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Is ‘Woke’ Dead?

by Nick Dixon
26 February 2023 9:00 AM

Gareth Roberts offers an excellent and nuanced take on the potential impending death of wokeness in the Spectator. Here’s an excerpt:

If you don’t live online, you may have missed the controversy over Hogwarts Legacy, the latest computer game to have been spun out of the multi-billion Harry Potter franchise.

A small but amazingly vocal band of activists launched a vicious campaign against the game because of its connection to ‘transphobe’ J.K. Rowling. Then the game came out and was instantly a phenomenal success – the most popular game ever on the streaming platform Twitch, physical sales of 12 million in its first two weeks of release, earning its makers $850 million (£709 million) in revenue. These cold, hard, commercial facts are like a glass of cold water in the face. The balance sheet shows that we have a very skewed understanding of the popularity and reach of ‘woke’.

Elsewhere, we see the smash West End success of Steven Moffat’s play The Unfriend, despite its star turn by notorious ‘Terf’ (‘trans-exclusionary radical feminist’) Frances Barber. A friend showed me a hilarious social media post from a true swivel-eyed woke believer who apologised to his followers for attending, and said that, though he’d loved the show, he’d made a point not to applaud Barber at her curtain call. Outside the worlds of showbiz and entertainment, we have recently witnessed the spectacle of Nicola Sturgeon self-destructing after her gender reform bill smashed into reality.

One dares to hope: is woke dead? We keep waiting for a tipping point that never tips. There have been so many false dawns, hefty straws that you think will surely break the camel’s back then don’t.

A global pandemic, it was believed, would make people appreciate that gender pronouns are not humanity’s most pressing concern. But COVID-19 quickly established its own culture wars, as keyboard warriors began arguing about which marginalised groups were suffering most. A major land war in Europe should have been serious enough to bind the progressivist fist for a month or two. But the conflict in Ukraine has barely touched the sides. Even the recent possibility of an alien invasion doesn’t seem to be having much effect on concentrating the crazed human hive mind.

Roberts hopes we may see a gradual erosion of wokeness, while acknowledging it won’t be easy, due to the way woke ideology has embedded itself in so many public and private organisations:

Lots of us would like to reclaim our culture from the insane progressivists who have hijacked it over the past two decades. But there remain big obstacles. The biggest is that almost every western institution, public or private, big or small, has a cell of woke activists in it, enabled by their elders.

Our increasingly ageing population is, bizarrely, characterised by this deference to youth. Older people seek out the political validation of teenagers and young adults, even children, when it really ought to be the other way around. Think of middle-aged people wearing ‘ally’ badges, burly policemen shying away from upper-middle class Extinction Rebellion protestors, or the publishing execs who tell authors: “We couldn’t get it past our junior members of staff.”

Interestingly, he believes a Labour government may actually reduce wokeness in the culture.

In the U.K., an incoming Labour government might be a factor in the dying of woke. You may think this unlikely, given the party’s love of taking the knee and diversity ‘training’, but let me explain. The defenestration of Margaret Thatcher and the coming of Tony Blair led to our pop culture, populated as it is by middle-class bien pensants, unclenching its socially concerned muscles and expressing itself. Look at the joy of daft Reeves and Mortimer after the grim Ben Eltony political shoutiness of 1980s comedy. And not for nothing were the scabrously incorrect League of Gentlemen and Catherine Tate Show the products of a time when the Tories had been ‘seen off’. That’s a silly way of looking at the world, yes, but it’s how TV commissioners think.

Right now we stand at a crossroads. Let’s consider two futures. In Future A, people look back on the 2010s and early 2020s with bemusement. ‘How mad that time was!’ celebrity talking heads will tell the nostalgia shows of 2043. ‘What were we thinking!’

Or we might get future B: the gradual degradation and collapse of western civilisation as this cultural awfulness snowballs through it, as personal liberties taken for granted for centuries evaporate, as crazier and crazier grievances are indulged, as the pillars of the institutions rot, as the state becomes nothing but a gigantic simultaneously totalitarian and crumbling HR department.

Worth reading in full.

Tags: J.K. RowlingLabourWokeWoke capitalismWoke GobbledegookWokery

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    20 Comments
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    TJN
    TJN
    2 years ago

    Well ok, but if the variant spread out from New York then that would mean that travel restrictions would help slow the spread of the virus. But we know that such restrictions did nothing.

    I have no idea how to explain what we are seeing here, or appear to be seeing here, except to suggest that the data is hopelessly incomplete and even misleading.

    There’s far more to viral outbreak, spread and virulence than is dreamt of in your philosophy Horatio.

    31
    0
    JXB
    JXB
    2 years ago
    Reply to  TJN

    The problem with any analysis is it must rely on data produced by Governments or their agents which is wholly untrustworthy due to its deliberate corruption and manipulation and sheer incompetence.

    There can be no meaningful analysis beyond we were deliberately misled and panicked by evil people for political, ideological and monetary motives.

    23
    0
    TJN
    TJN
    2 years ago
    Reply to  JXB

    I think that’s it. Gathering such data comprehensively, or at least sufficiently, to conduct useful analysis and draw useful conclusions would be extremely difficult with the best will in the world. But when governments, health agencies, and the like have deliberately corrupted and obfuscated the data then the task of analysis becomes almost hopeless.

    My hunch is that Will is drawing ostensibly sensible conclusions from data which is probably hopeless, and hence not much relevance can be placed on those conclusions.

    Happy to be shown to be wrong, but my feeling is that these conclusions can be regarded as only loose conjecture right now.

    10
    0
    Uncle Monty
    Uncle Monty
    2 years ago

    Australia and NZ had a more severe than normal winter (June to August) ‘flu season in 2019.
    Was this not in fact Covid?
    https://theconversation.com/its-a-bad-year-for-flu-but-its-too-early-to-call-it-the-worst-ever-5-charts-on-the-2019-season-so-far-120093

    25
    0
    MikeAustin
    MikeAustin
    2 years ago

    All-cause mortality, please! We need to stop referring to so-called ‘covid deaths’ as if there has been some definitive and reliable measure of this. And remember that some locations may test more than others.

    Last edited 2 years ago by MikeAustin
    70
    0
    Lancer
    Lancer
    2 years ago
    Reply to  MikeAustin

    Well sure. Given how the lurgy was “detected” with tests that amplified a genetic sequence far beyond what the inventor K Mullis intended (CTs of well above 30+, let alone its ability to differentiate live viral fragments from dead ones), how many afflicted were essentially at their end of life anyway (not including the Liverpool Care Pathway that was potentially used to accelerate those, and perhaps much younger others at that), the fact the average age-of-death due to the lurgy appears to be HIGHER than our average life-expectancy (something clearly doesn’t add up there if the lurgy increased our life-expectancy on the whole) and.. an mRNA “solution” that has arguably been the most dangerous intervention ever administered on the public (with no definitive evidence of its efficacy or safety other than the Yellow Card data which no one seems even the slightest bit concerned over, anecdotal hogwash of how awesome the potion is outside of the pharmaceutical’s own questionable declarations (PHE / HSA’s data clearly showed for months on end after its launch the recipients of the gene-therapy solution were testing positive up to three times as much as those ‘un-solutioned’, prolonging the pandemic by infecting others at a rate above R1).

    All combined shows “the data” is useless – more than useless since it’s guided policies that themselves have caused untold disaster (some still to be realised in many years to come). Leaving us with only one metric that could be beneficial as you point out – all-cause mortality to give us an indication of how a complete and utter shitshow this really was / is.

    34
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    For a fist full of roubles
    For a fist full of roubles
    2 years ago

    Interesting that the data source used by Will shows the NY curve completely out of synchronisation with the five other locations depicted, which appeared to progress in lock step. And this graph also emphasises how different were NY’s results.
    Of course, one reason for New York to be so different from the rest of the country is that the NY authorities simply made up the results, but surely nobody would do that, would they?

    30
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    transmissionofflame
    transmissionofflame
    2 years ago

    Could there have been a second leak in Wuhan, of a different variant?

    8
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    Jabba the Hut
    Jabba the Hut
    2 years ago
    Reply to  transmissionofflame

    Maybe the 1st release wasn’t doing the job, maybe the 2nd release was accompanied with a dodgy PCR test knocked up in a couple of weeks to big up the numbers. Maybe Omicron was released to cover up the shoddy vax and to show how effective they are at preventing death.
    Remdesivir, Midazolam ventilators all helped with the numbers and the authorities deliberately muddying the statistics. Who actually knows?

    24
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    TheGreenAcres
    TheGreenAcres
    2 years ago

    For myself, I don’t see how interventions can explain all the excess deaths

    In the UK we saw only saw deaths start to spike in the ‘care’ homes once they shut down the hospitals and started giving out Midazolam. That would be my investigative starting point.

    75
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    TheBasicMind
    TheBasicMind
    2 years ago

    There’s no mystery. It simply wasn’t killing enough people for anyone to notice.

    32
    0
    JXB
    JXB
    2 years ago
    Reply to  TheBasicMind

    Nor producing symptoms not shared by umpteen disease causing respiratory viruses that are routine part of life.

    16
    0
    Monro
    Monro
    2 years ago

    Another outstanding effort by Will Jones, for which many thanks.

    Of course the main thing that New York, Wuhan and Lombardy all have in common is very poor air quality.

    The other thing in common everywhere is very poor data regarding cause of death and covid/influenza diagnosis, distinction.

    Nevertheless:

    ‘….the present study demonstrates that higher rates of spread of COVID-19 in Metropolitan Lima (Peru) are associated with previous long-term PM2.5 exposure. Men and older people were at higher risk of death due to COVID-19. Reduction in air pollution from a long-term perspective and social distancing are needed to prevent the spread of virus outbreaks.’

    ‘Association between air pollution in Lima and the high incidence of COVID-19: findings from a post hoc analysis’ 16 June 21 BMC Public Health

    The key appears to be previous long term exposure to pollution with, no doubt, consequent previous respiratory infections.

    The obvious solution would seem to be bicycles but these seem to engender frequent psychotic episodes in their users.

    Last edited 2 years ago by Monro
    13
    -1
    TJN
    TJN
    2 years ago
    Reply to  Monro

    Since March 2020 I’ve suspected that air quality plays a major role in covid mortality. Back then I use to joke that it wouldn’t bother us down here in Devon and Cornwall, as the virus didn’t like the sea air. Except that I wasn’t really joking.

    15
    0
    Monro
    Monro
    2 years ago
    Reply to  TJN

    Completely agree. The reason that so many of us on here have been so incandescent for so long is that all of this is so obvious.

    Up north, it hasn’t bothered us much either, except in the cities!

    This is not complicated, has been going on since the ‘smogs’ in major cities in this country.

    The common cold, coronavirus or other, is a major killer of the elderly and infirm, even more so than influenza, well documented.

    Only the World Health Organisation and its acolytes, for reasons doubtless not unconnected with venality, could have instrumented this monstrous debacle.

    Just as we can no longer be beholden to the global energy market, we must sever all links with this plethora of undemocratic supranational entities, WHO, OECD, ECHR, World Bank etc. who very much do not have our best interests (but their own) at heart.

    14
    0
    stewart
    stewart
    2 years ago

    My first thought after reading this was: orchestrated biological attack.

    18
    0
    Monro
    Monro
    2 years ago

    It is becoming pretty clear that Covid 19 started Oct 2019 or earlier but the panic only started when it reached high density centres of population with poor air quality, populations, many of whom had already had or still had respiratory infections which made them particularly susceptible to a novel common cold coronavirus, Covid 19.

    The situation was further confused by simultaneous outbreaks of influenza and covid 19

    ‘The spread of COVID-19 in Wuhan and Seattle was far more extensive than initially reported. The virus likely spread for months in Wuhan before the lockdown.’

    Using the COVID-19 to influenza ratio to estimate early pandemic spread in Wuhan, China and Seattle, US. The Lancet, 12 Aug 20

    ‘So the 20,000 cases in China is probably only the severe cases; the folks that actually went to the hospital and got tested. The Chinese healthcare system is very overwhelmed with all the tests going through. So my thinking is this is actually not as severe a disease as is being suggested.’ ‘There’s a vast underreporting of cases in China.’

    Prof John Nichols Univ. of Hong Kong 06 Feb 20

    Lima, also Iquitos, Peru are other examples of how poor air quality, a cause of respiratory infections for some years, created a population of the elderly and infirm particularly susceptible to Covid 19.

    Last edited 2 years ago by Monro
    10
    0
    johndee
    johndee
    2 years ago

    Interestingly I had to retire to my bed for several days in November 2019 with the then classic symptoms of Covid-19, especially the protracted dry cough. I was completely washed out. It could of course have been flu (though I had been jabbed a couple of months earlier) but it was unlike any previous bout of flu I can remember. I didn’t trouble my GP and fully recovered after a couple of weeks

    I have come across a few other people with the same story…. curious.

    Last edited 2 years ago by johndee
    24
    0
    JXB
    JXB
    2 years ago

    It’s no mystery. Why did it spread undetected? Because nobody was looking. Had we not been told there was a ‘novel’ virus causing what we normally call Cold or ‘Flu, with all the unnecessary ensuing panic, we still wouldn’t know about CoVid 19.

    How much do we currently know about the spread of rhinovirus and adenovirus? There is no daily escalating count of positive PCR tests for these, but they surely are spreading as they have been doing for some time.

    29
    0
    Monro
    Monro
    2 years ago
    Reply to  JXB

    Completely agree and these can, of course, be every bit as lethal amongst the elderly and infirm as the novel common cold coronavirus, covid 19, as this paper, well before Covid, explained:

    ‘Unexpectedly Higher Morbidity and Mortality of Hospitalized Elderly Patients Associated with Rhinovirus Compared with Influenza Virus Respiratory Tract Infection’ Apr 2017

    The Prime Minister and Health Secretary both deserved to lose their jobs many times over for multiple grave derelictions of duty. Beyond time for the Gumby Brothers Whitty and Vallance to lose theirs.

    Last edited 2 years ago by Monro
    14
    0
    TJN
    TJN
    2 years ago
    Reply to  Monro

    Beyond time for the Gumby Brothers Whitty and Vallance TO FACE CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION.

    17
    0
    jburns75
    jburns75
    2 years ago

    It might be critical to look at treatment of Covid patients in hospitals and care homes, including use of sedatives and ventilators, if only to rule this out as a factor explaining the Spring 2020 surge in excess deaths.

    Though the ONS buried historical mortality statistics in a dusty corner of their website (instead only ever choosing to publicly present five years’ of data), they were obtained via FOI, and are still available.

    They show that absolute mortality in 2020 was no higher than ~2003. Age adjusted, the date moves forward several years. What made 2020 seem so unusual was that all cause mortality had decreased substantially from the early 2000’s onwards.

    You can speculate as to why. Most likely a generation moving into old age who were more switched on to their health – reduction in smoking; better diets; better healthcare; better diagnosis with the aid of smarter technology, particularly of cancer and heart problems.

    Health isn’t binary between good and bad though – there’s a continuum, and it’s likely these improvements left a large number of people who would have died of other causes in previous times, more vulnerable to death from viral infection.

    It would have also left a section of the population less likely to survive aggressive and inappropriate medical intervention. The damage caused by this intervention could be hidden during an outbreak of a fairly nasty flu-like respiratory illness. Some have suggested governments used the pandemic to implement mass state-mandated euthanasia. This is a shame as it poisons the well, making it easy to dismiss legitimate worries surrounding this as conspiracy theorising. There’s no way such a programme could remain hidden.

    There is however the possibility – and one that the healthcare sector might be understandably reluctant to acknowledge – that the surge of excess deaths was caused (or exacerbated) by a combination of panic and institutional errors resulting from the sort of groupthink that thrives in a crisis. That in a healthcare system riven with fear of being overwhelmed, of infection of its staff, and of fear of catastrophe enhanced by government and media hype, many already vulnerable Covid patients with pneumonia were pushed over the edge by interventions rather than the virus itself. That without these interventions, the excess death figures might resemble those of a flu outbreak. There’s also the possibility that this skewing of the data makes it harder to determine the true cause of later excess mortality.

    Doctors, nurses and paramedics were inculcated with the idea that Covid infection in the vulnerable was a downhill path to a painful and protracted death; that due to irreparable damage to lung tissue, there was little chance of recovery beyond use of ventilators, failing which powerful sedatives should be used to ease anxiety and discomfort prior to death. It’s established that invasive ventilation causes lung damage. Ventilator associated pneumonia was also later shown to be higher in Covid patients than in non-Covid patients. Its also established that sedatives like Midazolam and Morphine cause respiratory suppression and distress, which for an elderly patient with pneumonia is likely fatal. These factors would have fed into the Covid mortality data, circularly heightening the perceived mortality risk of the virus and further justifying use of these interventions.

    Regarding sedatives, it’s also known that the previously banned Liverpool Care Pathway was resurrected at this time. The Covid ‘end of life’ guidelines published by Public Health Scotland and the Birmingham NHS trust (which I found after a couple of minutes googling) recommend administering sedatives in Covid patients to ease anxiety and distress, in doses that according to CDC guidelines for their use act as anaesthetic, and in elderly people would often lead to death. Moreover with no clinical basis required for their administration in settings like nursing homes or adequate monitoring that the guidelines insist upon.

    It’s not hard to see how such a policy could be disastrous. While a compassionate medic might understandably want to ease the suffering of a patient near death, and even hasten their passing, how, in the absence of clinical evidence, could they know that death is inevitable? Especially when the effects of the drugs they’re administering are indistinguishable from acute respiratory distress syndrome? Anxiety is a subjective measure – any Covid patient admitted to hospital was likely to be in a state of extreme anxiety and have breathing difficulty from at least mild pneumonia.

    There’s a possibility that medical interventions might have acted at least as a multiplier for patients with Covid symptoms in excess death data, which could help explain the unusual bumps and age discrepancies. This needs serious investigation, but I’m not holding my breath..

    Last edited 2 years ago by jburns75
    23
    0
    Monro
    Monro
    2 years ago
    Reply to  jburns75

    The ‘surge’ in mortality spring 2020 was a simple product of hospital clearances.

    The Amnesty International report “As If Expendable’ gives chapter and verse.

    The rest of the year, age adjusted, was pretty much plumb normal and not much out of the ordinary since then.

    12
    0
    jburns75
    jburns75
    2 years ago
    Reply to  Monro

    This view chimes with what I’ve said. As far as I know, the NHS end of life guidelines would have applied to treatment in care homes as well as hospitals. In the former there would have been even less (if any) examination of clinical evidence justifying administration of sedatives and less medical expertise. Proper analysis of their administration in these settings would help clear it up, but the whole thing seems to have been swept under the rug.

    12
    0
    TJN
    TJN
    2 years ago
    Reply to  jburns75

    Insightful post, methinks.

    5
    0
    RW
    RW
    2 years ago

    Government-reported COVID death numbers are completely useless as there’s no single definition of COVID death and the usual definitions are only insofar related to COVID as they’re based on a positive PCR test result some time before death.

    Worth recapitulating here: According to lots of anecdotical evidence, the so-called Spanish flu was the most horrible killer disease since the black death. The German official history of WWI by the Reichsarchiv (Der Weltkrieg von 1914-1918) mentions hundredthousands of sick German soldiers (all malnourished and living in poor and very cramped accomodations, out of somewhat less than 5.5 million soldiers in the German field army) who will typically again be fit for service after 4 – 5 days and will have completely recovered within a few weeks. Which means this horrible pandemic was pretty much not more than a severe outburst of pandemic hysteria in the USA.

    Even the most ardent COVID zealots freely admit that COVID is much less deadly than the Spanish flu. Considering the information from the source mentioned above, this means that COVID was, relative to a non-event, an even ‘noner’ event. Someone should really classify the WHO and everything associated with it as instrument of senseless mass devastation rivalling to the most deadly weapons invented by mankind so far.

    Last edited 2 years ago by RW
    16
    0
    madison431
    madison431
    2 years ago

    I expect this has already been cited, but aren’t the axis labels reversed on the chart?

    1
    0
    Judy Watson
    Judy Watson
    2 years ago
    Reply to  madison431

    That’s what I thought?

    0
    0
    DomH75
    DomH75
    2 years ago

    A Chinese scientist charged with investigating the outbreak defected to the US and went on GB News where she claimed the release of the virus was deliberate. If that was the case, it might have been released in several locations before it took hold, possibly with different variants, while also escaping from the Wuhan lab. Omicron’s mysterious appearance in South Africa is a good example. And no, I’m not being a conspiracy theorist: just speculating. As for me, I had it at Christmas 2019 and was wiped out for weeks by it. Very unpleasant. It was all over my home town.

    8
    0
    SweetBabyCheeses
    SweetBabyCheeses
    2 years ago

    “Consider: there was a relatively deadly outbreak in Wuhan in December 2019”
    Was there? I don’t believe a single word of it.

    0
    0
    Crouchback
    Crouchback
    2 years ago

    Are your axes mislabelled?

    1
    0

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