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Corona virus, Port and the AFL. Part 4.

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Restrictions relaxing across the country. Getting a bit nervous?

Home COVID test:

1. Pour a large glass of red wine, try to smell it.

2. If you can smell the wine then drink it & see if you can taste it.

3. If you can taste & smell it, confirms you don't have COVID.

Last night I did the test 19 times and all were negative. Thank God.
 

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Restrictions relaxing across the country. Getting a bit nervous?

Home COVID test:

1. Pour a large glass of red wine, try to smell it.

2. If you can smell the wine then drink it & see if you can taste it.

3. If you can taste & smell it, confirms you don't have COVID.

Last night I did the test 19 times and all were negative. Thank God.

I tried but I got a headache and illness which I think are secondary symptoms, so I think I caught covid
 
Restrictions relaxing across the country. Getting a bit nervous?

Home COVID test:

1. Pour a large glass of red wine, try to smell it.

2. If you can smell the wine then drink it & see if you can taste it.

3. If you can taste & smell it, confirms you don't have COVID.

Last night I did the test 19 times and all were negative. Thank God.

That is actually more help than anything the SA Government has thus far put out. It would be nice to get an updated version of the COVID symptoms and what to do once you test positive. I took a look at the SA Health website and all I could find was vaccination info. I reckon they need to move off vaccination and onto detection and care. If people have not got their first shot by now they deserve everything they get.

SA Health are saying they have 1500 tablets which will allow them to monitor oxygen levels and vitals at home. What is as clear as mud is who decides if you need one of these and how you get one. Do COVID positive people visit the local GP for clinical assessment and risk spreading the virus? Do they attend the local hospital and sit for hours infecting all around them? In the early days of the Sydney and Melbourne outbreaks several people died at home and I suspect that is a possibility in SA.

At present with low case numbers SA Health contact you if you have a positive result and tell you what to do however if the system becomes overloaded, as it may well do, are they going to be able to phone everyone who tests positive?

I suspect it will be a case of contracting the virus, exhibiting symptoms, getting tested, isolating at home monitoring your symptoms and calling an ambulance if things get too bad then of course hoping an ambulance comes.

Of course the anti vaxxers and freedom fighters out on the streets will be worse off but **** them just don't give them my ambulance and my place in the queue and my monitoring device. Give them a taste of their own medicine.

There are currently 15,000 applications for entry into SA waiting to be rubber stamped. Among that lot there are bound to be some infected people.

 
Dan Andrews: "In regards to your specific comments about the vaccine mandates, our research indicates one person can't make a difference no matter how big a screwball he is, so let me close by saying..."

Craig Kelly: "And the horse I rode in on! I'll show them what one screwball can do!"




 

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Dan Andrews: "In regards to your specific comments about the vaccine mandates, our research indicates one person can't make a difference no matter how big a screwball he is, so let me close by saying..."

Craig Kelly: "And the horse I rode in on! I'll show them what one screwball can do!"





Psyop in full swing
 
That is actually more help than anything the SA Government has thus far put out. It would be nice to get an updated version of the COVID symptoms and what to do once you test positive. I took a look at the SA Health website and all I could find was vaccination info. I reckon they need to move off vaccination and onto detection and care. If people have not got their first shot by now they deserve everything they get.

SA Health are saying they have 1500 tablets which will allow them to monitor oxygen levels and vitals at home. What is as clear as mud is who decides if you need one of these and how you get one. Do COVID positive people visit the local GP for clinical assessment and risk spreading the virus? Do they attend the local hospital and sit for hours infecting all around them? In the early days of the Sydney and Melbourne outbreaks several people died at home and I suspect that is a possibility in SA.

At present with low case numbers SA Health contact you if you have a positive result and tell you what to do however if the system becomes overloaded, as it may well do, are they going to be able to phone everyone who tests positive?

I suspect it will be a case of contracting the virus, exhibiting symptoms, getting tested, isolating at home monitoring your symptoms and calling an ambulance if things get too bad then of course hoping an ambulance comes.

Of course the anti vaxxers and freedom fighters out on the streets will be worse off but fu** them just don't give them my ambulance and my place in the queue and my monitoring device. Give them a taste of their own medicine.

There are currently 15,000 applications for entry into SA waiting to be rubber stamped. Among that lot there are bound to be some infected people.

Yes they said today that if they get overwhelmed they will send out auto texts until they can talk to individuals by phone and that they will have enough temp probes and oximeters.
They say they have learned a lot from the eastern states so we shall see.
 
On Sunday, official Australian Government data showed 77.2 per cent of the state’s population aged over 16 had received two vaccination doses. Just over 87 per cent of the same population group had received at least one dose. The double-vaccination rate for Aboriginal people was 46.7 per cent as of yesterday. For South Australians aged 12-15 years, the rate is lower – 43.15 per cent.
 
On Sunday, official Australian Government data showed 77.2 per cent of the state’s population aged over 16 had received two vaccination doses. Just over 87 per cent of the same population group had received at least one dose. The double-vaccination rate for Aboriginal people was 46.7 per cent as of yesterday. For South Australians aged 12-15 years, the rate is lower – 43.15 per cent.
And the rate is slowing. I guess if we have a big outbreak the more reticent will get off their bums and do something.
 
One Nation Leader PaulineHansonOz will withhold support for all government legislation unless the Prime Minister backs her bill to stop mandatory vaccinations.

One Nation Leader Pauline Hanson will withhold support for all government legislation unless the Prime Minister backs her bill to stop mandatory vaccinations. Ms Hanson will introduce her legislation in the Senate tomorrow which seeks to make it unlawful to discriminate against Australians who choose not to be vaccinated against.
 

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I know it’s not your average ‘Today’ or ‘Sunrise’ show science that relies on repeated fear driven images to push the corporate/fascist narrative.

Coming from the guy who linked us to a 200-page self-published manifesto authored by a habitual conspiracist.

Gee whiz, fella.
 
Instead we spend over $2B on the new RAH and closed the old one for a net gain of 50 beds. *slow clap*

At least we have wards where each inpatient has their own dedicated bathroom now, which wasn’t the case at the old RAH. That would account for considerable space, you’d think.

When I had a spontaneous haemothorax in 2014 that particular situation was peak shambles.
 
Can't wait til there's a breakout at a vaccination mandate venue and the blame is on the unvaccinated rather than the notably ineffective vaccine compared to the other immunisations we've been brought up with.

The most effective ones we grew up with (smallpox, polio, measles) were for diseases that are only present in humans, with no other natural reservoir — making them less prone to mutation, easier to isolate away from, easier to prevent entirely via vaccination and achieve herd immunity more rapidly.

This clearly isn’t the case with COVID (which was recently discovered to be rampant in white-tailed deer for instance) and the myriad strains of influenza (which infect humans, pigs, birds, etc) — mutations are far more common and the disease is constantly circulating outside of humans, which naturally results in those vaccines being less effective than their aforementioned counterparts. It’s not ideal, but it is what it is — it’s not some failing of vaccine development or as is often inferred, a deliberate ScAm To SeLL mOrE bOoStErS.

Besides, with the way people carry on even if they do further perfect a COVID shot with say 80-95% efficacy in-line with those aforementioned vaccines, that’ll be construed as all part of ‘the plan’ anyway 🤷‍♀️
 
One Nation’s vaccine mandate bill has just been rejected by the Senate, despite five government senators crossing the floor.

Liberals Alex Antic, Gerard Rennick and Concetta Fierravanti-Wells, National Matt Canavan, and Country Liberal Sam McMahon voted for the One Nation bill, while the rest of the government, Labor, Greens and crossbench voted against.

In one final twist - Pauline Hanson and Malcolm Roberts were unable to vote for their own bill, because they are still in Queensland, attending parliament remotely.
 
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