These conditions couldn't be more ideal to breed vaccine resistant variants.Larssen wrote:
There's several countries in the world now that have 80%+ vaccination rate. Quite a few in the EU. Despite the effort, it's not enough to keep covid at bay. Several are now reimposing restrictions or considering doing so as winter approaches.
It really makes you wonder what the point of it all is in the long term. 80% vaccination is only achievable for very highly developed countries. There will be many countries around the globe that will top out at 30-50%, even if they have unlimited supply. It may also take several years to get to that point globally. Because of issues with infrastructure, dispersed rural populations, low literacy rates, the fact that the jab isn't effective forever and will need to be reapplied etc. Considering that a nearly fully vaccinated population doesn't seem to be enough to deal with covid, it's a foregone conclusion that this pandemic will not end. More mutations may also pop up. We can only hope there won't be one that's more contageous and/or dangerous than delta.
Vaccine resistant variants.So what will that mean for the next 1, 2 or even 5 to 10 years? I'll assume there's no sudden miracle cure and covid won't inexplicably disappear.
Covid: All countries to be removed from UK's travel red listYes, pre-flight testing and quarantine measures are likely to remain for the foreseeable future. It's likely there will be countries that are permanently semi-blacklisted from travel. It's likely most of the world will remain denoted as 'do not travel' because their healthcare infrastructure/population monitoring/vaccination isn't developed enough for high quality economies to trust them.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-59063818
Another genius move.
The world is going to have to change.Workplace restrictions might become either permanent or reconsidered every fall/winter season. Face coverings could be made compulsory on and off. Kids going to school or uni will always have covid dangling over their heads as an argument to restrict them from following in-class education or socialising with friends. Social venues, events, festival & nightlife might just be closed again every few months.
This is the problem with doing everything half-arsed. Sort of nearly do lockdown, kind of impose travel restrictions etc.I'll be frank, it's fucking madness. I'm not a healthcare professional or virologist so don't have answers, but at this point it doesn't look like they have any answers either. The zero covid strategies around the globe have failed, and the controlled covid strategies are entering the realm of stupidity. After seeing that 80% vaccination isn't doing it the next 'way out' that's being propagated is for people to not only be vaccinated & QR-checked, but also tested regularly, wearing masks everywhere, social distancing forever, perhaps taking anti-viral medication in the future on top of that. On/off lockdownesque restrictions. And then we'll beat it for sure! All for the sake of mostly keeping geriatrics and retirees from flooding intensive care capacity.
Probably right.It's folly to believe that the majority of the population will abide by all that shit or think that it is in ANY WAY possible for that sort of convoluted and costly system to be implemented anywhere but the very richest & developed countries. I'll carefully conclude: there is no real way out, and it'll take another year or so, maybe two, for that realisation to set in.
At this point developed countries could and should get to 90% vaccination and could go into a 2-3 month ultra-hard lockdown after preparation.
But there's little point as the 2nd and 3rd world will just reinfect us unless we close them off forever.
Various places, Aus and NZ, could ride this out if we could just be serious about shutting down international travel, morons aren't going to go for that though.
Now would be a good time for China, Daszak and Fauci to come clean and admit what they've done, it might help us get out.
Fuck Israel