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The one victim of coronavirus not worth saving is capitalism

John Wight
4 min readApr 11, 2023

This piece is originally from March 2020, when Covid was running rampant across the world. I wouldn’t change a single word.

When with unrivalled sagacity Martin Luther King said, ‘The dogmas of a quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present,’ he could have been speaking to us in the here and now, confronted as we are by a deadly pandemic that has turned our world upside down and inside out.

For this is not like any other global crisis we have faced since the Second World War. It’s one that has already forced us to think anew about the way we live and how we organise our societies in different parts of the world, and in consequence is well on the way to producing an ontological shift.

Putting it bluntly, coronavirus has laid bare the rotten foundations of societies that have been nailed to the cross of neoliberalism over the past four decades. Greed and profit at the expense of stability and sustainability had before this this public health crisis left us bereft of what it means to be human, reducing us to mere economic units and appendages to the machine. It had, to paraphrase Arthur Miller’s words in his classic work The Crucible, ‘pulled down heaven and raised up a whore.’

In the UK the raft of measures Britain’s accidental man of the moment, Chancellor Rishi…

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John Wight
John Wight

Written by John Wight

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