BrickTamland
Well-known member
I do nights in a supermarket and only last night did it become mandatory to wear masks
I do nights in a supermarket and only last night did it become mandatory to wear masks
The bolded bit is utterly wrong. For example, I know someone who lives alone but needs carers to come in to get him up and put him to bed and do his shopping. If the carers stopped coming, it would cut the risk of transmission, but he would die. Is that a good thing?I wasn't advocating 24 hour mask wearing just that people living in a home where one or more people are regularly not at home, most likely for work purposes, it would make sense for people in those households to wear masks around their homes. Most infections are transmitted indoors and anything that helps cut transmissions can only be a good thing. Encouraged that the government is likely to ban sitting on benches outdoord as this is not deemed as exercise and is considering ending the allowanmce of meeting one other person outdoors for exercise as this is obviously being heavily abused.
The bolded bit is utterly wrong. For example, I know someone who lives alone but needs carers to come in to get him up and put him to bed and do his shopping. If the carers stopped coming, it would cut the risk of transmission, but he would die. Is that a good thing?
It's an extreme example - it's meant to be. But you are continually looking at coronavirus as if it is the only thing which could possibly matter and anything else is irrelevant. Other things matter too. If we save one old person's life so they can spend two more years lying in bed and in pain, is that worth a million jobs? No it isn't. There is a point at which the damage done by reducing the pread exceeds the good it does, and you never seem to acknowledge that.
I certainly hope you are wrong about banning sitting down. Again, there may be advantages to the public good if old people drop down with a heart attack rather than sit down for a rest, but I struggle to see what they are. Extreme again? Maybe. But to ban retired people from sitting down to look at the view in case they have an outdoor conversation? It's absurd. Especially in winter.
And about exercise. Again, I fail to see any benefit in making a law that a woman who works during the day must take exercise alone at night. Are there not dangers in lady joggers running alone? I don't know how many people have been killed directly or indirectly by two joggers running together, but I suspect it's a lot less than by say two supermarket staff having a chat. To ban it make women either take no exercise or take it alone, is foolish and dangerous and counterproductive. Like it or not, there are evil men about who would love to see women exercising on their own at night or in secluded beauty spots.
I do nights in a supermarket and only last night did it become mandatory to wear masks
For staff ? or, for staff and customers ? ... Just saw this on the BBC, I do shop mostly at Morrisons and I have seen many cases of people wearing no mask or wearing them incorrectly. Mostly shops are afraid even to enforce their own rules, witness the abuse of disabled or parent with child parking spaces that goes on. Up til now people have not been confronted in case they lose a customer... but, if they lose customers through Covid....
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-55618408
Which one? It has been mandatory for staff in Tesco for months
I don't think it is a case of losing customers, it is to save the staff from unnecessary abuse, now that security staff seem to have disappeared. But I have to say that the response from supermarkets during this lockdown has been shite so far.
Brighton. It’s been mandatory for customers and day staff, but not for nights despite that side of things being ramped up to minimise the amount of people on the shop floor during the days. Some nights there’s 30 ish staff on the shop floor.
I wasn't advocating 24 hour mask wearing just that people living in a home where one or more people are regularly not at home, most likely for work purposes, it would make sense for people in those households to wear masks around their homes. Most infections are transmitted indoors and anything that helps cut transmissions can only be a good thing. Encouraged that the government is likely to ban sitting on benches outdoord as this is not deemed as exercise and is considering ending the allowanmce of meeting one other person outdoors for exercise as this is obviously being heavily abused.
Working for next to minimum wage, in not the best of conditions I don’t think it’s fair for the staff to have to be enforcers imo - should be full time security staff at the door dealing with it.
Supermarket workers have to enforce age limits on fags and booze. In smaller places, like my local Co-op, there are no security staff, just a couple of people, one on the till and the other one doing the shelves. 90% of the time they are both women. They've had occasional issues with young herberts trying to buy booze and getting shirty when refused.
The problem lies with the government not making it mandatory in law, instead having a wishy-washy "you should, unless you can't" approach; they should be "£200 fine for refusing to wear a mask or prove exemption". Sure some would "get away" with it but it would send a message that it's no longer tolerated.
That's a shame, because holding your breath is a very good way of avoiding the virus and I believe will be introduced in Tier 6.Hopefully England will follow suit but I won't hold my breath.
Some people are genuinely stupid, what impact will closing a click and collect or some of this nonsense mentioned? It just kills the thousands of businesses that are just managing to scrape by offering deliveries/collections.
The government and media have managed to deflect all blame onto the public whilst letting those high up get away with the true problem which as with the first wave is spread within hospital of already sick people and care homes, but guess what? No one is talking about that because everyone is talking about some people going to a garden centre or meeting up in a park.
I can’t believe people don’t see it.
The government and media have managed to deflect all blame onto the public