Chief Nudger, David Halpern, says UK has been drilled to accept a future lockdown

 

Chief Nudger, David Halpern, says UK has been drilled to accept a future lockdown



Lockdown sceptics were "wrongly calibrated"

David Halpern is a British psychologist, author, and government advisor. He's best known for his work in the field of behavioural economics and his role as the Chief Executive of the Behavioural Insights Team (BIT) or "Nudge Unit" in the UK.

The Behavioural Insights Team

Halpern's work with the Nudge Unit involves using insights from behavioural science to inform and influence policy and practice in areas like public health, education, and tax compliance. The team's nickname derives from the book "Nudge" by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, which advocates for subtle policy shifts to help people make better decisions for themselves.


Before joining the Behavioural Insights Team, Halpern was the Chief Analyst in the Prime Ministerā€™s Strategy Unit under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.


The BIT initially focused on policy areas within the UK, but it quickly gained an international reputation. Its work demonstrated that relatively minor tweaks could, for example, significantly increase tax compliance or organ donation rates. The team's successes prompted interest from governments and organizations around the world.


In 2014, the BIT was spun off into a social purpose company, jointly owned by its employees, the UK government, and Nesta (an innovation-focused charity). This allowed the BIT to work with other countries and organizations, and it has since set up offices and run projects in numerous locations around the globe, including the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Canada, among others.


Can you spot a pattern in the list of countries in which the BIT advises!?


Speaking to The Telegraph for the Lockdown Files podcast, Halpern discussed what went on during the pandemic.


When it came to lockdowns, Halpern said the UK had ā€œpractised the drillā€ and ā€œcould redo itā€ in a future crisis. He predicts that if another pandemic were to occur, the country would comply with another lockdown because they ā€œkind of know what the drill isā€. He even thought that the nationā€™s prior experience made it ā€œmuch easier to now imagineā€ the population accepting new restrictions.


The professor said that although fear-based messaging is generally not effective, ā€œthere are times when you do need to cut throughā€¦particularly if you think people are wrongly calibratedā€. Take note, lockdown sceptics, you are wrongly calibrated, next time you will be sent to the quarantine centre for recalibration.


He confirmed what we all know, that posters acted as visual prompts so that ā€œwhen you go into a shop or somewhere else, it re-reminds you, it cues, it acts as a trigger for the behaviourā€. Often the behaviour it triggered was irrational aggression from those who were brainwashed by the BIT.


The BIT used the correct triggers to make the population feel ā€œnakedā€ without masks. ā€œYou would feel like, Oh my God, I havenā€™t got my mask. You feel naked, right?ā€, he said.


He likened the publicā€™s response to exercising muscles - once theyā€™ve been used, theyā€™re more likely to be reused again. The professor said that once the public is taught a new behaviour, ā€œin principle, you can switch it back onā€. ā€œYouā€™ve got the beginning, particularly, of what is called a habit loop: if this has happened, then you should do thatā€.


Halpern said that major disasters ā€œleave this enduring trace on societyā€ which is a ā€œquasi-evolutionaryā€ impact, strongly indicative of future behaviour. He thinks that the public would wear masks again ā€œrelatively rapidly if they were persuadedā€.


Sadly, I agree with him and the recent pandemic has only strengthened the nudgers. ā€œWe figured out a lot more than we did before, so weā€™ve practised the drill and we could redo it,ā€ he said.

ā€œImagine if it happens, not across the whole population, but it happened in an area, a city, and you said, ā€˜it is really important to do the following thingā€™. ā€œIt is much easier to now imagine that that city would then say, ā€˜OK, we better do this, stay at home and wear masks when weā€™re out or whatever.ā€

The BIT identified 8% of the population as ā€œsuper spreadersā€, i.e. citizens that didnā€™t comply with Covid restrictions. ā€œTheyā€™re the ones you really worry aboutā€, he said. Whilst his team didnā€™t design the ā€˜can you look them in the eyes?ā€™ posters, Halpern said, ā€œI can perfectly understand why they were put together in the way they were.ā€ The images were aimed at non-compliant individuals for whom the message was ā€œnot emotionally cutting throughā€.


Will the government's new emotive Covid ad make people obey the rules?


Maybe Halpern should be told to look at these posters instead.


GOV.UK on Twitter: "Around 1 in 3 people who have Covid-19 have no  symptoms. Act like you've got it. Stay Home. Protect the NHS. Save Lives" /  Twitter


When asked about the ā€œunnecessarily scaryā€ pandemic adverts, Halpern said there is precedent for tougher messaging.


The genie has been let out of the bottle, will it ever go back in again?



Source: The Naked Emperor

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