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Coronavirus/Covid-19 Discussion Thread (1 Viewer)

Would you take a coronavirus vaccine if it was available to you, and if so which would you prefer?

  • No

    Votes: 18 11.6%
  • Any vaccine

    Votes: 19 12.3%
  • Pfizer

    Votes: 47 30.3%
  • Astra Zeneca

    Votes: 1 0.6%
  • Already vaccinated with AZ

    Votes: 2 1.3%
  • Already vaccinated with Pfizer

    Votes: 62 40.0%
  • Moderna

    Votes: 2 1.3%
  • Sputnik

    Votes: 1 0.6%
  • Janssen

    Votes: 2 1.3%
  • Novavax

    Votes: 1 0.6%

  • Total voters
    155

Drdusk

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Apparently Sydney’s most famous Chinese/Cantonese restaurant went out of business because of the whole lockdown situation. Even a former US President has eaten at that restaurant.
 

enoilgam

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I also think whilst we wont reach herd immunity, as people get infected and vaccinated, COVID will progressively become less deadly and severe. Also, viruses tend to eventually mutate towards more contagious but less virulent forms over time, which could also help this crisis die out.
 

Trebla

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We have to be comfortable with the reality that there is just too much uncertainty. We cannot demand guarantees for something that is unpredictable. No one knows how the virus will behave over time, the best you can do is speculate what might happen. There is always the possibility that lockdowns could return if hospitals get overwhelmed.

On a side note, an interesting observation is that the beta variant is apparently the most vaccine resistant variant of concern, yet it got overtaken by the delta variant due to its higher infectiousness.
 

enoilgam

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We have to be comfortable with the reality that there is just too much uncertainty. We cannot demand guarantees for something that is unpredictable. No one knows how the virus will behave over time, the best you can do is speculate what might happen. There is always the possibility that lockdowns could return if hospitals get overwhelmed.
My point is, I don't think lockdowns are worth the cost even if hospitals are overrun. Whilst both are terrible, terrible situations I think overrun hospitals aren't as bad as ongoing lockdowns. I think the primary reason that the worlds economy hasn't faced the economic Armageddon that was predicted is because business have assumed this will be temporary and have gone into hibernation. If it is ongoing and the uncertainty continues, business confidence will take a permanent and lasting hit and then we will be in serious trouble.

Ive said this since the beginning of the pandemic, but people who say health is more important then the economy have rocks in their head. Health and wealth go hand in hand. Those "non-essential" small businesses are the backbone of Australia, their taxes generate the money that fuels hospitals. Contrary to popular belief, hospitals don't run on good will and fairy dust, they run on cold hard cash and represent one of the biggest economic costs in a country. As hard as it is, the healthcare system needs to develop its capacity so it can handle any surge whilst the country keeps running - otherwise, there wont be much of a healthcare system left when COVID finally does end.
 

Hiheyhello

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My point is, I don't think lockdowns are worth the cost even if hospitals are overrun. Whilst both are terrible, terrible situations I think overrun hospitals aren't as bad as ongoing lockdowns. I think the primary reason that the worlds economy hasn't faced the economic Armageddon that was predicted is because business have assumed this will be temporary and have gone into hibernation. If it is ongoing and the uncertainty continues, business confidence will take a permanent and lasting hit and then we will be in serious trouble.

Ive said this since the beginning of the pandemic, but people who say health is more important then the economy have rocks in their head. Health and wealth go hand in hand. Those "non-essential" small businesses are the backbone of Australia, their taxes generate the money that fuels hospitals. Contrary to popular belief, hospitals don't run on good will and fairy dust, they run on cold hard cash and represent one of the biggest economic costs in a country. As hard as it is, the healthcare system needs to develop its capacity so it can handle any surge whilst the country keeps running - otherwise, there wont be much of a healthcare system left when COVID finally does end.
true
i reckon that once we’ve reached the 80% target we have to open up because lockdowns simply aren’t sustainable to support consumer livelihoods unless the economy and workforce entirely transferred online. but the issue with transferring everything online is there’d be a time lag which would create lotsa structural unemployment, and i don’t think anyone wants to live in isolation as a long term solution. we just have to hope that the vaccines reduce symptoms to some extent (less strain on hospitals), and may need to get used to vaccines as a regular part of our lives.
 

Trebla

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My point is, I don't think lockdowns are worth the cost even if hospitals are overrun. Whilst both are terrible, terrible situations I think overrun hospitals aren't as bad as ongoing lockdowns. I think the primary reason that the worlds economy hasn't faced the economic Armageddon that was predicted is because business have assumed this will be temporary and have gone into hibernation. If it is ongoing and the uncertainty continues, business confidence will take a permanent and lasting hit and then we will be in serious trouble.

Ive said this since the beginning of the pandemic, but people who say health is more important then the economy have rocks in their head. Health and wealth go hand in hand. Those "non-essential" small businesses are the backbone of Australia, their taxes generate the money that fuels hospitals. Contrary to popular belief, hospitals don't run on good will and fairy dust, they run on cold hard cash and represent one of the biggest economic costs in a country. As hard as it is, the healthcare system needs to develop its capacity so it can handle any surge whilst the country keeps running - otherwise, there wont be much of a healthcare system left when COVID finally does end.
Whilst I agree that we cannot have lockdowns as a long term solution, I actually think that we are not yet at that boundary point between temporary measures vs sustained measures. We are still in the midst of grappling with short term issues and will be for a while yet, especially given under 12s are still not yet in scope for vaccination anytime soon.

The whole relationship between health and wealth goes both ways. If we get to the point where ordinary people are not even able to access normal health care due to an overwhelmed system then you are inevitably going to have a collapse in economic activity. That would come from aspects such as lost productivity/output with too many people getting sick and reduced consumer activity - where people are afraid to go out and spend if they think they might not get proper treatment should they become sick. At least in lockdown there is a goal of suppression, but without it people will be uncertain about how bad it could get. That uncertainty has flow on effects to consumer sentiment.

The reality is that we can create as much surge capacity in the system as we can but it can never handle large exponential growth (even worse if health care workers themselves end up hospitalised). I don’t think society would accept government inaction on an overwhelmed hospital system, especially if it is also hurting the economy.

If the vaccines hopefully hold up and we don’t have that scenario, then great. But I would not be surprised if lockdowns make a return should the hospital system be overwhelmed. As I said before, we need to manage our expectations for any potential scenario, not just the ones idealistically promised to us by the government or what we wish would happen.
 

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the vaccines aren't effective enough to provide herd immunity

covid will keep mutating and outpacing global vaccine supply chains

booster shots will continuously be needed bu tthere will be an attrition rate as many people will fail to get them year on year

lockdowns are finished and people have had enough, it wont be long before something serious happens that will force the hand of all state govts to lift restrictions and open borders, like a truckers strike (which has been threatened already)

end result of all of this in the long term: a slightly higher death rate

it will take at least one or two generations before we will start seeing objective analyses into the efficacy and value of these lockdowns
 

SylviaB

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im so annoyed by politicians talking about "reopening our borders to foreign visitors" or whatever as if its the grand goal of defeating covid (as opposed to letting Australians live normal lives and not having businesses be destroyed etc)

they really aren't that fucking necessary for our economy, and any benefit is offset at least in part by the fact that asutralians will spend huge amounts of money overseas themselves. and the benefit will be clearly negative when you account for the fact that foreigners WILL bring in covid and cause outbreaks that result in lockdowns that do a hell of a lot more economic damage than not bringing in foreigners
 

Paradoxica

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lol i love how you think you know me as though i give the remotest of a shit about endless consumer garbage that's available in first world western countries that i somehow could never live without if i didnt have

my life is very barely any different from most ppl in the third world as it is, arguably worse

im already seriously planning on moving to brazil or somewhere a faggot like you would never consider living in, but enjoy living indoors like a fucking coward
surviving isn't living
 

SylviaB

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it's still as relevant to the conversation as your remark
i wasnt even arguing against what you said, you doofus

i'm just independently pointing out the silliness of your putting something like that in your signature

the reddit thing is using post history to dismiss somebody's argument which i wasn't even trying to do ffs
 

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