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Grand Magnate
Member Since Nov 2014
Location: Spain ( the land of flowers and gladness, lol!)
Posts: 3,825
9 1,758 hugs
given |
#101
I’m crazy about bonsai trees but I heard they require lots of care and noone of my thumbs is green, neither a little. 😂
__________________ Social Anxiety and Depression. Cluster C traits. Trying to improve my English. My apologies for errors and mistakes in advance. Mankind is complex: Make deserts blossom and lakes die. ( GIL SCOTT-HERSON) |
Grand Magnate
Member Since Nov 2014
Location: Spain ( the land of flowers and gladness, lol!)
Posts: 3,825
9 1,758 hugs
given |
#102
Quote:
You see. I had news about the empty syringes. Let’s see the research outcome. __________________ Social Anxiety and Depression. Cluster C traits. Trying to improve my English. My apologies for errors and mistakes in advance. Mankind is complex: Make deserts blossom and lakes die. ( GIL SCOTT-HERSON) |
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Oct 2019
Location: UK
Posts: 4,692
(SuperPoster!)
4 11.6k hugs
given |
#103
The big news here now is the Indian variant, there are a few patches in the UK where it's growing and becoming the dominant strain, apparently it's 50% more infectious than the UK variant. Our area has some infections but not as many as others - so far we're still low numbers but the danger is if it grows exponentially. We've all seen how quickly that can happen.
I have heard they are bringing up 2nd doses from 12 to 8 weeks for over 50s/vulnerable people. There was some talk of the young being given vaccines immediately in some areas (we're still on 38/39 year olds) but I don't know if that will actually happen. Personally I feel the young have really suffered with this, they have lost over a year in their development, and now back of the queue for vaccines - yet they can and do get sick with this especially as more likely to be in frontline service jobs. So I'm back to worrying - and I disabled facebook again - so many horrible comments calling those of us who want caution 'bed wetters'. Some peole are just nasty. |
BreakForTheLight
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Grand Member
Member Since Jan 2015
Location: Europe
Posts: 852
9 211 hugs
given |
#104
Quote:
Meanwhile back home the news is about travel agencies getting extremely busy because the travel advice for several countries has changed/is changing Let's spread some more different strains! I'm feeling more and more stupid for being cautious. Not taking my chance now when we have some freedom coming back, in case it gets taken away again in a couple of months. |
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Discombobulated
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#105
Quote:
Poor Peru. If COVID has been a mess here, it's been much worse there. In addition to the syringe problem that is being investigated there was another scandal with well-placed politicians getting vaccines before the rest. They are still working on getting the elderly vaccinated there, unlike here. I read somewhere that nearly everyone in the country knows someone who has died from COVID. The official numbers from there don't show the true story at all. Before all this started, we used to love to fly up to Lima for a week to eat good food and spend time along the coast. I don't know when we will be able to do that again. Hopefully keeping the borders closed is helping us to keep out the Indian variant. The border closure has been extended to the end of the month. At least there are fewer connections between here and there, normally, unlike Brazil, which has been the most problematic variant here. @AzulOscuro I see you are using your newly learned vocabulary. |
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Discombobulated
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Discombobulated
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Grand Member
Member Since Jan 2015
Location: Europe
Posts: 852
9 211 hugs
given |
#106
Having a tough day don't know if it's the PMS or the weekend isolation or getting turned down for the job and getting slightly desperate for something better. Just feeling sad since last night. Watching the band that has gotten me through the last couple of weeks relatively cheerful now makes me miss live music. Hmpf.
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AzulOscuro, Discombobulated
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Nov 2014
Location: Spain ( the land of flowers and gladness, lol!)
Posts: 3,825
9 1,758 hugs
given |
#107
Quote:
I keep on my thinking that coronavirus is not our main problem. There’s something up there in our heads that doesn’t work as it should. Oh, @rechu, I made a mistake but I can’t correct it now. I’d wish I could edit posts for a longer period of time because there are so many mistakes I made. But, sometimes I play with the language on purpose. 😀 __________________ Social Anxiety and Depression. Cluster C traits. Trying to improve my English. My apologies for errors and mistakes in advance. Mankind is complex: Make deserts blossom and lakes die. ( GIL SCOTT-HERSON) |
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Oct 2019
Location: UK
Posts: 4,692
(SuperPoster!)
4 11.6k hugs
given |
#108
Quote:
Yes I hope your closed borders will help keep this variant out, the UK was way to late to make India red list. We have trade deals with the country - say no more. |
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AzulOscuro
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#109
@AzulOscuro - I definitely think this pandemic has brought out the worst in people. We have a lot of Peruvians living here and I know several who are very concerned about family living there who haven't had the chance to get vaccinated.
@Discombobulated - Yeah, here the border closure was way to late to help with the Brazilian variant, but at least it should have an impact on the latest one. I imagine our President didn't want to piss off Bolsonaro, so they waited until it would look like it wasn't directed just at Brazil. We are supposed to vote this weekend. There are elections for municipal offices and the people that are going to write the new constitution. From the ads I have seen, no one running has a clue what should be included in a constitution, so I was not inspired to vote initially. When you add in almost 7,000 new cases the last few days and over 300 active cases in my municipality, I have less interest in risking it. Here there is a map you can view to see where the active cases are concentrated. It superimposes squares over the map. White squares are zero cases, yellow and orange refer to moderate numbers of cases and red is the worst. You can also see exactly how many cases there are in each square.Where we are, it's white, zero cases. However, where we have to vote, which is several km away, the map is all red with double digit active cases in every square around there. The Health Minister said that by the election we should be seeing around 3,000 new cases a day. Boy, was he wrong, again! I feel another spike of cases coming on in a week or so. Interesting, I looked at the area where we used to live on the map and there were quite a few active cases. 4 in the immediate square and areas to the north and west had 11 and 16. Yet, we are locked down and they aren't. |
AzulOscuro, Discombobulated
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Nov 2014
Location: Spain ( the land of flowers and gladness, lol!)
Posts: 3,825
9 1,758 hugs
given |
#110
Well, I’m not vaccinated, either.
__________________ Social Anxiety and Depression. Cluster C traits. Trying to improve my English. My apologies for errors and mistakes in advance. Mankind is complex: Make deserts blossom and lakes die. ( GIL SCOTT-HERSON) |
Grand Magnate
Member Since Nov 2014
Location: Spain ( the land of flowers and gladness, lol!)
Posts: 3,825
9 1,758 hugs
given |
#111
And to be honest, it’s ok. We have to pay our stupidity in dealing with this virus from the get go.
See New Zealand case. How they dealt with the matter to avoid their territory could be effected. F@cling borders close. So easy! If you don’t have the measures or the will to trail people who are already contagious. F@cking close the borders. __________________ Social Anxiety and Depression. Cluster C traits. Trying to improve my English. My apologies for errors and mistakes in advance. Mankind is complex: Make deserts blossom and lakes die. ( GIL SCOTT-HERSON) |
Grand Member
Member Since Jan 2015
Location: Europe
Posts: 852
9 211 hugs
given |
#112
Officially there is no more priority for vaccinations by GPs from tomorrow, meaning anyone who wants it can make an appointment.
Practically though, there still isn't nearly enough for everyone so I assume my doctor will keep giving more vulnerable people priority. And I don't want to be one of those people driving the nurse on the phone insane - I bet plenty of people will be calling trying to make an appointment :/ |
AzulOscuro, Discombobulated
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#113
@BreakForTheLight - yeah, in that situation, I'd probably wait a bit. You just know the first days after an announcement are going to be chaotic with a lot of people calling. I hope you can get in for an appointment relatively soon, though. Fingers crossed!
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#114
@AzulOscuro - I definitely think that here we missed a huge opportunity to do what New Zealand did. We didn't see the first case until March, when it was already causing trouble in other areas such as Europe and North America. Still, they let people in without a mandatory quarantine, knowing the virus was spreading around. All they had to do was fill in a form about their travels. The first case here was a doctor who was in Asia and Spain on vacation. He waltzed back here, went back to work at a health center in town and gave the virus to something like 8 or 9 co-workers and family members.
It took them over two weeks more for them to restrict entry to residents and citizens only. Arrivals were required to quarantine at that point, but it was pretty much an honor system. They could come to your house and check, but there is no way they could check everyone. I remember a case in those early days where another doctor that was supposed to be quarantining at home after returning from abroad was discovered in a supermarket. I'm not sure how it was determined that she wasn't supposed to be out. They shut down the whole store to sanitize it! |
AzulOscuro, Discombobulated
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AzulOscuro, Discombobulated
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Oct 2019
Location: UK
Posts: 4,692
(SuperPoster!)
4 11.6k hugs
given |
#115
Yes the borders were not shut in the UK until far too late either. Yet we could see what was happening in mainland Europe, why we didn't act is beyond me. I read much of the 1st wave came via the ski resorts (they sampled cases to know this).
Our borders are open for non essential travel again from today, this time we have requirements of a negative full test (they are expensive!) and vaccine certificate proof and proof of quarantine arrangements. Already there are counterfeiters and it's going to take border staff so much longer to examine these documents. I pity them. I don't even know if we're going to do official vaccine proof in the UK, I downloaded the NHS (public health) app and sure enough it's in my records, it would be easy enough to spoof. |
rechu
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rechu
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#116
My vaccines are already in the government system. Here we have a password that works for most government accounts. You sign into the "Yo Me Vacuno" site with that and it pulls up the vaccines, you had - brand, location where it was given and date. You can download a certificate with a QR code. I do wonder, though, if there is some sort of requirement for vaccination proof from other countries, how they are going to figure out what is real and what is falsified.
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Discombobulated
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Grand Member
Member Since Jan 2015
Location: Europe
Posts: 852
9 211 hugs
given |
#117
Quote:
I bet they won't be sending your digital vaccination proof by post though *coughGermanycough* |
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Discombobulated
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#118
Ugh, lockdown renewed again. We are heading towards nine weeks of this crap. FML. In theory the Health Minister, Public Health Undersecretary and that bimbo, what's she? Undersecretary for Crime Prevention say they know that these long quarantines don't work because they are hard to enforce and people get quarantine fatigue. But they STILL insist on imposing them anyways.
Speaking of which, the Undersecretary for Crime Prevention, she has been the victim of two attempts to steal her car. She was only saved because she has an armed escort car following her. The elections had a bunch of covidy-events. I think it was the right decision not to go. I'm not sure how it was known, but there were many reports of people that were supposed to be quarantining due to positive tests or close contacts who showed up to work the polls or vote anyways. Various voting places had to close down temporarily due to this. At one polling location, a guy showed up with covid-like symptoms, apparently coughing all over. They had to send the poll workers home to quarantine, disinfect the area and obligate some other voters to fill in to work the voting station. |
Discombobulated
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Oct 2019
Location: UK
Posts: 4,692
(SuperPoster!)
4 11.6k hugs
given |
#119
@rechu I was reading about the results of this election, it was reported as a positive outcome, how are you feeling about it?
2nd day of released restrictions and so far things feel calm. Although things are much looser now people are being advised to use common sense from a government who have shown very little common sense themselves IMO. I don't plan on going indoors in cafes etc just yet - our son is not vaccinated so don't want to chance bringing anything home to him. One thing I am planning on doing is going inside my parents house (not been indoors since last Sept although we did go in their beautiful garden last month). Just for a cup of tea and maybe some cake. They've had both their vaccinations and I'm almost a month after my first so I think it's as safe as it'll ever be. |
BreakForTheLight
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: Somewhere in South America
Posts: 2,212
8 1,039 hugs
given |
#120
@Discombobulated - As far as the mayoral, regional governor and city council elections, it is being portrayed as a progressive vs. conservative divide. I see two different things going on, however. There definitely was a rejection of the conservatives, some mayoral incumbents that are closely aligned with the President’s center-right coalition lost and I am sure that is related to his very low approval ratings and handling of the pandemic. At the same time it did feel like a wider rejection of traditional political parties with many younger independents without much political experience winning.
There were a lot of strange candidates that wanted to rewrite the constitution. In some cases, you would just scratch your head and say why does this person think they are in any way qualified to write a constitution? In the end, there were a few outlier weirdos chosen, but there were a lot of lawyers (the greatest %), along with educators, doctors, sociologists, journalists, etc. I will have to find the breakdown, I know I saw it somewhere. It’s going to be a while before we see what the new constitution will look like. Then there will be a vote to approve it. Basically, we won’t know for a while what it’s going to look like. Even so, our currency has fallen as has the stock market here, so I guess investors and the world at large is concerned about what might happen. Just my 2 cents 😊 . . . |
Discombobulated
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Discombobulated
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