West
can’t cope with Covid-
19 because of DOCILIANS,
the pampered herd
whose
demand for ZERO RISK
actually risks killing
thousands
RT,
25
March, 2020
By
Dr David Zaruk, environmental-health risk analyst and professor based
in Brussels. He has worked in risk management and science
communications for industry, public institutions and the academe
since the 1990s. He writes a blog under the name The Risk-Monger
A
risk-averse culture and a helpless population that expects others to
solve every problem has made the developed world uniquely unsuited to
evaluating and dealing with the dangers of the new coronavirus.
Like
all viruses, the Covid-19 coronavirus preys on the vulnerable and is
allowed to destroy the weak. It is rapidly spreading across Europe
and America due to the weaknesses in our regulatory risk management
systems which have created a culture totally unprepared to act to
contain such a threat.
If
Western democracies had been capable of implementing basic risk
reduction measures to keep exposures down during the first 10 weeks
of 2020, there would not have been the need to lock down countries,
strangle the global economy, and lead to the unprecedented decline in
physical and mental well-being of its populations. Why couldn’t
they?
Risk
management, as a field of academic study, was born out of the
environmental-health risk crises of the 1990s. BSE, GMOs, MMR, EDCs
and EMF were some of the acronyms that raised fear as risk-managers
learnt how the precautionary principle could be applied to reassure
citizens with declarations of certainty and safety. In the two
decades that followed, particularly in Western Europe, risk managers
adopted the protective, precautionary role, cultivating a risk-averse
population dependent on regulators to guarantee a risk-free world.
Docilians
Western
societies have become docile, having others protect them while
feeling entitled to benefits without risks. They no longer had to
manage their own risks as any hazards were regulated out via their
policy system. There was no need for warnings like ‘Handle with
care’ or ‘Keep out of reach of children’ as everything was
guaranteed to be safe and if regulations failed to protect the
public, the US tort lawyers would send perpetrators into bankruptcy
(‘Warning: Contents may be hot!’).
This
removal of a basic human survival instinct has led to a passive,
receptive, well-fed population of ‘docilians’ who demand safety
and certainty without the capacity to manage their own risks. Coupled
with decades of affluence and entitlement, individuals formed into
social media tribes to reaffirm their risk-averse demands on their
authorities. Precaution (better safe than sorry) was an easy policy
tool for lazy regulators since they did not have to be right in their
decisions, just safe.
Gurus
and activists reinforced this docilian desire for a zero-risk world
and pushed this precautionary tool to include banning products with
minimal or non-existent risks: trace levels of pesticides in
breakfast cereals, vaccines, plastic linings in tin cans, acrylamide
on chips... These docile individuals, used to being protected, were
not concerned about the consequences on global health, food security,
or economic well-being – the ‘facts’ they wanted to hear were
amply fed to them.
Research
and innovation became bureaucratically encumbered as docilians
refused to accept any risk or uncertainty. Where regulators tried to
impose a scientific rationality on the process, this tribe of
activist cults demanded to have the risk assessors and authorities
replaced with citizen panels (people like them) who would then impose
precaution and stop any threats.
The
docilians were succeeding in dismantling the risk management process
in Europe and America until something happened in Wuhan.
Covid-19:
The stark reality of risk
Within
three months in 2020, the entire docilian risk-averse culture was
infected with a deadly virus which its risk management tools were too
weak to combat. The risk managers were telling their populations what
they wanted to hear: that this threat was in China and there was zero
risk. But as the risk crept closer, the best they could do is remind
people to wash their hands... with soap.
The
only risk management tool docilians tolerated was the precautionary
principle: when there is uncertainty (when you cannot prove a
situation is safe), then take precaution (stop any actions,
processes, substances causing the uncertainty). In a normal
situation, precaution is applied when all other means to manage a
risk (and enjoy a benefit) have failed. Ten weeks after the discovery
of a novel coronavirus, the only measure most Western authorities
took, once the outbreak was spreading out of control on their shores,
was to lock down entire populations: take total precaution (stop all
actions) to try to slow the virus transmission.
Why
were the authorities incapable of applying robust risk reduction
measures in the 10 weeks prior to the collapse of the Western economy
and civil liberties? They could have developed sufficient testing
capacity, built hospitals, established viral firewalls around the
most vulnerable, educated populations on how to strengthen immunity
levels and improve resistance or removed elements that could amplify
transmission in public spaces. Most 10-year-olds would know how to
react when a storm is coming, but docilians had grown accustomed to
benefits without responsibilities, entitled to a world without risk
and the expectation that others would take care of them.
As
Western populations have seen the loss of most social and economic
benefits in a matter of weeks, facing large-scale loss of life and
the incapacity to protect its most vulnerable, the docilians have
woken up. This is the moment to reconsider our misguided risk
management procedures.
Rewriting
risk management
Precaution
is a failed policy tool that has weakened humanity’s capacity to
prosper and protect itself. In affluent times, the lost benefits from
precautionary actions were only felt by the weakest, but those times
are gone. Risk managers need to protect the most vulnerable, but in
the docilian nightmare, this got turned on its head. Precaution
banned crop protection tools and seed technologies so the wealthy
could eat organic food; it handcuffed medical innovations so the
healthy would thrive with supplements; it banned forms of energy so
only the rich could afford to keep the lights on. But Covid-19 did
not spare the affluent and people were reminded that humanity’s
existence is, by nature, fragile.
Science
since the time of Francis Bacon was aware of this fragility and the
need to protect the weak from the ravages of nature. The docilian
perversion (attacking science to defend nature) ultimately made
everyone weak. Restoring the role of science at the heart of risk
management would be the first step.
Precaution
is not even a risk management tool (it simply tries to manage away
uncertainty). Uncertainty (hazard) is inescapable and there is no
such thing as zero risk. What risk management does is try to reduce
exposure to hazards to as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA). Our
risk management debates must be on what is reasonable in light of the
benefits and not the insatiable emotional concepts of ‘safe’ and
‘certain’.
In
this docilian awakening, we have the opportunity to restore risk
management within the framework of what is scientific, rational and
achievable. Perhaps the next time nature rears its ugly head, we will
have the tools to protect our most vulnerable.
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