Like true apparatchiks, those at the reins of unconstitutional power thanks to COVID-19 have determined that their decrees are too onerous or absurd to apply to themselves.
Exactly.
What is disturbing about our elites flaunting their own decrees is that it signals a turn toward the modus operandi of a banana republic.
Escape hatches of the elites and shadow economies—two phenomena that have quickly sprung up amid various states’ responses to COVID-19—are hallmarks of authoritarian nations whose laws are incongruent with human nature and the demands of reality. Soviet Russia is a classic case. Members of the Party’s inner circle had their dachas in the countryside and connections to goods and services of which the general population was deprived. As for the rest of the people, to do more than eke out a basic living without political connections was unthinkable.
But this outcome is written in the very philosophy of communism, which calls for the “politicization” of the masses at the hands of a cadre of elites. That is, the political visionaries must force the population against its will along the path of progress. Those tasked with so noble a goal could not possibly be forced to obey the same laws and standard of living as the peons, the purported beneficiaries of communism.
The response of many American elites to the pandemic seems to reveal a similar psychology. Rules for thee but not for me. That the oligarchs, from whose pens these decrees have been issued, are flagrantly disregarding them suggests that the end goal is a lofty and altogether unattainable one. Why should an entire population do what even the authors of the laws cannot?
The extreme lockdown measures in response to COVID-19 are out of keeping with the demands of practical necessity. This apparent contradiction was the undoing of the Soviet empire and it will soon be the undoing of our own little trial with totalitarianism.
The curve has “flattened,” whether due to the lockdown measures or not, revealing that preventing the health-care system from being overwhelmed was not the goal, or citizens would not still be under lockdown. What then is the goal? Like other “wars” on fill-in-the-abstraction—poverty, drugs, terror, climate change—the “war on coronavirus” will undoubtedly cost a fortune and will not be won.
This latest utopian dream, that political control backed by fear and select scientific opinion can help us to defeat or escape a virus, is as chimeric as the classless society dreamed up by Marx. The qualitative result, however, is much the same: austere measures for the general population and exemptions and workarounds for the elite.
In demanding that we shutter our businesses and churches while they wait out the pandemic from the comfort of their country homes, the elites in this country have shown us that it’s high time we stop pretending they are our “public servants.” Some officials, to be sure, merit the title. But many, as recent events demonstrate, are bona fide democratist commissars.