report low levels of adherence in other people, both self-reported data and systematic observations of behaviour in public places suggest that adherence stayed high during the second lockdown. [9,10] Some 90% of people or more adhere to hygiene measures, to spatial distancing, and to mask wearing most of the time. [11] Moreover, people generally support regulations and, if anything, believe that they should be more stringent and introduced earlier. This pattern has been repeated in the last few days, with 85% of the public endorsing the January ‘lockdown’ and 77% thinking it should have happened sooner. [12,13]

Even among those groups who have been singled out and blamed for irresponsible behaviours, such as students whose partying was widely reported in October, systematic analyses reveal a very different picture. ONS data reveals very high levels of adherence to social distancing, very low levels of social mixing, and indeed that students were far more likely than the general population to avoid leaving their accommodation altogether. [14]

The discrepancy between what people are doing and what we think people are doing is instructive and points to what is termed the availability effect. [15] That is, we judge the incidence of events based on how easily they come to mind – and violations are both more memorable and more newsworthy than acts of adherence. People sitting quietly at home and watching TV does not make a newspaper headline. People at a house party does. So we develop a biased perception of the level and type of violations, which runs the risk of becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy. If we believe that the norm is to ignore the rules, it may lead us to ignore them too. [16]

However, there is one key area where the perception of low adherence is not at odds with the reality. That concerns levels of self-isolation in those who are infected or else are contacts of those who test positive for the virus, which are estimated to be around 18%. [17] Unlike hand-hygiene and social distancing, self-isolation requires support from others to be possible. This includes support from others in the community, in the form of shopping most obviously. It also requires material support in the form of an income and sufficient space. The lower adherence rates for self-isolation therefore suggest that the issues may have less to do with psychological motivation than with the availability of resources. [18] This accords with data from the first “lockdown” showing that the most deprived were six times more likely to leave home and three times less likely to self-isolate, but that they had the same motivation as the most affluent to do so. [19] Non-adherence was a matter of practicality, not psychology. It also accords with the fact that in those places where support is given to self-isolate (as in New York, where people are provided with money, hotel accommodation, food, mental health support, even pet care) adherence is as high as 95%. [20,21]

All this goes to make a simple and obvious point. People get infected because they get exposed. And they are more likely to be exposed if they are structurally more vulnerable: living in crowded housing, not able to work from home, limited to public transport. This is true of young people and explains the increase in infections among the young when the first lockdown was eased. [22] It also explains the outbreaks in student halls of residence where, characteristically, many live together in small shared units.

The problem, then, is that in psychologising and individualising the issue of adherence, one disregards the structural factors which underlie the spread of infection and the differential rates in different groups. One also avoids acknowledging the failures of government to provide the support necessary to follow the rules (most obviously in the case of self-isolation). Additionally, one overlooks the fact that some of the rules and the messaging around them, may be the problem (such as encouragement to go out to the pub – doing one’s “patriotic best” according to the PM – and to return to work after the first “lockdown”). It is particularly misleading and unfair to ask people to do things and then blame them for doing so. [23]

The way in which issues of adherence have been portrayed and understood during this pandemic have been spectacularly wrong. If anything, the headline stories should not be of “fatigue” and “covidiots”’ and house parties. They should highlight the remarkable and enduring resilience of the great majority of the population – including those who have been most subject to blame such as students and young people in general – even in the absence of adequate support and guidance from government. Indeed, in many ways the narratives of blame serve to project the real frailties of government policy onto the imagined frailties of public psychology.

Stephen Reicher, School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St. Andrews

John Drury, School of Psychology, University of Sussex

BigGreen · 12/01/2021 07:07

What a fantastic blog, thanks for sharing.

It is to our great shame that the government pay their mates for laptops all while leaving the poorest in society to bear the costs of self isolation.

That's got to be a key factor in the spread. I wonder why they are so resistant to the NY approach?

LivinLaVidaLoki · 12/01/2021 07:09

@eve I've seen that posted too, it's an interesting read.

Though I've noticed when it has been shared elsewhere a lot of people don't believe it. There's a lot of "well they would say they're keeping to the rules, but on my street alone....."

Eve · 12/01/2021 07:13

It is an interesting read - and I must thank whoever shared it originally.

NoGoodPunsLeft · 12/01/2021 07:17

The question of who is at fault has been asked twice (that I remember) on the You Gov daily questions, both times it's the public to blame by a big percentage.

SansaSnark · 12/01/2021 07:17

I agree with you OP. Whilst so many people are being forced to go to work in person, so many non-essential business are open and so many schools still have 50% or more of their students in, individuals breaking the rules are not going to be the main source of spread.

But that is the government's narrative. They are trying to deflect blame from their own poor decision making.