hmmm wrote: » Absolutely - not my thing, but looks like a bunch of families keeping their distance and enjoying themselves. There is no law against groups of neighbours sitting in their own driveways. This crisis has really exposed the curtain-twitchers and hysterical people in general. People who think that the air outside their house is swimming with virus (have they HEPA filters inside their home?). Spying on couples going for a walk. Ringing the guards when they see a lone cyclist.
facehugger99 wrote: » Passed two separate houses on a walk last night with groups of teens/early-20's drinking cans in the gardens. These were the front gardens so I presume there's probably more stuff going on behind closed doors. There's way more traffic on the roads and more people out and about - very noticeable the increase since Thursday. What's clear is that, other than bedroom-dwellers on the main thread, most people will not accept being locked-down for more than a couple of weeks. We should have held off for a couple of weeks and introduced it toward the middle of this month until the end of April.
Who's spying on couples going for walks? And calling guards on lone cyclists?
BanditLuke wrote: » Thank god you aren't in charge of running the country.
facehugger99 wrote: » Shouldn't you be hitting f5 over in the main thread?
facehugger99 wrote: » There's way more traffic on the roads and more people out and about - very noticeable the increase since Thursday.
jlm29 wrote: » I’ve heard seen that said a lot on here and Facebook, but any time I’ve been out I haven’t seen it myself, though I’ve only been out of the house twice in the week. I wonder is some of it the “I always do my shopping in Thursday/Friday, so I will continue”. Also, what day is pension/dole day? Are they thur or fri, that people would Have the means to go shopping now?
[Deleted User] wrote: » the numbers of infected in Germany are levelling out now but no talk of relaxation of restrictions there yet.
d15ude wrote: » Yes, there is. Actually a lot!
[Deleted User] wrote: » You are not listening to the news. The official line is no relaxations. Don't dare go on trips at Easter... and that is coming direct from freshly released in to the wild Merkel's mouth this morning.
VinLieger wrote: » Yeah were deffinitely gonna be out of all restrictions by next week.... But lets just check and see what the advisors are sayinghttps://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/coronavirus-lockdown-steps-could-remain-into-winter-says-expert-1.4221164?mode=amp
ixoy wrote: » That's behind a paywall. Is it saying the current restrictions or, as the text under the picture suggests, some different level of restrictions? I can't see how the current level is sustainable for that length of time but differing variations could be.
kieran. wrote: » All I see there is that some restrictions may be in place for some time. Hardly a definitive statement?
Padre_Pio wrote: » Very suspicious how they've as many cases as France but only a fraction of the deaths. Maybe some manipulation. French authorities said they never included people who died outside of hospitals in their official counts until this week. Are Germany doing something different? Deaths are really the only way to record the spread of the virus. We could make our recorded cases go to zero by stopping testing, harder to manipulate death records.
ixoy wrote: » I can't see how the current level is sustainable for that length of time.
easypazz wrote: » Good idea, wait until we all have before trying to stop it.:rolleyes:
avg3078 wrote: » Lock down is not a solution, does anybody think what will happen when we all get back to normality after sitting at home? The virus will start spreading again. Should we be in lock down till the vaccine is available? How much money does the govermnet have to give it away every week? And what sort of economy will there be? I don't see the government thinking about the distant future. They are so obsessed with numbers at the moment. Look at Sweden, guys. Life as it was with a few restrictions. Children going to school, shops open. Keeping sane is what we really need.
avg3078 wrote: » ... And what sort of economy will there be?...
avg3078 wrote: » Look at Sweden, guys. Life as it was with a few restrictions. Children going to school, shops open. Keeping sane is what we really need.
robinph wrote: » Does it actually matter that much if the economy in country X collapses if at the same time it also collapses in every single other country? It does matter in normal circumstances where an economy is measured by how well it is doing against others, but if they all fall off by the same then has anything actually changed?