figmentPez
Staff member
Right now I'm more wearing my mask because of fucking pollen than because of COVID. I am wearing it for both, but pollen seems a more definite threat to my personal well being.
I wish I could say this surprises me, but I worked retail for too long.Oh COME ON now...RTFM, people!Please stop putting COVID-19 test solution in your eyes and nose, FDA says
FDA says it has received reports that people are injuring themselves with the tests.arstechnica.com
--Patrick
I honestly think it's both. Yes, people are tired of lockdowns and masks so the government is trying to avoid those measures. But I do think there is less urgency to it all because this newest wave is so much less dangerous, and the hospitals just aren't as overwhelmed as they once were.I honestly think the more relaxed govt attitude has less to do with fatality rates and much more to do with overall fatigue and a desire to not piss off voters who would honestly rather get sick with “flu two” than be forced to stay at home, especially what with footage floating around of what “the govt” is doing in Shanghai right now.
—Patrick
It's case severity driving policy decisions. We don't, from my knowledge, lockdown countries because of Influenza A or B, or Norovirus, so the attitude is why would we do it for omicron? I have to say that I agree with this reasoning, particularly because we have a fairly effective vaccine already available, and hospitalizations have not seen the dramatic rise that would necessitate a lock down. That said, locally there's a segment of the population that instantly clings to negative news about hospitalizations/deaths as if to prove a point. We had 3-4 deaths per day near the end of the last wave, and then we opened up everything, no vaccine or mask mandates, and now they're pointing to 7 deaths a week as indicative of needing to reinstate many of those same measures.
For the people in the back row, I'll say again "Covid Zero is not possible and should not be a goal."
So long as severity stays low, I'm on the pro "let's get out of the house" side. On the other hand, I'm also on the pro "everyone who can and wants to work from home should work from home. Because it's just...better." I don't really want to ever go back into the office on the regular. For my line of work, it makes absolutely no sense to sell a house and move somewhere for a new job. At my last job, even before Covid, we had a lot of telecommuting because we had people split between offices. Bitch how you will about Microsoft Teams, it's still better than sitting in a conference room with 20 people and trying to hear the other 20 people in the other office on the speakerphone, while everyone looks at a washed out and hard-to-see projected presentation.A combination of high levels of immunity and the reduced severity of the Omicron variant has rendered Covid-19 less lethal than influenza for the vast majority of people in England, according to a Financial Times analysis of official data.
This is a perfect mirror to how Australia (and New Zealand) handled this. Being an island is a major advantage, of course.The situation in Taiwan over the last few weeks has been... interesting.
Originally we were getting no local infections. The only cases we had were imported cases from overseas, and we generally got maybe 50 to 100 cases per day. To us, at the time, this was an alarmingly high number.
Then inevitably something got through and we saw a few local infections. Not many, just a handful, then two handfuls a few days later, and then the number kept rising. Twenty cases one day, then thirty the next, then fifty the next, then eighty, then a hundred... People started asking if we're going to lock down again like we did last year. Last year the government announced a lockdown when we hit 180 new cases in one day. But this time around the government said no, it's all under control.
Two days ago we had over 400 new cases. Yesterday we had over 500. Today we have more than 700. But the government is stubbornly refusing to go into lockdown mode. And, weirdly enough, it seems like most of the population is nervous but generally supportive of the government's decision not to lock down. There are a few reasons for this. Firstly the government's done an amazing job so far, so there's a widespread sentiment that they've earned the benefit of the doubt, and we can trust them to do what's right. Secondly, despite all these new cases over the last few weeks, there have been remarkably few deaths. I think there's only been like two or three deaths in the last two weeks. Furthermore, virtually all the cases have been mild or asymptomatic, with fewer than 20 cases overall being classified as medium or severe. This may have something to do with Taiwan having decent vaccination rates now.
Still, while the government isn't mandating full lockdowns, many individual organizations and institutions have chosen to err on the side of caution and implement their own measures. For example, some schools that had positive cases have announced remote learning for the next few weeks.
Closer to home, my wife and I decided not to travel back to her hometown for the traditional Tomb Sweeping Festival earlier this month, which was a bit of a big deal to her parents, but they decided we'd made the right choice when it turned out there were a few positive cases on the train we would've taken, and because we would've been in contact with some elderly relatives.
Possibly related to Krisken's comment:Yeah, consequences matter. And when there are no consequences, there's nothing keeping people honest.
We all are back in the office, but the city council still sessions virtually.
How 2 years ago.Taiwan hit 2000 new daily infections yesterday.
My department's intern asked if he could start working from home. My company does actually allow remote work if any employee wants to, as long as output level and quality don't suffer, so he's gonna be working remotely now for the time being. I'm staying in the office though because I feel like I need to be here to put out emergency fires when necessary. Also because my Internet connection at home is currently sucking quokka balls.
I'm seeing a lot of emails about staff shortages at my school, too. And more and more kids are calling in sick. California is usually about 2-4 weeks behind the East Coast when there's a surge, which means we should be heading into a new wave of our own right about now...A whole lot of people have been calling in sick the last week or two.
Nobody's SAYING covid... but I'm trying to work from home as much as I can.