"As Toby Green and Thomas Fazi note in their book, The Covid Consensus, the idea of entire countries being placed in lockdown was something entirely new? As they note, an aggressive form of authoritarian capitalism resulted in poor people everywhere suffering enormous losses while rich people everywhere became immeasurably richer."-- Larry Elliott, The Guardian "A bracing anti-lockdown polemic." -- London Review of Books "[A]n outstanding history of the present, one that no other historian or journalist has written up to this day."--African Arguments "A meticulously referenced, shocking catalogue of Western hypocrisy and the destruction wrought by global lockdowns on the poorest nations . [A] depressing tale of hubris, mindless groupthink and cynical power grabs by bureaucrats and governments, taking advantage of a ''health crisis''."The Australian "As [this book shows], the strategy judged to be the best for dealing with Covid-19 in the rest of the world is badly adapted and in fact counter-productive on the African continent."- Le Monde "A thoughtful analysis of the forces and attitudes that unleashed lockdowns upon the global poor, with harrowing descriptions of the consequences." -- Sunetra Gupta, Professor of Theoretical Epidemiology, University of Oxford, and co-author of the Great Barrington Declaration "An excellent book at a critical time.
Pandemics breed hysteria, to which the only cure is reason. This book is a masterly dose of reason, challenging, questioning and skeptical in the best sense of the word."-- Simon Jenkins, author and columnist "Nuanced and rigorous. This is not a thoughtless polemic, but a reasoned plea for progressives to put social inequality at the center of pandemic responses." --Labour Hub "This rigorously researched book lifts the veil on the disastrous effects of lockdowns worldwide and raises more questions than it can answer given the continuing global crisis. It is a much-needed left-leaning critical intervention in the prevailing political consensus characterized by a totalitarian merging of Big Tech, Big Pharma, media corporations and government. Read it, weep (it is harrowing in parts), then read it again."-- Left Lockdown Skeptics "The best hope yet of an antidote to the Covid lobotomy, performing the near impossible task of detailing .
the great horrors that government lockdowns have brought to bear on populations in the Global North and South, without once betraying the kind of outrage that causes those who believe in the Covid narrative to close their ears and shut their eyes, both to fact and to feeling."-- Lockdown Skeptics "Even in the face of viruses and death, some humans are still "more equal" than others. This book demonstrates it abundantly while challenging conventional wisdom on the pandemic and how to confront it."-- Gilbert Achcar, Professor of Development Studies and International Relations, SOAS University of London "In a grave pandemic, what is the acceptable level of mortality risk relative to the damage to society, economy and poor countries from lockdowns? [This] searching scrutiny and anguished analysis of this dilemma is a much-needed corrective to simplistic slogans."-- Ramesh Thakur, former Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations "Toby Green brilliantly picks apart the underlying incongruities which allowed Covid-19 to upend democratic, scientific and international norms. From the loss of thousand-year-old traditions to the effective re-colonization of sub-Saharan Africa, these changes should concern us all."-- David Bell, independent consultant, and former medical officer, World Health Organization "Brilliantly picks apart the underlying incongruities which allowed Covid-19 to upend democratic, scientific and international norms. From the loss of thousand-year-old traditions to the effective re-colonisation of sub-Saharan Africa, these changes should concern us all.
"-- David Bell, independent consultant, and former medical officer, World Health Organization "Whether or not the reader is persuaded by [this book''s] arguments against lockdown, it is undeniable that such restrictions have disproportionately affected the young and poor. [This] unique take explores how these groups, often lacking the facility for remote work and with their education severely limited, are likely to experience staggering inequalities for years to come."-- ew Statesman, ''The Best Books About the Covid-19 Pandemic'' "Brave, measured, essential." -- El PaĆs "An important book."--The Critic.