- Thread starter
- #81
Wait until your kids are in year 9 and you might detect a few flaws in that thinking.
You may have a point but I think it would've suited me at the time!
Wait until your kids are in year 9 and you might detect a few flaws in that thinking.
Has it been announced anywhere that you can't ignore these rules and obey the 'normal' ones? As in if we were in Tier 1, could you just keep meeting 6 indoors and not hugging?
But the numbers of COVID cases in schools would suggest otherwise. Infected kids have been spreading the virus within families and to teaching staff. I don’t disagree that choices have had to be made but keeping schools open has co-incided with the second wave and that decision will have cost lives and made it more difficult to maintain the suppression of the virus that was being achieved in the Summer.
Yep. I would personally have closed schools from year 9 upwards - as these kids should be capable of working from home and don't need looking after - but what do I know!
Unfortunately, there are a lot of kids, year 9 and upwards, who do not have the tools, nor the parental support, to study from home and would soon fall massively behind where they could and should be.
Additionally, many of these same kids are from vulnerable households where they may not receive sufficient food when remaining at home, and being at school affords them some decent nutrition each day.
Interested to see the numbers on that as a governor at a local school. Interestingly sickness through other ailments is massively down because of the bubbles and cleaning going on. We've had Covid in our family, all tested positive, but I don't think it came from the schools, they acted quickly and I don't think any kids or teachers in my kid's bubbles got it either. That is just anecdotal of course.
Don't forget as well as schools opening, restaurants and bars had already opened, gyms and leisure also opened. A lot of variables to consider before we blame schools being open, unless the numbers are conclusive of course.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of kids, year 9 and upwards, who do not have the tools, nor the parental support, to study from home and would soon fall massively behind where they could and should be.
Additionally, many of these same kids are from vulnerable households where they may not receive sufficient food when remaining at home, and being at school affords them some decent nutrition each day.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of kids, year 9 and upwards, who do not have the tools, nor the parental support, to study from home and would soon fall massively behind where they could and should be.
Additionally, many of these same kids are from vulnerable households where they may not receive sufficient food when remaining at home, and being at school affords them some decent nutrition each day.
surely now you can all see this is all bull#### ! if this was a proper pandemic everything would be shut down and rationed , this is nothing less than getting people used to being controlled to make the true agenda smoother to implement
From day one in every democracy, it’s always been unashamedly NOT just based on science.
If it was, Germans and Brits would’ve been kept locked up indoors as in Wuhan, food delivered by the army, until vaccines have been administered to all.
It’s openly been a balance of epidemiology, and:
1. What’s sustainable for a free thinking and free acting population? Will law/rules actually be taken seriously? Brits haven’t the compliant nature of the Chinese, Taiwanese and Koreans to 100% abide by laws for as long as it takes.
2. Mental health, the oppression of not seeing family and friends, from seeing all favourite activities closed.
3. Business and livelihoods. Economies would go bankrupt, countless businesses would sink without a trace, lifetime work destroyed, with an endless lockdown.
No doubt sadly there will be a further spike in cases and deaths, but there are many people including on NSC who said they were going to ignore the laws anyway.
To me this is a decent compromise. All four nations are in agreement.
Absolute disgrace of a decision. If our Government's handling of this pandemic wasn't disastrous enough, let's just add this crazy idea to the mix. You'd think they'd of learned something useful by now.
I get, and support, the idea that a balance is needed. But only a few weeks after the government stated the primary need to get things under control, and on the same day when the deaths reached the level of mid-May, it seemed premature to announce the relaxation of the rules over Xmas and bizarre to also announce the return of football fans in just over a week’s time. As things currently stand, I feel the balance needs to swing towards locking down and not the other way.
I get, and support, the idea that a balance is needed. But only a few weeks after the government stated the primary need to get things under control, and on the same day when the deaths reached the level of mid-May, it seemed premature to announce the relaxation of the rules over Xmas and bizarre to also announce the return of football fans in just over a week’s time. As things currently stand, I feel the balance needs to swing towards locking down and not the other way.