Europe’s best-selling newspaper announced this weekend the lockdown in
response to the Chinese coronavirus pandemic was a “huge mistake,”
citing a number of public intellectuals critical of the country’s
official response.
Reproducing comments from seven well-known intellectuals, Bild underscores
the importance of “warning, doubting, and arguing” in the case of a
public crisis that involves the suppression of the fundamental rights of
citizens.
In presenting the opinions of highly esteemed “lateral thinkers,” the
newspaper notes Germany’s political leaders, on the contrary, “pushed
the recommendations of other luminaries to justify the lockdown of the
economy and public life, as well as the severe interference with
everyone’s freedoms,” while ignoring contrary voices.
Prof. Klaus Püschel, for instance, a respected pathologist and head of
the Institute of Forensic Medicine at Hamburg University Hospital,
argues that “in the end, COVID-19 is a viral disease like the flu, which
in most cases is harmless and is only fatal in exceptional cases.
“It is important to look at the aftermath of the epidemic to see if
COVID-19 really was the cause of death,” Püschel observes. “Of the
approximately 180 deceased with coronavirus that we have now examined,
all suffered from severe pre-existing conditions and were not children
or adolescents. The COVID-19 infection was the straw that broke the
camel’s back.”
University of Hanover Professor Stefan Homburg, a former adviser to
the federal government, agrees official figures in Germany in no way
justified the lockdown.
“In Italy, the coronavirus epidemic was worse than a flu epidemic, in
Germany it was less severe,” Homburg said. “With the lockdown, the
federal and state governments have made a huge mistake.”
“The damage is increasing every day, all bans must be lifted
immediately,” he continued. “Empty soccer stadiums and half-empty
restaurants are of no use to anyone.”
For his part, Professor Hans-Jürgen Papier, former president of the
Federal Constitutional Court, said the debate was too short and state
interventions went too far.
“The balance was between the protection of life and health on the one
hand and the protection of constitutional goods on the other,” he said.
In principle, “there should have been a broader and more detailed
parliamentary and public debate.
To this end, the legal goods to be weighed up were too important and the consequences and interventions too great.”
Julian Nida-Rümelin, Germany’s former Minister of Culture, said
statistics without contextualization create fear and panic but do not
promote a rational debate.
“With COVID-19, new, huge numbers appear every day, which make us
frightened and perplexed,” he said. “These figures must be understood by
asking: how many people die every day in Germany in total? How many
have heart attacks? How many from cancer? How many from COVID-19? Little
is being done to this effect.”
For “legendary” journalist Patricia Riekel, warnings and an appeal to
personal responsibility would have been preferable to the lockdown.
“I would not have thought the measures necessary,” Ms. Riekel states.
“I am in favor of the Swedish way, with recommendations that distance
be kept and that people who are at risk stay at home.”
“What we have seen in the last six weeks has been excessive,” Riekel adds: “We have become a people of compliers and snitches.”
https://www.breitbart.com/health/2020/05/11/germanys-das-bild-says-lockdown-was-a-huge-mistake/
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