The Caravan

State of Denial

Liberty, it would seem, comes to the British from above. It trickles in as assurances about our “inalienable right to go to the pub,” which the prime minister, Boris Johnson, regretted wrenching away as the COVID-19 pandemic belatedly dawned upon his imagination in March. As Britain faced the corona-virus, a troubling version of itself stared back—a vision in which liberty is disseminated with enduring, supposedly divine, grace. Liberty’s selective graces have allowed the entitled freedom from concern for their fellow citizens, but denied others the rights to basic services. The British public, the “herd,” has endured the highest death toll in Europe.

sounded the alarm on 24 January, stressing the need for “vigilant epidemiological control.” However, as the coronavirus ravaged Europe and overran British shores, the government dragged its feet. Johnson quipped to business leaders, even as

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Caravan

The Caravan24 min read
The Bangalore Ideology
“THE FUNDAMENTAL NATURE of government is a platform,” the tech billionaire Nandan Nilekani declared in the 2015 book Rebooting India: Realizing a Billion Aspirations, which he co-authored with the software engineer Viral Shah. “We are talking about r
The Caravan65 min read
The Sangh’s Fixer
THE COUNTRY’S MOST IMPORTANT politicians and industrialists walked into a brightly lit hall in Chennai on 18 January 2015. Among them were the senior ministers Rajnath Singh, Arun Jaitley, Piyush Goyal, M Venkaiah Naidu and Ravi Shankar Prasad, and t
The Caravan5 min read
New Wine in Old Bottles
“This is when it all happens. The harvest time is our playground,” Eddie Chami said, surrounded by vines, as he stood on a mountain slope in Bousit village, wearing a T-shirt and a khaki hat. It was early morning, the best time to harvest fragile gra

Related Books & Audiobooks