jcon1913 wrote: » Well we do agree on the fact that the lockdown is hogwash Either do or do not- there is no try All we have now is a try. Like I said in a previous post the government has had a year and endless resources to get this right. To quote one of the reporters in the Indo today- once the vulnerable groups are vaccinated people’s patience will run out
GlobalSun wrote: » Car crash. They partially lost my trust in September and it's now completely gone with this third lockdown. Anybody with half a brain could foresee an even longer lockdown resulting from the lifting of restrictions for Christmas. They took a risk in order to boost the economy and now we're paying the price 10 folds. The uncertainly around this third lockdown is even more shocking, especially now that there is a vaccine available. During the first lockdown, they elaborated a completely unrealistic roadmap, but it at least gave us hope despite the fact that there was no vaccine in sight. Now, we have a vaccine available, but no roadmap, just a whole bunch of talking with no concrete information. Hot air. I absolutely love Ireland and it's always been home to me, but as an expat who moved here 12 years ago, I'm seriously contemplating leaving if this debacle doesn't get any better by the end of year. Never have I contemplated leaving Ireland as I love this country so much, but it has constantly been on my mind lately. The way this situation was been managed since September is a complete farce if you ask me. At this stage, we'll still be in a lockdown even if all the vulnerable people get vaccinated. They'll use the new "variants" as an excuse to be conservative.
GlobalSun wrote: » Car crash. They partially lost my trust in September. Now, it's completely gone with this third lockdown. Anybody with half a brain could foresee an even longer lockdown resulting from the lifting of restrictions for Christmas. They took a negligent risk in order to boost the economy and now we're paying the price 10 folds. The losses incurred during this endless lockdown will be far greater than the profits generated around Christmas. The uncertainty around this third lockdown is even more shocking, especially now that there is a vaccine available. During the first lockdown, they elaborated a completely unrealistic roadmap, but it at least gave us hope despite the fact that there was no vaccine in sight. We now have a vaccine available, but no roadmap, just a whole bunch of talking with no concrete information. Hot air. I absolutely love Ireland. It's always been home to me, but as an expat who moved here 12 years ago, I'm seriously contemplating leaving if this debacle doesn't get any better by the end of year. Never have I contemplated leaving Ireland as I love this country so much and saw a future here, but with the current situation it's hard to imagine a future of quality. Moving has now been on my mind more than ever. The way this situation has been managed since September is a complete farce if you ask me. At this rate, we'll still be in a lockdown even if all the vulnerable people get vaccinated. They'll use these new "variants" as an excuse to remain "conservative". Additionally, because the economy will have been frozen for so long, the job market is going to take ages to recover. The rental market might turn into a renter's market, but with the lack of jobs and low salaries, it's still going to be an issue. The option to purchase a property will seem even less reachable. As much as I love Ireland, we're slowly falling apart.
Glenbhoy wrote: » Out of interest, where are you contemplating moving to?
Oranage2 wrote: » Another terrible decision was allowing the meat factories to stay open after the first outbreak but closed all the other businesses in Laois, offaly and Kildare. Another I scratch your back decision by our greedy overlords.
Oranage2 wrote: » I see Rte having an article saying how basically students in West caused a massive outbreak. What Rte fails to say is how the government delayed the decision to close universities so that the students would rent the houses owned by themselves and their lackies. A decision based on pure greed. Another terrible decision was allowing the meat factories to stay open after the first outbreak but closed all the other businesses in Laois, offaly and Kildare. Another I scratch your back decision by our greedy overlords.
GlobalSun wrote: » Belgium, potentially. Lived there before. Plus, I speak both local languages. Taxes are certainly higher but salaries are better than in Ireland. The rental market is also far better as no housing crisis in sight. The job market doesn't seem to be as frozen as Ireland's and more importantly, you can clearly see what your feed into. Ideally, exiting the EU/Europe would have been a good plan, but given the current circumstances, it's not a realistic/viable trajectory at all. Even if I leave, I'll more than likely end up coming back. It's just that Ireland's (or at least Dublin's) quality of life has significantly deteriorated in the last few years with no hope for improvement in the near future. This lockdown has simply allowed for Ireland's dysfunctionalities to raise to the surface. Again, every country is dysfunctional in one capacity or another. Ireland is a great country, just poorly managed at the moment and it's sad to see such a great nation absorbing the daily ramifications of poor-decision making at the highest level.
Klonker wrote: » The new government has been a disaster, I don't think many would disagree with that. But I think NPHET and particularly Tony Holohan have to take a fair share of the blame. If you think back to last March, what was the strategy and motto? "Flatten the curve" so hospitals and ICU wouldn't become overrun. Come October last year and numbers were slowly rising. Hospitals weren't under pressure but there was a little worry so NPHET wanted to put the handbrake on and move to level 3 (indoor restaurants closed but retail open) This seemed to be working and we saw a slight decrease in numbers but then Tony returned wanting level 5. Government held off for 2 weeks but eventually caved and we locked down for 6 weeks. This was from late October to early December. This is when a lot of people do some early Xmas shopping. People could of been encouraged to do their shopping early to avoid a December rush. People could have still been meeting in small groups (I actually forgot how many households could visit as it seems so long ago now). What actually happened was we locked down to suppress the virus but we also suppressed peoples social contacts. But we only suppressed these things, we didn't make them go away. So naturally, as people are social animals, we tried make up for lost time in this window over Christmas. It was a window as we were already told we'd be locking down again in January. And some people went social crazy in this window, it was almost like the purge. And of course we know what that lead to, huge exponential growth. This was the opposite of flattening the curve. People wonder how our numbers increased so much over Christmas when others didn't. Some will say because we relaxed our restrictions more in this period and that is true. But I think the even bigger factor was we locked down in October when nobody else did (even though our rates were amoung the best in Europe at that time), allowing this pent up social demand to bubble under the service waiting to be released. But no, the media will tell you its because we opened restaurants for about 2 weeks and a few people flew home from England.
Klonker wrote: » This was from late October to early December. This is when a lot of people do some early Xmas shopping. People could of been encouraged to do their shopping early to avoid a December rush. People could have still been meeting in small groups (I actually forgot how many households could visit as it seems so long ago now). What actually happened was we locked down to suppress the virus but we also suppressed peoples social contacts. But we only suppressed these things, we didn't make them go away. So naturally, as people are social animals, we tried make up for lost time in this window over Christmas. It was a window as we were already told we'd be locking down again in January. And some people went social crazy in this window, it was almost like the purge. And of course we know what that lead to, huge exponential growth. This was the opposite of flattening the curve. People wonder how our numbers increased so much over Christmas when others didn't. Some will say because we relaxed our restrictions more in this period and that is true. But I think the even bigger factor was we locked down in October when nobody else did (even though our rates were amoung the best in Europe at that time), allowing this pent up social demand to bubble under the surface waiting to be released. But no, the media will tell you its because we opened restaurants for about 2 weeks and a few people flew home from England.
Klonker wrote: » But we only suppressed these things, we didn't make them go away.
bucketybuck wrote: » Said it before, the lack of understanding of human nature has been astounding from the government and their NPHET masters. Sociology 101 could have told you the mistakes and inevitable consequences in their approach and yet a so called advisory group didn't take any of that into account whatsoever. And they still aren't, they still haven't a ****ing clue the damage that their communication is doing to their underlying message. The most worrying part is that this is strong evidence of blinkered groupthink, of a group not seeing the wood for the trees, and that groupthink is very likely to be affecting all their decisions, not just the public ones we hear about. And that should be very concerning to all.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » How would we measure government performance on covid? What would good look like?
quokula wrote: » If you were to take it in numbers. We have one of the lowest death rates in western Europe, despite having an extremely open land border with the country with one of the highest death rates by far in the world. We have one of the highest vaccination rates in the world so far, only really behind a couple of extreme outliers like Israel and the UK, basically maxing out our delivery of all available vaccine supplies. We're forecast to be the only economy in Europe that grew in 2020 - in fact our economic outlook even looks better than the likes of New Zealand. But for a lot of people, it seems that not being able to go and have a pint in the pub for a while trumps all of that.
quokula wrote: » We're forecast to be the only economy in Europe that grew in 2020 - in fact our economic outlook even looks better than the likes of New Zealand.
Bit cynical wrote: » Thought it might be interesting to add all the days in above graph for each country. So a country that stayed at the top of the chart for a long period would have a high score. Ireland is pretty high on this list, just below Italy which of course was the early epicentre of the outbreak in Europe.Country | Stringency Italy | 26550 Ireland | 25527 Spain | 24847 Cyprus | 23648 France | 23638 Netherlands | 22982 Romania | 22704 Belgium | 22244 Hungary | 22076 Austria | 21596 Sweden | 21491 Poland | 21473 Slovenia | 21031 Slovakia | 20833 Czechia | 20669 Denmark | 20457 Luxembourg | 19564 Lithuania | 19465 Latvia | 19010 Croatia | 18409 Bulgaria | 17937 Finland | 16802 Estonia | 14659
Rodin wrote: » Is there a graph for enforcement?
Rodin wrote: » Is there a graph for enforcement? A law/regulation is only as good as itsenforcement. I am yet to see a Covid checkpoint.
HansKroenke wrote: » Hysterical over reaction which requires hyperbolic phrases to justify the heavy handed restrictions they have imposed. Three of these incredibly destructive, authoritarian lockdowns in a year is utterly indefensible by any metric. Simon "There were 18 covid before covid 19" Harris or Stephen "Trampolines are inherently dangerous" Donnelly, both inept and acting ministers for health during the year
Plumbthedepths wrote: » I live close to a large Midlands town, there are Garda checkpoints every single day . If you haven't encountered any checkpoints since all this began you either never leave the house or don't reside in Ireland.
Rodin wrote: » In and out of work every day. Have been since the start. In Ireland. Don't really care if you believe me or not. It's true.