The Bigger Picture
is Hiding Behind a Virus
By Jonathan Cook
April 04, 2020 "Information
Clearing House"
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Things often look the way they do because someone
claiming authority tells us they look that way. If that
sounds too cynical, pause for a moment and reflect on
what seemed most important to you just a year ago, or
even a few weeks ago.
Then, you may have
been thinking that Russian interference in western
politics was a vitally important issue and something
that we needed to invest much of our emotional and
political energy in countering. Or maybe a few weeks ago
you felt that everything would be fine if we could just
get Donald Trump out of the White House.
Or maybe you
imagined that Brexit was the panacea to Britain’s
problems – or, conversely, that it would bring about the
UK’s downfall.
Still feel that
way?
After all, much as
we might want to (and doubtless some will try), we can’t
really blame Vladimir Putin, or Russian troll farms
spending a few thousand dollars on Facebook advertising,
for the coronavirus pandemic.
Much as we might
want to, we can’t really blame Trump for the
catastrophic condition of the privatized American health
care system, totally ill-equipped and unprepared for a
nationwide health emergency.
And as tempting as
it is for some of us, we can’t really blame Europe’s
soft borders and immigrants for the rising death toll in
the UK. It was the global economy and cheap travel that
brought the virus into Britain, and it was the Brexit-loving
prime minister Boris Johnson who dithered as the
epidemic took hold.
The Bigger Picture
Is it possible
that only a few weeks ago our priorities were just a
little divorced from a bigger reality? That what
appeared to be the big picture was not actually big
enough? That maybe we should have been thinking about
even more important, pressing matters – systemic ones
like the threat of a pandemic of the very kind we are
currently enduring.
Because while we were all
thinking about Russiagate or Trump or Brexit, there were
lots of experts – even the Pentagon,
it seems – warning of just such a terrible calamity and
urging that preparations be made to avoid it.
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We are in
the current mess precisely because those
warnings were ignored or given no attention –
not because the science was doubted, but because
there was no will to do something to avert the
threat.
If we reflect, it
is possible to get a sense of two things. First, that
our attention rarely belongs to us; it is the plaything
of others. And second, that the “real world”, as it is
presented to us, rarely reflects anything we might
usefully be able to label as objective reality. It is a
set of political, economic and social priorities that
have been manufactured for us.
Agents outside our
control with their own vested interests – politicians,
the media, business – construct reality, much as a
film-maker designs a movie. They guide our gaze in
certain directions and not others.
A Critical
Perspective
At a moment like
this of real crisis, one that overshadows all else, we
have a chance – though only a chance – to recognize this
truth and develop our own critical perspective. A
perspective that truly belongs to us, and not to others.
Think back to the
old you, the pre-coronavirus you. Were your priorities
the same as your current ones?
This is not to say
that the things you prioritize now – in this crisis –
are necessarily any more “yours” than the old set of
priorities.
If you’re watching
the TV or reading newspapers – and who isn’t – you’re
probably feeling scared, either for yourself or for your
loved ones. All you can think about is the coronavirus.
Nothing else really seems that important by comparison.
And all you can hope for is the moment when the
lockdowns are over and life returns to normal.
But that’s not
objectively the “real world” either. Terrible as the
coronavirus is, and as of right as anyone is to be
afraid of the threat it poses, those “agents of
authority” are again directing and controlling our gaze,
though at least this time those in authority include
doctors and scientists. And they are guiding our
attention in ways that serve their interests – for good
or bad.
Endless tallies of
infections and deaths, rocketing graphs, stories of
young people, along with the elderly, battling for
survival serve a purpose: to make sure we stick to the
lockdown, that we maintain social distancing, that we
don’t get complacent and spread the disease.
Here our interests
– survival, preventing hospitals from being overwhelmed
– coincide with those of the establishment, the “agents
of authority”. We want to live and prosper, and they
need to maintain order, to demonstrate their competence,
to prevent dissatisfaction bubbling up into anger or
open revolt.
Crowded out by
Detail
But again the object of our
attention is not as much ours as we may believe. While
we focus on graphs, while we twitch the curtains to see
if neighbors are going for a
second run or
whether families are out in the garden celebrating
a birthday distant
from an elderly parent, we are much less likely to be
thinking about how well the crisis is being handled. The
detail, the mundane is again crowding out the important,
the big picture.
Our current fear
is an enemy to our developing and maintaining a critical
perspective. The more we are frightened by graphs, by
deaths, the more we are likely to submit to whatever we
are told will keep us safe.
Undercover of the public’s
fear, and of justified concerns about the state of the
economy and future employment, countries like the US are
transferring huge sums of public money to the biggest
corporations. Politicians controlled by big business and
media owned by big business are pushing through this corporate
robbery without
scrutiny – and for reasons that should be
self-explanatory.
They know our
attention is too overwhelmed by the virus for us to
assess intentionally mystifying arguments about the
supposed economic benefits, about yet more illusory
trickle-down.
There are many other
dramatic changes being introduced, almost too many and
too rapidly for us to follow them properly. Bans
on movement. Intensified
surveillance. Censorship.
The transfer of draconian
powers to the
police, and preparations for the deployment
of soldiers on
the streets. Detention
without trial. Martial
law. Measures
that might have terrified us when Trump was our main
worry, or Brexit, or Russia, may now seem a price worth
paying for a “return to normality”.
Paradoxically, a
craving for the old-normal may mean we are prepared to
submit to a new normal that could permanently deny us
any chance of returning to the old-normal.
The point is not
just that things are far more provisional than most of
us are ready to contemplate; it’s that our window on
what we think of as “the real world”, as “normal”, is
almost entirely manufactured for us.
Distracted by the
Virus
Strange as this
may sound right now, in the midst of our fear and
suffering, the pandemic is not really the big picture
either. Our attention is consumed by the virus, but it
is, in a truly awful sense, a distraction too.
In a few more
years, maybe sooner than we imagine, we will look back
on the virus – with the benefit of distance and
hindsight – and feel the same way about it we do now
about Putin, or Trump, or Brexit.
It will feel part
of our old selves, our old priorities, a small part of a
much bigger picture, a clue to where we were heading, a
portent we did not pay attention to when it mattered
most.
The virus is one
small warning – one among many – that we have been
living out of sync with the natural world we share with
other life. Our need to control and dominate, our need
to acquire, our need for security, our need to conquer
death – they have crowded out all else. We have followed
those who promised quick, easy solutions, those who
refused to compromise, those who conveyed authority,
those who spread fear, those who hated.
If only we could
redirect our gaze, if we could seize back control of our
attention for a moment, we might understand that we are
being plagued not just by a virus but by our fear, our
hate, our hunger, our selfishness.
The evidence is
there in the fires, the floods and the disease, in the
insects that have disappeared, in the polluted seas, in
the stripping of the planet’s ancient lungs, its
forests, in the melting ice-caps.
The big picture is
hiding in plain sight, no longer obscured by issues like
Russia and Brexit but now only by the most microscopic
germ, marking the thin boundary between life and death.
Jonathan Cook
is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism.
No one pays him to write these blog posts. If you
appreciated it, please consider visiting his website
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https://www.jonathan-cook.net/supporting-jonathan/
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