They've Learned Nothing - Because That Would Expose Too Much
Update: 2025-11-23
Description
By Roger Bate at Brownstone dot org.
The UK Covid-19 Inquiry has finally released the core political chapters of its long-awaited report. After nearly three years of hearings, millions of documents, and tens of millions of pounds spent on legal fees, the conclusion is now unmistakably clear.
They've learned nothing, as I detail in my latest research.
Worse, they may not want to learn. The Inquiry's structure, its analytical frame, even its carefully curated narrative all point in the same direction: away from the possibility that Britain's pandemic response was fundamentally misguided, and toward the politically safer claim that ministers simply "acted too late."
On November 20, 2025, Jay Bhattacharya captured this perfectly in a single sentence on X: "Fact check; not locking down at all (like Sweden) would have saved lives in UK. Hard to believe how much money the UK spent on its sham covid inquiry." That tweet was provocative - but it was also accurate in its diagnosis of the Inquiry's deeper pathologies.
The Inquiry's Central Mistake: Asking the Wrong Question
From the outset, the Inquiry has framed Britain's pandemic response as a timing problem. Lockdowns were assumed to be necessary and effective; the only question was whether politicians implemented them quickly enough. The result is a dry recitation of process failures and personality clashes inside Downing Street, all of which are said to have delayed the inevitable "stay-at-home" order.
But that framing was never neutral. It was baked into the Inquiry's analytical choices - especially its uncritical reliance on the same family of models that drove the UK into lockdown in March 2020.
The centerpiece of that modeling tradition is Imperial College London's Report 9, the document that forecast hundreds of thousands of UK deaths absent stringent lockdowns. That report assumed near-homogeneous mixing, limited voluntary behavior change, and high fatality rates across the population. Under those assumptions, lockdown becomes not a political choice but a mathematical necessity.
The Inquiry has now rerun the same machinery and, unsurprisingly, produced the same conclusion.
Its headline claim - that delaying lockdown by a week caused roughly 23,000 additional deaths - is not a historical finding. It is not based on observational data. It is simply the output of an Imperial-style model with a different start date.
The Inquiry has restated the model, not tested it.
The Evidence They Chose Not to See
The Inquiry's blindness becomes fully apparent when we ask the obvious comparative question: if the lockdown paradigm were correct, what would we expect to see among countries that refused to lock down?
We would expect chaos. We would expect mass hospital collapse. We would expect mortality catastrophes to dwarf the UK.
We would expect, in short, to see Sweden in ruins.
Instead, we see the opposite.
Sweden kept primary schools open, avoided stay-at-home orders, relied heavily on voluntary behavior, and preserved civil liberties throughout the pandemic. After correcting early care-home errors, Sweden recorded one of the lowest age-adjusted excess mortality rates in Europe.
The Swedish experience is not a footnote. It is not an "exception." It is the control case - the real-world test of the lockdown paradigm.
And it falsifies it.
A serious Inquiry would have begun with Sweden. It would have asked why a country that rejected lockdowns achieved better mortality outcomes than Britain while preserving education, normal life, and basic freedoms. It would have integrated that evidence into every chapter. It would have examined whether voluntary behavior changes, targeted protection, and risk-based messaging can substitute for mass coercion.
Instead, Sweden is barely mentioned. When it appears at all, it is described as an anomaly. The Inquiry behaves as though Sweden is politically inconvenient - not analytically essential.
Because it is.
The Modeling Was Wrong. The Inquiry Can't Admit It...
The UK Covid-19 Inquiry has finally released the core political chapters of its long-awaited report. After nearly three years of hearings, millions of documents, and tens of millions of pounds spent on legal fees, the conclusion is now unmistakably clear.
They've learned nothing, as I detail in my latest research.
Worse, they may not want to learn. The Inquiry's structure, its analytical frame, even its carefully curated narrative all point in the same direction: away from the possibility that Britain's pandemic response was fundamentally misguided, and toward the politically safer claim that ministers simply "acted too late."
On November 20, 2025, Jay Bhattacharya captured this perfectly in a single sentence on X: "Fact check; not locking down at all (like Sweden) would have saved lives in UK. Hard to believe how much money the UK spent on its sham covid inquiry." That tweet was provocative - but it was also accurate in its diagnosis of the Inquiry's deeper pathologies.
The Inquiry's Central Mistake: Asking the Wrong Question
From the outset, the Inquiry has framed Britain's pandemic response as a timing problem. Lockdowns were assumed to be necessary and effective; the only question was whether politicians implemented them quickly enough. The result is a dry recitation of process failures and personality clashes inside Downing Street, all of which are said to have delayed the inevitable "stay-at-home" order.
But that framing was never neutral. It was baked into the Inquiry's analytical choices - especially its uncritical reliance on the same family of models that drove the UK into lockdown in March 2020.
The centerpiece of that modeling tradition is Imperial College London's Report 9, the document that forecast hundreds of thousands of UK deaths absent stringent lockdowns. That report assumed near-homogeneous mixing, limited voluntary behavior change, and high fatality rates across the population. Under those assumptions, lockdown becomes not a political choice but a mathematical necessity.
The Inquiry has now rerun the same machinery and, unsurprisingly, produced the same conclusion.
Its headline claim - that delaying lockdown by a week caused roughly 23,000 additional deaths - is not a historical finding. It is not based on observational data. It is simply the output of an Imperial-style model with a different start date.
The Inquiry has restated the model, not tested it.
The Evidence They Chose Not to See
The Inquiry's blindness becomes fully apparent when we ask the obvious comparative question: if the lockdown paradigm were correct, what would we expect to see among countries that refused to lock down?
We would expect chaos. We would expect mass hospital collapse. We would expect mortality catastrophes to dwarf the UK.
We would expect, in short, to see Sweden in ruins.
Instead, we see the opposite.
Sweden kept primary schools open, avoided stay-at-home orders, relied heavily on voluntary behavior, and preserved civil liberties throughout the pandemic. After correcting early care-home errors, Sweden recorded one of the lowest age-adjusted excess mortality rates in Europe.
The Swedish experience is not a footnote. It is not an "exception." It is the control case - the real-world test of the lockdown paradigm.
And it falsifies it.
A serious Inquiry would have begun with Sweden. It would have asked why a country that rejected lockdowns achieved better mortality outcomes than Britain while preserving education, normal life, and basic freedoms. It would have integrated that evidence into every chapter. It would have examined whether voluntary behavior changes, targeted protection, and risk-based messaging can substitute for mass coercion.
Instead, Sweden is barely mentioned. When it appears at all, it is described as an anomaly. The Inquiry behaves as though Sweden is politically inconvenient - not analytically essential.
Because it is.
The Modeling Was Wrong. The Inquiry Can't Admit It...
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