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Covid 19 Part XXI-27,908 in ROI (1,777 deaths) 6,647 in NI (559 deaths)(22/08)Read OP

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,950 ✭✭✭polesheep


    GooglePlus wrote: »
    Looks like it has gotten out unfortunately. They'll contain that in no time though with their approach, it's top notch.

    It's really no different from anywhere else. Cases down - open up. Cases up - restrictions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,809 ✭✭✭Hector Savage


    GooglePlus wrote: »
    Looks like it has gotten out unfortunately. They'll contain that in no time though with their approach, it's top notch.

    Where are you talking about here ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    Breaking news: Russia has successfully developed the vaccine. Its over folks.
    Russia has approved its own vaccine for use. That doesn't mean it works.

    This is a big gamble, driven largely by Putin attempting to hold onto his strongman persona and improve his support. If it works, great for the world. But once again Russians have been put in the firing line to save the rest of us.
    US2 wrote: »
    Cousin got tested this morning, she was a close contact to someone last Monday and got a phonecall from contact tracers on Thursday.

    Must be waiting 7 days to test contacts? Makes sense given incubation period I suppose, but I thought they test on day 1 and day 7.
    Median turnaround for contact tracing is apparent less than a day. But that's not from the contact. It's from the positive result.
    So person gets notified that they're a close contact = 1 day (Thursday)
    Person gets test scheduled = 1 day
    Person attends test = 1 day
    Person gets test result = 1 day
    Throw in weekends and random delays, and this is pretty typical.

    Remember that they only test close contacts when there's a positive result. So your cousin's contact was on Monday but that person probably didn't test positive until Thursday, at which point your cousin was contacted.

    Unless you're saying that the contact's positive result was last Monday?
    All cases of covid in NZ in the past 100 days have been in managed quarantine
    And now there are four cases of unknown origin. Which is obviously worrying for them. One person in a family brought it in, and they don't know where it came from. Which means there's at least one active case at large in Auckland.

    The decision to lock down will probably suppress it though.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 475 ✭✭Onesea


    If you saw how they act here, you'd see .... masked up on the streets even when totally alone, the SS thug pig police wandering around looking to give out fines .... get to the beer terrace - off with the masks ...

    Get the beers in, and spit all over your mates, cos Covid doesn't like terraces apparently - the Pigs walking by ignoring it, giving some asthmatic old lady a ticket for her mask being a cm below her nose as she carries her shopping back - alone, not near anyone.


    PERO BUENNOOOO!!!!






    slowly we inch......




    slowly we inch......

    Its clown world, an excuse to take control. Even when there is no more cases the fear will keep them apart.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 359 ✭✭The Unbearables


    s1ippy wrote: »
    A supervisor is opening the office for me tomorrow even though their young son is being tested and they will be awaiting results tomorrow presumably. Am I within my rights to ask them if they received a positive test before agreeing to go and meet with them? They are absolutely dense and would not necessarily know that they should self-isolate.

    There are two people in my workplace who came back from two different parts of Portugal last weekend and are back in work. Nobody gives a fcuk.

    I work from home and go into the office once every two weeks to touch base and sign paperwork which im refusing to do at present and they are using a courier to deliver the paperwork at their expense.

    Once im still getting full pay i couldn't care less, they are all risking their own health.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,809 ✭✭✭Hector Savage


    Onesea wrote: »
    Its clown world, an excuse to take control. Even when there is no more cases the fear will keep them apart.

    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.

    They will use the excuse of - "in case it comes back" or new viruses ....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,298 ✭✭✭Widdensushi


    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.

    They will use the excuse of - "in case it comes back" or new viruses ....

    Won't need those excuses, just the common flu kills so many people


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,077 ✭✭✭Away With The Fairies


    Stheno wrote: »
    Guardian reporting four cases in a NZ family who had not travelled, they don't know where it came from

    Doesn't passengers arriving into NZ go into mandatory quarantine for 2 weeks? Would make you think if the incubation period is longer than 2 weeks.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 359 ✭✭The Unbearables


    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.

    They will use the excuse of - "in case it comes back" or new viruses ....

    Evidence if you are certain.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,950 ✭✭✭polesheep


    Doesn't passengers arriving into NZ go into mandatory quarantine for 2 weeks? Would make you think if the incubation period is longer than 2 weeks.

    They claimed to have eradicated it, but there were likely asymptomatic people walking around with it and spreading it to other people who were either asymptomatic or had only mild symptoms. Very interesting.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,809 ✭✭✭Hector Savage


    Evidence if you are certain.

    I just know, bureaucracy is months/years behind reality, check back in a year or two and let's see ....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,034 ✭✭✭Ficheall


    we will still be muzzled on the streets.
    Are you suggesting they have managed to shut you up?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 55,534 ✭✭✭✭Mr E


    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.

    They will use the excuse of - "in case it comes back" or new viruses ....

    Mod: cut out the "muzzle" crap please. It's idiotic. Thread ban if you use that word again.


  • Registered Users Posts: 949 ✭✭✭Renjit


    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.

    They will use the excuse of - "in case it comes back" or new viruses ....

    I feel threatened :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,916 ✭✭✭✭iguana


    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.

    They will use the excuse of - "in case it comes back" or new viruses ....

    And what do you think the point of that would be? What nefarious overlord has such a strong eye fetish they desperately need to cover the bottom of our faces, so they can jizz themselves to full satisfaction at only seeing out eyes?

    When you worry about the point of something, just think it through.
    Why do they want us to wear masks? To prevent spreading a novel virus that cripples healthcare provision in areas where it runs out of control.

    Why else could the want us to wear them?
    Profit???? Don't think so.
    Religious fundamentalism???? Doesn't seem likely.
    Unspecified evil and because it happened in some YA dystopia???? Obviously fūcking not.

    If there is no reason for "them" to make us wear masks, "they" won't because this isn't some shįtty YA novel. Random mindless control of the population for absolutely no reason is not how a free(ish)-market society works.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,077 ✭✭✭Away With The Fairies


    polesheep wrote: »
    They claimed to have eradicated it, but there were likely asymptomatic people walking around with it and spreading it to other people who were either asymptomatic or had only mild symptoms. Very interesting.

    If there was asymptomatic people walking around, they would know about it now. Surely it would involve other people needing hospital treatment.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,528 ✭✭✭copeyhagen


    chinese citizens still used them after SARS, or is that as much to do with the air quality as the epidemic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,139 ✭✭✭What Username Guidelines


    polesheep wrote: »
    They claimed to have eradicated it, but there were likely asymptomatic people walking around with it and spreading it to other people who were either asymptomatic or had only mild symptoms. Very interesting.

    More seasonal proof? I read this the other day and shrugged it off

    https://twitter.com/alexkx3/status/1291808118192709632?s=20


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    I am 100% CERTAIN that even when this is gone, vaccinated away - whatever, we will still be muzzled on the streets.
    There is no requirement to wear masks while outside on the street.

    You're probably right, there will be a significant set of information campaigns encouraging people to wear masks when they have a cold or flu and are out in public places, as well as standing advice to stay home if at all possible.

    These are things we should have been doing for the last century with our improved understanding of epidemiology.

    But instead we can't be arsed with all that and we go out and about spreading viruses and conditioning ourselves to accept that there is a "flu season" even though it's entirely and easily preventable.

    Will it remain mandatory to wear masks indoors? No. You can only enforce the laws that people accept. Will be acceptable to tut at people out and about in public with snuffly noses and coughs? Yep. And rightly so.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,674 ✭✭✭✭ACitizenErased


    Struggling to figure out how the virus got back in to NZ :confused:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,656 ✭✭✭CalamariFritti


    GooglePlus wrote: »
    The self entitlement of some people who think they're above wearing a mask is shocking.

    They're happy out not wearing one as their head is already up their hole so they're safe.

    Its not any worse as those patronising posts telling us the umpteenth time how stupid and selfish these people are for the sake of some cheap thanks.

    The masks narrative has been one single disaster from start to finish. Do you think its a good idea we all fall into line behind our 'leaders' without questioning anything? Don't you think we need to keep them honest?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,139 ✭✭✭What Username Guidelines


    Struggling to figure out how the virus got back in to NZ :confused:

    If there are far more asymptomatic then we believe it could be circulating very stealthily, their quarantine squashing most of it but it still pops up eventually. That is a stretch though.

    It's also a month or so after flu season there (not comparing severity, just the way it acts) which is when covid seems to hit most places. I have no idea why or how that works, just more observational.

    Seems the same in latitudes across the states, with the outlier being Louisiana which has a more spread-out peak earlier, but it sits in line with lots of travel from elsewhere during Mardis Gras.

    Basically, I've become interested in seasonal nature of viruses and the more I read, the less I find debunking. I'd like to see evidence to prove it wrong because it makes no sense to me. Yes, we're still finding a lot of cases and we couldn't be further from flu season, but our deaths are very very low now - along with Italy/Spain/UK/Sweden etc..


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,980 ✭✭✭s1ippy


    I think you know the answer to that question.
    It's their own personal family medical situation though, I'm wary about prying. I've been in touch asking if we're still good to go tomorrow, but I don't expect that they'll get the hint if I do it subtly. I don't want to be burning bridges with them either.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 14,459 Mod ✭✭✭✭marno21


    The New Zealand case we’re hearing about this morning, in a country ideally suited for eradication, should finally put to bed the “zero Covid island” approach we keep hearing about for Ireland.

    It’s a nice idea in theory but it is a total non runner in practice


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 189 ✭✭seanb85


    Struggling to figure out how the virus got back in to NZ :confused:

    A lot of people don't spread it much and at least 20% of cases show no symptoms, could have been a

    chain of asymptomatic spread from the initial outbreak, odds are huge but not impossible.

    Another possibility is the incubation period could be much longer than 14 days, I did see some Chinese reports of some cases where it was over 20 days.

    I suppose as well it may survive better on surfaces than we think, New Zealand would still be importing stuff. I think China blamed imported salmon for some cases in Beijing.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    Struggling to figure out how the virus got back in to NZ :confused:
    I'm not sure the "it's been circulating in the thousands all this time but everyone is asymptomatic" theory is reasonable unless the virus had mutated. If it was circulating in asymptomatic people for any reasonable amount of time, it would pop up relatively quickly.

    It's worth remembering that despite the praise NZ has gotten, it is still a society just like ours, filled with people just like us, who make mistakes and make iffy decisions.

    I think the most likely explanation is that there was some lapse in quarantine - either someone was given a special exemption to leave quarantine for a short period, or staff working at the quarantine accidentally breached hygiene protocols, and the infection managed to get out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,580 ✭✭✭JDD


    If there are far more asymptomatic then we believe it could be circulating very stealthily, their quarantine squashing most of it but it still pops up eventually. That is a stretch though.

    It's also a month or so after flu season there (not comparing severity, just the way it acts) which is when covid seems to hit most places. I have no idea why or how that works, just more observational.

    Seems the same in latitudes across the states, with the outlier being Louisiana which has a more spread-out peak earlier, but it sits in line with lots of travel from elsewhere during Mardis Gras.

    Basically, I've become interested in seasonal nature of viruses and the more I read, the less I find debunking. I'd like to see evidence to prove it wrong because it makes no sense to me. Yes, we're still finding a lot of cases and we couldn't be further from flu season, but our deaths are very very low now - along with Italy/Spain/UK/Sweden etc..

    So you think it's somehow tied into flu season, or at least early spring rather than any direct connection to the flu? Why would it have spread in China in Nov/Dec/Jan then? Would that be connected to a rainy/dry season rather than a set four seasons?

    And South America (lets forget Brazil) should have had a lesser outbreak in March - May, and should in fact be having their steep increase in cases now. I don't know about Argentina/Columbia etc, but Chile/Peru had a huge surge of cases in June. That doesn't quite fit in with your theory.

    And then we have the US. However I think the cases in Texas/California/Florida are less to do with seasons, and more to do with everyone being indoors in air conditioning (cinemas, shopping etc) during the hot summer months. Perversely they may get less virus instances in the winter as you'd be outside more - in the temperate areas anyway, if not in the high regions of Texas/California that get cold winters.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,079 ✭✭✭blowitupref


    JP Liz V1 wrote: »
    Knock Shrine in Mayo announced it will be closed on August 15, the Feast of the Assumption, to prevent large gatherings of crowds

    The travelling community are still going to turn up to that in their 100s and when you consider a few clusters has shown up from their gatherings such as funerals recently it won't be a surprise if another of batch of cases comes from that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,809 ✭✭✭Hector Savage


    seamus wrote: »
    There is no requirement to wear masks while outside on the street.

    You're probably right, there will be a significant set of information campaigns encouraging people to wear masks when they have a cold or flu and are out in public places, as well as standing advice to stay home if at all possible.

    These are things we should have been doing for the last century with our improved understanding of epidemiology.

    But instead we can't be arsed with all that and we go out and about spreading viruses and conditioning ourselves to accept that there is a "flu season" even though it's entirely and easily preventable.

    Will it remain mandatory to wear masks indoors? No. You can only enforce the laws that people accept. Will be acceptable to tut at people out and about in public with snuffly noses and coughs? Yep. And rightly so.

    Sorry I'm in Spain.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 40,338 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    seamus wrote: »
    I'm not sure the "it's been circulating in the thousands all this time but everyone is asymptomatic" theory is reasonable unless the virus had mutated. If it was circulating in asymptomatic people for any reasonable amount of time, it would pop up relatively quickly.

    It's worth remembering that despite the praise NZ has gotten, it is still a society just like ours, filled with people just like us, who make mistakes and make iffy decisions.

    I think the most likely explanation is that there was some lapse in quarantine - either someone was given a special exemption to leave quarantine for a short period, or staff working at the quarantine accidentally breached hygiene protocols, and the infection managed to get out.

    And I think it should be praised to a point. My issue was that it was being compared to us when outside of population being similar there are many differences which don't make it a fair comparison.

    But yeah it's a worry.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,399 ✭✭✭✭LuckyLloyd


    Breaking news: Russia has successfully developed the vaccine. Its over folks.

    This is definitely the news of the day.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 40,338 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    I see Russia is saying it's got a vaccine. I wouldnt be breaking out the champagne just yet because as I understand it developing a vaccine isn't the hardest part, it's making sure it's safe is the part that takes time.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,780 ✭✭✭✭ninebeanrows


    Can you imagine living through the draconian measures likely to result in NZ as they finally realise they have to live with the virus not shut it out. Unless they want to shut off their country for 3-5yrs, not sustainable

    Of course the plan looks great on paper from a health perspective but it's just storing up a shock


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,329 ✭✭✭owlbethere


    I read on Facebook on a group, community transmission has occurred in new Zealand so they are closing all schools now.

    We still have some community transmissions occurring and we are considering opening ours.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,399 ✭✭✭✭LuckyLloyd


    Itssoeasy wrote: »
    I see Russia is saying it's got a vaccine. I wouldnt be breaking out the champagne just yet because as I understand it developing a vaccine isn't the hardest part, it's making sure it's safe is the part that takes time.

    Well they're about to roll out a million doses as part of the most ambitious phase III trial in history so we'll know in a couple of months!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,139 ✭✭✭What Username Guidelines


    JDD wrote: »
    So you think it's somehow tied into flu season, or at least early spring rather than any direct connection to the flu? Why would it have spread in China in Nov/Dec/Jan then? Would that be connected to a rainy/dry season rather than a set four seasons?

    And South America (lets forget Brazil) should have had a lesser outbreak in March - May, and should in fact be having their steep increase in cases now. I don't know about Argentina/Columbia etc, but Chile/Peru had a huge surge of cases in June. That doesn't quite fit in with your theory.

    And then we have the US. However I think the cases in Texas/California/Florida are less to do with seasons, and more to do with everyone being indoors in air conditioning (cinemas, shopping etc) during the hot summer months. Perversely they may get less virus instances in the winter as you'd be outside more - in the temperate areas anyway, if not in the high regions of Texas/California that get cold winters.

    Not necessarily my theory, just a theory I have become interested in.

    There are 4 zones from north to south that have varying flu* seasons. North temperate (Europe, Northern American States, etc) North Tropical (Southern US States) South Tropical (South America, etc) South Temperate (Aus, NZ, Argentina, South Africa etc). The general marker between temperate and tropical is about 35'N and 30'S.

    Note that this is one aspect of spread along with travel/Testing capabilities, etc.. It does line up with typical flu* spikes and waves, although these can move slightly by a number of weeks depending on location. The initial cases in Aus could in fact be travel related but it didn't take hold until it entered their season. South Africa too.

    *I'm hesitant to use the term flu as lots may label me as "just the flu" type, it's more the seasonal aspect I'm interested in, not the comparison with severity. Along with the fact the lockdown and measures were based on uncontrollable spread that wouldn't stop until 70% of the entire population were infected. If covid was in fact an influenza strain, not a coronavirus, would we be looking at a flu pandemic response instead?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,784 ✭✭✭froog


    If there are far more asymptomatic then we believe it could be circulating very stealthily, their quarantine squashing most of it but it still pops up eventually. That is a stretch though.

    It's also a month or so after flu season there (not comparing severity, just the way it acts) which is when covid seems to hit most places. I have no idea why or how that works, just more observational.

    Seems the same in latitudes across the states, with the outlier being Louisiana which has a more spread-out peak earlier, but it sits in line with lots of travel from elsewhere during Mardis Gras.

    Basically, I've become interested in seasonal nature of viruses and the more I read, the less I find debunking. I'd like to see evidence to prove it wrong because it makes no sense to me. Yes, we're still finding a lot of cases and we couldn't be further from flu season, but our deaths are very very low now - along with Italy/Spain/UK/Sweden etc..

    WHO have said there is no evidence coronavirus is seasonal.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,331 ✭✭✭✭drunkmonkey


    marno21 wrote: »
    The New Zealand case we’re hearing about this morning, in a country ideally suited for eradication, should finally put to bed the “zero Covid island” approach we keep hearing about for Ireland.

    It’s a nice idea in theory but it is a total non runner in practice

    What ever about that blip our current approach has no hope. I'll take New Zelands approach over ours any day.

    What it does highlight is the max 14 day incubation advised by the WHO is utter bollix as usual from them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 40,338 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    LuckyLloyd wrote: »
    Well they're about to roll out a million doses as part of the most ambitious phase III trial in history so we'll know in a couple of months!

    And given it's a Russian trial it'll either be like yuri Gagarin in yostok 1 and a huge russian triumph or like Soyuz 1 which was a death trap and Vladimir komarov the cosmonaut died a horrible death because the parachutes failed and the capsule slammed into the ground.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,139 ✭✭✭What Username Guidelines


    froog wrote: »
    WHO have said there is no evidence coronavirus is seasonal.

    They haven't said it isn't, but there are places now showing that it may be. NY, Sweden, etc, down to minimal numbers. Everyone 2 weeks ago was talking about Florida, Arizona and Texas running out of ICU beds, and now they're trending down after a mixed and haphazard response.

    Obviously the constraint here is time, we need to observe what happens over a longer period. It's just interesting that all of these responses to the pandemic in every country were based on unstoppable spread with a high mortality rate.

    If places that didn't lockdown hard are trending down, it's either seasonal, has some sort of limiting factor (previous immunity?) or there are 100x the cases out there and many more have had it. The latter is unlikely but if true, then the mortality rate is lower than feared.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,580 ✭✭✭JDD


    froog wrote: »
    WHO have said there is no evidence coronavirus is seasonal.

    WHO also said there was no evidence of asymptomatic spread of the virus, that masks would not help prevent the spread of the virus and that they believed China only had 80k cases.

    WHO are generally staffed by good people who are doing their best, but they are fumbling in the dark, just like everyone else.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,823 ✭✭✭Deeper Blue


    Can you imagine the meltdown in here if we'd done what New Zealand did and now we had cases popping up at random


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 359 ✭✭The Unbearables


    Itssoeasy wrote: »
    And given it's a Russian trial it'll either be like yuri Gagarin in yostok 1 and a huge russian triumph or like Soyuz 1 which was death trap and Vladimir komorov the cosmonaut died a horrible death because the parachutes failed and the capsule slammed into the ground.

    The Russians are an incredible people. If this vaccine was developed in the UK, the US or Germany this would be leading the news worldwide.

    This is really big news but because of the anti Russia phobia that western media pushes on it's people it's viewed as some sort of negative when i fact this could be the beginning of the end of this virus.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,580 ✭✭✭JDD


    The Russians are an incredible people. If this vaccine was developed in the UK, the US or Germany this would be leading the news worldwide.

    This is really big news but because of the anti Russia phobia that western media pushes on it's people it's viewed as some sort of negative when i fact this could be the beginning of the end of this virus.

    It could, but they are not a transparent country and are run by a megalomaniac who would do anything to be the country that saved the world. Forgive me if I wait twelve months to ensure that this vaccine doesn't make me blind or give me heart disease. That's not based on biased western media demonising Russia, it's just basic truth.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,306 ✭✭✭✭Drumpot


    The Russians are an incredible people. If this vaccine was developed in the UK, the US or Germany this would be leading the news worldwide.

    This is really big news but because of the anti Russia phobia that western media pushes on it's people it's viewed as some sort of negative when i fact this could be the beginning of the end of this virus.

    I think you need to separate the Russian people from those ruling them. Chernobyl really brought to light what a wonderful people they can be in adversity and how the ruling class can use and abuse them.

    It’s effectively a dictatorship with a democracy sticker to look legitimate. I feel for the people of that country, they are effectively a guinea pig to make Putin/Russia look good, that’s just really sad.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,599 ✭✭✭✭CIARAN_BOYLE


    How long does it take to get a test appointment at the moment.

    I started having symptoms yesterday morning. Rang my gp yesterday lunch time. Had a telephone consultation today morning. When will I get an appointment.

    I've lost track of what's published about the length of the cycle.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,331 ✭✭✭✭drunkmonkey


    El Sueño wrote: »
    Can you imagine the meltdown in here if we'd done what New Zealand did and now we had cases popping up at random

    There not random there's a reason we just don't know what it is yet.
    Can you imagine how happy everyone would be if life carried on as normal here and we only had to lockdown one area.
    Instead we've turned the people on each other like dogs, Newstalk was an eye opener earlier on as to how nasty the mask brigade have become.


  • Registered Users Posts: 716 ✭✭✭Paddygreen


    owlbethere wrote: »
    I read on Facebook on a group, community transmission has occurred in new Zealand so they are closing all schools now.

    We still have some community transmissions occurring and we are considering opening ours.

    Everything except for the supermarkets and pharmacies should be closed until at least next March. Close it all now. If we stay at home and listen to the experts we can win the war on Coronavirus. Holding firm is the only answer as we stay home to save lives going forward. Things like clapping for our hero’s will keep the morale huge enough to make it past The holidays. We need to STAY SAFE guys, frankly I think going any further than my local Spar is too much of a risk right now. I am beyond petrified, nine on a scale on one to ten, I can’t even eat my lunch.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,806 ✭✭✭An Ciarraioch


    Drumpot wrote: »
    I think you need to separate the Russian people from those ruling them. Chernobyl really brought to light what a wonderful people they can be in adversity and how the ruling class can use and abuse them.

    It’s effectively a dictatorship with a democracy sticker to look legitimate. I feel for the people of that country, they are effectively a guinea pig to make Putin/Russia look good, that’s just really sad.

    Indeed, the main scepticism is the turnaround time between development and release - if it was any other country the same "wait and see" perspective regarding potential side effects would be taken.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,668 ✭✭✭DebDynamite


    There not random there's a reason we just don't know what it is yet.
    Can you imagine how happy everyone would be if life carried on as normal here and we only had to lockdown one area.
    Instead we've turned the people on each other like dogs, Newstalk was an eye opener earlier on as to how nasty the mask brigade have become.

    Exactly. Up until yesterday New Zealanders were living in relative normality: crowds could go to sporting events, bars were open, they could shake hands and embrace each other, no masks, etc. Only thing they couldn’t do was travel abroad on holidays. I, and I imagine most people, could live with that for a year quite easily.


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