It’s worth remembering what lockdown actually involved

People forget, but Britain First gained its initial traction as an animal charity. As the BNP broke up, around 2011, party leader Paul Golding employed an Ulsterman called Jim Dowson to handle his web content. Dowson was a grifter more than he was an ideologue — he had once set up an entirely fictional charity that raised £130,000 for ‘victims of The Troubles’ — so, with his keen understanding of human psychology, he made posts with pictures of flayed cats and loping dogs in miserable bondage, telling browsers: LIKE THIS POST IF YOU BELIEVE THESE CAGES ARE A DISGRACE. The algorithm did the rest. By 2014, Britain First had quietly become massive on Facebook, with over 300,000 subscribers.
There are many ways to skin a cat (though, as established, Britain First are firmly against cat-skinning). Any telesales executive knows that if you can have a conversation with people about what’s important to them, soon enough you get to talk about what’s important to you.
As the virus becomes the new hinge of broader political polarisations, various fringe actors have spotted a chance to expand their audience, hoping to turn our crisis into their opportunity. And while some commentators are hoping to revisit the 1930s in the form of FDR’s New Deal, there are others who wish to rehabilitate a very different vision of that decade. In America, a coalition of the strange, the merely esoteric and the truly nutso have interleaved themselves into the movement to end the lockdowns, and are now trying to blend in with the crowd.
Patriot Prayer, the Trump-loving nationalist street rabble, have been fighting running battles with Antifa in downtown Portland for almost three years. The clashes have become a spectacle in themselves — the point at which the online hysteria of the culture wars congeals into flesh and baseball bats and teargas.
Now, they organise their own anti-lockdown protests via a website called ‘Non Essential Help’, suggest other personal acts of defiance — like mowing the lawn or having a haircut — and promote businesses who defy the lockdown:
“Come support Glamour Salon is Salem today!!! Owner was courageous enough to open and defying all the threats and illegal orders by this government. Will be here all day until 6pm. BBQ and Music!”
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