Yesterday over 49,000 people tested positive for Covid infection.
Within the last week an average of 124 people died as a result of Covid each day in the UK.
That’s two double decker buses full of seated people.
Friends, wives, husbands, grandparents, mothers, fathers and the occasional
child.
Every day.
If a double decker bus ran off the road and into a ditch
killing all its occupants there would be outrage. An enquiry into what happened.
Two on the same day. Well, that’s hard to imagine. Almost as
bad as everyone dying on a crashed airplane. Well four a week actually if the
weekly figures are compared with a Boeing 747.
BUT
The UK Government website displays the numbers vaccinated first thereby placing emphasis on this rather than the many thousands actually affected by the virus on a daily basis. Yes, vaccination appears to be saving lives, reducing the severity of illness in most of those vaccinated but coronavirus is still there. Still killing people in airplane loads.
At the start of Lockdown 1 I was part of a group of friends who started zooming each Sunday, initially to support our dear friend John who was completely socially isolated as a result. As my Blog readers will know John sadly died but not of Covid. However, we have carried on zooming most weeks as we reach out to each other, voices of reason, debating the news headlines, deciding which masks are the best to wear on an airplane and in shops…
As a group – all retired - we fit into the brigade of vaccinated, eagerly
awaiting boosters, mask compliant, sanitising, handwashing, still social distancing
where we can and avoiding places/situations where we can’t.
Yet it feels as though there are not many of us left.
At the weekend Mr H and I stopped at a service station on
the M5 to use the loo and it was buzzing with crowds of non-mask wearing people
pushing past me as I headed, slowly, towards the sign for the Toilets. Mr H as
usual was by my side to block those non mask wearing pushers who were in too
much of a hurry to give a wobbly me the space I needed.
You wouldn’t think we were in the midst of a pandemic at
all would you I said to Mr H as we walked. I was feeling so angry I checked
the UK Gov Guidance which states: When You Should Wear a Face Covering:
We expect and recommend that members of the public continue to wear face coverings
in crowded and enclosed places (sounds like a service station to me…) where you
come into contact with people you don’t meet. For example, on public transport…
This brings me to Dimwits and back to my zooming friends. In
particular our zoom master, the organiser of our weekly chats Jeff Smith. He
has kept us entertained with his lengthy emails, summarising and commenting on
the day’s news headlines. He has just returned from a holiday in Mallorca and
this was our zoom sponsors take on what he witnessed…
There are just so many cases nowadays
in the UK, very nearly 45,000 yesterday… at an average rate of 387 per every
100,000 over the last seven days.
According to Reuters this morning, in
Spain over the last seven days, the average is currently at 4% of its peak…
that is an average of 1,538 cases per day, just 22 cases per 100,000. A significant
difference.
This is the personal view of an intelligent member
of the public who has witnessed first-hand the different approaches in the UK
and Europe. It is clear that a large percentage of the UK population don’t want
to protect their fellow man.