If Books Could Kill - "In Covid's Wake" Part 1: Lying About Lockdowns
Episode Date: June 17, 2025Two political scientists look back at a deadly pandemic and ask, "could we have done even less?"Where to find us: Peter's newsletterPeter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other pod...cast, Maintenance PhaseSources:Lawrence Wright’s “The Plague Year”The 2019 WHO report 30‐day mortality following COVID‐19COVID-19: examining the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventionsPolicy Interventions, Social Distancing, and SARS-CoV-2 Transmission in the United StatesWhat we can learn from SwedenA review of the Swedish policy response to COVID-19How Sweden approached the COVID‐19 pandemicThe first eight months of Sweden’s COVID‐19 strategyThe Swedish COVID-19 Response Is a DisasterExcess mortality in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden during the COVID-19 pandemic Comparing drivers of pandemic economic decline 2020How Sweden approached the COVID-19 pandemicComparisons of all-cause mortality between European countries and regionsJonathan Howard’s “We Want Them Infected.”Deaths: Leading Causes for 2021Stay-at-home orders associate with subsequent decreases in COVID-19 cases and fatalities in the United States Did the Timing of State Mandated Lockdown Affect the Spread of COVID-19? US State Restrictions and Excess COVID-19 Pandemic DeathsThanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I've been dealing with a very Hobbesian ailment lately.
I believe that I have turf toe.
Your feet are transphobic?
It's like a sprain of the big toe.
They call it turf toe because it happens in sports with AstroTurf a lot.
How did you do that?
Probably just walking.
Basically it's like you overextended or like a little too harshly or whatever.
That is Hobbsian because it's like my humors are out of balance.
There's no like actual reason it's happening.
We've been going on a lot of like walks around our local like reservoir and stuff.
for a few miles and uh look at you could have been over like it could have been from workout stuff i don't know
this is your 40s dude you're doing like cSI reconstructions yeah exactly your pillow was like half a
centimeter too low and so your neck hurt for like two weeks if my if my neck is not like at like the
angle that god chose when i'm watching television it will hurt for three days same but it doesn't
stop me from doing it anyway i've been lying in on couches in various ways for four
years. Yeah. And suddenly it doesn't work? I know. I'm not going to stop doing it just because
it's literally killing me. Absolutely not. Okay, what have you, Zingwise? Okay, yeah, I can do it. I can do it.
Peter. Michael? What do you know about in COVID's wake? All I know is that the only book about
COVID that I want to read is the one about why it turned every Republican insane.
So the full title of this book is in COVID's wake, colon, how our politics failed us. It is by
Stephen Mascito and Francis Lee, two political scientists at Princeton. Not real jobs, folks. Unemployed as far as I'm
concerned. There's really no reason for us to be talking about this book. It's, I mean, this book,
just to spoil it, like this book is awful. It's reactionary. It has a very self-published on Amazon
kind of feel to it. It's just kind of janky throughout. Yeah, you already said that they're
political scientists, Michael. We can move on. Otherwise, we wouldn't be talking about this, but these authors have
been featured on episodes of the daily, on an entire segment on PBS News Hour.
They are being featured in all kinds of mainstream respectable media.
And the message of this book is providing like a backbone for this wave of COVID revisionism
that has the costume of something that is like a serious reflection on the mistakes that we
made during COVID.
But it's actually just like right wing adjut prop.
I'm glad we're doing this just because I have noticed anecdotally the proliferation.
of arguments about COVID that are basically arguments that like we did too much.
Yes.
And implicitly that we should have just let it rip.
Yep.
Which to me, a man of science and reason, feels a little wild.
When we know that COVID killed a million people here and counting with these measures.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It just feels a little bit crazy to me to be like, did we go overboard?
I think this is the main thing that.
really bugs me, like, on a gut level about this book, is that, like, they are lying to your face
about something that you remember.
2020 was not that long ago.
I remember the fucking pandemic, right?
I know the statistics.
If you look at official COVID death rates, so adjusted for population, America is the 17th
worst in the world.
So out of 190 countries, only 16 countries have more COVID deaths than we do.
And if you look at excess deaths, which is like a more.
fair way to do country comparisons because a lot of countries didn't track their COVID deaths very
well, were 30th. And the thing is, people often try to kind of write this off as like, well,
we're not New Zealand, right? We're not a small country where we can control our borders. We never
could have handled it that well. But Canada has half the death rate of America. Like, it was a massive
blunder the way that we managed the COVID pandemic. It just was. Also, a lot of the places where
our death rates were terrible are places where people live like a quarter mile apart.
Yeah, South Dakota. There's just no defending it. In the introduction, actually I'll send this to
you. This is one of the core arguments they make throughout. They do this whole thing, this kind of Barry
Weiss song and dance where they're like, I'm a liberal. But, you know, from within our coalition,
we really have to ask tough questions about where our group think is leading us astray. So here is this.
A vital source of strength and resilience is liberalism's commitment to fair-minded criticism and
self-criticism.
The willingness to entertain doubts, listen to other points of view, and revise our own commitments.
These should not have been set aside under COVID.
Oh, my God, dude.
I can't. I already hate these guys so fucking much.
This is why I can't stop skeeting about this.
This is why every fucking thing I've done on the internet for like three weeks, it's like,
fuck these people.
To many on the left, the willingness to listen fair-mindedly to those on the right
is a luxury we can no longer afford.
Not while Donald Trump occupied the White House,
and not so long as the Republican Party remains in thrall
to election deniers, climate change skeptics,
and people who deny structural racism.
This is a mistake.
The partisan mindset has lumped reasonable questions
in with irresponsible claims
because both are associated with the same source,
the opposing party.
This is a prescription for failures of critical thinking.
Under COVID, there were heavy consequences.
Okay, so this is the same argument we saw
when we were talking about the lab leak in our bonus episode,
now made free to all listeners.
Because we're philanthropists.
Where basically the idea is we got too oppositional.
Yeah.
Anything coming out of the right was rejected offhand,
even though some of it was correct.
Although it's interesting that he's like,
you know,
we weren't listening to them because they're election deniers.
It's like, well,
RFK doesn't even believe in fucking germ theory, dude.
They're not thinking through the consequences of what they're saying, right?
They're not saying, oh,
they're actually not climate change deniers. You may think they are, but they actually aren't.
Right. No, they're just accepting. They are climate change deniers. They did try to overturn a free and fair
election. They're just accepting all that, but they're like, oh, but you're being too mean to them.
I guess there's like a theoretical argument here that's understandable where it's like not every single
thing that comes out of right wing circles is necessarily wrong. Sure. The thing is that I don't
think that is the source of the left's positions on COVID. It's just not. I mean, we're mostly going to
skip it because it's so boring, Peter, and we've read it a million times. But at least like a third of
this book is dedicated to, like, criticism of dissidents was unfair. People were too mean.
And then every single dissident is somebody who said like, oh, COVID will only kill like 10,000
people. It's basically the flu. Yeah, idiots. That's the thing. It's like, when these people were running
their mouth in early COVID, like, you know, Elon Musk being like, I think the numbers will stop here,
right? Just talking out of his ass. And a bunch of people are like, you don't know what you're talking about.
Those people were correct.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like, sorry, what do you think that we as a society should do with people who lie constantly
and are proven to be wrong?
Right.
You don't think we should marginalize those people.
I'm sorry, what is your understanding of like what a society is?
Like, what is merit?
Yeah.
Like, you're trying to, you're trying to explain this to like a child.
Like, if you're good, you should get rewards.
And if you're bad, you should get punishments.
Like, this is a really fundamental aspect of human community.
And they're just like, oh, no, no, no.
let's ignore the fact that they were wrong.
Other people were mean to them.
Well, they were wrong in a way that would have killed literally tens to hundreds of thousands
of people.
And like, is it really okay that the Secretary of Health and Human Services eats roadkill?
Is that really okay?
Yeah, exactly.
This is the outcome that this argument produces.
Right.
Right.
Is fucking RFK Jr.
In office.
Right.
So for this episode, we're going to just talk about the pandemic chronologically.
So this roughly follows the format of the argument.
the book, but there's kind of discrete phases of the pandemic. And so the first phase we're going to
talk about is like pre-pandemic. What did science know about non-pharmaceutical interventions
before the pandemic started? So here is a clip of them talking about the state of the science
before the pandemic. Frances, one of the things that was a real revelation to me was how you document
in the book that prior to COVID, that there was a good deal of analysis done about what happens
if a respiratory virus does emerge. And the consensus, or some version of a consensus,
was that lockdowns are not that effective and that they would cost society enormously.
Yes, there had been a tremendous amount of work planning for what to do when the next pandemic
arrived. And we took measures in the early going of the pandemic that were at odds with the
recommendations. They had been recommended against in some cases. There was a World Health Organization,
report from November 2019 that looked at what was known about all the proposed non-pharmaceutical
interventions. This is masks, shutdowns, isolation, testing, tracing, etc. Business closures,
school closures, looked at what was known about the effectiveness of each of those measures. And
across the board, the report states that the evidence base for the effectiveness of each of them
was poor. And so it's so striking that you get, you know, six months later, and
those measures are being employed all around the world with policymakers saying that they're
following the science. And of course, it's quite obvious that all of those measures have tremendous
costs. So as policymakers are weighing their alternatives, there's uncertain benefits, but certain costs.
I know. A report that came out before we knew exactly how COVID spread.
A report that was not about COVID because COVID didn't exist yet. Well, it existed in a lab in Wuhan.
So basically the argument they're making here is that before the pandemic, everyone in public health
kind of knew that things like mask mandates, lockdowns, travel restrictions.
They knew that these things didn't work.
They had no real evidence that they worked.
And yet, as soon as we get to 2020, all these public health officials are saying, oh,
we should all, we should do these lockdowns, we should use mask mandates.
Right.
Most of their chapter in the book covers this WHO document from November of 2019.
They're basically going through and saying, okay, what is the evidence for masks?
What is the evidence for stay-at-home orders, right?
Yeah.
And so the first thing to know about the WHO document, as we mentioned, this is about the flu.
This is not about COVID.
As of 2020, the fatality rate of COVID was about seven times higher than the flu.
So it's talking about something that was less severe in basically every way we know how to measure that.
And so the recommendations kind of follow from that.
The second thing that you need to know about the WHO report is that it has all these recommendations of like, yes, you should do this.
No, you should do that.
And the authors of in COVID's wake make big hay about the fact that like certain things like contact tracing, the WHO says it's like not recommended in any circumstance.
But all of these recommendations in the WHO report are provisional.
So for border closures, it says border closure is generally not recommended unless required by national law in extraordinary circumstances during a severe pandemic.
Right.
So over and over again in this document, they're like, wait, don't do contact tracing unless you have like as much.
massive once in a century global thing on your hands. So like, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Things are
different when things are different. This reminds me of a really irritating argument about the
stuff that I've seen pop up occasionally, which is just sort of pointing out that things like
masks, social distancing have like limited efficacy. Right. The thing is, even if masking reduced
transmission by 10%, it would be really important to get people to do it because at scale, you're saving
thousands and thousands of lives.
But then those are kind of like the obvious surface level problems with this argument that
like the WHO, like everybody knew that like masks and lockdowns don't work before the pandemic.
The main thing to know about this document is that the document is using what's called the
grade standard.
This is a kind of objective measure of how high quality is research.
And the grade standard is based on this principle that like you want a standard of research
across every single field to say what is high quality, medium quality.
and low-quality research. So the kind of gold standard is like a double-blind, placebo-controlled,
randomized control trial. And then at the bottom, it's just like a case report. Like,
there's one patient, and we tried this thing, and then he got better. That's the lowest quality,
right? The lowest certainty. But the thing about using these grade standards is that many,
many interventions cannot be studied in a randomized controlled trial. So in this WHO document,
they go through categories of various different interventions that you can do to prevent a respiratory,
pandemic. And one of them is a respiratory etiquette. So this is like covering your mouth when
coughing. The authors of in COVID's wake make a lot of hay of the fact that like, oh, there's
no evidence for this and yet they recommended it. But in the actual WHO paper, they say the quality
of evidence could not be judged because no study was identified. You cannot do a study where you
tell a thousand people to cover their mouth when they sneeze and another one where you tell
them not to cover their mouth when they sneeze because people already fucking do
that. It's like a thing in society that we already practice. It's basically already just background
public health guidance. You wouldn't get high compliance if you told people just, oh, cough in other
people's faces. We also know enough about the spread of illnesses that it's really irresponsible
if you have the flu to go around doing that, even if it's for a study. So there is quote
unquote, no evidence that covering your mouth when you cough works to prevent a pandemic. But that's
because you can't gather evidence on it. It's not the kind of thing you can do a study on.
I'm going to go down to Princeton and cough in these motherfuckers' faces.
Don't worry, Francis.
There's no evidence.
The other one that drives me fucking crazy is in this paper, they also talk about isolation.
So basically, when you're sick, you should stay home.
And they say the quality of evidence for this intervention is very low.
The in COVID's wake authors are saying, oh, they're admitting that there's low quality evidence.
But again, you cannot tell people if you have the flu.
Oh, yeah, go about your business.
You can't do a randomized control trial on this.
would be wildly unethical and the compliance would be really low. So low quality evidence in this
case basically just means it hasn't been meaningfully studied. You can't do a study on it. Or at least
that granular of a level, right? Because we do understand that proximity to other people impacts
the spread of infectious disease. That's not exactly contested. This is actually exactly what
they say about mask mandates. So here is their summary from the book where they're talking about
face masks.
The assessment also stated that in severe epidemics or pandemics, face masks worn by asymptomatic people are
conditionally recommended to reduce transmission. Despite there being, quote, no evidence that the use of
face masks is effective. There is nevertheless, quote, mechanistic plausibility. Right, which means what
we're saying, which is, there's no specific study on this because of the difficulty of conducting that
exact study, but like we understand the mechanism. Right. Therefore, we basically know that this works.
And also the incredible thing about this is that there is actually quite a bit of evidence.
There's a number of randomized controlled trials that have been done with masks.
One of them, they take kids in college dorms.
In one dorm, they're like, okay, wear a mask all winter.
And in the other dorm, they're like, ah, don't wear a mask.
And then at the end you see how many kids got, you know, common cold, flu, et cetera, at the end of that period.
And they do actually find that people who wore masks are much less likely to get sick.
The problem is that study was done on wearing masks and handwashing.
So the reason you can't say with 100% certainty that masks would work is because there's two interventions being done at the same time and you haven't isolated just masks.
So again, this is science being responsible.
They're being transparent.
I fucking love these political science dipshit.
Dude.
Trying to navigate these documents that reflect the work of people who do actual science.
Yeah.
Like, sorry.
Like it's just not your fucking field.
How are you doing a two-author book coming out of Princeton and neither of you are like,
should we tap someone from our prestigious university who does work on infectious disease, perhaps?
No.
Two political scientists, the greatest force known to man.
And so throughout this report, over and over again, for almost every single intervention,
they keep mentioning that, like, evidence is moderate.
Evidence is low quality.
But they also give the reasons why the evidence is low quality.
they also say that these fucking interventions work.
Right.
So in the contact tracing section, they say contact tracing combined with other interventions is effective in reducing influenza transmission in the community.
But the effect of contact tracing alone is unknown.
Because when you have these natural experiments like SARS outbreak, et cetera.
Right.
You combine different.
Yes.
Countries will do like 10 things at once.
And so at the end, you're like, okay, well, those 10 things worked extremely well.
We can't say this one thing was decisive or this other thing was decisive.
What if for the next pandemic, we just try one of these?
That way we have a coherent piece of data.
So the reason, I mean, this is like such a fucking dunk fest, but like the reason I wanted
to bring this up is first of all just to establish like the bad faith and scientific
illiteracy of the authors of this book.
Like I'm genuinely trying to approach this in good faith.
But it's like they're literally lying in their first substantive chapter.
There's almost an implication behind a lot of these arguments that like that something nefarious
was going on with the.
implementation of these measures, right? If you go into fringe right-wing circles, the argument was
always like, they're never going to lift these restrictions, right? Like, it's a control mechanism.
Of course, they did lift the restrictions. The whole argument falls apart, but it doesn't matter.
I don't understand these people who really seem to believe that, like, someone somewhere had an
interest in pushing ineffective mitigation techniques on all of us. I don't get it. Right. This actually
comes back to something you mentioned in our lab leak episode.
where they're talking about all the scientists engaging in a cover-up, and they say, like, scientists with mixed motives.
And you were like, hang on, what were their motives?
Like, why would a bunch of American scientists help China engage in a cover-up of a lab leak?
It's sort of the same thing here, too, where it's like, sorry, if everyone in public health knew that these measures don't work,
why was every country in the world recommending them in March of 2020?
Which scenario makes more sense, right?
Hundreds of thousands of public health workers around the world recommended a bunch of steps that they know are ineffective.
Or is it more likely that two people without the relevant expertise are misreading a report?
Is he wearing a burgundy suit?
How dare you, Peter?
That's from this month's Target Pride Collection.
It's all burgundy.
It's all beige.
The tag just has a homophobic slur.
That's how you know it's in the Target Pride Collection for 20s.
We're here, we're queer. Don't look at me. Yes. The other reason why I wanted to talk about this,
not just to establish the lack of credibility of the authors, is also you hear this so much when you're
talking about conspiracy movements and public health, which you often hear is if scientists had been
more transparent about the downsides of public health measures or if the CDC had been more
transparent about the harms of vaccines, right? There are very small, but there are existing risks of
vaccines. If public health had been more transparent about that, you wouldn't see these anti-
by faxers, right? These conspiracy movements, what they're really reacting to is like the lack of
transparency, the lack of accountability of our public health infrastructure. This chapter
demonstrates how false that argument is, right? This is a document from the WHO being extremely
transparent about, we have no evidence that you should stay home when you're sick, right? A study has
never been done. We have no evidence of that, yet we are recommending it anyway. Here is why, right?
And then these bad faith actors come in and they go, oh, so there's no evidence and you're
recommending it anyway, right? Admitting the weaknesses in your arguments and in your data will not
tamp down conspiracy theorists. They will latch on to every single weakness. The idea that conspiracy
theories emanate from like a lack of transparency is ridiculous. That's what they say, but they fucking
lie all the time. They also say that vaccines cause autism. You can't trust what these people
fucking say. Right. They think the earth is flat. You can't, you can't be like, well, what do you want to
here. This is not, it's just not how their brains work. They don't know why they are conspiracy
theorists. It's, again, this is just two political scientists in way over their fucking heads.
Yeah. Policy wise and suit wise. Okay. So we are now going to move through the timeline to
2020. So we finally have the start of the pandemic. In late January of 2020, China imposes lockdown on
March 9th, Italy locks down. On March 13th, workplaces in the U.S. start closing. On March 15th,
we start getting school closures. March 16th, Trump issues a recommendation to stay home, but he never
actually issues a nationwide lockdown order. On March 19th, we get the first stay-at-home orders.
And just because there's like a lot of kind of discourse about these and a lot of like weird
misremembering of them, I just want to talk a little bit about like the basic facts of the stay-at-home
orders. So it was either 42 or 43 states issued stay at home orders depending on the way
that you define it. There were tons of exemptions. So 16 states allowed religious services to be
exempt from stay at home orders, which is nuts because that's like perfect super spreader event
because everyone's fucking singing. Right. And the Supreme Court intervened. The religious freedom.
Yeah. The average duration was 43 days. With the exception of eight states, they were all over by June 1st.
They were also not enforced.
Right.
So I looked up the statute in Washington State, the stay-at-home order that I was under.
It was 70 days, which is, I think, the fifth longest in the U.S.
And it was like, you have to stay at home unless you're carrying out essential activities.
Right, right.
And then the definition of essential activities was, like, relatively broad.
It was like getting groceries, getting pharmaceutical stuff, caring for a loved one.
No cop was stopping you on the street.
No one was ever checking like, what are you on your way to do?
Yeah.
Many countries did actually have enforcement of these things.
And you'd get a ticket if you were out on the street.
Right.
Nowhere in America was anything like that ever imposed.
What were you doing during this period, Peter?
Chilling.
You were in New York, right?
Yeah, I was in Manhattan, the worst place to be.
Andrew Cuomo was actively trying to kill me at this time.
Yes.
You as a person in the United States during 2020 were not heavily influenced by your state
or municipalities' lockdown order.
You were heavily impacted by your.
employer and your kids school, right? And that's what I think people are reacting to and why they
think the lockdowns actually were much longer than they, than they were. Yeah, I think, I mean, a lot of
these also included closure of businesses. I think that's when it really sort of started to feel real for
everybody was because, like, you just couldn't go do anything, like, even if you had wanted to.
Right, right. I actually remember ours being much shorter than it was. I remember ours being like
two or three weeks. And I think that's because all of the data indicates.
that compliance with the lockdown orders, like, started to decay very quickly.
So by week, like, four or five, people were, like, outdoing stuff and, like, seeing people.
That's my recollection, too, is that when, remember when, like, Republicans were protesting outside of state houses?
That was mid-April. That was actually pretty quick.
That was after only, like, two weeks of, like, actual lockdowns.
It's wild.
That makes sense.
That's how long it takes to drive Republicans completely insane.
It's like, hey, can you just think about the well-being of other people for?
for two weeks and they were, they were like, I'm marching to the state house.
Although what's actually interesting about that period is you really didn't see very much
politicization.
Right.
The first couple weeks, it was, I think it was something like 87% of Americans, like,
supported the lockdowns.
One of the things that, like, really kind of, like, hurts my heart about this book
is that you have, like, what was really this great sacrifice that everybody went into
eyes wide open, right?
Nobody thought that, like, lockdowns were going to be fun or good.
Right.
Or that, like, kids weren't.
going to suffer or that businesses weren't going to suffer. Everybody knew this. And we made a
decision collectively to like help other people. Like they say over and over in the book, like the
fatality rates were low for younger people. And like I fucking knew that. I was like 35. My, my risk
of dying of COVID was relatively low even before I was vaccinated. But also like, yeah, I'm fine
to stay home for a while to help old people and disabled people and people who are less fortunate
than me. Like everyone knew that at the time. No one thought like, oh, this is going to be great for
kids. Kids learning is going to like go through the roof during this period. Everyone knew it was
going to be really fucking bad. And so we decided to do this like kind of beautiful thing together.
And then this whole wave of COVID revisionism is like, no, it was ugly. We didn't have to do shit for
those people. What you did for like healthcare workers and disabled people and old people,
they never thanked you for it. They lied to you. It's like, why do this?
It gets retconned as this really horrific thing. My genuine memory,
of that really early phase, those first couple of weeks was that there was a sense of like we're
all in this together that I have never felt in my life, maybe outside of 9-11, except that applied
only to other people because I'm half Iranian.
But you saw it.
We were the COVID of the post-9-11 period.
Okay.
So here is the way that the in COVID's wake authors summarize this period.
Their core argument is basically that there was no evidence that any of this would work, and public health knew it at the time.
Experts knew that none of these non-pharmaceutical interventions had previously been put to the test, and evidence of their effectiveness was weak to non-existent.
There was much reason to doubt that such measures would work as intended, most especially after a virus had spread widely.
Experts also knew that elected officials had incentives to use these measures for political reasons to appear to be doing something and to pretend to be in control in the face of public.
fear. The policies pursued were plagued by persistent ambiguity about goals. The initial shutdowns
in the United States were justified as 15 days to slow the spread to curb disease transmission to
prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed. But key actors hoped to reduce the total number of COVID
deaths intended to keep restrictions in place as long as possible and used slowing the spread as a pretext.
As a pretext. They were using it as a pretext to prevent death.
Key actors hoped to reduce the total number of COVID deaths. They're like shady actors by
the scenes. We're trying to prevent death. This is the most minute distinction that's like, oh,
they wanted to lock us down to prevent the spread, but they were actually trying to prevent
deaths. Right. I mean, A, I don't think they were lying about that. B, is that really a meaningful
lie? This is crazy. I mean, the first part of this is also just the same error that you were discussing
before where they're acting like the evidence that this stuff works is weak when, in fact,
it's not. It's relatively strong. We just don't have like very specific studies. And then you have
the second part where it feels like there maybe this is the heart of the argument, the, the idea that
this is being done performatively. It's very conspiratorial. They drift into conspiracy very often
in this book because they have this thing of that public health experts intended to keep restrictions
in place as long as possible. And like, yeah, they were very transparent about this. The restrictions
should stay in place until we've controlled the spread of COVID and health care systems are not
overwhelmed.
Yeah.
This was totally transparent.
Yes, as long as possible to prevent death.
They're acting, and I see a lot of people act as though Fauci or something was dictating
policy across the country.
They make this argument very clear in the conclusion, but they're basically saying that
like public health experts were given dictatorial control over the country.
And we never should have given so much power over to these narrow public health, you know,
wonks, whatever. But America is actually a very good example of that not being true, right? Because
different states had very different lockdown policies. The CDC issued guidance. State public health
agencies issued guidance. Also, there were tons of economic forecasts. And governors took all that
information and they issued stay-at-home orders or didn't or reopened or closed this business or
not this other business or masks or no masks. There was actually a wide diversity of approaches across
the United States. So if public health officials had been given this dictatorial power, we would
have seen much more strict restrictions and we would have seen unified restrictions. We didn't see
that. Let me steal man a good faith version of this complaint, right? Which is that like,
okay, the policy decisions happen at the state and local levels, but a relatively small handful
of public health officials have undue influence over the decisions because they're the ones
putting out the guidance at the federal level, right?
Sure.
If we want there to be federal public health officials, the question isn't do they put out
guidance or not, right?
Because the whole role is putting out guidance.
The real question is, who do you want the public health officials to be?
Do you want it to be the serious scientists or do you want it to be the roadkill eaters?
Right.
That's the question.
So as evidence of their argument that none of these.
restrictions were effective or necessary, they take us to Sweden. So the next chapter is called
the Swedish alternative, where they talk about how Sweden didn't do any of these large-scale
lockdowns. They say, no large-scale test and trace regimes were attempted. Masks were never mandated.
No, stay-at-home orders or restrictions on movement were imposed. Restaurants and gyms were not
closed. Sports continued. And then they say this. Most of the population was at very low
risk. It was the very old, sick, and frail who were at serious risk. Preventative measures could be
concentrated on the vulnerable. People could be relied upon to change their behavior voluntarily,
and that would make a significant difference. In short, Swedish health authorities viewed COVID
as the equivalent of a severe flu, which could not be contained but only slowed and which would
inevitably run its course. Inevitably run its course. The thing about running its course is that, like,
we sort of know that that's not true, nor is that like really how the flu works, but whatever.
The authors of this book, as usual, with these like bold, heterodox thinker books is like they're too chicken shit to make their actual argument.
They're basically arguing for herd immunity.
Like all of these, like the dissenters were criticized.
It's all people who were pushing for herd immunity.
But like we now know scientifically, like without a doubt, herd immunity does not work, right?
Because there are variants.
And people can just get reinfected over and over again.
The other reason why the herd immunity shit was never going to work is because it relies on like, oh, we can protect the vulnerable, right?
people with pre-existing conditions, but 60% of Americans have one chronic condition or another, right?
If you look at things like diabetes.
I have turf toe right now.
But it's like you can't, I mean, none of these people were ever going to support actual measures
to protect vulnerable people.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
If you look at quote, vulnerable people, you're talking about like 80 to 150 million people.
Protecting those people requires exactly the same kind of lockdowns we fucking did.
Even if you're like, all right, we'll limit it to like certain very specific conditions, right?
like respiratory conditions, et cetera, people who are immunocompromised in some way, and then
the elderly, you're still looking at millions of people that like, what, need to be isolated
from society without the rest of society feeling it at all?
Right.
How?
Yeah.
It always felt like that was this sort of like undeveloped policy solution, right?
That they didn't actually know how it would work.
They were just like, I don't think that I need to be doing this.
They then say that despite this lack of restriction, despite.
you know, giving their citizens much more freedom. The Swedish experience is actually a case of
what we should have done. So here are the results. This book is not a mystery novel. So at the risk
of spoiling the surprise, at the end of June 2021, Sweden's excess morbidity for the period from
January 2020 to the end of June 2021 was negative 2.3%. That is, the country had overall no excess
mortality, but rather less mortality than would be predicted based on previous year's figures.
This was also true of seven of the best-performing European countries, which included in Sweden's
Nordic neighbors.
So first of all, this narrative is roughly correct that the Swedish like lockdown experience in
March and April of 2020 was a lot lighter than other countries.
The thing that really set Sweden apart during this period is that they issued a ton of guidance,
but nothing was mandatory.
They did close schools for kids over 17, but for younger kids, they never closed schools.
On March 18th, they told employers to let employees work from home.
They're like, we think you should do this.
And they also told restaurants to like avoid overcrowding, like only let in a certain
number of people at a time.
They told Swedes not to travel within the country on March 18th.
So they were telling people to do a lot of the things that other countries were doing,
but none of this was mandatory.
So it was basically just like, we think that you should do this.
So that is really something that is very different about Sweden.
The main thing to know about Sweden's approach during this period was that it was an abject failure.
So in March and April of 2020, Sweden had the highest mortality rate in the world from COVID as a percentage of their population.
Their death rate was five times higher than Denmark's, nine times higher than Finland's and 11.5 times higher than Norway.
It was also, this is really bleak.
This is from one of the articles I read.
it was also 25% higher than the USA.
It's like they're like 12 times worse than Norway and like a little worse than America.
If you had put Cuomo in charge of one major city in Sweden, he would have wiped those
motherfuckers out.
So what's wild about this whole kind of like recasting of Sweden's approach as like secretly
successful is like Sweden itself set up a COVID commission and they issued a report that
says that this was a failure.
So it says pandemic measures were too few and too few.
late and the commission concluded that these should have been more extensive, particularly during
the first wave and considering the limited knowledge about COVID-19.
And so things like keeping businesses open, keeping public transit open, keeping schools open resulted
in a ton of COVID spreading around the community, which eventually did get to older people.
Like that is one of the reasons why the death rate was so high.
It says the high number of deaths among older people in Sweden, especially during the first wave,
probably due to high overall viral transmission in society. So even Sweden realized that this approach
was a mistake. And so in June of 2020, Sweden basically updated its approach. So this is an excerpt
from an article called How Sweden Approached the COVID-19 Pandemic. It says during the second and
third waves, the government and its agencies launched several new and robust measures which they had
previously rejected or refrained from using to reduce the transmission of the virus. These included
restrictions in restaurants and commercial areas, household quarantine if a family member had COVID-19,
and wearing face masks on public transit during rush hour. The changes between the first and second
waves were not based on any new knowledge. Some measures in late autumn 2020 were initiated by the
government rather than requested by the public health authority. These included no alcohol in restaurants
and limits on the number of people allowed at public gatherings. So basically, after June of 2020,
the practices among the Swedish population and the policies of the Swedish government were not all that
different from European countries. The only period when Sweden's policies differed very significantly
from other countries was the period when they had the highest death rate in the world.
Now, what I don't understand is why these other countries had lockdowns at all without
the evil mastermind Anthony Fauci, without him puppeteering at all. So Anders Tegnell, the head
of the public health agency, he writes a book earlier this year he gives an interview. He says,
The misconception is that Swedes haven't changed their lives because they really have.
Many work from home.
Restaurants were significantly less busy at all times.
People were no longer meeting indoors, but outdoors and traveling less.
If you walk down the streets in Stockholm, they were empty.
They didn't have mandatory, like statutory lockdowns, but people in Sweden restricted their activities.
That's what I was going to ask about because Europeans believe in society in a way that we don't.
So I was just sort of wondering like, what was their behavior like?
Because that's what really dictates whether this stuff works.
Right. The policy is sort of upstream of that, right? Right. And you can see that I'm sure that there are
countries that had more aggressive policies and fewer people adhering to those policies, which would also
make the policies a sort of a bad indicator of what works in a vacuum. They actually mentioned this.
They're like, oh, actually, if you look at the data post June of 2020, and they're like, oh, well, they did restrict
their movements. They did restrict their activities just as much as everybody else. But they had more freedom,
It wasn't dictated by the government.
If this is sort of the strongest case that you can make is like, oh, people should have locked down.
Like people should have stayed home.
But the government shouldn't have mandated it.
Right, right.
Okay.
What are we really talking about here then?
See, now we're no longer talking about something that political science professors are too stupid to understand.
Now we're talking about something that's so stupid that only a political science professor could think that it's important.
So then we have to talk about their weird thing where they say that Sweden has.
had less mortality than the previous year. So again, the book says Sweden's excess mortality
for the period from January 2020 to the end of June 2021 was negative 2.3%. That is, the country had no
overall excess mortality, but rather less mortality than would have been predicted based on previous
years figures. This was also true of seven of the best performing European countries, which
included Sweden's Nordic neighbors. And so their footnote for this leads to a book called The
heard by a Swedish journalist named Johan Norberg, who kind of bafflingly is citing a study from the
UK Office of National Statistics, which during the pandemic would release these periodic reports of
like, what is excess death doing around the world, kind of as these numbers became available?
And it is true that Sweden has a excess mortality at that time in June of 2021 overall of negative
2.3%. That part is true. However, if you actually go to the citation, Sweden has the worst excess
mortality of any Nordic country. So it's negative 2.3% in Sweden. It's negative 7.9% in Finland,
negative 8.3% in Denmark, and negative 12% in Norway. So I have no idea what is going on with these
numbers. I have not seen these numbers in other places. I think it's something with the ONS's
specific methodology on calculating excess deaths. But even in their own source, Sweden is doing
the worst out of any Nordic country. My initial instinct would have been that,
you would see fewer excess deaths in other regards, like things like car accidents are going to plummet, right?
Yeah, yeah.
That's most of the explanation.
Other types of diseases are going to are going to plummet.
Yeah, flu basically disappeared for like two winters.
Yeah.
They're just latching on to a stray statistic.
It's also just so bizarre to cite a book, which is citing a UK report, which he doesn't even link to in the footnotes of that book.
I'd like go truffle hunting for it.
when there are dozens of studies on this.
Like the world of academia and epidemiology are very interested in outcomes in Sweden.
And so if you look up numbers from statistics Sweden, which is exactly what it sounds like,
Sweden had around 7,000 excess deaths in 2020, around 1,000 excess deaths in 2021,
and around 4,000 excess deaths in 2022.
It is not the case that excess deaths overall went down during the pandemic.
It's just, it's an utterly bizarre hill to die on.
It just isn't true.
And I have no idea what's going on with this O&S study.
Told you what's going on.
Political scientists run wild.
Look, these guys can't even figure out why Trump won.
You think they can figure out fucking COVID?
No, go, go analyze some polls, bitch.
So to slightly steal man their argument, because this is an argument that goes around a lot,
is that if you look at the entire duration of the pandemic,
Sweden is not actually that much worse than the other Nordic countries.
And that's actually true.
So if you look at the four Nordic countries, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Norway.
Sweden is like in the middle of the pack.
If you look at all of 2020, 2020, 2021 and 2022, however, this kind of ignores, like, I think,
important nuance.
So even though it's like it looks less bad, if you look at the entire course of the pandemic,
Sweden still has 36% higher death rate than Denmark.
Like, that does matter.
Yeah.
The real outlier in Scandinavia is Finland.
Finland had 190 deaths per 100,000.
Sweden had 117.
So Finland did way worse than Sweden overall, if you look at the full course of the pandemic.
However, Finland apparently really fucked up their vaccine rollout and they had a really bad
omicron wave.
So for them, the year 2021 and 2021 were just like when most of their deaths were concentrated.
They did lockdowns and they had many fewer deaths during the lockdowns.
Yeah.
Those are just different things.
You can't just say like Finland has more deaths than Sweden and therefore lockdowns don't
work.
You have to look at the specifics.
So you have basically two months where they had a.
a laxer policy approach, those two months see a ton more COVID deaths than comparable countries.
And then the policies between these countries start to align a little bit as Sweden sort of cracks down.
Yeah.
I'm surprised that Sweden takes up such a large part of the mental space of the sort of like COVID denialists and their and people who are sort of sort of COVID denial adjacent because it just doesn't.
I'm not seeing it, right?
Yeah.
There's not, I guess the fact that it like, they overall had decent pandemic numbers is maybe
what people are hanging their hat on a bit here.
But it seems to me, and like maybe this is the only part of this little rant that you can
use.
So I guess what you're saying is that just ignore all that.
I guess what you're saying is that to the extent that Sweden had decent numbers at
the end of the pandemic, that was in spite.
Yes.
Of the fact that they had like, you know, these sort of laxer policies in the early phase.
And then the other thing about Sweden that I really want to mention is that, you know, the whole
point of these policies, right, is like we shouldn't do a lockdown.
It's going to cause all of these costs, right?
We're balancing economic growth.
Think about how bad it's going to be for economic growth when we shut down all of our
businesses, right?
Keep kids home from school, et cetera.
Think about how bad it's going to be.
Sweden also had a fucking massive economic crash during the pandemic.
Uh-huh.
This is the conclusion from an economic.
paper about Denmark versus Sweden. Denmark is an interesting case because it had like a very
strict lockdown and pretty early. So Denmark and Sweden are like a really interesting case study of
countries with similar cultures, similar economies, and one was like on the strict end of the
spectrum and one was on the lax end of the spectrum. So here are the economic effects. Denmark and
Sweden were similarly exposed to the pandemic, but only Denmark imposed significant restrictions
on social and economic activities. We estimate that aggregate spending dropped by around 25
percent in Sweden and as a result of the shutdown by four additional percentage points in Denmark.
So that's what mass death buys you is four points of demand.
Right, right.
Wow. And we still would have lost 25%.
One thing that I feel like gets glossed over is that although there was obviously a loss of
economic activity, the response was massive government stimulus that like largely worked.
And because of that, there was no massive recession or depression in 2020.
I think a lot of these discussions get boxed in by this sort of like assumption that like this was a massive sacrifice from just a pure economic perspective, which is not totally wrong because a lot of people were hit very hard.
But it also needs to be qualified with the idea that like we do.
did manage our way out of this.
Yeah, it was more generous than any Western European country.
Yeah.
Kind of accidentally.
We sort of like didn't really know what we were doing, but it's fucking great.
We just like gave unemployed people a shitload of money.
And like the savings rate went up during that period.
Like you can just throw money at problems.
And not all problems, obviously, but like a lot of problems become far less severe when you
just throw a shitload of money at them.
And there's actually, I'm skipping it because like it feels like I'm like dunking on this
book too much.
But they have a whole section about public debt.
Yeah.
about like, oh, the cost of the pandemic.
We, you know, look at all the deficit spending.
It's going to ruin the children for generations.
And it's like, should we not have done that?
Should we not, like, given people money when they had to stay home?
Like, this is just completely sociopathic to me.
Ludwig von Mises, you are absolutely cooked, bro.
Bitch made.
Bitch made.
The term that I learned from watching Temptation Island.
It feels to me like they're doing the same thing that, like, RFK does, which is sort of like, yeah, a lot of people dying,
except they're old and sick, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And who gives us shit, right?
They say that basically expressly here, right?
Yeah.
I mean, it says it was the very old, sick, and frail who were at serious risk.
And it's like, yeah.
And those are people, right?
But also, I mean, I also look this up because it drove me so fucking nuts reading this.
It's true that COVID is not like a major threat to like very young people, right?
There's only been 1,500 deaths of people under 18 throughout the pandemic.
I mean, you say only about children's deaths and you sound like a fucking monster.
but like compared to 1.2 million deaths, right? A very small percentage of them have been children. But also,
once you get into sort of 35 years old, in 2021, COVID was the second leading cause of death for 35 to 44-year-olds.
It was 16,000 people died of COVID. This was in 2021, right? After a lot of people had already been vaccinated,
for 45 to 54-year-olds, it was the number one cause of death. And if you look over the course of the whole pandemic,
we had 200,000 deaths of people between 50 and 64 years old. So it's not just like,
like, oh, if you're over 85, you're going to die and everybody else is like super safe.
No, I mean, middle-aged people like my age, there's still an elevated risk of death from COVID.
They're doing this fucking chicken shit thing.
They're like, oh, well, young people.
Oh, it's not bad for young people.
Fine for fucking infants or like people under five or whatever.
Yeah, the risks are lower.
But like, there's a spectrum of risk.
They can't even find right-wing virologists to write this shit.
Yeah, yeah.
They act like it doesn't matter.
And in fact, we've made them a mistake.
of being too snobby about this stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That, like, listening to public health officials rather than some dip shit was the mistake we made.
Right.
Lefties were too condescending to people early in the pandemic just because they were wrong and lying and
unqualified.
Right.
Have you thought about that?
Have you thought about your mistakes?
Well, yes, and they're not really very meaningful mistakes.
Yeah.
My mistakes rule, okay?
If we're going to have a sort of 2020 hindsight conversation about, like, what did we
fuck up in this period of the pain?
pandemic. Yeah. The actual failures were that we didn't lock down early enough because COVID spreads
exponentially, right? Two becomes four, becomes eight, becomes 16. Even like one day early for lockdowns
can prevent like hundreds or thousands of cases further down the line. Yeah. And that's very clearly
what the data shows too, that for a lot of states and counties, you had cases on this kind of upward
exponential trajectory. And the minute the stay at home orders come down, you see it like dramatically
turn to the right, literally flatten the curve.
Like that is what happened after the stay-at-home orders came down.
So one study says,
compared to counties that did not implement stay-at-home orders,
the results show that the orders are associated with a 30% average reduction in weekly
cases after one week, a 40% reduction after two weeks,
and a 49% reduction after three weeks.
Stay-at-home orders are also associated with a 60% average reduction in weekly fatalities
after three weeks.
So these did have...
dramatic effects. And sort of the caveat that you always have to give with these is that they are
associations, right? After the stay at home orders came down, we saw a reduction in cases. That doesn't
necessarily mean that it is causal and people may have locked down anyway. There's some evidence that
people were starting to stay home and avoid bars and restaurants, et cetera, before the mandatory
state at home orders came down. The problem with that is that a lot of other measures had happened
before we had stay-at-home orders, right? A lot of states had already closed schools. A lot of employers
had already told people to work from home. Trump had already issued that guidance that was basically,
please stay home. And people weren't doing it. Right. And so in analyses of this period that look
at all of the different interventions and what was the most effective, they find that stay-at-home orders
were the most effective because, like, you couldn't go out and do things. Right. You can't rely on the
population to just like voluntarily not leave the house for weeks on end. I mean, we knew, we were
aware that COVID was spreading in other parts of the world. Yeah. In like January, February, right? Yeah. And, you know, I, I don't think that that is like when we should have locked down. But had we, it would have worked. Well, yeah. Right. It would, it would have been very effective. I mean, this does kind of get back to the failures of this period, the actual failures. For this, I also read the play year by Lawrence Wright, which is really interesting and is basically exactly what it sounds like. It's just like, okay, what happened in 2020. Uh-huh.
And, you know, one of the core arguments of this book is that, you know, all we looked at was public health indicators.
We weren't looking at the economy.
We weren't looking at this broader range of indicators.
Most of America's failures during that time come from too much fealty to economic indicators.
It is very clear from what was going on behind the scenes that Trump did not want to lock down because he was afraid that it would crater the economy.
Fucking Cuomo didn't want to lock down because it would crater the economy.
That's the main reason our response was so bad and people waited so long to lock down was to save the economy.
was to save the economy.
Again, just like they're lying to your face not only about what happened, but about the reasons why it happened.
This is the thing is like the like economies are interconnected, right?
You couldn't have just maintained your country's economic status quo because other countries were shutting down.
You rely on imports, right?
Yeah.
The idea that there was like a clean trade where it's like, yeah, there's like a little more COVID spread, but everything else stays the same.
Ridiculous.
The other, I mean, the other thing that they're totally misrepresenting is like, oh, public health experts don't consider the tradeoffs.
But that 2019 WHA document that they cited, the entire purpose of that document was to consider tradeoffs.
That's the point.
It's like cost versus benefits.
So in that document, the WHA does not recommend contact tracing because it's too expensive.
These institutions are also, like, they're not far leftist adjut prop, right?
These are also relatively conservative institutions who have taken on this kind of everything has to be dollars and cents.
Everything has to be return on investment cost benefit kind of analysis.
The thing that really pisses me off is these people do not have the balls to be like,
I think that 50,000 more deaths would have been worth not having to wear masks.
That is actually what they think.
It's the obvious implication of what they're saying, but they don't have the balls to say it.
It's also emblematic of the way that they overlook the actual failures because kind of the point of the shutdowns was to give the government time, right?
was to get PPE, to get a testing infrastructure in place so that we could reopen.
And that was like the abject failure of the Trump administration was to do anything with those two
months, right?
They completely left states on their own.
Governors were bidding against each other.
There was a thing where Charlie Baker ordered a bunch of masks from China and then FEMA
fucking stole it, like on the runway.
Yeah.
Like Trump completely sabotaged this entire period.
The one thing that Lawrence Wright mentions in his book is that the CDC did not have a press
conference for three months for the first three months of the pandemic because Trump wouldn't let them.
Well, but he was having the like sunlight in your veins press conference at the time.
He was promoting ultraviolet beams as a cure for COVID in like March April.
Dude, that was the funniest fucking phase of the pandemic where you can like watch his brain
work where he's like, what kills the virus?
And they're like, it doesn't seem to be able to survive ultraviolet light.
And he's like, perfect.
We'll get that.
We'll get them in the body.
I read this whole book, and then I, just to double check, I control F'd.
There's no criticism of Trump in this entire book.
Oh, my God.
Every once in a while, they'll say, like, the left accuses him of failures, like they did with
the climate change denial stuff.
We're like, the left says this.
But it's like, okay, well, do those claims have any merit?
Do you want to, like, look at that at all?
Yeah, yeah.
You're misinforming people about the problems in the pandemic.
Right.
There was not leftist overreach.
Like, that's just incorrect that there was, like, public health leftist overreach.
The actual failures were from the fucking deranged weirdo we had running the government
at the time.
And not to mention, like, Trump's running interference against the public health officials, right?
So, like, in this book complaining about how public health officials have too much power might be worth noting that the president of the United States was undermining them in various material respects.
Look, he's just the person running the country.
We're not going to like spend any time on this guy.
I don't know where the causation is going.
Are these people dumb or does taking these positions rot the brain?
I know.
I know.
Eat away.
I know.
Your fucking neurological function to the point where you can't even read basic data.
Data that is central to the point you're making.
So we're going to talk much more next episode about everything that happened after the lockdowns lifted, the pre-vaccine period, the post-vaccine period.
There's a lot more to go over.
But for now, we're going to close with an excerpt from their conclusion.
A fundamental error of COVID policy was to accord too much power to public health experts with a predictably narrow set of professional concerns.
and expertise, as well as perspectives shaped by comfortable upper middle class material conditions.
There's a real lack of self-waring that's going on here.
I'm at Princeton.
I'm really against these eggheads, these elite eggheads.
Slogans like, follow the science turned complex, practical, and moral choices among policy alternatives
into simplistic attempts to predict effects on a narrow range of outcomes.
Public deliberation was severely hampered by the unwillingness of many political leaders,
journalists, and academics to ask and demand answers to hard questions involving difficult
tradeoffs. The problem of elites
hubristically deciding that they know better
than everyone else is as old as
democracy. What were we supposed to
fucking vote on
mask mandates or something? Like what
national referendum? What are you fucking talking about?
And by the way, it would have won. Also, it's not
hubris for experts
to give their expertise. That's not,
it's like I know about nuclear physics. Therefore,
I can tell you about nuclear physics. That's not
humorous. That's like basic fucking human functioning.
Also, sorry, but these
people were put into place by
elect democratically elected officials
right yeah yeah the idea that this
was like done by a fucking
cabal of experts who
by the way by the way
what do we fucking have these people for
if not to give us a little bit of
guidance during this once
in a century event
it comes and they're like you should wear
masks and stay away from each other
to the best of your ability and these people are like
the hubris of these experts what are you
fucking talking about wait wait wait wait wait I just
I just remembered something, hang on, but I actually want you to end with. Okay, so this is,
this is what they're recommending instead of what we actually did in 2020.
What was most needed was critical thinking, as health ethicist Ari Joff puts it, an effortful pause.
The UK's official COVID inquiry has recommended that in future crises, there be both
red teams, groups of dissenting non-experts trained in critical thinking, as well as far
wider range of expertise brought to bear.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What about the dumbasses?
We haven't heard from dumbasses.
I love the idea of having a group of dissenters.
So, like, you can't have them prepared in advance because you don't know what they're dissenting against, right?
So you basically get a bunch of experts together.
And then no matter what they conclude, you pull together a bunch of people who disagree.
Whose disagreement is a qualification.
That's the only qualification.
No, there's two qualifications.
The other qualification is that they are not experts.
Also, I love trained in critical thinking.
Yeah, I've been holding my mind.
Yeah.
Generally.
We have a debate between a public health expert and 50 Sam Harris's.
You know, I can logic my way through this.
Anthony Fauci, that was an interesting presentation.
What does the least famous political science professor at Princeton have to say about this?
