I'm sure you meant to say "have allegedly deliberately done things..".
Not really. The people to whom the courts seek to attribute blame and subject to punishment are those initially 'alleged' miscreants who misdeeds come to be regarded as 'proven' after investigation and 'due processes'. As you imply, the courts obviously do not attribute blame to, or punish, people whose guilt has not been 'proven'
Before that stage though there is an investigation ....
Exactly, and that investigation is crucial to determining (to the best of our ability) whether alleged misdeeds really were misdeeds.
This inquiry is the investigation.
Exactly.
It's astonishing that you don't think there should be an inquiry.
I really don't know where that comes from. As I keep saying, an inquiry (into the management of the pandemic) is
absolutely crucial if we are to learn lessons from our recent experiences and thereby hopefully be able to plan to 'do better next time'. However, in terms of that aim (which I regard as by far the most important one) it doesn't matter a jot as to
who [what individual(s) ]did any 'less-than-ideal' things, and why.
Strongly disagree. There is enough evidence that procurement rules may have been broken, i.e. evidence that there may have been serious wilful abuse or neglect of the power or responsibilities of the public office held by those who decided to award large PPE contracts to friends, family and party donors to merit investigation to see if anybody did/was likely to have committed Misconduct in Public Office.
You are talking about acts which are/were, if proven, criminal and/or in breach of parliamentary rules/regulations. They should be investigates as such, and any appropriate sanctions/punishments applied if the allegations are proven. However, that is totally separate from, and nothing directly to do with, learning lessons which might help us to 'do better next time' - other than to plan (how???) 'to avoid criminal acts by members of government during management of a pandemic!
It's astonishing that you don't think there should be an inquiry.
As above, I'm also astonished that you believe that to be the case, when it's the antithesis of what I keep saying...
How do we know that unless we investigate?
Exactly.
Are we? We are talking about people who ran an illegal PPE procurement scheme.
You seem to be but, as above, those allegations are matters for the police, the CPS and parliamentary authorities to investigate, not thee Covid Inquiry.
And you are so sure that they were all doing their best to do what they believed was the best for the UK population ....
I'm obviously not 'so sure', but I very strongly suspect that the vast majority of members of government, as well as everyone else involved were 'doing their best' to deal with a crises of which none of us had any past experience. I'm sure that the vast majority are ordinary 'decent' people, and find it very hard to believe that any will have deliberately done things that they knew/suspected would lead to an increase in illness and deaths just for some sort of 'person gain', don't you?
that you don't think there should be an investigation ..... Astonishing.
Again, I am astonished by your repetition of this accusation which is the anitheais of my view. It is crucial that there should be an investigation - but related to 'what', not 'who' - if not only because none of the same individuals will be in government (and quite probably not still alive) when 'it next happens'.
.... Secondly, re competing ideologies, absolutely. But maybe people should have their eyes opened to the true consequences of their ideological choices.
Yes, maybe they should, but .....
So if the consequences of a "private good, public bad" ideology, the consequences of a "centralised good, local/devolved bad" ideology, the consequences of cutting spending on health and social care and preparedness are that we were inadequately resourced, we were unable to manage risk properly, we were not sufficiently ready, the government were not making the best decisions, then how can it not be right and proper for the public to be able to make fully informed decisions about whether they think the "costs" of implementing their ideological preferences are acceptable?
... as I recently wrote, we live in a democracy and the fact is that, throughout my lifetime to date, the electorate have rarely been prepared to elect a government with declared policies anything like as 'extreme' as would probably appeal to you - that probably being at least in part to 'human nature' (poorly considered 'self-interest'.
If you want to get philosophical, I don't think that you would ever see an 'extreme Socialist' regime elected (and/or allowed to remain in power for long) in any democratic country. I therefore suspect that the only way one can have such a government is in the context of a 'benevolent dictatorship' - and I'm not too impressed with what has happened in the countries which have tried that!.