Chivito550 wrote: » Cathal talking pure sense in a world gone mad with hysteria.https://www.irishexaminer.com/sport/othersport/arid-40223543.html?type=amp&__twitter_impression=true
Nuttzz wrote: » Public opinion in Japan seems very much against it going aheadhttps://apnews.com/article/tokyo-sports-asia-2020-tokyo-olympics-japan-olympic-games-010ed6aa2fe427cf7d36a8549f9d79a7
ultrapercy wrote: » Hysteria? 3 million people have died and its only just started.
Chivito550 wrote: » I was referring to hysteria around Olympics going ahead, when other sports events are happening. But seen as you bring it up, at the time deaths were at 1.2 million, the WHOs best estimate was that 10% of the world's population (approx 760 million) had already had Covid. A death rate of 0.16%. P. S. 2.38 million have died with Covid, not 3 million.
ultrapercy wrote: » you're adopting the Stalinist viewpoint that the death of one person is a tragedy, the death of a million people sorry 2.38 million is a statistic? I paraphrased him a little but he's also dead.....and he was a ****.
KSU wrote: » Australian Open has shown how problematic large scale sporting events are even in countries of low case numbers. Also I don’t believe Emperors Cup is a good comparison when you factor in international travel (from countries of varying health protocols in place) I do agree IOC will try push on no matter what as $$$ is the be all and end all for them but I don’t believe it will be as big a factor for Japanese government as we have seen that the financial implications of things getting out of hand again can be just as costly
Chivito550 wrote: » No, I never insinuated anything of the kind. Please do not put words in my mouth and try make me out to be a heartless c?&t. You do not know me! Pointing out that the death rate of a virus is much less than initially feared (and still assumed by many not willing to do a bit of digging) is not the same as the views of a brutal dictator who had no value on human life, and who was responsible for the deaths of 50 million people, and the suffering of many more. Utterly shameful comment. What goes through peoples' heads to actually write comments like that.
ultrapercy wrote: » speaking of hysteria�� the lord save us. This pandemic has exposed the selfishness and imaturity of a section of the community as much as it has highlighted the heroism of front lne workers. Whining about sports and hobbies while millions die is modern society defined. All that matters now is ME and thats the reason we're in the state we're in.
ultrapercy wrote: » speaking of hysteria🀣 the lord save us. This pandemic has exposed the selfishness and imaturity of a section of the community as much as it has highlighted the heroism of front lne workers. Whining about sports and hobbies while millions die is modern society defined. All that matters now is ME and thats the reason we're in the state we're in.
KSU wrote: » Bit off topic but I don't think it is confined to certain sections of our society sadly. Everyone is lobbying, petitioning or advocating for there own particular niche as they feel entitled to be exempt. For me it shows a breakdown of communities by in large as there is no sense of pulling together in times of hardship everyone is looking to be exempt or blame someone for what they feel is there right.
Chivito550 wrote: » Hard for people to pull together when some have had their livelihoods ruined while others are unaffected. I, myself, am completely unaffected financially. I've been working from home and saved a stupid amount of money. But I'm not so selfish to cast judgements on those less fortunate.
KSU wrote: » That is my point though those unaffected tend to downplay the effects of this, those who are in the thick of it tend to be blinkered on the health risk side and others financially hit tend to feel that that supersedes the health side. Everyone is pulling in their own direction with little regard for those outside of there bubble rather than rallying together as communities supporting each other in order to keep people safe (both from a health and financial perspective) It's a symptom of a bigger issue in modern day but still sorry to see
Chivito550 wrote: » Hasn't that always been the case though? How many times have you walked last a homeless person and done nothing?
Murph_D wrote: » Dennehy's article seems to be more about news values than any real insight into whether the Games will go ahead. Hopefully they will find a way to stage them, safely. If media representatives are being discouraged from attending, it's hardly surprising. The current conditions would seem to justify pool reporting, for instance, rather than adding to the logistical problems with a larger than necessary influx of sports journalists and other media people. Totally agree that the main driver of staging the Games, if they happen, will be the money.
Chivito550 wrote: » I've adhered to these restrictions, even though I disagree with a lot of them. I've seen my parents twice since July even though they are a 20 minute drive away. Most of my friends I haven't seen for a year. I've seen nobody but my fiancé since January! You're quite the self-righteous one aren't you!
rom wrote: » The first 21% vaccinated are the group where 98% of deaths occurred so that's why the UK is pushing for that. Now when Ireland gets to that place there may be an acceptance on people going to the olympics getting a vaccine priority due to the event "boosting mental health" etc but the real problem is that this will be an option here but there are many countries will have no vaccine program or be at a very early stage. A hard sell in those places. If it goes ahead it will be very negative for Olympics as it will highlight the lack of balance in global rollout of the vaccine.
Chivito550 wrote: » The IOC has stated that a vaccine isn't a requirement. In fact a vaccine is no benefit at all, as you still have to be tested regardless, and isolated if positive.
rom wrote: » https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-vaccines-for-the-tokyo-olympics-have-become-a-political-issue-11613314814
demfad wrote: » Agree with this. I also think actual physical activity is massively great for individuals and the larger community to get mental release during these tough times and protect them as much as possible physically should they be unlucky enough to get infected. The masses of money spent by nations on Olympics would be better spent on local physical exercise participation. Also, the astronomical money that surrounds the Olympics probably enough to go towards vaccinating world if there was a serious cooperative global response. Priorities etc.
average_runner wrote: » Olympics has a purpose also, it gives people something to look forward to. What the olympics needs to do is tone down the event on the money side. It rarely adds anything to the community after it finishes up. Brazil is a perfect example of a bad olympics. Olympic park is closed due to safety issues, media centre just a demolished building. The rest is even worst. The people of Brazil suffered badly due to the Olympics.