To be fair it's called "Clap for Heroes"
You’re my heroe x
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To be fair it's called "Clap for Heroes"
I like Scott Morrison, but to give him all the credit for the way Australia has handled this pandemic would be mistaken.
Each state sets its own health policy, and also its own border control policy. Two states in particular have pretty much isolated themselves through the last few months, WA and QLD. Australia is in a strong position compared to many, mainly due to geography and population density, but also the one decision that Scott Morrison had a big say in. The international border was pretty much slammed shut from day one. We are pretty much unable to leave and there is still a queue of 30,000 Aussies waiting to get back.
One state in particular has done the hard grind. Victoria was on the verge of being overrun by COVID, but acted and acted tough. It is a Labour governed state, and as much as I do not like the Premier, Dan Andrews achievement of eliminating Covid is impossible to ignore. We seem to be winning the latest battle too, so far.
So you believe that if we hadn't had Johnson in charge, we wouldn't have have had lots of people dying of coronavirus? - what bollox. Also we didn't have Australia's advantage of being relatively isolated, surrounded by hundreds of miles of ocean, and with immigration controls that would have sent half of NSC apoplectic if the Tories tried to introduce them here! Oh, and there might just be a tad of difference in the population density too .........................
I agree with all of this (apart from liking Scott Morrison). The implementation of a National Cabinet has been a bit of a master stroke IMHO. Having representatives from the federal government and all the state governments sitting down and making decisions is one of the big reasons for the success in Australia. They have all done a fairly good job of putting petty party politics to the side and supporting each other which I also think has helped. If I could wish for one thing to come out of all this I would like this method of politics to continue (at least for the important stuff like education, climate and health care etc).
In fairness to Boris though (ow that hurts). Dealing with the pandemic in Australia is a totally different animal to dealing with it in the UK. Social distancing 25 million people over a vast continent is far easier than social distancing 60 million people on a small island. We have space and distance between each other to play with.
I agree with all of this (apart from liking Scott Morrison). The implementation of a National Cabinet has been a bit of a master stroke IMHO. Having representatives from the federal government and all the state governments sitting down and making decisions is one of the big reasons for the success in Australia. They have all done a fairly good job of putting petty party politics to the side and supporting each other which I also think has helped. If I could wish for one thing to come out of all this I would like this method of politics to continue (at least for the important stuff like education, climate and health care etc).
In fairness to Boris though (ow that hurts). Dealing with the pandemic in Australia is a totally different animal to dealing with it in the UK. Social distancing 25 million people over a vast continent is far easier than social distancing 60 million people on a small island. We have space and distance between each other to play with.
Have to agree about the National Cabinet thing, although I did not realise it did not exist until recently. One of my enduring causes of confusion in my time here so far is the lack of alignment in all kinds of topics. Could be speed limits, taxation, car tax (rego), penalties for offences, double points for driving offences on public holidays, daylight saving anomalies and many other things I cannot think of right now.
A more, but not complete, nationalised lifestyle would be advantageous in my view.
I’d sooner clap for supermarket workers. They kept the shops open and the shelves filled while my local GP surgery and dentist shut down for most of the year.
I won’t though. But if any supermarket worker reads this then, thanks.
I didn’t realise this was back. I don’t think we’ll see a large take up. There isn’t the blitz spirit now, it’s more of a “heads down and plough through this shit again” feeling this time round.
Whilst I'm sure my Wife (a Nurse) doesn't speak for all NHS staff, she has always found it incredibly patronising.
*sigh*
You missed the, England - Tory not great bit then. That's not defending him it's just challenging your view he's uniquely bad.
I get it Clampy, he's a Tory, he delivered Brexit therefore he will always be the antichrist in your eyes.
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I guess I’m politically neutral because I think both Labour and the Tories are pretty awful, but the latter spend the best part of £4b on the NHS per week. How much more would they have to spend to mollify the “Tories are destroying the NHS” crowd?
I guess I’m politically neutral because I think both Labour and the Tories are pretty awful, but the latter spend the best part of £4b on the NHS per week. How much more would they have to spend to mollify the “Tories are destroying the NHS” crowd?
As inarticulate replies go, that’ll take some beating.
Yup. And frankly, it probably doesn't matter how much more is spent on the NHS as much of it will simply be absorbed by increased levels of acute care required to manage the fallout of a population that takes too little exercise, consumes way too much booze and calls the police when KFC run out of chicken. Not to mention the hoards of idiots who routinely overwhelm A&E departments because they don't understand what constitutes an Accident or an Emergency.
I'm all for funding the NHS properly and better rewarding those who work in it; but frankly we all have a responsibility to look after ourselves a bit better.