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Blindsight is 2020: Perspectives on COVID Policies from Dissident Scientists, Philosophers, Artists, and More

An introduction to the book by the author

Why would a 66-year-old woman object so strenuously to policies designed to keep her safe? My book Blindsight is 2020, recently published in English by the Brownstone Institute and in Spanish by Mandala Ediciones, takes on the question. The book grew out of my deep misgivings about the pandemic lockdowns, mandates, and what I call COVID culture. I’m honored to share a few details about the book with this community.

Remember the early days, when everyone was telling us to follow the science? Like many others, I had a problem with this slogan. From the day the lockdowns were announced, I wondered: Why are only scientists being consulted? Where are the mental health experts to tell us how social isolation will affect our most vulnerable, both young and old? Where are the economists to insist on a cost-benefit analysis? Where are the ethicists to weigh in on the appropriate balance between risk avoidance and human rights? Or the philosophers to zoom out to the big questions, like the perils of splitting off biological subsistence from meaningful living?

These perspectives, so often missing in the COVID discourse, carry no less weight than the epidemiologic one. A young human rights lawyer has important insights to impart about a pandemic, as does an aging philosopher. Or an author of ground breaking fiction. I stumbled into their thought leaders in magazine articles, academic papers, podcasts, and elsewhere, and felt it was important to gather their insights in one place. That’s why the 46 dissenting thinkers showcased in the book include not just scientists and doctors, but philosophers, ethicists, economists, politicians, lawyers, writers, musicians, as well as a comedian and a priest.

Beyond the Science

The book takes the position—shared by many scientists, as it turns out—that a pandemic is not just a scientific problem, but a human one. “The novel coronavirus response is being driven too much by the epidemiology,” Mark Woolhouse states in his book The Year The World Went Mad. A professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the University of Edinburgh and one of the people I feature in the book, Woolhouse shares my dismay at the curious and conspicuous dismissal of the mental health, human rights, and economic perspectives on the pandemic. “We epidemiologists were repeatedly told it was someone else’s job” to worry about these things, he writes. But “whose? Nothing was ever made public.”

As a health and medical writer who works with doctors most days of the week, I have a deep respect for science. But science alone cannot dictate pandemic policy. The UK government, for one, understood this in the pre-COVID era. “Before COVID, [we] had a much broader view of pandemic management,” UK medical sociologist Robert Dingwall told me in an interview. “Our whole-government approach, which saw pandemics as a societal threat rather than a public health threat, was much admired in Europe.”

Managing a pandemic is not just about containing a virus, but about shepherding the human family through a massive societal upheaval. An upheaval that threatens not just lives, but livelihoods. Not just lung health, but mental health. Not just heartbeats, but hopes and dreams. It’s about striking a balance between collective action and individual agency. It’s about respecting that not everyone brings equal capabilities or resources to the navigation of public health directives—considerations that were jettisoned with COVID.

Epidemiologists can do epidemiology. Public health experts can do public health. But none of these experts can do society or human nature any better than intellectuals from other disciplines or even “ordinary people.” No scientist has the legal or moral authority to tell someone they can’t sit next to a parent on their deathbed.

Letting people die alone may align with the goal of viral containment, but that doesn’t mean it serves the “greater good,” whatever the term means. Yale University philosopher Samantha Godwin made this point in a 2021 Tweet: “We have collectively accepted, without meaningful debate, the ideological belief that the greater good can be equated with maximum COVID mitigation, without concern for or recognition of the collateral harms caused by these mitigation efforts.” I wrote the book to give pride of place to such insights, which the mainstream COVID narrative has summarily discounted.

Embracing Reality

The dominant narrative positioned the virus as the enemy in a planetary war—an enemy we must fight to the bitter end, costs be damned. But as it became clear that we were waging an unwinnable war, a second story began gaining momentum. This story cast COVID as a guest that, while not exactly welcome, was here to stay, so we needed to find a way to coexist with it without destroying our social fabric. In his book Gone Viral, Justin Hart calls the supporters of each story Team Apocalypse and Team Reality, respectively.

My book runs with the second story: attempting to eliminate all risk from COVID is a fool’s errand and carries too high a cost. “The world today is much closer to 2019 True Normal than it is to 2020 New Normal, and a lot of that is because what the Covidians wanted is both logistically and psychologically impossible,” says Heidi Buxton, the brilliant Colorado nurse and editor who reviewed my manuscript before publication. In other words, pandemic policies must respect biological realities and human nature—a point made by several people quoted in the book.

As an essayist and memoirist, I also enjoy weaving some personal anecdotes into the mix. From my attendance at a freedom rally and therapy with a Zoom shrink to a trip to Sweden and an LSD trip on a lake, I recount several personal experiences that sprang from my despair about the COVID policies.

No book should try to be all things. While I have much respect for the researchers who continue to investigate the origins of the virus, early treatments, and vaccine side effects, the focus of Blindsight is 2020 lies elsewhere. Its diverse voices shed light on the fears and follies that set the COVID era in motion, and suggest a saner path forward. I hope the insightful and colorful characters featured in the book speak to you as they did with me.


BLINDSIGHT IS 2020 currently available on Amazon and LuLu as a printed edition or in e-reader format. Amazon reviews are gratefully appreciated.

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Free the People publishes opinion-based articles from contributing writers. The opinions and ideas expressed do not always reflect the opinions and ideas that Free the People endorses. We believe in free speech, and in providing a platform for open dialog. Feel free to leave a comment!

Gabrielle Bauer

Gabrielle Bauer is a Toronto health and medical writer who has won six national awards for her magazine journalism. Her books include Tokyo, My Everest, co-winner of the Canada Japan Book Prize, and Waltzing The Tango, a finalist for the Edna Staebler Creative Nonfiction Award.

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