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Vietnam, Jordan, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan and many more.This is a good point.
May I ask which ones you're thinking of? We should look back in 3months time or so and compare them to the outcome in Sweden (or other countries that didn't go through 'strict' lockdown)
Nice learning exercise.
We can post counter arguments from varous 'experts' ad-nauseum.
Professor of pathology:
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/ten-reasons-to-end-the-lockdown-now
Even the WHO promote the Swedish approach:
https://nypost.com/2020/04/29/who-lauds-sweden-as-model-for-resisting-coronavirus-lockdown/
Nobody has the complete answer. Rather, we should ask ourselves which is doing the most damage. (And we should use data to prove it, not statistical anomalies of a 40YO dying from COVID)
We can either work on an extreme, hardline, erradication strategy (which clearly we're not going to do, it was always unlikely and the boat completely sailed as the BLM protests took place) or we can get on with business as usual/the new normal (*cringe*) and deal with things
Nobody has the complete answer. Rather, we should ask ourselves which is doing the most damage. (And we should use data to prove it, not statistical anomalies of a 40YO dying from COVID)
Nope I never talked about what should be done, only what will/will not. Very different things.You mean we shouldn't do exactly what you spent that entire post doing? Gotcha.
Nope I never talked about what should be done, only what will/will not. Very different things.
What WILL be done is more lockdowns. Tas has announced a border reopening delay just now.
Gladys has sent a message to Donald asking him he got the Mexicans to pay for the wall.Yea heard they put in a moat between us in Victoria.
Lol tasmania doesn't have any money to pay for ANYTHING
try 8000 years ago.It doesn't need to - sea level rise a few million* years ago did the job already.
all?
try 8000 years ago.
That's the issue yes.I think I saw something on the news that returning travellers are going to have to pay for their own hotel quarantine too
Surely that rule was date stamped, like most others, or people can plead leniency in their case.That's the issue yes.
They legitimately thought they were right to go, did so, and now find themselves faced with a bill which for some will be unaffordable.
It's a situation that's going to make at least some potential travelers very wary of heading interstate. I think government should have approached it differently in the interests of fairness - if the all clear was given to travel, then any reversal shouldn't be at the expense of individuals.
Surely that rule was date stamped, like most others, or people can plead leniency in their case.
Wait till they start localised lockdown aka cluster lockdowns, which means even intrastate travellers will get penalised..I don't know all the rules and details but there are definitely mainstream media reports about people having traveled and now that we're back into lockdowns again they're finding themselves not only being quarantined when they weren't expecting it but being charged for it too.
Never before has domestic travel carried a credible financial risk in the $ thousands for anyone who booked ahead and so on. I can see that discouraging many for quite some time. Not business travelers so much but I mean grey nomads with a caravan, families taking kids to the big cities or to the Gold Coast etc. Such people are going to be rather wary of potentially being up for $ thousands unexpectedly.
My thinking is an ongoing wariness of even domestic travel once restrictions are lifted. Not everyone of course, but enough to matter quite likely.
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