Sweden's kids were free Credit: Martin von Krogh/Getty Images

A hundred years ago, in New York City, 20,000 people marched down Fifth Avenue in protest against one of the greatest public health policy experiments in history. One of them was wearing a sign featuring an image of Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Last Supper,” beside the slogan, “Wine was served.” There were posters of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln. Another read: “Tyranny in the name of righteousness is the worst of all tyrannies.”
For a year, beer, wine and spirits had been illegal throughout the United States. From a public health perspective, it seemed a reasonable enough measure. That alcohol was a dangerous substance was clear: disease, violence, poverty and crime were intimately bound up with it. Even now, despite its failure, it is known as the “noble experiment”. But was it right to prevent people from making drinks they not only enjoyed, but that also served important cultural and religious purposes? Not for the first time, Americans found themselves torn in a balance between freedom and security — nor for the last.
Until recently, prohibition remained the largest experiment in social engineering a democracy had ever undertaken. And then, in early 2020, a new virus began to spread from China. Faced with this threat, the world’s governments responded by closing schools, banning people from meeting, forcing entrepreneurs to shut their businesses and making ordinary people wear face masks. Like prohibition, this experiment provoked a debate. In all the democracies of the world, freedom was weighed against what was perceived as security; individual rights versus what was considered best for public health.
Few now remember that for most of 2020, the word “experiment” had negative connotations. That was what Swedes were accused of conducting when we — unlike the rest of the world — maintained some semblance of normality. The citizens of this country generally didn’t have to wear face masks; young children continued going to school; leisure activities were largely allowed to continue unhindered.
This experiment was judged early on as “a disaster” (Time magazine), a “the world’s cautionary tale” (New York Times), “deadly folly” (the Guardian). In Germany, Focus magazine described the policy as “sloppiness”; Italy’s La Repubblica concluded that the “Nordic model country” had made a dangerous mistake. But these countries — all countries — were also conducting an experiment, in that they were testing unprecedented measures to prevent the spread of a virus. Sweden simply chose one path, the rest of Europe another.
The hypothesis of the outside world was that Sweden’s freedom would be costly. The absence of restrictions, open schools, reliance on recommendations instead of mandates and police enforcement would result in higher deaths than other countries. Meanwhile, the lack of freedom endured by the citizens of other countries would “save lives.”
Many Swedes were persuaded by this hypothesis. “Shut down Sweden to protect the country,” wrote Peter Wolodarski, perhaps the country’s most powerful journalist. Renowned infectious diseases experts, microbiologists and epidemiologists from all over the country warned of the consequences of the government’s policy. Researchers from Uppsala University, the Karolinska Institute and the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm produced a model powered by supercomputers that predicted 96,000 Swedes would die before the summer of 2020.
At this stage, it was not unreasonable to conclude that Sweden would pay a high price for its freedom. Throughout the spring of 2020, Sweden’s death toll per capita was higher than most other countries.
But the experiment didn’t end there. During the year that followed, the virus continued to ravage the world and, one by one, the death tolls in countries that had locked down began to surpass Sweden’s. Britain, the US, France, Poland, Portugal, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Spain, Argentina, Belgium — countries that had variously shut down playgrounds, forced their children to wear facemasks, closed schools, fined citizens for hanging out on the beach and guarded parks with drones — have all been hit worse than Sweden. At the time of writing, more than 50 countries have a higher death rate. If you measure excess mortality for the whole of 2020, Sweden (according to Eurostat) will end up in 21st place out of 31 European countries. If Sweden was a part of the US, its death rate would rank number 43 of the 50 states.
This fact is shockingly underreported. Consider the sheer number of articles and TV segments devoted to Sweden’s foolishly liberal attitude to the pandemic last year — and the daily reference to figures that are forgotten today. Suddenly, it is as if Sweden doesn’t exist. When the Wall Street Journal recently published a report from Portugal, it described how the country “offered a glimpse” of what it would be like to live with the virus. This new normal involved, among other things, vaccine passports and face masks at large events like football matches. Nowhere in the report was it mentioned that in Sweden you can go to football matches without wearing a facemask, or that Sweden — with a smaller proportion of Covid deaths over the course of the pandemic — had ended virtually all restrictions. Sweden has been living with the virus for some time.
The WSJ is far from alone in its selective reporting. The New York Times, Guardian, BBC, The Times, all cheerleaders for lockdowns, can’t fathom casting doubt on their efficacy.
And those who’ve followed Sweden’s example have also come in for a lot of criticism. When the state of Florida — more than a year ago and strongly inspired by Sweden — removed most of its restrictions and allowed schools, restaurant and leisure parks to reopen, the judgement from the American media was swift. The state’s Republican governor was predicted to “lead his state to the morgue” (The New Republic). The media was outraged by images of Floridians swimming and sunbathing at the beach.
DeSantis’s counterpart in New York, the embattled Democrat Andrew Cuomo, on the other hand, was offered a book deal for his “Leadership lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic”. A few months ago, he was forced to resign after harassing a dozen women. But the result of his “leadership lesson” lives on: 0.29% of his state’s residents died of Covid-19. The equivalent figure for Florida — the state that not only allowed the most freedom, but also has the second highest proportion of pensioners in the country — is 0.27%.
Once again, an underreported fact.
From a human perspective, it is easy to understand the reluctance to face these numbers. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that millions of people have been deprived of their freedom, and millions of children have had their education gravely damaged, for little demonstrable gain. Who wants to admit that they were complicit in this? But what one American judge called the “laboratories of democracy” have conducted their experiment — and the result is increasingly clear.
Exactly why it turned out this way is harder to explain, but perhaps the “noble experiment” of the 1920s in the US can offer some clues. Prohibition didn’t win because the freedom argument prevailed. Nor was it because the substance itself had become any less harmful to people’s health. The reason for the eventual demise of the alcohol ban was that it simply didn’t work. No matter what the law said, Americans didn’t stop drinking alcohol. It simply moved from bars to “speakeasies”. People learned to brew their own spirits or smuggle it in from Canada. And the American mafia had a field day.
The mistake the American authorities made was to underestimate the complexity of society. Just because they banned alcohol did not mean that alcohol disappeared. People’s drives, desires and behaviours were impossible to predict or fit into a plan. A hundred years later, a new set of authorities made the same mistake. Closing schools didn’t stop children meeting in other settings; when life was extinguished in cities, many fled them, spreading the infection to new places; the authorities urged their citizens to buy food online, without thinking about who would transport the goods from home to home.
If the politicians had been honest with themselves, they might have foreseen what would happen. For just as American politicians were constantly caught drinking alcohol during the prohibition, their successors were caught 100 years later breaking precisely the restrictions they had imposed on everyone else. The mayors of New York and Chicago, the British government’s top advisor, the Dutch Minister of Justice, the EU Trade Commissioner, the Governor of California all broke their own rules.
It isn’t easy to control other people’s lives. It isn’t easy to dictate desirable behaviours in a population via centralised command. These are lessons that many dictators have learned. During the Covid pandemic, many democracies have learned it too. The lesson has perhaps not yet sunk in, but hopefully it will eventually. Then perhaps it will be another 100 years before we make the same mistake again.
This is an edited translation of an article that first appeared in Sydsvenskan.
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Subscribe“A relic of a time when Islam and Muslims had become something of a national preoccupation”. Since the US led by Joe Biden abandoned Afghanistan to the Taliban and passed a bill to criminalise criticism of Islam, they no longer cared about people suffering from faith-based totalitarian policies.Ilhan Omar’s bill against Islamophobia undermines our freedom to speak out. Trump hardly went that far. Is criticism of the Taliban, the Islamic Republic of Iran or the Islamic State a form of Islamophobia? Is criticism of all the discriminatory laws allegedly based on Islamic laws a form of Islamophobia?As Milton criticised the authority of the Church with good arguments, why should we consider a crime to criticise Islam in similar ways?
“Threats to democracy” is code for, “if I ever read any history, I’ve forgotten it.” Now do Lincoln’s draft riots, Shay’s Rebellion, the Whiskey Rebellion, Wilson’s repression of Blacks, the Impeach Truman movement. The comity of the Eisenhower era is the anomaly. And America was never a democracy; it’s a Republic.
Obama & Biden’s “threat-to-democracy” was nothing BUT pre-election fear mongering. These guys will do anything to stay power.
SHADI HAMID, Do you want to know when and how democracy dies?
When political partisans run all federal agencies and the military. When these partisans control most news and media organizations and declare stories unfavorable to them as “Russian Disinformation”. When these partisans create voting systems that can be easily manipulated without much trace that they did it. When these partisans use the IRS to harass political opponents. When the government spends money it doesn’t have to buy votes. When the government creates sham programs to pay back political supporters. When political partisans manufacture allegations against an incoming president and his supporters. When partisans declare a health emergency to shut down the economy and schools to increase their power and scare uninformed people.
Democracy has been on life support since 2009, with only 2016 representing a slight sign of life. Its hard to see how we as a nation come back from this.
Congratulations Unherd, you just ran a column from the poor man’s Janan Ganesh. If I want to read histrionic extreme center garbage, I will go back reading the FT or the Atlantic, not Unherd. More Paul Kingsnorth, more Mary Harrington, more Matthew Crawford, more Joel Kotkin, more John Gray, among others, and less Shadi Hamid, less Peter Beinart, less futuristic and paleo liberals.
Right on, brother. I’ve been thinking much the same.
I discovered Unherd by seeing a Mary Harrington piece posted over at RealClearPolitics. And I’d appreciated the occasional Matthew Crawford piece and the more frequent Joel Kotkin pieces (even though I don’t share his anti-Trump sentiment).
But, more and more of the content seems sophomoric. Like, we don’t all have to agree. But, more and more of the content does seem to come from the Herd. Disappointing.
Oh. This is a piece from someone at Brookings. It reads like one …
In other words, only commission writers who write what I think and believe – silence the rest.
Well said Linda. I found the article thoughtful and if anything, more radical than the current attempts to create a binary world that much of msm focuses on. A very appropriate article for Unherd. Those who’ve voted down those takes on the article should do what Unherd asks – think again.
No, I just think they could find better writers to challenge us. I go to Unherd to hear a variety of interesting perspectives I cannot find in other publications. If the writers and articles are the same old tripe you find in other mainstream publications, what is the point? If Unheard wants to build a robust ecosystem of ideas and bring in a more left wing perspective, they have to at least bring in good writers and articles. If they don’t, hey confirmation bias at its finest.
I have read a variety of perspectives on UnHerd, from former Guardian writers through to very conservative ones and people like this chap who appear much more centrist. I’ve read from Christians, Jews and Muslims, Brits, Europeans, Yanks and recent immigrant arrivals on an array of subjects. Not every article I’ve agreed with, but I’ve enjoyed reading it none the less.
What you (and many others now unfortunately) appear to want is a stream of articles from writers you already like and agree with, which I’d argue runs counter to the whole purpose of the website.
Try a little reading comprehension Billy. I would say over half the people I read describe themselves as “left of center”. You just want to posture. I want something to read that does not waste my time.
Frankly I don’t believe you read much that you don’t already agree with, hence my criticism of your comment, but we’ll leave it there
Oh Billy, you really don’t get it do you? I read a lot of things I do not agree with as long as they are not screeching in my face like Vox or The American Prospect. The thing is, if the article does not make a good point or argument, then it is not going to change my beliefs in the slightest. Whether you believe me or not is one of the few things I will never care about.
The go read something that AGREES with your views. Simple.
I think this is unfair. The article seems reasonable even if, I suspect, that the writer and I would agree on little.
“In a country as large and unwieldy as ours, as evenly divided as ours, with as much separation of powers as ours, with enough federalism as ours, and with a media as vigorous as ours (towards Republican overreach), the notion that democracy would die or even that it could was a nightmare.”
What nonsense! Vigorous media, enough federalism? Also, America is a Constitutional Republic, not a “democracy.”
Mr. Hamid is unknowingly touching on the key problem of the Western world: “liberal democracy” is an oxymoron.
A democrat believed that the will of the people must be respected. A liberal believes infringement of certain rights is illegitimate even by popular vote. There is in evitable tension between these.
For a liberal democracy to function, the “rights” part of this equation needs to be small and the “will of the people” part quite large, lest the system become lose the “consent of the governed” and authoritarian. When the President of the United States declares that “trans rights are human rights”, effectively ruling that children slicing off their private parts is a right beyond the reach of the democratic process, your “liberal democracy” has officially jumped the shark.
When the Democratic Party (or the EU, or the UN, or any progressive body) says “democracy is threatened”, what they really mean is “liberalism is threatened”, and specifically they mean “our view of what rights are sacrosanct is threatened”. Don’t believe me? Ask a Pole or a Hungarian how “democratic” the EU is.
An interesting reflection to read. The longer I live, the less and less urgent politics seems to me. You can only suffer (and there is no more apt word for it) through so many “Most Important Election Ever!” moments before either burning out or tuning out. You brought your Muslim faith, I bring up my own Christian faith – I think you and I would agree that God / Allah is supreme over all, and this should further temper our worries for the purely momentary. Civilizations come and go, as do governments. What seems a crisis today will likely merit little more than a few sentences (if that) in histories of this era a century or two hence (for instance, who remembers President Taft? Or who was speaker of the House under Grover Cleveland?). What matters more is what you and I do with what we have – with our families, our friends, our home communities. In another 2 years we’ll have another ridiculous farce to endure, and it too will be “The Most Important Election Ever!” Right up until it isn’t. And life will go on. And what will matter most to you will still be your family, your faith, and your local community.
So Trump was replaced with a brain-dead, hair-sniffing kiddy-fondler and that’s democracy? Mind you, the Muslim “prophet” was partial to little girls.
Mr. Hamid still clings to the distinction between left and right, as if that distinction had not not long since evaporated. Most who do so see the threat to human thriving charging from the right only, as if the left were no threat. They do not notice that both Hitler and Stalin were fans of each other and that both laughed out loud at the idea that the left is harmless. Only when one transcends that former distinction, does one come to see the source of the real threat. That source is ideology. That source is the “idea of progress;” the idea that innocence itself will come only at the end of history. Pres. Trump is neither left nor right. He is, whether he knows it or not (I for one, think he knows), warring with this “idea of progress.” That is, he is fighting the right, not the wrong, battle. This is not to say, by the way, that there is nothing to fear from him. Of course not.
Democracy is most certainly dead in States which cannot prove election results. That is most of them.
American democracy died some years ago and was confirmed when creepy Joe was “elected” as President. The democrat party have just confirmed the fact by the electoral system and results of the mid-terms.
This is a pants-on-fire essay regarding Muslim blame games.
Obama was devising a Muslim ‘ban’ before Trump was in office…Obama has designated countries from which folks would be banned from coming to the USA. He was on his way out before he implemented it; Trump implemented it….
From CNN in 1917:
“The seven Muslim-majority countries targeted in President Trump’s executive order on immigration were initially identified as “countries of concern” under the Obama administration.
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer on Sunday pointed to the Obama administration’s actions as the basis for their selection of the seven countries. Trump’s order bars citizens from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the U.S. for the next 90 days.
https://www.cnn.com/2017/01/29/politics/how-the-trump-administration-chose-the-7-countries
How soon we forget….
This is a pants-on-fire essay regarding Muslim blame games.
Obama was devising a Muslim ‘ban’ before Trump was in office…Obama has designated countries from which folks would be banned from coming to the USA. He was on his way out before he implemented it; Trump implemented it….
From CNN in 1917:
“The seven Muslim-majority countries targeted in President Trump’s executive order on immigration were initially identified as “countries of concern” under the Obama administration.
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer on Sunday pointed to the Obama administration’s actions as the basis for their selection of the seven countries. Trump’s order bars citizens from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the U.S. for the next 90 days.
https://www.cnn.com/2017/01/29/politics/how-the-trump-administration-chose-the-7-countries
How soon we forget….
I’m 41 and I think I’ve heard about 6 different impassioned theories about how the world was literally going to end by (insert date). (Insert date) is well in the past for each of them. This is just within my lifetime. Now when I hear anyone using apocalyptic rhetoric my ears immediately shut off.
Same with politics. Republics are pretty sturdy. If I understand things correctly, it took the Roman Empire 700 years for half of it to fall after its democracy aspect arguably failed. And then that fall is hard to define because it didn’t end with a specific political upheaval or battle. The central government simply became a useless, irrelevant entity (no one cared to fight for) and local leaders gradually became feudal lords who answered to no one.
I am not sure I agree with the author’s view on elections. It seems profoundly obtuse to even write,” no one should cry about an election” when in this election the choice was choosing republicans who wanted to restrict women’s rights to abortion. Having someone be elected who promises to restrict your basic bodily autonomy seems like a fair reason to despair.
What a great article. I couldn’t agree more. It’s so good to hear someone speaking wisdom.
Absolutely right. A good corrective to some of the over-engaged and slightly hysterical calls to action that UnHerd and its commentators tend to drift towards.
I, too, thought that this was an interesting article, calmly put forward. Although there are a number of points with which I would disagree, it has given me some food for thought.