Nortaneous wrote: ↑Wed May 26, 2021 1:14 am
We have something called a "Central Intelligence Agency". It can
earn its paycheck.
Sure, but it didn't nor did its counterparts in many other countries. I'd love to know why too!
And I can't say I'm not intrigued by the fact that countries that have an obvious interest in watching the PRC very carefully, Vietnam and Taiwan, fori instance took the situation very seriously, very early on.
And do European leaders really not care who the commander in chief of their friendly neighborhood superpower is?
I know this is a weird take, but hear me out.
Why should they, really? Europe-US relationships aren't going to change much anyway. It's all decided ultimately by national/supranational interest, which doesn't change that much.
As far as we can tell, Macron kind of
liked Trump. Bush made tired old clowns like Schröder or Chirac look like Father of the Nation-types. The European public doesn't understand Republican -- whenever the US President is a Republican, we feel grateful that we don't have that at home. When our leaders disagree with their American opposite number (as is bound to happen), it looks like they're standing up to the American bully.
However, we love Democratic presidents. We start to wonder why our president isn't more like Obama. Or Biden. And when we can't agree with them, it makes our leaders look bad.
(Doesn't Sputnik V basically work?)
It looks very promising on paper but so did Sinovac and apparently, 62% of Russians don't want it. I mean, the story put forward by the Russian government (it was ready in August and it had 99% efficiency) does make me suspicious. As they, huge is true.
(I'm entirely prepared to reeavaluate a lot of things if it turns out that Sputnik V works as advertised with no major caveats. But I'm not holding my breath. What can I say? I just don't like or trust Putin.)
What I saw in the US was the other way around. Our anti-border-control types held fast to the idea that border control is always both racist and impossible, and responded to the response to the pandemic by getting very mad that anyone would propose anything about borders, suggesting that it was just a flu and not worth worrying about, and so on.
Here the government did say that border control
from Wuhan would be racist and impossible.
But our government isn't reallly anti-border control: again, when the people at the border are poor and Muslim they find that border control is neither racist, nor impossible.
The political polarity of the issue in general was the opposite of what we're used to until around the time of the mask mandate - I first heard about it in January from some far-right extremists, who went on to spend a few months getting mad at Democrat-aligned rags like Vox for running articles about how everything was going to be fine. (IIRC, one of the rags even brought in a psychologist to talk about how the people getting worried about the Wuhan flu just had a mental disorder.)
I'm glad you made that observation, and relieved to learn I'm not the only one who noticed: the ones panicking in January were far right, populist or survivalist types.
We didn't have Trump to polarize the issue, so a careful observer will note that here, the very vocal people on both sides, antivaxxers and lockdown/vaccine hardliners are right wingers, and that you'll find both types on the far right.
Left-wingers (with many exceptions, granted) are careful to sidestep the issue entirely and focus on the social consequences instead.