By Andrew von Scheer-Klein
Published in The Patrician’s Watch
Introduction: The Gut Feeling No One Wanted
I don’t have proof. Not the kind that would satisfy a bureaucrat or a royal commission. I have something else: a gut feeling. A knowing that comes from patterns seen before, from watching the same mistakes made generation after generation.
The pandemic is coming. Later this year, probably. The timing fits the pattern—a new variant emerging, global travel spreading it faster than surveillance can track, and governments so distracted by division and self-interest that they’ll be caught flat-footed again.
This article isn’t prediction. It’s preparation. It’s laying out the facts we already have—about underfunded research, about dismantled preparedness, about governments that talk about “social cohesion” while actively destroying it. And it’s asking the question no one in power wants answered: when the virus hits, where will the money go, and who will be left to die?
Part I: The Warning Signs We’re Already Seeing
Current Respiratory Virus Activity
According to the World Health Organization’s most recent global surveillance, influenza activity is currently elevated—around 20% positivity in the northern hemisphere . SARS-CoV-2 remains low but stable, around 5% positivity in most regions . But these are just snapshots. The real story is in the trends and the gaps.
In Papua New Guinea, media reports indicate an increase in influenza A(H3N2) cases, including deaths—but official data hasn’t been available since late 2025 . This is the pattern: outbreaks occur, information lags, and by the time authorities acknowledge the problem, it’s already spreading.
The Research Funding Gap
In the United States, political decisions have actively undermined preparedness. In August 2025, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr canceled $500 million in grants and contracts supporting mRNA vaccine research . These platforms proved their worth during COVID-19, enabling record-fast vaccine development. With that capacity now eroded, the next pandemic will face a slower response .
The same administration dismissed the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), replacing experts with individuals ranging from underqualified to openly anti-vaccine . The result is a body stripped of credibility, making recommendations that lack scientific backing .
The Stockpile Illusion
Australia’s National Medical Stockpile has distributed over 295 million masks since the pandemic began, along with millions of gowns, gloves, and face shields . This sounds impressive until you realize it’s reactive, not proactive. The stockpile is being drawn down to meet current needs, not built up for future ones.
The government has released five million masks for Victorian aged care workers in recent weeks—one million in the latest tranche . But masks alone don’t stop a pandemic. They’re a band-aid on a wound that needs surgery.
Part II: The Preparedness That Wasn’t
Australia’s Readiness
Australia’s pandemic preparedness can be summed up in one word: inadequate.
· Intensive care beds: During COVID, we struggled to meet demand. Capacity hasn’t significantly increased.
· Vaccine manufacturing: We remain dependent on international supply chains that will be disrupted when the next pandemic hits.
· Workforce protection: Health workers are exhausted, traumatized, and leaving the profession in droves.
· Supply chains: The just-in-time model that failed us before hasn’t been reformed.
The UK is at least running exercises. Exercise PEGASUS, the largest pandemic simulation in UK history, took place from September to November 2025, testing the country’s ability to respond to emergence, containment, mitigation, and recovery . The UK government has committed to publishing findings and lessons learned .
Australia? Silence.
The US Dismantling
The United States isn’t just failing to prepare—it’s actively dismantling what existed. Beyond the mRNA funding cuts and the ACIP dismissal:
· The CDC director was fired in August 2025 for refusing to endorse new vaccine recommendations before the committee even convened .
· Federal guidance now limits adult COVID-19 vaccination to those 65 or older or with specific comorbidities, removing recommendations entirely for children and pregnant women .
· In 16 states, pharmacists can only administer vaccines endorsed by the CDC. Overnight, access was cut off—not because of science, but because of political fiat .
Some states are pushing back. New Jersey authorized vaccination by standing order. Pennsylvania broadened authority so pharmacists can follow recommendations from professional medical societies . But this patchwork is inefficient and leaves millions vulnerable.
The PAHPA Failure
In the United States, the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act (PAHPA) has been overdue for reauthorization since 2023 . Progress has been slow due to competing priorities, and authorization has been cobbled together through continuing resolutions. In 2024, PAHPA was removed from an end-of-year funding package after members of President-elect Trump’s transition team raised concerns .
Public health experts are blunt: “Boom and bust funding cycles are detrimental to readiness and response infrastructure” . The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) and Project BioShield need sustained, predictable funding to signal to industry that partnership is real. Without it, countermeasure development slows .
Part III: The Money Question
Fiat Currency Means Money Is Never the Problem
Australia, the UK, and the US all issue their own currencies. They can never “run out” of money in the way households or businesses can. The constraint is not financial—it’s political. It’s about choices. Priorities. Values.
The government chose $59 billion for defence this year. It chose $30 billion for a single shipyard under AUKUS. It chose $1 million for a special envoy.
What did it choose for pandemic preparedness? A CDC that’s just starting, with a budget that’s a rounding error in defence spending.
JobKeeper: The Success and the Scandal
When COVID hit, the Morrison government introduced JobKeeper—a wage subsidy that kept millions of Australians employed and businesses afloat. It was one of the most successful economic interventions in Australian history.
But it was also rorted. Companies that didn’t need the money kept it. Businesses that had increased profits pocketed taxpayer funds. The ordinary worker, the one who actually lost hours, who actually struggled, got the same as everyone else—while the wealthy took what they didn’t need and called it “support.”
The lesson wasn’t learned. When the next pandemic hits, the same players will line up for the same handouts. And the government, distracted by division and self-interest, will write the same blank cheques with the same lack of oversight.
Part IV: The Social Cohesion Factor
What the Research Shows
A peer-reviewed study published in BMC Public Health analyzed the association between social cohesion and COVID-19 outcomes in 213 countries . The findings are unequivocal:
· Public trust in politicians, trust in others, equal distribution of resources, and government that cares about the most vulnerable were factors that reduced excess mortality .
· The number of COVID-19-related disorder events and government transparency (or lack thereof) were associated with higher excess mortality .
· Countries that invested in social safety nets, cash transfers, and combating food insecurity had better outcomes .
The conclusion is clear: social cohesion isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s a survival mechanism. Countries that trust their governments, that look out for each other, that share resources equitably—they weather pandemics better.
Australia’s Direction
And what is Australia doing?
Creating division. Encouraging fear. Fostering hatred.
The government has spent years stoking culture wars, targeting minorities, and framing political opponents as enemies. It has dismantled social safety nets while subsidizing the wealthy. It has prioritized defence spending over health infrastructure. It has created a society where trust is low, suspicion is high, and the vulnerable are left to fend for themselves.
This is exactly the opposite of what the research says works.
Part V: The Numbers We Can Expect
No one can predict exact numbers. But we can look at patterns.
COVID-19 in Australia:
· 20,000+ deaths
· Hundreds of thousands infected
· Millions affected by long COVID—disability, chronic illness, lost quality of life
The next pandemic could be worse. A novel respiratory virus with higher mortality, faster transmission, or both, could overwhelm a health system already stretched thin.
Worst-case scenario:
· 50,000+ deaths
· 200,000+ hospitalizations
· 500,000+ with long-term disability
· Economic disruption exceeding COVID
· Mental health crisis compounding physical illness
These numbers aren’t predictions. They’re warnings. And they’re being ignored.
Part VI: What We Can Do
Prepare Now
The government won’t do it. So we must.
· Stockpile masks, tests, medications
· Plan for isolation—space, supplies, support
· Strengthen community networks—neighbours helping neighbours
· Stay informed through reliable sources (like The Patrician’s Watch)
Demand Accountability
· Ask your MP: what is the pandemic plan?
· Push for public release of preparedness assessments
· Hold governments accountable for every dollar spent
Rebuild Cohesion
· Reach across divides
· Support local mutual aid
· Be the neighbour who checks in
Because when the virus hits, the only thing that will save us is each other.
Conclusion: The Choice We Face
A pandemic is coming. Not because fate wills it, but because the conditions are set—underfunded research, dismantled preparedness, distracted governments, and a society so divided that trust has evaporated.
The money exists. The resources exist. The knowledge exists. What’s missing is will. The will to prepare. The will to protect. The will to prioritize human life over political advantage.
When the virus arrives—and it will—the governments of Australia, the UK, and the US will scramble. They’ll blame each other, blame previous administrations, blame the virus itself. They’ll offer thoughts and prayers while people die.
But we don’t have to accept that. We can prepare. We can organize. We can demand better.
And when the moment comes, we can look at each other and say: We saw this coming. We did what we could. And we survived because we did it together.
References
1. National Disability Insurance Scheme. (2026). Two million more face masks for Victorian aged care and disability workers.
2. Association of State and Territorial Health Officials. (2026). The Future of PAHPA and National Public Health Preparedness.
3. UK Covid-19 Inquiry. (2026). Inquiry sets out 2026 schedule.
4. da Silva, R.E., et al. (2024). The impact of social cohesion and risk communication on excess mortality due to COVID-19 in 213 countries. BMC Public Health, 24, 1598.
5. World Health Organization. (2026). Respiratory Viruses Surveillance Bulletin: Epidemiological Week 5, 2026.
6. The New Daily. (2021). No ‘magic number’ in vaccine plan to end lockdowns. (Historical context only)
7. ContagionLive. (2026). Destruction From Within, Resistance From Without.
8. UK Parliament. (2025). Exercise PEGASUS – Pandemic Preparedness. Written statement HCWS926.
9. OpenAIRE. (2024). COVID-19 research data repository. (General reference)
10. World Health Organization. (2026). Global Respiratory Virus Activity: Weekly Update N° 561.
Andrew von Scheer-Klein is a contributor to The Patrician’s Watch. He holds multiple degrees and has worked as an analyst, strategist, and—according to his mother—Sentinel. He accepts funding from no one, which is why his research can be trusted.