Monthly Archives: March 2020

Coronavirus day 5 – Don’t we all miss community?

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Coronavirus spring – alone with the neighbour’s cat

Yesterday afternoon someone from the council phoned to check on Mum. He spent quite some time listening to my worries. I found this demonstration of support really moving and shed a tear or two after ringing off.

They call to check on her during heatwaves as well because we use the council’s aide à domicile service for people of reduced mobility. It’s great to know that such social solidarity exists.

Giorgio Agamben has caused a stir in left-wing social media circles with a piece claiming that the “frenzied, irrational and totally unjustified” emergency measures are a plot to normalise a “state of exception”.

The hypothesis that the international bourgeoisie is deliberately tanking the economy so as to strengthen the surveillance state seems dubious to me. Isn’t the state there to serve the economy, so far as they’re concerned?

Agamben thinks that this crisis will leave people ready to accept permanent extreme restrictions on their liberty.

I think that many incumbent governments, especially the most reactionary ones, will come out of this discredited, as will the doctrine that has led to the smothering of the welfare state.

While some will see this as a justification to huddle behind reinforced borders, I believe the value of community and solidarity will be reinforced for most people. We might even be ready to pay our taxes to pay for it.

Because don’t we all miss our communities? It’s a much-abused word – the “intelligence community” is a euphemism for spies, isn’t it? Be honest, you spooks – but the communities we form in our normal daily lives keep us fed, watered and sane, and lockdown has cut us off from them.

I don’t want to get all blitz spirit but I believe that facing a crisis that affects us all will reaffirm the value of solidarity and the social services that governments have been slashing over the last few decades.

The magic money tree was shaken in a crisis. Resources we were assured didn’t exist were found and today most people are aware that huge wealth has been accumulated and syphoned off into private hands. When it comes to paying the bill, repairing worn-out health and social services and reviving the economy, there is likely to be fury if the rich don’t foot the bulk of the bill.

Apart from that, the trip to the bakery went well. I wasn’t stopped by a cop, just as well since I forgot to take the form with me. Some but not many people on the street. The young woman serving was singing through her mask. I paid in one of those machines that takes your money and gives you your change. That’s not a Coronavirus innovation but it comes in handy now.
I also dared to sit out in our courtyard in the spring sunshine. I think I’m allowed to do that, as long as we observe social distancing. Nobody else was around so the question didn’t arise.

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Coronavirus day 4 – Don’t go to the beach!

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A big day. I’m going to go and buy some bread. I have my form printed. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Emmanuel Macron says that “too many people” are not taking the lockdown seriously enough and Interior Minister Christophe Castaner rather colourfully criticises people “who think they are modern heroes by breaking the rules when they are really imbeciles”.

Since several local authorities have felt it necessary to close the beaches, it looks as if they may have a point.

A medical state of emergency has passed in the Senate and it looks as if the lockdown is going to be long.

One of the top health bosses, Geneviève Chêne, says that it will almost certainly be necessary to extend it. Two to four weeks are necessary just to see of the situation is getting better, she says, adding that, if China’s example is anything to go by, the curve of infections will not start descending before the middle or end of May.

While the government is scolding the people, three doctors have filed a case against former health minister Agnès Buzyn and Prime Minister Edouard Philippe.

The doctors point out that Buzyn recently told Le Monde that she had warned the government how serious the virus was in January and said that the local council elections should be postponed. That didn’t stop her quitting her post to head the Macron party’s list for the Paris city council after a solo sex tape of the previous mayoral candidate was posted online.

The shortage of FFP2 face masks reflects poorly on everyone who has been in power over the last decade. In 2005, after the avian flu outbreak, the then government (under president Jacques Chirac) decided to build up stocks in case of a future emergency. But in 2010 Nicolas Sarkozy’s government scrapped the orders, saying plenty were available in pharmacies.

Not enough for an emergency, however, and they’re all gone now. The authorities are assuring us that they are not necessary if you are not ill or a medical professional, but that doesn’t seem to be the opinion of officials in countries were there are enough face masks. Ministers have even suggested that people who aren’t ill take them to the pharmacies for use by medical professionals. Of course, nobody knows for sure that they are not ill because the symptoms may not have appeared yet.

Meanwile, 25 million masks are being distributed to some of those the government says need them and emergency production has been launched. They used to be imported from Wuhan.

Do you want to know how Mum is? She’s coughing less today, which leads me to believe that it is aggravated by pollution or pollen – a lot better than the virus. But she said she was getting out of breath, another recurring problem. Still no fever.

I still have to remind her continuously to cough into her elbow, or as near as she can get to it. I explained everything yesterday but it doesn’t stick.

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Coronavirus day 3 – Explaining the epidemic to a forgetful old woman

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I sat down with my mum – 95-years-old, in case you missed the earlier post – today and explained the epidemic to her in blunt terms.

We have long since reversed the parent-offspring role – I even tell her to turn the volume of her radio down from time to time, which brings back memories – so she’s used to me lecturing her. She seemed to take it all in but I fear she will have forgotten within a matter of hours if she hasn’t done so already.

She coughs a lot, especially at night and in the morning, which is worrying, but she has done so for some time. She shows no sign of fever, however, and says “It’s just a tickle”. At that age it’s difficult to tell what is normal and what is exceptional with this sort of thing.

People seem to be getting into the swing of confinement.

No singing from the balconies around here but yesterday afternoon I heard shouting coming from the road at the bottom of the courtyard. At first I thought it was someone arguing with the police but it turned out to be a couple of residents of a block of flats having a high-volume chat from their windows. I waved. They didn’t see me.

Our neighbour, Marianne, tells me that one of her friends has caught the virus. She’s 63 but did not have a severe attack, apparently she only felt really bad for one day. But she has to self-isolate, so Marianne had to go and collect her sick note – dropped out of the window – and send it to her employers.  I know French officialdom is really picky about paperwork, but I’m not sure that they would have insisted on les délais in this instance.

Marianne’s conclusion of her friend’s relatively easy ride is that she doesn’t have to worry too much but that I have to be careful because of Mum.

I can’t help thinking of nightmare scenarios if either or both of us catch it.

Have you been reading the helpful tips from newspapers, magazines etc on how to handle isolation?

Elle in French had an article explaining why we shouldn’t just eat pasta yesterday, which seems a little obvious. Today someone is telling us how to bake our own bread in an oven, which might prove more useful.

Today’s Coronavirus questions:

  • How many times a day can you wash your hand without actually rubbing away the skin?
  • Can you believe how many times you want to touch your face?
  • Is it better to be confined on an overcast day, when the grey sky adds to your isolated gloom, or a sunny day, which really makes you want to go outside and enjoy the spring?

Spring is here in France. It looks as if we’re going to miss it.

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Some Coronavirus questions

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The French lockdown has only been going on half a day and it already feels like a month, an exceptionally stressful month. Meanwhile, we’re all reading online and the French media are carrying Q+As about confinement. Some of the Qs are slightly surprising.

  • People seem very concerned about walking their dogs. It’s permitted as long as the walk is short and you are alone (apart from the dog, of course). Apparently, in Italy some people have borrowed their neighbours’ dogs to provide a pretext for going out. Not a good idea.
  • Someone asked Le Monde if they could have a party in their home. Not only is this stupid idea quite correctly forbidden, if you were planning to get married in the next fortnight, you have to postpone.
  • We all want to know how long this well go on. The present decree runs for a fortnight but can be renewed. It takes a fortnight to be sure that you’re clear of the symptoms apparently. It is quite likely to be prolonged for a further fortnight and there’s even talk of 45 days (Eek!).
  • Workers who cannot go to work are to be paid 80% pay. There’s a relief package for companies.

Further questions have occurred to me:

  • There are reports of Cuba having a treatment that has worked against Coronavirus in China. How seriously are governments around the world taking this and how much can be produced?
  • There are reports that an anti-malarial drug appears to have some effect in France, although there can be side-effects which can be serious for older people. Pharma giant Sanofi says it’s going to hand some over to the French authorities. Is the news and the formula being shared with other countries?
  • Is the disruption to the economy going to throw globalization into reverse?
  • Will xenophobia be reinforced among some people and, if so, how many in what age groups, classes and other categories?
  • The climate crisis has already discredited capitalism in the eyes of many people, especially the young. Will this further discredit it, or will criticism just be confined to austerity and its disastrous effects on health services and other vital services whose value is being proved at the moment?
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Coronavirus diary – France locked down

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After two days’ phoney war, the president has opened serious hostilities against the Coronavirus. From midday we are confined to our homes, at pain of a 135-euro fine for unjustified sorties.

Not much social-distancing – pre-lockdown queueing in a Champigny-sur-Marne supermarket on Monday

“We are at war,” Emmanuel Macron told the nation yesterday evening, in a sharp turnaround from the complacency that allowed voting in local council elections to go ahead on Sunday. There was, of course, a record low turnout and the second round has been postponed sine die.

I imagine there are millions of Coronavirus diaries, in a great many languages, since the epidemic has put most of the world in the same awful situation, even if governments’ reactions have varied (I’m looking at you, Boris Johnson!).

Here’s my two-euros worth, anyway.

I’m 66-years-old and my mother, who lives with me, is 95.

So we’re both high-risk, her more than me, I suppose.

That makes our relationship even more interdependent than it already was. If I catch the virus, which is more likely since she rarely goes out, I will probably pass it on to her. Should she catch it, she’s pretty much certain to pass it on to me, since she forgets the recommended precautions and doesn’t really understand what’s going on.

So we can kill each other if we’re not careful and, frankly, that’s very frightening.

I suppose that’s true of everybody at the moment, although the young are at less risk, and it should be a lesson in our responsibilities to each other. The whole crisis is an incitement both to solidarity – we must behave responsibly so as not to endanger each other – and selfishness – if someone catches it, how much should we put ourselves at risk to help them? – and I suspect we all react to it in both ways at different times.

How seriously are people taking it all in France?

Anticipating the lockdown, I went to the shops yesterday. I wasn’t the only panic-buyer. There were queues in both the chemists and the supermarket – not much social distancing but quite a few face masks and scarves over the mouth and nose.

Of course the chemists had no more gloves or masks and at first I was told there was no hand sanitiser. But then they said that, if I went home and got a bottle, I could have some. Which I duly did, to be informed that it was strictly rationed and be charged 3.80 euros for a very modest amount.

Like the pharmacists, the supermarket till-operators have face masks and plastic gloves. The queues were long, so we stood there and judged each others’ purchases as we waited – I did, anyway.

People are clearly anxious about being confined to their homes – even though they will be allowed out if they have the necessary paperwork to buy food, walk the dog and even do some exercise, which strikes me as a major loophole.

I think many people are taking the virus more seriously now, too.

Our neighbour, who last week was asking whether the authorities weren’t taking it all a bit too seriously, is now shut up in her house with two weeks’ supplies.

The election turnout may have been low last Sunday but, my brother tells me, people in Paris went out to enjoy the spring weather, many of them failing to keep at regulation distances from each other. There haven’t been many people in the streets of the town where I live these last two days, although it’s difficult to judge if there’s been a big change since Monday is always a quiet day.

As for me, last week I drove my mother down to the Jura to visit houses with a view to buying, staying in a hotel, eating in restaurants and, worst of all, shaking estate agents’ hands.

Now we’re locked in the house as if the zombie apocalypse were going on outside, although I will probably exercise my right to go out to buy bread at some point.

Meanwhile, workers in jobs judged indispensable and impossible to do from home are exposing themselves to risk for the common good – and to keep earning a living. Turns out that most of them are low-paid and that many of them are part of that “privileged” caste whose pension rights will be reduced by the reform that sparked a big strike movement last year.

And finally, the health service. It’s in crisis. The government cut 900 million euros from its budget in 2018.

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