VACCINES - A SLOW-ACTING CURE FOR LOCKDOWNS Well my state of Victoria, Australia, is back into a fourth lockdown as some little-understood Indian variant of the virus infected a bloke in hotel quarantine in South Australia before they left and headed over to Melbourne where it has spread to at least 44 people at the current count (though none less than a few hundred kilometers away from me), after eighty-something days of no locally-acquired cases. Unusually it did actually disrupt a plan for me because I was going to be helping some family with a garage sale. Though I'm quite relieved actually because the whole thing was driving me nuts, I don't know why I let myself get caught up in these things. Well actually I do, because I've got a whole pile of things to sort out that I picked for myself last weekend while helping prepare for it, but still dealing with all the other people involved is a high price to pay. It's funny really that things can go from last weekend when hosting a garage sale seemed perfectly reasonable, you didn't need to wear a mask except on public transport or at the doctors, and the little bottles of hand sanitiser at the door of shops were empty and ignored, to at least seven days of not leaving home except for essential reasons, and wearing a mask everywhere if you do. Although the idea's hardly new at this point I suppose. But this snap lockdown idea seemed to be much better executed last time where they brought it in just as the first few cases were detected. Going from the media reports, the plan this time seemed to be that they'd just stick with the contact tracing route because from the second infection onwards the people infected after that were all "close contacts". Except they didn't know how that second person got infected from the one who caught the virus in quarantine, so on that basis alone the whole concept seemed flawed to me. But it's really this quarantine situation that pisses me off. It must be getting close to a year since experts started saying that using high-rise inner-city hotels as quarantine facilities for arrived overseas travellers just wasn't workable. I was already adding at that point that having the workers there go home or wherever they want in the city once their shift ends was ridiculous. The politicians would insist that you just couldn't expect workers to stay locked up in the same hotel, yet they're happy to tell EVERYONE IN THE STATE to stay at home because their weak management of the quarantine has gone wrong again. Actually the only reason they can't expect the workers to stay locked up is because, at least a year ago, they were being paid peanuts because the security company that the government employed to do the job subcontracted another company that subcontracted another company, or something like that, so you can imagine they must have been robbing the government blind just charging them money for nothing. Then these "gig economy" workers got employed to actually do the work in the quarantine hotels, between their meal delivery shifts, which is about the worst arrangement you could possibly imagine. As for the idea of setting up dedicated quarantine facilities? Oh, too expensive, and it would take ages by which time we'll have the vaccine anyway. Gah, for one thing all they needed to do was haul in a bunch of construction site offices and kit them up with some basic amenities - they've been getting estimates of between $150,000 and $200,000 for each of these these little "cabins", you'd think they were making them out of solid silver or something! So as a result, even now the state government still can't secure enough federal funding to go ahead with building a proper quarantine facility. https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/howard-springs-builders-could-get-victorian-village-up-in-four-months-20210217-p573cq.html What I think this all demonstrates is how completely ineffective the government really is. Oh they can spell out 22 pages of restrictions on everyone easy peasy, leaving us to immediately adapt our lives and businesses to suit. Somehow us Aussies seem to do a much better job of that than many other countries in world given that we keep working back to "COVID ZERO" (which, I'll add, many in the government originally claimed wasn't even going to be possible after the first big outbreak) for a few months at a time. But when it comes to things like quarantine that the government actually has to implement themselves, they're absolutely hopeless. Also, as hopeless at the state government's been, this latest case coming over from hotel quarantine in another state must be a clear demonstration of why quarantine is officially a duty of the federal government rather than the states and territories. But of course a large part of all this trouble really just boils down to gutless politicians passing responsibility at the first opportunity. And that's all without going into the vaccine rollout, which is actually the key point of criticism in the media at the moment. For my purposes it wouldn't really matter if that was a bit slow so long as they could manage the quarantine, and I've said enough already without going into it. Nevertheless, I'm eligable as a volunteer firefighter even though I'm well below the minimum limit for the general public, so early this month I booked in at the local doctor's. 3:45PM on the 21st of June, and they don't know whether they'll have the Pfizer vaccine or the Astra* one that clots younger people up. To be fair I could drive into the nearest big city to get to one of their "vaccine hubs". But it's on the other side of the nearest such city, that I hate driving in, and apparantly the parking around there is always full (also the only car park that I actually remember seeing vaguely near there had one car where all its wheels had been stolen last time I was there). By the way, current(ish) stats here are 12% of the population with a first dose of something (mostly Astra-what'sit, which is the only one being made locally), 2% with a second dose. So that's my lockdown whinge. I know that compared to the rest of the world Australia has really been exceptionally lucky with how this virus keeps failing to get a permanent hold even without a vaccine. Still, it's that same fact that makes these constant repeats of quarantine leaks and corresponding lockdowns so frustrating. - The Free Thinker