dolorosa_12: (being human)
a million times a trillion more ([personal profile] dolorosa_12) wrote2020-12-20 02:35 pm

In the bleak midwinter

If you live in the UK, you'll share my contempt for our current government. I didn't think I could despise them any more, but this pack of incompetents never cease to find new depths to plumb.



For those of you not aware, the UK government originally announced ridiculous plans to relax the semi-lockdown restrictions that were in place across the country, for five days on and around Christmas. They didn't relax things to a complete free-for-all, but the rules were such that up to three households could meet and celebrate Christmas indoors. They doggedly stuck to this for weeks on end, in spite of spiraling cases, catastrophic strain on the NHS, and pleas from epidemiologists not to allow it.

They were still sticking to this Christmas permissiveness as recently as Thursday, when Keir Starmer quite reasonably asked in Parliament whether this was at all sensible (at which point the government started raking him over the coals and saying things like 'Keir Starmer just wants to cancel Christmas!!!!!!!!'). Some schools in London wanted to revert to online classes for the last two days of the year, but were taken to court by the education minister and forced to stay physically open. (Of course, all these schools were in Labour council areas, and there was no attempt to sue Eton, which had also closed early.)

And then, yesterday afternoon, after leaking the news to a favoured journalist, the government did a u-turn, announced that almost all of the country would have to go into hard lockdown, travel would not be possible except for essential work or caregiving after midnight on Saturday night, and there would be no Christmas relaxation of rules after all.

People, as you can imagine, were spitting flames with fury. Many had made travel plans, organised enough food to feed largish groups, or paused regular grocery deliveries because they assumed they would be fed elsewhere. A woman on Twitter went into a panic spiral as she had planned to collect her elderly, housebound mother from Birmingham and bring her to London to celebrate Christmas; she had cancelled her mother's visits from a careworker, and the mother had no food in the house. Restaurants and cafes in the locked down areas were stuck with huge amounts of perishable food which they had expected to be able to sell this week. Even soup kitchens for homeless people were being told they would not be able to operate.

My personal feeling is that the relaxation of rules should never have been allowed in the first place. I think the government should have apologetically announced in November that Christmas celebrations would have to be limited to households and support bubbles (if vulnerable individuals were involved), travel would not be permitted except for essential work and caregiving, and that would be it. There would have been whinging and disappointment, but at least you wouldn't have been left with the disaster that's now unfolding. People got their hopes up, and are now crushed with despair. People have wasted money on food that will go uneaten, others will struggle to feed themselves, and there's utter chaos in terms of travel. Last night, all the major London railway stations were packed with people trying to get out before the midnight curfew, no doubt spreading COVID all around.

For me personally it makes no difference. I was planning to go to Australia for Christmas this year, but that obviously didn't happen (I'd decided by June that we were not going to go, and we didn't buy tickets). Normally if we don't go to Australia we would go to Germany to spend Christmas with Matthias's family, but I was cautious about that and we decided in October that wasn't a good idea (and didn't buy tickets). Germany announced Christmas restrictions a few weeks ago, so even if we had gone we would have had to quarantine and spend Christmas alone — and now all the countries in Europe are closing their borders to flights from the UK, so we wouldn't have made it anyway. So I had always been planning to spend Christmas in Cambridge with Matthias, and nothing has changed in that regard. But I feel the way the government has handled things has been unspeakably cruel and shambolic.

Cambridge is in the weird situation of being in Tier 2 restrictions (limits on groups indoors, but all shops still open and restaurants/cafes/bars open to in-person dining for household groups), but surrounded on all sides by other counties in the tough Tier 4 restrictions. Tier 2 is basically the way I've been living all year, whether it was mandated by the government or not: working from home, close to zero travel outside of Cambridge, exercise only alone and outdoors, a handful of sit-down meals in restaurants outdoors but only with Matthias — so my life is essentially unchanged. But the situation more broadly is dire.

Meanwhile, over in Australia, thanks to the monumentally selfish behaviour of a couple of people in Sydney, things are also tense. Australia basically had no cases for several months, after the tough restrictions in Victoria managed to get things under control. And then two people came back from overseas, got an exemption from the mandatory fourteen-day hotel quarantine so that they could quarantine at home and ... didn't quarantine. Instead they visited what appears to be every restaurant and cafe in the northern beaches, plus several supermarkets, public transport, and a Bing Lee hardware store ... while positive with COVID. I am livid.

It is rather surreal to watch the contrasting ways people react to things, though. Australia has closed all state borders and is catastrophising as a result of 20 cases. Meanwhile, in the UK, there are routinely 20,000 new cases per day and people just shrug.

Today is my birthday. As you can imagine, it's been a rather subdued affair — but given I'm not one for big group parties anyway, I haven't felt like I missed out on anything. Matthias and I went out for a sun-drenched walk to Grantchester (photoset here). I'm planning a nice dinner with wine and cocktails. And I'm going to spend the evening reading seasonally appropriate books: rereads of Iona Datt Sharma and Katherine Fabian's novella Sing for the Coming of the Longest Night (see my review of this book from last year; the story is basically a celebration of family in all its forms, a restoration of love and light and compassion to illuminate and banish the darkness), and Katherine Arden's Winternight trilogy. I think we could all do with stories that are about hope in the dark, kindness warming the icy heart of winter, and the fire that can be a candle flame.

My heart will not give up, my heart will not give out, my heart will not give in.
senmut: modern style black canary on right in front of modern style deathstroke (Default)

[personal profile] senmut 2020-12-20 03:25 pm (UTC)(link)
It is terrible and I am sorry for all of you. Also worried about your vulnerable populations.
nerakrose: drawing of balfour from havemercy (Default)

[personal profile] nerakrose 2020-12-20 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I am also very relieved I didn't buy plane tickets to go home for Christmas, as that would've been not only a waste of money, but crushing.

Happy birthday though! It sounds like a perfect celebration to me. :D
nyctanthes: (Default)

[personal profile] nyctanthes 2020-12-20 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Lovely pictures. And happy birthday!

You're the second person who's mentioned this novella in the past day. I'm going to check it out.
rekishi: (Default)

[personal profile] rekishi 2020-12-20 04:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy birthday even if it is at a tone like this!

Also, I loved Winternight, though I thought the first book was both the best and the strongest.
isis: (Default)

[personal profile] isis 2020-12-20 04:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy birthday! And at least you don't live here in the US, where things are even more dire, politically, though hopefully not for much longer (though the people who see covid-19 precautions as a political statement are alas not likely to change).

I liked the Winternight trilogy! The second book was probably my favorite.
schneefink: Teyla and Sora with drinks, laughing (SGA Teyla and Sora cheerful)

[personal profile] schneefink 2020-12-20 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
I had not heard about recent events in Australia. That is infuriating. (And I'm curious what kind of legal consequences there will be for these two people!)
We still have about a hundred dead each day here and it feels like that's barely mentioned in the news, äasdlkfäasd

Despite everything, happy birthday! May your next year be better than this one.
regshoe: Redwing, a brown bird with a red wing patch, perched in a tree (Default)

[personal profile] regshoe 2020-12-20 04:59 pm (UTC)(link)
It is a right mess, isn't it? I'm very glad I decided weeks ago not to travel for Christmas—it must be absolutely horrible for all the people who've made plans that they're now having to cancel at the last minute.

Lovely photos, and happy birthday :)
pauraque: bird on the ground with a santa hat (xmas pauraque)

[personal profile] pauraque 2020-12-20 05:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy birthday!
charlottenewtons: (Default)

[personal profile] charlottenewtons 2020-12-20 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
The sheer level of buffoonery displayed by the government is astounding.

Happy birthday! Wine and cocktails with a nice dinner sounds great.
rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)

[personal profile] rmc28 2020-12-20 05:23 pm (UTC)(link)

Yeah, it's infuriating. My household had already decided to keep things very quiet and low-key for Christmas, and to not try to make use of the reduced restrictions (because they seemed far too risky to us - we're pretty risk averse to start with), but a number of family members are having to completely redo their plans and very upset about it.

Happy birthday, and I do love Sing for the Coming of the Longest Night -I might borrow your idea and reread it this evening. I plan to start reading The Dark Is Rising to my kids tomorrow, at least the chapters that take place on 21 December, and see if they want to keep going during the rest of the week.

naye: a boy watching strands of floating mushi lights (mushi)

[personal profile] naye 2020-12-20 06:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I will wish you a happy birthday even with everything else going on, because you and Matthias are definitely making the best of it, and it does sound like you've got a good day planned. ♥

*hugs*
chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)

[personal profile] chestnut_pod 2020-12-20 06:22 pm (UTC)(link)
A happy birthday to you, despite it all!
silveredeye: anime-style person with long light hair (Default)

[personal profile] silveredeye 2020-12-20 06:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Some schools in London wanted to revert to online classes for the last two days of the year, but were taken to court by the education minister and forced to stay physically open. (Of course, all these schools were in Labour council areas, and there was no attempt to sue Eton, which had also closed early.)
That's not only incompetent but downright evil. My own country also managed to make a mess of those last weeks of school before Christmas, but at least no one got sued. :(

I'm so sorry you have to live with this government. And happy birthday - may this one be as lovely as possible and the next one much easier.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2020-12-20 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Jeeeeesus.

It's bad enough there's this virus out there that's programmed to try to kill us all. And there are always going to be idiots like those two people, but there are usually supposed to be health laws -- state, federal, city, whatever -- to restrain them. And "unspeakably cruel and shambolic" sums up a whole lot of countries at this point, especially the UK and US.

But happy birthday, definitely! That is important too! And I think I read Longest Night last year on your rec, and enjoyed it very much.
corvidology: Lower Slaughter ([EMO] HOME)

[personal profile] corvidology 2020-12-20 08:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy Birthday!

They've made a right dog's dinner out of it.

Things are bad enough here without hearing such disappointing news from home.
worlds_of_smoke: A picture of a brilliantly colored waterfall cascading into a river (Default)

[personal profile] worlds_of_smoke 2020-12-20 10:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree -- it was ridiculous to think that things would be in a state that y'all could ease restrictions for Christmas. But god forbid we fucking miss our big family Christmases. -rolls eyes-

We're on a "stay-at-home advisory" through the end of the year. We'll see how much of a clusterfuck things are.
umadoshi: (riceball love (snowgarden))

[personal profile] umadoshi 2020-12-21 02:43 am (UTC)(link)
Happy birthday! I hope the day overall continued to be good. *hugs*
ermingarden: medieval image of a bird with a tonsured human head and monastic hood (Default)

[personal profile] ermingarden 2020-12-21 03:14 am (UTC)(link)
Gosh, that all sounds awful! Well, I'm glad you're able to have a happy birthday in the midst of it all. Happy Birthday, and best wishes for the year!
falena: cartoon balloon with the word 'shit' in it (shit)

[personal profile] falena 2020-12-21 08:55 am (UTC)(link)
I'm so sorry. I sympathies, our government pulled something quite similar, barely 24 hours before yours.

Belated happy birthday. *hugs*

I will probably buy and read Sharma's novella over the holidays, I love her writing, it sounds like what I really need. Thanks for mentioning it.
trepkos: (Default)

[personal profile] trepkos 2020-12-21 09:18 am (UTC)(link)
I share your contempt for our UK government, and have saved a bit for our own in Jersey.
merit: (Books IV)

[personal profile] merit 2020-12-21 11:43 am (UTC)(link)
I was under the impression the source of the northern beaches cluster hadn't 100% been identified, though yeah, people somehow?? feel the need to go on non-essential outings after getting tested + having symptoms is baffling. It did impact my father's plans to visit my grandfather in Melbourne too :/

The UK government's mismanagement is on a total different level though. I suppose there will be less calls for the state governments to be abolished considering all this - the COVID responses have been incredibly popular (government policies getting 90+ approval ratings?? a marvel).

I missed your rec of Sing for the Coming of the Longest Night - having just read Iona Datt Sharma's delightful novella, it was an instant treat for myself.

lyr: (Default)

[personal profile] lyr 2020-12-21 11:56 am (UTC)(link)
Happy birthday! I'm glad it still felt like a celebration.

Sorry about the UK, though.