The Forum > General Discussion > Emergencies, Reactions & The Aftermaths
Emergencies, Reactions & The Aftermaths
- Pages:
-
- Page 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- ...
- 6
- 7
- 8
-
- All
The National Forum | Donate | Your Account | On Line Opinion | Forum | Blogs | Polling | About |
Syndicate RSS/XML |
|
About Us :: Search :: Discuss :: Feedback :: Legals :: Privacy |
As examples of the overreaction and the closing down of economies, he offers the following:
In the hot bed of the virus, New York City,
1.Only 1.7% of people in their seventies who have contracted the disease were sick enough to be hospitalised.
2.Of 18 years-olds 0.01% were hospitalised.
3.Of 18-44 year-olds 0/01% were hospitalised.
It’s different in Australia, but almost none of the things we were threatened with have occurred. In Australia, there has been no informed debate permitted. Since March this year, Australia has been ruled by executive decree. We have effectively been a police state, although not quite - we can still say such things. For now.
We have experienced:
Loss of elementary rights
Excessive police power
Dobbing in
Mass media support for the regime.
All “temporary” of course, but so were were suspensions of freedoms in 1930s Germany. It took a world war to nullify them.
The most unlikely people are now praising PM Morrison’s actions. ‘He’s doing a good job’. ‘He’s protecting us. Same applied to Adolf Hitler until it was too late.
“Those who think that the state is always benign clearly have no understanding of history”. Temporary measures and policies do often have a way of becoming permanent after the emergency is over. Already we are hearing about the “new normal”. This might sound over-the-top; not possible in Australia.
Maybe.