Pitch n Putt wrote: » That’s not the argument at all. Remember not everybody has this virus and to treat everyone you meet in your daily life as a spreader is not for me. Let’s get back to March April May when we had peak community transmission and no mandatory masks Can you or any of the hardline pro mask brigade name for us just one supermarket cluster or one supermarket that had to close because of covid 19 ?? There should have been many many outbreaks in these environments but there wasn’t.... Scientific evidence can be interpreted as suits. Real life information can tell us different things also.
Spiderman0081 wrote: » I think what people find hard to grasp is that it is only recently the effectiveness of masks has become apparent. Dr.Fauci for example, after 40 years of studying such viral diseases, has only realized in the spring of 2020 that masks help.
joeguevara wrote: » Supermarkets in April and May restricted the amount of people who were allowed in at a time. Also contract tracing was pretty much zero so we have no idea about community transmission. Are you basing the reason for not wearing a mask on unsubstantiated claim that Covid wasn't transmitted in supermarkets to trump scientific evidence.
GT89 wrote: » Where was the spread of covid 19 in supermarkets when we had the supermarkets packed full of absolute retards buying bog roll. The week leading up to lockdown
xhomelezz wrote: » Supermarkets....always supermarkets, favourite argument. Think we should all move there and stay, cuz by some it looks like the safest place to be
pjohnson wrote: » And now the BLM card :pac:
Sconsey wrote: » Where was the spread of Covid 19 in nightclubs? in churches? in gyms?in pubs? ... by your logic they are all safe right? The fact is we don't know where all the community transmission occurred but we can make some good guesses. Supermarkets do not have some miracle Covid-repelling properties as far as anyone is aware...except you maybe.
Pitch n Putt wrote: » That’s not the argument at all. Remember not everybody has this virus and to treat everyone you meet in your daily life as a spreader is not for me. Let’s get back to March April May when we had peak community transmission and no mandatory masksCan you or any of the hardline pro mask brigade name for us just one supermarket cluster or one supermarket that had to close because of covid 19 ?? There should have been many many outbreaks in these environments but there wasn’t.... Scientific evidence can be interpreted as suits. Real life information can tell us different things also.
is_that_so wrote: » That we have so few cases directly linked to them and the very fleeting nature of interactions suggests they are much lower risk and over the 5 months of shopping we've not seen a huge rise in cases from that source.
Sconsey wrote: » Nope, and likewise you cannot name a single supermarket where it did not happen. So neither of us know for sure where it is happening really do we? you don't, I don't, NEPHT don't. So let's take some simple precautions and quit whinging like a child.
Sconsey wrote: » Lower risk than what? how much risk is acceptable to you?
pjohnson wrote: » Its almost like people behave differently in a pub compared to a supermarket. Who could have possibly known that!
Pitch n Putt wrote: » Whinging like a child :rolleyes: Your right with a 100 % of everything you said and how dare anyone go against your thoughts. What a child you are.
jackboy wrote: » We massively reduced the infection rate while the supermarkets were busy and no one was wearing masks. We have proven there is not significant spread of the virus in supermarkets. Many supermarkets were wedged during that time with loads of them not controlling the amount of customers.
is_that_so wrote: » Risk is based on personal evaluation. If you're terrified that COVID is everywhere outside your door, that's the risk. Crossing a road is a risk but we do so by factoring in certain data, what we can see and what we have been taught. A supermarket is a location where the behaviour is very predictable and add in the "COVID rules" we have patterns to work with and a risk we can evaluate. I've never found that risk to be high, based on how I shop and observing the current rules. I see most others doing the same thing so low risk in my book.
Sconsey wrote: » Great, where is that proof?
jackboy wrote: » The massive reduction in cases while all the supermarkets were open with no mask wearing is the proof. It’s not rocket science. We know where spikes in cases come from, certain factories, pubs, nightclubs, house parties, hospitals, public transport. If we focus on these and a small Handful of other settings we will keep infection rates reasonably low.
odyssey06 wrote: » Thats not proof that community transmission in retail didnt.
jackboy wrote: » It is proof there was not significant community transmission in retail. That is clear.
timetogo1 wrote: » Do you have to make stuff up now? Which supermarkets were wedged? Any one I was at, restricted the amount of people going in and they're still not normal. I'm sure therell be one of two of the usual suspects to back you up but I don't remember any posters here saying supermarkets were operating normally.