EnzoScifo wrote: » with all due respect, you were there in the afternoon. I drove by at 9pm. The Gardai also corroborate my version of events.
freshpopcorn wrote: » That’s exactly it I’d say. Guy who took the video was loving it in my opinion so he could get his likes and shares.
freshpopcorn wrote: » Nope, just don’t have much time for people like him who love to post things online looking for attention.
TheChizler wrote: » I'm not sure exaggeration helps, you wouldn't get those kind of numbers packed on a bus or lift.
SusieBlue wrote: » The only person who said that was yourself. Talk about being passive aggressive.
Zardoz wrote: » Were you one of the neanderthals in the clip?
Zardoz wrote: » It's great to see the city buzzing again
TheChizler wrote: » It was pretty much the same as that when I was in late this afternoon, minus the drama of the Garda car driving on the footpath to get to Tuckey St. Plenty of space between groups, Garda van was parked up by the boardwalk for visibility, a few Gardaí walking around, stopping to chat to the odd group overtly drinking. Was a pretty cheerful and safe feeling atmosphere. Looks a lot worse with selective pictures taken from a distance so you can't see the space between people.
EnzoScifo wrote: » When I'm in a restaurant I usually dont have 15 to 20 people within a metre of me, but there you go.
freshpopcorn wrote: » Just loads of people being out and about and the Gardai chasing them and a fella who’s a bit dramatic commenting on it. Then the usual Karen’s saying how shocked they are about it.
Mr Hamou, who volunteers with the One Human Community charity, which conducts soup runs at weekends, said he took the footage at 8pm. It shows people, many without masks, milling around Grand Parade, and some skateboarding. At one point a garda car appears. Mr Hamou said it was a similar story last weekend in the city. "We will never get out of this lockdown if we keep doing this," he said. Mr Hamou said he appreciated many people out on the streets were young, but he added that many appeared to be drunk and were not wearing masks or practicing social distancing. He said of the street area in Cork city where he was tonight: "[there was] over a thousand people, easy." What is captured in the footage was corroborated by a garda source familiar with activity in the city centre this weekend, who said there was a "carnival atmosphere" driven by takeaway alcohol and which placed officers in a difficult position due to the sheer number of people on the streets. "Last night [Friday] was probably one of the busiest nights we have had since the beginning of the whole Covid thing," the garda said, adding of the scenes on Saturday evening, "it seems to have built on that. "There seems to be a kind of carnival atmosphere taken on."
ACitizenErased wrote: » They're already manufactured. Distribution starts within 12 hours of approval. EMA is already in rolling approval phases for 3 vaccines (Pfizer, Oxford, Moderna), FDA is in approval phase of 1 (Pfizer). Pfizer distributing 100 million doses by year end and 100 million every month after that. (Moderna and Oxford have even more, with J&J & Novavax closely following behind) Protection is possible with the one dose, sterilising immunity is with the two doses, 28 days apart.
TheChizler wrote: » The plinths were busy enough when I was there too, no worse than people sitting in a restaurant though.
EnzoScifo wrote: » I was driving through there at 9pm from the late night chemist and it was the opposite. very few on the boardwalk, but a lot of people with little social distancing on the plinths outside the library
EnzoScifo wrote: » People just meeting up with mates [/url]
EnzoScifo wrote: » People just meeting up with mateshttps://www.facebook.com/ali21329/videos/10224344965721040
Cork2021 wrote: » Can’t view? What is it about?
wally1990 wrote: » https://twitter.com/chrissyocall/status/1330263488854421505?s=19
Ludo wrote: » It is great to be optimistic which you always are, but I do think you are being a bit too optimistic here. June/July is more realistic I think. I actually looked into booking summer holidays earlier this evening but backed away as it is all too uncertain for now.
ACitizenErased wrote: » Majority of at risk people will be vaccinated by February/March, latest. We'll be well on our way back to normal at that point.
cantalach wrote: » The clinical trials for two of them have concluded successfully. But now they have to be approved, manufactured, distributed, and administered. Expert commentators say that the best case scenario, assuming emergency approval, is that there will be very limited quantities available by year end, with these going to the most vulnerable people (presumably ICU staff, etc.). Widespread availability is unlikely before March/April. Also, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines both require two shots, and there’s a couple of weeks wait for full immunity to develop.