Starting to feel a bit the same.
We’re double jabbed, soon to be tripled.
We’ve complied with every lockdown.
Wear masks everywhere.
Have done everything we’ve been asked to do, and are beginning to wonder who or what we’d now be protecting by yet another lockdown, should it happen.
I get the point about not overwhelming the NHS, but - to be honest - that alarm bell has been rung numerous times in the past, and it never really happened.
If people are now just getting mild symptoms, and deaths aren’t surging, then the cynic in me starts to wonder if the only real ‘at risk’ group now is the unvaccinated.
In which case, fvck ‘em.
Apart from the small segment who medically can’t have the vaccine - whom I do care about and wish to continue protecting - those who are choosing not to take it pretty much deserve to face any consequences now. Their choice, so why should others do any more for them now.
Meanwhile life has to start going back to normal. Maybe slowly, but I’m not sure there’s widespread willingness for things to go backwards yet again.
I'm treble jabbed, had covid once, likely twice. I'm meeting people treble jabbed at Xmas. If anyone can tell me what else I can do to stop the spread I'm all ears. Inject the covid deniers. Let the rest of us go about our business. They are the villains of this. If you know one, get them to get a vaccine They are the selfish bells prolonging all this (kids are a separate argument).
On overwhelming the NHS, I had the unfortunate experience yesterday of helping to sort out an elderly uncle (88) who had a fall yesterday morning. At 9am I had a call from his neighbour who had got him downstairs and ok with his morning carer, but she was having to go out, so I went down to be with him and got there about 9.30, while his son in Scotland was trying to sort things out with the NHS. To cut a long story short, a conversation with a nurse practitioner to arrange a telephone call with a doctor at 3.30. Before that he had another fall in the loo, after which I found it very difficult to get him up and back on the sofa, so I managed to bring forward that phone call, which happened at 3pm. Doctor advised ring 999 - probable UTI. Did so at about 3.30. Another fall, couldn’t get him up this time. Called 999 again about 4pm to elevate the priority - lying on the floor in the hall.
The ambulance got to us at 12.30am - about 9 hours (NINE HOURS) after the original call. With the help of neighbours we had got him back on the sofa, but he had about 2 hours on the floor - a frail 88 year old.
When the paramedics came, they were brilliant, took their time, kind and patient and making sure he was going to be treated right and sorted out. He’s in hospital now. They were also enormously frustrated at the pressure on them and their colleagues.
To be fair, a lot of this is down to decades of underfunding, and then austerity. But Covid is the very big straw which might have broken the camel’s back.
Well it's obvious isn't it? The objective is containment so that not everyone is ill at the same time and the hospitals can't cope with those who get it badly...
but we're now at the point where we need a long term strategy for the virus. I'm sorry but shutting off the economy every time there's a new variant doesn't cut it. it just doesn't.
My family are all jabbed up so no reason not to meet up. If we are just protecting the unjabbed then to be honest **** them.