I agree. Given the miniscule risk of such an event materialising (every 100 years or so), the spending should have been minimal.
100 years... like the 100+ years it's been since 1918?
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I agree. Given the miniscule risk of such an event materialising (every 100 years or so), the spending should have been minimal.
Just let Amazon run storage and distribution in future. That's the debriefDo you think they are purposely leaving them like that though? Or do you think they should have planned for this kind of one in 100 year things? Just in case?
There are lots of countries in East and SE Asia where people do things like eat bats that have nowhere near as much censorship as China does. Most of these videos of 'Chinese eating bat soup' are actually filmed in countries like Indonesia or Polynesian Islands.
I mean in France they eat Frogs and force feeds Geese with a feeding tube to eat their livers. H1N1 in 2009 originated from either Mexico or the USA and the 1918 flu most likely came from Europe or North America. Its not unique to China.
Perhaps the best thing to come out of this worldwide will be that we start to actually improve sanitation standards for the animals that we eat. I doubt it though and I imagine that unfortunately once the heat reduces, China will restart the disgusting wet markets.
This is I guess where our responses differ. Rather than sitting here moaning about where it started, allowing a PH disaster to unfold (ie USA) I'd rather we have just gotten on with it and helped keep it under control like Singapore and Taiwan have. And considering we live in an open society and our government is responsible for us, as opposed to Xi, I'd rather focus my efforts on what we can actually influence.
Similarly to those who are just criticising as a reflex, I imagine there are some who are happy with the response now who would not be so if another party were in power.
Perhaps that's just my cynicism though.
One of the things I admire and enjoy seeing most in CZ is how the historic communist shackles are being thrown off. You can see it directly in the replacement of old buildings - especially in Moravia in my experience.
Some of the old habits die hard though. Being sticklers for rules and having a very proscriptive legal environment shoe that heavily. There's also still a strong distance between workers and management - something that's taken our company nearly 10 years to break down.
All of the respect of authority makes it far easier for the govt to get people to behave in a way that the UK govt simply couldn't do. We're not collective thinking people here - haven't been since the mid 70s (and even that was a hangover of WW2 measures).
Yet the public was very quick and almost entirely uniform in its obedience to the message to stay at home (at least in the areas I have contact with). That's a big difference to the UK. I had to go out and get some weed killer this morning - everyone in the queue for the store was complaining that we couldn't just go in and go about our business.
You can always send it this way.
Or just open that pub where you serve yourselves and go up on a leader-board against the other cities - you'd be rid of it all in a night!
No, I don't want to die from a strong breeze.Are...are you vegan now?
That's why I chose 100 years.100 years... like the 100+ years it's been since 1918?
Yeah, we do save our very best for sending over to Prague - delightful bunch aren't they?The newer buildings in Prague have already taken on varying new looks, within the limits for UNESCO, but still lots of the old style communist remain in the suburbs although it is changing. Mind you I do hate the v-tower with a passion, just ugly and seemed stupid to be built where it is - plus it spoils my view from office
I can't pass comment on the worker/boss scenarios, I have been with this company for ten years now and majority of the evenings we're out with senior management for a few beers and there hasn't been much them n us at all. But this may be more to do with being in Prague than Moravia.
Respect for understanding why it was need yes, but for some of the members then not so much. Only last year we had the largest gatherings since the velvet revolution to demand Babis quits. But you are right in that there is very much more a sense of collectiveness here.
Brits love to complain about anything
Although a lot of it about covid I'd say is not understanding the fuss because many believe that it is just the flu, there is no full understanding of the implications involved with this thing currently and until they are directly/indirectly affected by it (the virus) then they will not understand. As soon as they are, the light bulb flicks on.
Yes, we took heed and stayed in. Does it make us subservient to do so or just understanding and realising that for a time we need to be careful?
I'd rather limit my possible exposure and avoid the chance to pass something on to someone that would make them very ill or potentially kill them, or even catch it myself.
Hehehe, not a chance , besides judging from the examples seen in the centre many an evening it looks like it is too strong for a lot of you.
Aaah yes, "The Pub" spent a few nights in there in the past and ashamed to say (or maybe pride) that we've topped the table a few times
These are the words of the editor of the Lancet at the end of January:
He is probably the loudest and most qualified critic of the government's actions. There's some very selective amnesia going on amongst those who simply want to criticise the government, no matter what.
He came across as very pompous on question time the other day.
So what else is new?
A couple of weeks back I was hearing people vehemently criticising a certain foreign government for a certain action they'd taken in response to this crisis, then in the next breath criticising Johnson just as vehemently for not doing that very same thing.
If nothing else I'm getting a crash course on how to filter out those for whom such an agenda overrides all else.
These are the words of the editor of the Lancet at the end of January:
He is probably the loudest and most qualified critic of the government's actions. There's some very selective amnesia going on amongst those who simply want to criticise the government, no matter what.
Its sad really, we are facing a situation that i have never seen in my life time and it seems some are more interested in making opinions on what as you says points towards agendas.
This has took every country by surprise and the results are awful but some seem to want to blame the people who are in power. Political bias should not be important at this time with all the deaths we are facing and it really is shocking that some may be using it that way.
The Chinese would lock down a fudging city if someone tweeted something they don't like.
I'm not sure you understand China and/or communism.
Horton should have no creditability after publishing the Wakefield paper and not retracting until 12 years later.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancet_MMR_autism_fraud
You can lay a lot of the blame about the rise of the anti vax movement at Horton's door.
He should realise he is just a journo at this stage and is far removed from medicine.
My post criticised him for making whatever pronouncements suited him at the time.@scaramanga why are you liking this when you've tried to use him as a credible source to back your sick, hyper-capitalist, sociopathic arguments? You're a total fraud.
What a dingdongMy word..... What an absolute macaron ass Officer!
Thankfully the jobsworth’s bosses decided to employ some common sense...What a dingdong
Trump must be sick of the sight of them!