over9k
So I didn't tell my wife, but I...
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- 12 June 2020
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I think we follow through with our national strategy; if it is my call.
Australian citizens have been warned for months to come home. They stay abroad now, or they pay for a complete lockdown quarantine on return. Our domestic borders remain welded closed until we have the virus under control in all states and territories; there is no international travel for the foreseeable future.
We either stay the course and protect our domestic economies, within the national economic interest, to open up without taking steps back, or we don't do it at all.
which won't really be a big deal anyway to many people who weren't already terminally ill.
Anyone knows the reasoning preventing Australian to get OUT?
Multiple examples in the news of binational having to request exemption from gov to be able to leave?
I just realised if i have any death/illness in my family in Europe, i probably can not leave here in time.
And i can land in France or most of Europe wo issue.
Coming back is another matter but my problem is the de facto house arrest of Australia
Maybe that's the way for Australia to solve the coming brain drain?
Are your parents and grandparents still alive ?
Do you have a good relationship with them ?
My own personal situation is irrelevant to the big picture.
You guys are putting the cart before the horse here:
If the lockdowns work and the virus is re-controlled, things will actually return to a (relative) normal. If not, aus goes the way of the USA where people will only do anything (work, order food, buy stuff) face-to-face when they have no other choice.
We've got another week or two of watching the news like a hawk before we'll know whether the genie was irretrievably let out of this proverbial bottle. In the meantime, we get to see if the whack-a-mole approach works.
Yes (2 of 4 grandparents, both 85+).Are your parents and grandparents still alive ?
Do you have a good relationship with them ?
Yes (2 of 4 grandparents, both 85+).
Yes .
I still think lockdowns are ridiculous. I don't expect the majority of the population to stop living, in order to protect my parents and/or grandparents.
People are still living. If this includes going to the pub and getting smashed, I'm sure they can live without that for a while.
That is the key, you need an actual strategy and waiting for a working vaccine is not one LOL.unless you completely eradicate this virus from the whole planet (impossible, surely everyone realises that by now), lockdown is only a temporary strategy
But it's relevant to your assessment of the situation.
If the hospitals are full of covid patients then your mother may not the get treatment she needs after a heart attack/stroke cancer diagnosis , nor may you if you have a road accident or are assaulted in the street.
No, it is not. Only an emotionally feeble person would see it that way.
At my mother's age, a stroke or heart attack would probably be fatal anyway, as would be cancer. If you want to talk about my mother specifically (which is a stupid thing to do but you persist in doing so) she is extremely mistrustful of conventional medicine, an extreme anti vaccer, she said many years ago that she will never have a breast scan and will never get checked or treated for breast cancer (probably the only type of cancer she'd be likely to get which could be cured without coming back and killing her not much later anyway).
The chances of me hanging in the balance of life and death after such an incident and dying for lack of treatment due to the virus are so incredibly remote. Sure, it's possible, but so is the possibility that due to lack of healthcare funding due to economic collapse the system doesn't function properly and I die in such a situation.
You are using a very emotional way of thinking, just cherry picking extreme hypotheticals without weighing up their likelihood and comparing them to other hypotheticals and their likelihoods. If you use that way of thinking you will easily justify almost literally any position you can think of, regardless of how incorrect it is. You should wear chain mail trousers and socks every day, because you might be bitten by a snake. I've had two friends killed by snakes (yes, really) and another friend who almost died and has permanent injury after being bitten by a cobra in an Asian market when reaching for some vegetables in the pile the snake was hiding in (yes, really). So I suppose you should wear chain mail gloves too if you go shopping in Asia, and the government should enforce this rule. What if you or someone you loved were to die from snake bite? It's literally something which could happen and you're currently not taking any precautions for. Even if you don't die, you could have permanent loss of taste and/or smell, or permanent kidney damage, or any of a large number of other permanent issues. We need chain mail trousers for everyone and chain mail gloves while shopping for fresh produce, right?
Well that's a pretty emotive response in itself.
People take precautions in dangerous situations, like we now find ourselves in.
Social isolation is a precaution in an infectious disease situations, but your solution is to do nothing, I don't think that is credible.
That's just it. I should be able to take the precaution I see fit.
If you want to lock yourself in a room for 3 months (social isolation), go for it. I'm not interested.
I'll take the risk, and will even foot the medical bill if that were an option, should I get severely ill.
People are still living. If this includes going to the pub and getting smashed, I'm sure they can live without that for a while.
And how many people are you going to infect in the meantime ?
If your friends got it and ended up in hospital I doubt if they would be too happy with you.
And how many people are you going to infect in the meantime ?
If your friends got it and ended up in hospital I doubt if they would be too happy with you.
Does any of the above bother you at all?
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