I had not intended to publish another post until 2021 was behind us after the review a few days ago.
However, the decision of national cabinet yesterday, coupled with today’s Covid numbers changed my mind.
In the back of my memory is an early Monty Python sketch.
Two characters discussing the very disturbing rise in murders, and what should be done. One finally suggests that murder be made legal, end of the problem with murder rates and associated public outrage.
Yesterday our politicians ‘led’ by #scottyfrommarketing decided to change the definitions of what constitutes a ‘Close contact’. While the definitions and consequences have varied across states to date, they are now consistent, and will reduce the number of tests, and therefore the number of cases of Covid reported.
Problem solved?
Not as such.
Perhaps the political problem has been massaged, but Covid has not gone away. The collective memory of Australians will be that once again, politicians have, if not lied, then creatively massaged numbers to make black look a bit more like white.
It is Ok to acknowledge that this pandemic has become endemic, and despite all the science at our disposal, we are stumped, for the moment. That admission however tacitly concedes that people will become sick, and some, particularly the old and in some way vulnerable, will die. Not a good election promise.
The header graph is NSW covid cases to December 29th. The 30th, yesterday was 21,151 and today, the 31st will be added tomorrow, January 1, 2022. Probably not a good beginning to the year.
Yesterday’s 21,151 came from 148,410 swabs, a 14.3% infection rate. This is a number that very recently would have induced political panic, now it is just a number to be massaged.
I wonder what the gagged scientists think of the massaging?
Have a good, and distanced, new years eve celebration.
right out of the trumpian playbook – if we don’t test we don’t have cases! It’s at an intellectual level of the 3 year old who covers her eyes and says “ha hah you can’t see me”. Not just intellectual, but truly cynical
Thanks for the reminder of the 3 year old. it was a game I played with my granddaughter, now 5.
Fortunately, she has grown out of it, and now understands that the important thing is what other see, not what she can see, especially with eyes covered.
She does live with her parents in Canberra, being Covid refugees, perhaps my son should offer her as a mentor to #scottyfrommarketing? they are just down the road!