Originally Posted by
Warb
On the other hand, the US have/are bouncing back, travel is possible, and life is getting back to normal. In comparison, half of Australia is in lockdown and (mostly importantly, I'm sure you'll agree) my holiday to Tasmania has been cancelled and everyone is out of stock of the spindle sander I want to buy.
Playing Devils Advocate again, the vast majority of deaths from covid are of people who are old and/or have significant underlying health issues. Earlier in this thread we touched on "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few", where we justified vaccination of aged care workers to protect their patients. In that case the few (those who didn't want to be vaccinated) were deemed to be less important than the rest of us. Now, on the other hand, we are suggesting that the needs of the 0.1% of Americans who died from covid outweighed the needs of the 99.9% who didn't. It's an interesting philosophical issue - how much harm/discomfort/restriction should we put on 99.9% of the population in order to protect the 0.1%. And for how long? Have the 0.1% been asked? I'm in my (late!) 50's, and my kid's schooling and lives in general have been stuffed around by covid. If I was in my 80's and living in a retirement home, I'm not sure whether I'd think I was being fair to them........
The vaccine is not 100% effective, as you say. It is also now blatantly obvious (and, in fact, has been from the start) that this disease is not going away. Like many other diseases we are going to have to learn to live with it. Currently Australia boasts low death rates, low infection rates and equally low vaccination rates. Unless we are live as a permanently isolated country in "perma-lockdown", I don't see how those numbers can last. Even with higher vaccination rates, that 60% efficacy rating of the vaccine means that 40% of the immunised population will still get, and spread, covid. The evidence suggests that those who are immunised experience less severe symptoms, but will that really help the old/weak/sick? Are we just delaying the inevitable (yes, I realise that death is always inevitable, but you know what I mean!)?
Devils advocate, as I said!!