Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX

uziq wrote:

'here' = australia, a tiny island nation
https://www.aboutaustralia.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Size-of-Australia-compared-to-USA-on-a-Map.jpg

Don't worry, Jay made that mistake too.
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unnamednewbie13
Moderator
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Can we see that with portions of land resized to represent population?
uziq
Member
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Dilbert_X wrote:

uziq wrote:

'here' = australia, a tiny island nation
https://www.aboutaustralia.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Size-of-Australia-compared-to-USA-on-a-Map.jpg

Don't worry, Jay made that mistake too.
i meant in terms of population and prominence, dipshit. i know that the fucking island of australia is geographically big ffs.

australia is not a major international hub (nor is new zealand). it's in the arse end of nowhere and has a tiny population. no shit you can close your island and kid yourself that the solution fits everywhere. that's what i meant by tiny 'island nation'. not that the island is tiny. /facepalm

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 19:31:08)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX
Thats not what you wrote though, dipshit

a tiny island nation with a small population
Lrn2english

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2021-07-17 19:33:31)

Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3717

Dilbert_X wrote:

uziq wrote:

'here' = australia, a tiny island nation
https://www.aboutaustralia.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Size-of-Australia-compared-to-USA-on-a-Map.jpg

Don't worry, Jay made that mistake too.
Seems you have plenty of space for immigrants.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
uziq
Member
+492|3450
'island nation' is a noun construction. you are a tiny island nation in terms of international flights and global prominence.

'hurr durr australia is actually big'. are you really telling a british person who  has been on this planet for three decades that the continent of australia is big? you think i don't know that? jesus fucking christ.

the gist of my argument should have given sufficient context to what i was saying. an argument you, once again, haven't engaged with at all. seeing as we are talking about epidemiology and, you know, human communities and the movement of people. and yet you start going on about geographical size. u very intellgient! i meant 'nation' as in 'a collective of people' not 'an expanse of land' .

lrn2 use your ginger head.

the most incredible thing is that, in a different discussion, you'll make the argument that australia's geographical size is misleading, because, ackshually, all the people are concentrated on the coast, in the south-east, etc. etc. you yourself tacitly acknowledge my point by other means. it's easy for a relatively small body-politic to seal itself off from the world! australia has 25 million people living thousands of km's away from most major international destinations! that DOESN'T work for states in europe. ENGLAND and WALES had a hard enough time controlling their border during the peak of the pandemic ffs.

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 19:53:59)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX
TLDR

Australia is highly dependent on travel, for tourism and students for two.
Still better to crimp travel and not live under lockdown.

So when is Boris delivering his victory speech?
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uziq
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tourism and students were the first thing to go in the UK/europe, at the very start of the pandemic. how is that relevant to your little airport-closure pet theory? tourism hasn't been a thing here for the last 15 months. people have been holidaying domestically.

europe is full of economic migration, borderless trade, businesses and organizations tightly interwoven with their neighbours. you can't instate a total travel ban there in the same way that a fucking island in the middle of nowhere can! to even try to get to new zealand from anywhere outside of oceania is an absolute mission, with a significant cost. no shit it's a different dynamic in europe.

australia evidently has a migrant population, or first-generation immigrants, who are still economically 'integrating' into the society. and then you go ahead to demonize those people when they want to maintain physical links to their families, wherever they may be – like india. now imagine that scenario in europe scaled up in complexity because of the increased group/population sizes at stake, as well as the obvious proximity. do u get it?!?

are you really this dense? you repeat the same points over and over and can't admit any complexity (or complicating factors) at all. you do realise that, in our globalized world and global economy, people need to cross borders for reasons that aren't entirely frivolous and indulgent? many people are working, far away from their loved ones, because of economic necessity or circumstance. they're meant to be stranded for 2 years? because you have issued an edict from your parents' bungalow? ok great work.

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 20:10:54)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX
Who exactly needs to travel though?

Its pretty well no-one, not with telephones, email, zoom etc.

You didn't need to travel to Korea, but being an egotist you thought the risk to everyone else was worth it to you.
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uziq
Member
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Dilbert_X wrote:

Australia is highly dependent on travel, for tourism and students for two.
In 2019, tourism in Australia accounted for 3.1% of the national GDP, contributing $60.8 billion to the Australian economy [...] Of this, 26% came from international visitors to Australia while 74% came from domestic tourism.
According to data from the tourism satellite account published by the INE, the industry generates 12.3% of Spain's GDP and 12.7% of its employment.
uziq
Member
+492|3450

Dilbert_X wrote:

Who exactly needs to travel though?

Its pretty well no-one, not with telephones, email, zoom etc.

You didn't need to travel to Korea, but being an egotist you thought the risk to everyone else was worth it to you.
i was vaccinated and korea had 250 cases per day in a population of 60 million. i took 2 tests before departure, 1 test in germany, and 3 tests within my first 2 weeks of arrival in isolation. i paid $1500 to quarantine in total self-isolation for 2 weeks. in addition, i'm not frivolously hopping around, crossing borders: i've moved somewhere to stay put for the foreseeable (and i'm contributing handsomely to their national health service, natch). 'the risk to everyone'. tell me more, oh dilbertius the grand inquisitor!

do i need to remind you again that non-essential travel was totally banned at the time? there were police officers at the border gates of heathrow ffs. weren't you gloating about it in the lead-up to my move, rubbing your hands at the thought that i'd have to cancel and be as miserable as you? 'frivolous' travel in the eyes of you but not the eyes of the british and korean embassies, i guess. you should send them a letter!

who needs to travel? are you just ignoring everything i said about economic migrants? what if you're separated from your family and elderly relatives? what if someone falls unwell? what if you have to attend the funeral of your parents? immigrant or itinerant workers are often only in their host country in the first place to help support a family living far away.

you really do think that the world is made up of lolly-gagging jetsetters and idiot influencers, don't you?

go and rewatch idiocracy! you really have a grasp on people's lives!

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 20:28:33)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX

uziq wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Australia is highly dependent on travel, for tourism and students for two.
In 2019, tourism in Australia accounted for 3.1% of the national GDP, contributing $60.8 billion to the Australian economy [...] Of this, 26% came from international visitors to Australia while 74% came from domestic tourism.
According to data from the tourism satellite account published by the INE, the industry generates 12.3% of Spain's GDP and 12.7% of its employment.
Various areas are highly dependent on tourism, NT and Northern QLD for two.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX

uziq wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Who exactly needs to travel though?

Its pretty well no-one, not with telephones, email, zoom etc.

You didn't need to travel to Korea, but being an egotist you thought the risk to everyone else was worth it to you.
i was vaccinated and korea had 250 cases per day in a population of 60 million. i took 2 tests before departure, 1 test in germany, and 3 tests within my first 2 weeks of arrival in isolation. i paid $1500 to quarantine in total self-isolation for 2 weeks. in addition, i'm not frivolously hopping around, crossing borders: i've moved somewhere to stay put for the foreseeable
But you didn't actually have a single valid reason to go did you? Except you felt like it.

I'm sure if you suddenly need to go back to the UK you'll be whining as hard as everyone else that borders should be open, the govt needs to do more to support citizens abroad etc.
Or if Korea has an outbreak like Taiwan you'll want to get out ASAP and won't give a stuff if you bring a vaccine resistant strain back to the UK.

What we're in is not much different to a world war in the seriousness, people couldn't just hop on on a plane then because the snowflakes had worked for a year and needed a holiday because they were 'burned out' LMAO.
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uziq
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korea currently has an outbreak like taiwan. we are in the most severe lockdown yet. i don't mind – i'm reading novels, watching films, ordering amazing food (and posting here). am i whining that i want to go back or leave? no.

an awful lot of bitter, frustrated supposition on your part. and very little in the way of a good argument? you still haven't addressed any of the hypothetical reasons i posted for people who might need to cross borders because of urgent issues (and i'm not including myself in the groups of poor migrant workers, here). instead of actually acknowledging people's whose experience might differ from your own, all you can offer is tabloid-level invective about 'feelings'. yes, because indians of course want to travel back home because they 'feel bad'. it's all feEelIngZ! selfish feeLings!

for my part, i'm living and working here. i pay tax, pension, health insurance: i'm here like any other international worker. what sort of 'valid reason' does a person need to relocate their life elsewhere to live and work? my reason was good enough for the korean government; do i have to please you, you creep?

'snowflake'. ah, that buzzword again. like 'pretentious' in your culture discussions. you sound like such a sad and unhappy individual. i pity you. i was bored of my working life in the UK, so i took positive action to change it. i did the paperwork, applied and was given permission to work abroad. (i contribute to my host country just in the same way that you, a migrant, contribute to australia. hurr durr.)

how long have you been whining about your work-life frustrations on this forum for, whilst doing absolutely fuck all about it? and i'm supposed to feel bad? you are a waste of space.

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 21:47:09)

uziq
Member
+492|3450

Dilbert_X wrote:

uziq wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Australia is highly dependent on travel, for tourism and students for two.
In 2019, tourism in Australia accounted for 3.1% of the national GDP, contributing $60.8 billion to the Australian economy [...] Of this, 26% came from international visitors to Australia while 74% came from domestic tourism.
According to data from the tourism satellite account published by the INE, the industry generates 12.3% of Spain's GDP and 12.7% of its employment.
Various areas are highly dependent on tourism, NT and Northern QLD for two.
1 in 8 people in spain are employed in tourism. 12.3% of its GDP. international tourism, meanwhile, accounts for 0.8% of australia's GDP.

even when talking about the most frivolous and 'unnecessary' types of flight, holidaying and tourism, can you not see that a global travel ban has bigger ramifications in places that aren't australia? it's almost like ... i fucking said ... a one-size-fits-all blanket ban is a bad idea!

whilst you're moaning about 'hipsters' and 'egotists', 1 in 8 people in spain, a country already in poor economic health, are looking at joblessness, evictions, homelessness and structural deprivation (youth unemployment in spain: 40% australia: 11%).

so that's about 6 million people in spain whose livelihoods would be destroyed by a year-long travel ban, just to take one example from a developed country. so about a quarter of australia's total population. 'but northern QLD ...!'

easy for you to make dismissive pronouncements from your suburb where you risk nothing, venture nothing, and in fact do nothing, isn't it? 'let's shut down the world for a year, it'll be fine, we can all use zoom, it works swimmingly on my ipad pro actually when i need to ask pater to bring me some soda from the next room'. and meanwhile you start frothing with rhetoric about how this is 'our world war' oh my god you precious little ... snowflake?

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 21:50:40)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6103|eXtreme to the maX
The point is you had exactly no valid reason to relocate during a pandemic.

Do you think Australia should let in people who just feel like a change of scenery? During a pandemic?

Spain has structural problems, as do a lot of places, if tourism is 'only' 12% of GDP it hardly matters doesn't it?
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uziq
Member
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dilbert, old chap, i understand that you've played your hand of cards in this life and have come up craps. i get it. you trace a rather pitiable and desolate figure, and i'm genuinely sorry for it. but your personal animus and grievances are not the world picture, and your 'solution' to this pandemic, to pour scorn on everyone else's 'frivolous' lifestyles and to ban all travel, everywhere, for a year, is just not a good solution.

places like korea and taiwan have managed to suppress the pandemic brilliantly whilst also still keeping their borders open. quarantine, effective track+trace systems, as well as meaningfully deployed restrictions in response to local outbreaks ... this is a better-fitted solution, not this one-size miracle fix you keep doggedly promoting. (if you want to talk about why korea's cases can rise and fall by a 'dramatic' 1000 cases over several months, i'm happy to go into the details of their tier system for you; but international flights are not the culprit.)

i've never likened myself to an economic migrant who has had to move to another country out of sheer necessity, nor have i likened myself to a refugee fleeing a war-torn area. what i have tried to point out to you, though, is that the global system does rely upon the flow of goods and labour – including my own. i am still part of that system, a global worker with globally marketable skills, and my relocation is an entirely valid part of those 'international flights' and routine border-crossings that keep the global system humming along. after all, they had an open visa scheme advertising for applicants even during a so-called 'world war' scenario. go figure.

'the point is', rather, old chap, that the korean and british governments and their respective embassies both deemed my relocation to be 'valid', by their own respective criteria, and granted me permission to travel and settle – this during a time when both countries had any number of restrictions and measures in place which banned 'inessential' travel. your 'feelings' about it are irrelevant: i don't care if you personally see it as valid. or is the vituperative view of an unhappy ginger manchild in an australian suburb more important than the actual governments of the places in question? write them a letter, as i said. i can't help you.

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 22:31:54)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
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uziq wrote:

places like korea and taiwan have managed to suppress the pandemic brilliantly

uziq wrote:

korea currently has an outbreak like taiwan. we are in the most severe lockdown yet.
Just remember, Jay is ahead of you in literally every life achievement.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2021-07-17 22:33:14)

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uziq
Member
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'most severe lockdown yet' = almost all businesses open until 10pm, gyms open, offices open, schools open, domestic and international tourism for vaccinated people allowed.

'outbreak' = 1500 cases a day, 2 deaths.

yes, they have managed to suppress the pandemic brilliantly using a fitted solution, NOT a blanket ban. a country of 50 million people has incurred 2000 deaths in 1.5 years. that is world-topping performance almost no matter which way you look at it. meanwhile the economic life of the country has continued with minimal interruption. international arrivals and departures continue as normal so long as they are deemed 'valid' and 'essential'.

and, again, on the question of validity:

your 'feelings' about it are irrelevant
also jay is about a decade older than me. i should hope he is ahead of me. isn't a more meaningful comparison to you? aren't you his senior? surely the logical statement is 'jay is ahead of YOU in every life achievement'. he's younger than you, dipshit. you are really straining hard to make a 30 year old feel bad about pursuing what they want in their life. i’m not going to apologise for it .

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-17 22:58:11)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
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You seem to think people care what you think.

Does it trouble you that no-one does?
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uziq
Member
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i've been discussing covid measures, you've been berating me for moving to another country in a safe and governmentally approved way.

considering you feel entitled to criticize a move that was approved by two governments, wouldn't you say you're the person who has a problem with overbearing judgments and opinionating?

Last edited by uziq (2021-07-18 01:29:38)

Larssen
Member
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unnamednewbie13 wrote:

When I did my rounds for a month, I was under the impression that I was like the miner's canary for some people in my family. Many still haven't gotten the jab yet. Some have comorbidities, and some have dependents. Among most of these, not one person I know of was buying into the antivaxxer stuff previously.

All the facebook and misrepresentation and sensationalized/tweaked reporting has left people terrified. It should be angering.
facebook and social media plays a part but I'm also over it tbh. If someone chooses to believe that crap amongst the wealth of legitimate info they can find, then fuck those people. Esp. after the thousands of news items about unvaccinated people being hospitalised.

Last edited by Larssen (2021-07-18 01:39:23)

unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6769|PNW

To an extent, maybe. It feels more like people are victims of ceaseless, concerted gaslighting. I've said before that some of this stuff can ensnare otherwise intelligent people. Press and some of the people who have been floating all this stuff out since the first inkling that Democrats were inventing COVID-19 to harm Trump have been doing a good job highly polishing all of their bullshit.

An aside, I've been hearing the word "gaslighting" from right-wingers complaining about what they think critical race theory is. "The liberal left-wing socialists are gaslighting America!"

Darned if I don't see Fox, etc., spinning viewers and listeners up into a dither. Although where the vaccines are concerned, other big groups share some of that responsibility in sacrificing accuracy for scoop.

The facebook and others fold back into how big tech should be held to task for this stuff if they want to act like media groups.

e: Bringing up all the dying unvaccinated people seems to go in one ear and out the other. The conversation will resume about how Pfizer, Moderna, are obsolete or not FDA-approved (not knowing what that means). Also how they're worried about the side effects and how the second dose has floored people (a thing that has gotten a lot of attention). The horse is dead, and we're still beating in an attempt to save lives.

Instead let's talk about the baby bust (millennials killing population growth) or that part in CRT that says we should load all old white men onto transport ships and push them into the Pacific. Hang on, let me see if I can find that part …

Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2021-07-18 02:26:10)

SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3717

Dilbert_X wrote:

uziq wrote:

places like korea and taiwan have managed to suppress the pandemic brilliantly

uziq wrote:

korea currently has an outbreak like taiwan. we are in the most severe lockdown yet.
Just remember, Jay is ahead of you in literally every life achievement.
Jay is literally the most successful member of late (16 to now) bf2s. He twice reproduced.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
uziq
Member
+492|3450
i don’t want kids in my early 30s. i’m not in a hurry. i’ve got things to do (that don’t involve sitting on my ass at my parents’ house).

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