Dodgy knees wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 7:24 pm
I do believe the UK does have a good share of the western world's uneducated, ill disciplined, mongy sorts, but, it ain't being helped by very complicated tier systems that many of us haven't
understand.
If the rules were black and white, in or out then folk can't blame others. If the country was in sync, all doing the same, it may of helped, but different bits doing different thinks ain't working. Folk will bend the rules, cross the borders, etc.
To be in this situation one year on, positive covid numbers, nightingales, sick hospital staff, really does show poor leadership. If it was company management under the spotlight, they would no longer be with the business , probably wishing them all the best for the future, maybe after a spell of gardening.
Happy New year.
In all honesty I don't think it's anything to do with lack of education or regional variations on rules, we had regional variations here earlier in the year and it worked extremely well (gone to shit since the restrictions were lifted though). I should imagine there are less police per head of population here than in the UK, but they got round this by setting up checkpoints going in and out of the cities (the hotbeds for the virus) which made going to a city a PITA, you don't want to spend an hour or two stuck in traffic unless you really need to. (It's also been great for the village shops, every grocery store in the village has expanded the range of foods they offer, 2 have extended their premises and the hardware shop is currently in the process of demolishing then rebuilding a bigger premises thanks to all the extra trade.)
I think it's more to do with a lack of enforcement (or, at least, a perceived lack of enforcement leading to a belief that they won't be 'caught') and an attitiude that they're entitled to do whatever they like because they work hard and need to unwind. I don't think they're uneducated, but possibly more immature whe it comes to obeying rules.
I'm not a fan of Boris, but I think it's right to have those regional variations. There's no point completely shutting down Manchester (for example) if the infection rate is low, just because the infection rate in London is high. Business needs a breather, as do people. Stopping people from travelling to and from areas with high infection rates should in theory help to slow the virus, but I guess police checkpoints wouldn't be too popular n the UK, and maybe not even possible given the number of entry and exit points (they got around that here by putting concrete barriers on minor roads but not 'advertising' it, another good way to put people off making unnecessary journeys. I remember a few posts from angry expats who thought they'd skip the checkpoints by using the back roads, only to give up after a fruitless drive where they kept meeting concrete barriers).