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Claire Calman

ByClaire Calman, claire calman

Opinion

Covid conspiracies — I have a theory

The pandemic provides rich pickings for wild claims, ranging from sort-of possible to off-the-scale bonkers

September 4, 2020 09:45
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3 min read

Conspiracy theories are like gossip – they don’t have to be true to be juicy and enticing. The pandemic provides rich pickings for conspiracy theorists; there are multiple wild claims whizzing about the internet, competing for your attention and faith. These range from sort-of possible to off-the-scale bonkers. With some, you can understand their genesis at least. For example, the idea that the virus might have leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology lab doesn’t seem beyond the realms of possibility, although it has now been proved that it didn’t. Others — that the pandemic simply doesn’t exist (not sure what those 800,000+ people died of worldwide….um….) or that it’s caused by the ‘deep state’ (sometimes code for the Jews; most things are our fault, as we know) — seem to have been spun out of thin air.

One of my personal favourites is that it’s down to Bill Gates’s sinister agenda: He wants everyone to be vaccinated so he can insert nano-micro-chips in us. That way he can track and even control us. Is it because he’s bored? Come on, Bill, take up watercolour painting or something — get a hobby, why don’t you?

When I think about myself — which I try not to do on the whole as my most recent predicted grade was “Could do better” — I realise that I am a mixture of competent and incompetent. I have two skills at which I am moderately able: writing and cooking. In every other area, my ability level ranges from “Acceptable”, say for driving and getting dressed, through “Below average” for singing and working out at the gym, right down to “Good grief! Can’t something be done?” for a mammoth cluster of items, such as keeping on top of my paperwork, tidying, ice-skating.

The same is true of the government — they offer a mixed performance. I feel no urge to trumpet how brilliantly we have handled the pandemic, but I wouldn’t describe the UK as a failed state. Arguably, the leadership has done its best to mitigate the worst effects with its free food boxes for those shielding early on and the furlough scheme. If you were predicting a final grade at the end of the pandemic, however, “Could do better” would be the best verdict the government could hope for.