Exactly, a component, useless in isolation.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Let's not kid ourselves, vaccines are an overwhelmingly important component here.
Fuck Israel
Exactly, a component, useless in isolation.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Let's not kid ourselves, vaccines are an overwhelmingly important component here.
I think you took the wrong meaning. At the risk of analogy rabbit holing, vaccines are an indispensable component and process of the arms race against viruses. Widespread lockdown and constantly shutting down the economy are part of another machine that can't be run indefinitely and should be replaced by widespread vaccination as soon as it's available. But in part because people (like you) have been creating so much vaccine hesitancy, the process of getting life back to normal has been hindered.Dilbert_X wrote:
Exactly, a componentunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Let's not kid ourselves, vaccines are an overwhelmingly important component here.
Untrue.useless in isolation.
except they're literally not useless in isolation, are they? because they have a proven effect, across a huge number of studies and datasets, of reducing serious illness and death. you might want to look up the definition of 'use' there chap. the vaccines work to do what they're designed to do.Dilbert_X wrote:
Exactly, a component, useless in isolation.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Let's not kid ourselves, vaccines are an overwhelmingly important component here.
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Some of that stuff (and you aren't downplaying any of those other things like you are vaccines, so cut it out with that) is for when we don't have a vaccine on hand. Lockdowns are unsustainable in the long term, and unnecessary to shotgun when we have multiple vaccines now, tested to be effective. Now even the booster shots have hesitancy and scaremongering floating around them.Dilbert_X wrote:
Guess how people dealt with pandemics before vaccines?
Vaccines, travel restrictions, contact tracing, lockdowns - they're all essential components
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N O O N E is proposing this.Dilbert_X wrote:
OK, lets rely exclusively on vaccines and nothing else when they aren't 100% effective we could do plenty of other things to help.
Don't bother with masks, handwashing, distancing, capacity limits etc - so stupid and gay and get in the way of a good time
Vaccines!
and but who is proposing vaccination only as the solution, anyway? that's not how any country is approaching covid from a wider public health point-of-view. again, hospital treatments, steroid treatments, anti-viral treatments, etc, have all come a long way since the first and second waves. social distancing, hygiene and safety practices in businesses or public places, etc, are all readily available and easy to implement. temperature checks, QR code contact tracing, quick-turnaround lateral flow testing, etc, can all be rolled out or reactivated at short notice and in a targeted manner. i could go on.
all of which makes infinite amounts more good sense than lockdowns, economic self-harm, and tight restrictions on people's freedoms.
What I've said is 80% vaccination is useless, doesn't seem to be - black-and-white. statistically, provably - doing the job in many countries.uziq wrote:
N O O N E is proposing this.
you saying 'vaccines only make a marginal difference' is WRONG. black-and-white. statistically, provably WRONG.
your obsession with borders and international travel is fetishistic. you are a nut.
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https://www.theguardian.com/australia-n … -the-worldHere we had practically normal lives - thanks to closed borders -
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literally not true. even new zealand is pivoting away from a 'zero covid' strategy with the tacit admission that they are unsustainable indefinitely. which leaves only china as the exemplum of a 'total control, total containment' model (for now; even they have recently made gestures towards reopening when vaccination levels reach 80-85%). sure, if you want to live under the technocratic eye of the CCP, be my guest.States which were organised and efficient haven't had these problems.
ffs make fucking sense. earlier this page you were saying '80% vaccination is useless without other measures ...'. now you're saying 'in the long run vaccination will help'. so which is it?!?In the long run vaccination will help but throwing away all the benefits of vaccination ...
and a fine job you're doing of contributing to this, with a 'me me me, i only care about my country's covid stats' attitude and your persistent (and unfounded) vaccine hesitancy and skepticism!more so when most of the world won't be vaccinated for years
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jacinda ardern's government has vacillated over this issue several times in the last 1-2 months, clearly discussing re-opening their borders to people who have been double-vaccinated and tested, with (it looks like) now next spring being the timeline, after the usual winter challenges.On October 4, prime minister Jacinda Ardern unveiled that the country would be moving away from its elimination strategy, as it became clear that its battle with the Delta variant, with the first case found on August 17, was not ending anytime soon. “For this outbreak, it’s clear that long periods of heavy restrictions has not got us to zero cases,” she said.
and so once again we're back to the scenario i've been talking about, since at least 9 months ago, where international travel is perfectly feasible with multiple testing + quarantine + contact tracing. that is, the model that south korea and taiwan used for almost the ENTIRE duration of the pandemic, and which seems readily available and suitable for, yes, australia and new zealand and any other nation that wants to be cautious.Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said New Zealand’s border restrictions would ease starting early next year, allowing vaccinated travelers from low-risk countries to enter without having to quarantine. The country’s borders have been closed to almost all foreign travelers since March 2020.
In a new program beginning in October, vaccinated New Zealanders returning to the country may also be able to self-isolate at home and skip the 14-day hotel quarantine that is currently required.
Ms. Ardern warned, however, that the country’s borders would not return to their pre-pandemic norm, when passengers did not face vaccination or testing requirements.
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