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No Tom some free people have submitted to lockdowns, the Australian state of Victoria is an example, and the rest of us had a month lockdown at the start of the pandemic and are largely CV19 free today.
Sorry you are just plain wrong .No other people locked down to the extent that the Chinese imposed. Theirs was draconian and only an authoritarian state like China (or someone like Quid would like to do here ) could get away with it in a free state . They had a cordon sanitaire on the whole city of Wuhan and two other cities nearby. Starting February 2,suspected or mild cases; and even healthy close contacts of confirmed cases ;were sent to makeshift hospitals and quarantine centers. This involved turning hundreds of hotels, schools into quarantine centers . They built a new hospital and created 14 more in public housing . 40,000 medical workers were bused in from all over China, and the city’s residents were sealed into their homes. It is all documented in a movie by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei called 'Coronation ' . It shows the efficiency of the dictatorial state as well as the crushing brutality that goes along with that efficiency. You will be hard pressed to find it at more traditional outlets like Netflix Amazon because they fear the Chinese backlash . But it is available in sites like Vimeo .
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China has assumed the status of superpower on the global stage, yet it remains poorly understood by other nations. Through the lens of the pandemic, “Coronation” clearly depicts the Chinese crisis management and social control machine—through surveillance, ideological brainwashing, and brute determination to control every aspect of society. The film shows the changes that took place in a city and in individual space under the impact of the virus; it illustrates the value of individual life in the political environment, reflecting on the difficulties we face as individuals and countries in the context of globalization. Ultimately, the result is a society lacking trust, transparency, and respect for humanity. Despite the impressive scale and speed of the Wuhan lockdown, we face a more existential question: can civilization survive without humanity? Can nations rely on one another without transparency or trust?