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by tjomk 2179 days ago
To a degree, they did a sane thing: listened to the advice of an expert. Now if you look at the other side of the ocean where the orange man didn't listen to the advice of an expert, look what happened.

I don't know how these things work in government, but relying on the opinion of just a single expert might not be the best strategy to win here. It's unlikely though that policy makers will come out in the worse shape here than they were before because even though they might have failed (a big if in the long run), they've relied on the advice of the experts rather than their beliefs.

1 comments

Let's look at the track record of the supposed experts at FHM. A few favourites:

"The virus will not spread in Swedish society under the current circumstances. We might see a few cases." (February)

"A large proportion of the population will gain immunity, this will lead to herd immunity. No patients will have to be triaged away." (March)

"The number of ICU patients and infected elderly is stabilizing. Our measures in society are proving effective." (March)

At some point, a responsible and reasonably intelligent person will realize that maybe this particular expert is lacking in expertise and the two dozen or so of other domestic experts (all of them virologists, epidemiologists, professors in medicine etc.) that are fervently recommending stricter measures might have a point.

Swedish politicians have a great knack for avoiding the responsibility they ask for in the elections, and they're really good at shifting blame. I sure hope they won't get away with it this time.