I missed this staggering and articulate indictment from @bmj on the negligence of Johnson, Trump and other "Populists" during the #Covid19 #pandemic .

RT in full. Link at end. Everything we've said and more. A must read.

Thank you kabbasi@bmj.com
After two million deaths, we must have redress for mishandling the pandemic

Murder is an emotive word. In law, it requires premeditation. Death must be deemed to be unlawful. How could “murder” apply to failures of a pandemic response? 1/
Perhaps it can’t, and never will, but it is worth considering. 2/
When politicians and experts say that they are willing to allow tens of thousands of premature deaths for the sake of population immunity or in the hope of propping up the economy, is that not premeditated and reckless indifference to human life? 3/
If policy failures lead to recurrent and mistimed lockdowns, who is responsible for the resulting non-covid excess deaths? 4/
When politicians wilfully neglect scientific advice, international and historical experience, and their own alarming statistics and modelling because to act goes against their political strategy or ideology, is that lawful? 5/
Is inaction, action?1 How big an omission is not acting immediately after the World Health Organization declared a public health emergency of international concern on 30 January 2020? 6/
At the very least, covid-19 might be classified as “social murder,” as recently explained by two professors of criminology.2 The philosopher Friedrich Engels coined the phrase when describing the political and social power held by the ruling elite over the working classes… 7/
…in 19th century England. 8/
His argument was that the conditions created by privileged classes inevitably led to premature and “unnatural” death among the poorest classes.3 In The Road to Wigan Pier, George Orwell echoed these themes in describing the life and living conditions of working class… 9/
…people in England’s industrial north.4 Today, “social murder” may describe the lack of political attention to social determinants and inequities that exacerbate the pandemic. Michael Marmot argues that as we emerge from covid-19 we must build back fairer.5 10/
International accountability
A pandemic has implications both for the residents of a country and for the international community, so sovereign governments should arguably be held accountable to the international community for their actions and omissions on covid-19. 11/
Crimes against humanity, as adjudicated by the International Criminal Court, do not include public health.6 But David Scheffer, a former US ambassador for war crimes, suggests that we could broaden the application of public health malpractice “to account for the… 12/
…administration of public health during pandemics.”7 In that case, public health malpractice might become a crime against humanity, for leaders who intentionally unleash an infectious disease on their citizens or foreigners. 13/
Others have argued similarly for environmental crimes.8

If not murder or a crime against humanity, are we seeing involuntary manslaughter, misconduct in public office, or criminal negligence? 14/
Laws on political misconduct or negligence are complex and not designed to react to unprecedented events, but as more than two million people have died, we must not look on impotently as elected representatives around the world remain unaccountable and unrepentant. 15/
What standard should leaders be judged by? Is it the small number of deaths in countries such as New Zealand and Taiwan, or the harsher standard of zero excess deaths? 16/
Deaths do not come as single spies but as a battalion of bereaved families, shattered lives, long term illness, and economic ruin.

From the United States to India, from the United Kingdom to Brazil, people feel vulnerable and betrayed by the failure of their leaders. 17/
The over 400 000 deaths from covid-19 in the US, 250 000 in Brazil, 150 000 each in India and Mexico, and 100 000 in the UK comprise half of the world’s covid death toll—on the hands of only five nations.9 Donald Trump was a political determinant of health who damaged… 18/
…scientific institutions.10 He suffered electoral defeat, but does Trump remain accountable now that he is out of office? 19/
Bolsonaro, Modi, and Johnson have had their competence questioned in differing ways, and McKee and colleagues argue that populist leaders have undermined pandemic responses.11 The prospect of accountability in autocracies such as China and Russia is more distant still and… 20/
…relies on strong international institutions and the bravery of citizens. 21/
More than a few countries have failed in their response to the virus; the global missteps are many and well documented by the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response.1213 Its report calls for comprehensive use of non-pharmaceutical interventions—the means,… 22/
…they say, by which these interventions curb a pandemic are “well known”—and for governments to support equity, reinvent and modernise the global pandemic alert system, take pandemic threats seriously, and cooperate better with other nations and WHO. 23/
Acting urgently and collaboratively in these areas will allow the world to be best prepared for any future pandemic.

Hollow excuses 24/
But the global picture does not absolve individual leaders and governments from responsibility.14 Many of the independent panel’s conclusions place the blame squarely at the doorsteps of rulers, although you will be hard pressed to find a single politician who has admitted… 25/
…responsibility for the extent of premature death, let alone resigned. Several have expressed contrition, but “sorry” rings hollow as deaths rise and policies that will save lives are deliberately avoided, delayed, or mishandled. 26/
Others say they have done all they can or that the pandemic was uncharted territory; there was no playbook. None of these are true. 27/
They are self-serving political lies from the “gaslighters in chief” around the globe.15 Some attempt to defend their record by claiming that their country has done more testing, counts deaths better, or has more obesity and population density. 28/
All of these may contribute, but counting methods or population factors do not explain the sheer scale of the variation in performance.

If citizens feel disempowered, who might hold negligent politicians to account? 29/
Experts in science might do so, but official scientific advisers have often struggled to convince politicians to act until it is too late or kept silent to avoid public criticism. So might doctors, with their responsibilities to public health.16 30/
The media might help here, remembering their duty to speak truth to power, to hold elected officials accountable. 31/
And yet much of the media is complicit too, trapped in ideological silos that see the pandemic through a lens of political tribalism, worried about telling pandemic truths to their readers and viewers, owners, and political friends. 32/
In fact, truth has become dispensable as politicians and their allies are allowed to lie, mislead, and repaint history, with barely a hint of a challenge from journalists and broadcasters. 33/
Anybody who dares to speak truth to power is unpatriotic, disloyal, or a “hardliner.” 34/
Ministers in the UK, for example, interact with the media through sanitised interviews, stage managed press conferences, off-the-record briefings to favoured correspondents, and, when the going gets tough, by simply refusing to appear. 35/
It is this environment that has allowed covid denial to flourish, for unaccountability to prevail, and for the great lies of “world beating” pandemic responses to be spun. 36/
“The most important lessons from this pandemic,” argue Bollycky and Kickbusch, “are less about the coronavirus itself but what it has revealed about the political systems that have responded to it.”17 37/
How many excess deaths does it take for a chief scientific or medical adviser to resign? How long should test and trace fail the public before a minister of health or chief adviser steps down? 38/
How many lucrative contracts for unscientific diagnostic tests that are awarded to cronies or errors in education policy will lead to a ministerial sacking?

Getting redress 39/
Where then should citizens turn for accountability, if they don’t find it in their leaders and feel unsupported by experts and the media? 40/
The law remains one form of redress, and indeed some legal avenues, including criminal negligence and misconduct in public office, are being explored,1819 although proving any such claims will be difficult and drawn out. 41/
But the notion of murder, at least “social murder,” is hard to shake emotionally, and strengthens with every denial of responsibility and every refusal to be held accountable or to change course.

That leaves three options. 42/
The first is to push for a public inquiry, as The BMJ and others argued for in the summer of 202020—a rapid, forward looking review rather than an exercise in apportioning blame that will identify lessons and save lives. 43/
The second is to vote out elected leaders and governments that avoid accountability and remain unrepentant. 44/
The US showed that a political reckoning is possible, and perhaps a legal one can follow, although research suggests that mishandling a pandemic may not lose votes.21 The third is for mechanisms of global governance, such as the International Criminal Court, to be… 45/
…broadened to cover state failings in pandemics.

In the UK, which was responsible for about 1% of global deaths in the 1918-19 flu pandemic and now accounts for 5% with a smaller proportion of the world’s population,922 elections are a few years off. 46/
As the current government holds a parliamentary majority, avenues for redress seem blocked. 47/
What’s left in these circumstances is for citizens to lobby their political representatives for a rapid public inquiry; for professionals in law, science, medicine, and the media, as well as holders of public office, to put their duty to the public above their loyalty to… 48/
…politicians and to speak out, to dissent lawfully, to be active in their calls for justice, especially for disadvantaged groups.

The “social murder” of populations is more than a relic of a bygone age. It is very real today, exposed and magnified by covid-19. 49/
It cannot be ignored or spun away. Politicians must be held to account by legal and electoral means, indeed by any national and international constitutional means necessary. 50/
State failures that led us to two million deaths are “actions” and “inactions” that should shame us all.

Footnotes
Competing interests: I have read and understood BMJ policy on declaration of interests and have no relevant interests to declare. 51/
Provenance and peer review: Commissioned; externally peer #pandemic 52/
The above is not my work, but it captures what I and many others have been saying since February 2020.

I endorse it in full

Thank you @KamranAbbasi

Retweeted from:

Covid-19: Social murder, they wrote—elected, unaccountable, and unrepentant

bmj.com/content/372/bm…
This cannot be forgotten and must not be forgiven until those responsible have become accountable for those who never should have died.

I've lived under an Illusion:
Social Mass Murder can never happen in the UK.
My reassurances: Unwritten constitution, mother of parliaments, free press.

I AWOKE, in HORROR.

This was the best place to enable a tragedy. And continue to stay in office.

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More from @atatimelikethis

6 Mar
It's 756 years since the first Parliament of what's now the UK sat

Just one thing survives from then.

As a member of the Executive, to lie deliberately to or mislead the House requires immediate resignation.

So. Mr Johnson?

You seem to have done both.

goodlawproject.org/update/johnson…
Maybe you're a fan of Johnson?
You want to forgive it as minor?
A small white lie from a man everyone knows "exaggerates".

As you build these excuses consider for a moment that if there is no requirement for truth to be told to Parliament, then there is no Democracy.
Mr Johnson is not campaigning in Parliament, he's in power.

When campaigning, under English law, he can say or promise almost anything without sanction (look it up)

That stops at the Dispatch Box

He may exaggerate or promise. But to deceive deliberately brings down Democracy.
Read 7 tweets
5 Mar
Inconvenient #NHS facts

The 1% pay rise is "all we can afford" because the BJ is paying £513m extra already for training & recruitment

We're paying £513 extra because of the cost of the BJ's badly thought through immigration exceptions.

And two more factors he also controls...
1. Yes NHS Visa charges are back. Remember your outrage last year? From Jan 1st, in addition to an onerous immigration system, they quietly ALSO started to charge nurses to work here.

2. Then why so many more staff? Well we can't blame the BJ for #COVID19 in general...
But 80,000 EXTRA died: his PPE, border controls, (lack of) testing. July beaches.

BJ didn't cause Covid, he just made it far worse at huge cost of life

More NHS staff costs to correct his mistakes.

Odd, because war powers were added "avoid mistakes"⏬

Just one more thing...
Read 8 tweets
15 Jan
When Jacob Rees Mogg threw dead fish into the Thames at WETminster, I thought, like most of you, he was making a point on behalf of the Fishing INDUSTRY.

It was only yesterday that we all learned he was acting on behalf of the FISH.

Fish happiness, not Brexit, was the goal!
In the year before #Brexit started -
(note: Brexit was not done, it's just begun)
- I worried about those most impacted.

My logic was while those wishing to remain would be most disappointed, they would also be most prepared.

#BrexitDeal would hurt its supporters.
Starting ☝️
Two reasons were anticipated.

1. Famously the economic consequences would hurt Leave voters the most (albeit no one expected the madness of combining #Brexit with #Covid19)

2. Sovereignty and independence would be reversed; we'd end up with less of both (as we have).

Number 3?
Read 15 tweets
15 Jan
Admirable Team Johnson NOW acts re' viruses at our borders.

But that makes THEN a mystery⏬ .

The thread has 14 examples of no #Covid19 border safety
TLDR:

* anti checking PR
* 000s Italy passengers unloaded
* lies about WHO advice
* useless quarantine
* no reporting
* ⏫☠💷
If Goebells occasionally clouded the truth:
* Grant Shapps has been murky,
* Priti Patel opaque.

On the record xxx times Shapps quoted WHO to justify no checks or flight restrictions.

⚠️ He used half the letter
⚠️ The whole letter said the opposite

Shapps ideological removal of UK from European Air Safety Guidance in March was reckless given #Covid19 impact on Travel Industry (we still have no replacement).

For Human life it was catastrophic.

UK was the only major country in the world to welcome #Covid19 at our borders
Read 6 tweets
6 Jan
When did a force for good last win enough for a little cheer 🍻🥂?

🤔😪a while

Cheer up. You missed one 🌊
In the US. We all did.
😲😏

Implications for the UK?
🤔🙂😃

Press owners, corrupt editors, bent politicians can be beaten?
😂🤣😅

If they don't kill us first!
😲😳🥺
The victory of CNN over Fox News is Tectonic, like a super nova is the warm embers of a fire.

Impossible
Couldn't happen
Big Bang Event

In the UK we know CNN from their brand not success.

Stateside they WERE dead.

Fox didn't see it coming.
But CNN were even more surprised. Image
Most Brits regard Fox News as nasty, dangerous or both. Few of us know it HAS 2x share of its rivals CNN & MSNBC

HAD

Everything changed.
CNN is now larger..

Interesting but a UK link pls?

OK, Our Press is EVEN more biased.
Can we learn how this happened?
Apply it?
YES! Image
Read 19 tweets
4 Jan
If it's normal to be incompetent, then slowly it's acceptable, then expected => HMG & #Covid19

SLOWLY

Cabinet is negligent. Deaths, costs, health failures, purchasing: All worse than they should be

Prediction: Minimum 80% of final deaths and cost due Cabinet.

Evidence? ⏬ Image
Remember #Johnson spent the first half of this Pandemic calling it unprecedented when it wasn't. Now that's old HIS new variant is THE new variant is...unprecedented.

Threads, starting in May to show it is PRECIDENTED
[]

Time to read? More examples⏬
Airport checks?
Don't exist. We were told to put them in, in March.
We have a lousy lazy quarantine - Ms Patel never reports on it.

No country is this lazy

But to raise blood pressure, 80% of deaths and costs in wave 1? This factor alone.

Read 10 tweets

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