Re: Vaccine ****ery
Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2022 11:34 am
Tom Cardy hasn't wasted any time...
That sounds... unpleasant.Chris Preston wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 10:57 amMoving on from vaccines to masks, I am currently not in South Australia on the first trip Mrs P an I have taken across state borders in 2 years. All Australian states now have mask requirements of various sorts for indoor public places. Yesterday early evening as I went back to the hotel for an increased layer of protection from the elements, I got into the lift (the stairs have been roped off as a COVID-19 risk) a family of 5, 4 of whom were not wearing masks, decided they were going to join me. I left the lift and for some unknown reason, one of the family did the same.
This person then decided they needed to interrogate me as to why I did not stay in the lift. I responded that it was because they were not wearing masks. That was absolutely the wrong thing to say. I had to ask the girl behind the hotel desk to call the police before he would stop threatening me.
Needless to say, we are now at a different hotel.
Wow, what an unpleasant experience. Covid is really bringing out the worst in people.Chris Preston wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 10:57 amMoving on from vaccines to masks, I am currently not in South Australia on the first trip Mrs P an I have taken across state borders in 2 years. All Australian states now have mask requirements of various sorts for indoor public places. Yesterday early evening as I went back to the hotel for an increased layer of protection from the elements, I got into the lift (the stairs have been roped off as a COVID-19 risk) a family of 5, 4 of whom were not wearing masks, decided they were going to join me. I left the lift and for some unknown reason, one of the family did the same.
This person then decided they needed to interrogate me as to why I did not stay in the lift. I responded that it was because they were not wearing masks. That was absolutely the wrong thing to say. I had to ask the girl behind the hotel desk to call the police before he would stop threatening me.
Needless to say, we are now at a different hotel.
Prof Antonella Viola was apparently targeted because of her public backing for children to be vaccinated.
Some countries make is very hard for someone who has been deported to ever get another visa. Is Australia like that? i.e. if his legal challenges fail, might he face a long term ban for attempting to enter without complying with the requirements?Chris Preston wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 10:40 amDjokovic will not be allowed into Australia and will be deported.
They do. I believe you are banned from entering for 3 years. However, it is likely in this case that an exemption might be made for a future trip provided all the requirements were met. Craig Tiley is doing more ducking and weaving than the English openers. If it turns out that Tennis Australia provided the wrong advice, Djokovic could get some leniency.Millennie Al wrote: ↑Fri Jan 07, 2022 12:51 amSome countries make is very hard for someone who has been deported to ever get another visa. Is Australia like that? i.e. if his legal challenges fail, might he face a long term ban for attempting to enter without complying with the requirements?Chris Preston wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 10:40 amDjokovic will not be allowed into Australia and will be deported.
“Djokovic is not being held captive in Australia,” Andrews told the national broadcaster ABC. “He is free to leave [the country] at any time that he chooses to do so and border force will actually facilitate that.”
But he didn't play by the rules, which are the same for everyone no matter how many times a champion they are, because the rules say that you need to be vaccinated or otherwise be quarantined.“It’s not fair. The guy played by the rules, he got his visa, he arrives, he’s a nine-time champion and whether people like it or not he’s entitled to fair play,” McNamee told the ABC.
Yes, Australia is enforcing its rules, and he wasn't following them, he was trying to get around them, and assuming that he'd get special treatment from being "the No 1 player in the world".“Players need to know with confidence that if they’re flying around the world to events, there’s not going to be this sort of problem at entry. It’s a problem we’ve seen over the last two years in Australia and the victim of that is the No 1 player in the world.
“He was following the rules. Now you might be angry that he was given an exemption, but players need to have confidence that the rules they abide by are going to be enforced.”
Ryanair's twitter is so jokes
Voráčová is believed to have entered Australia last month with a vaccine exemption granted by Tennis Australia because she had recently contracted and recovered from COVID-19.
But he doesn't have Covid at the moment, so he can sit on an aeroplane just fine.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Fri Jan 07, 2022 11:25 amSeems a bit daft that he can't play tennis outside but can go on an aeroplane. Surely he should have to finish quarantine before either? I wouldn't want to sit next to the germy c.nt.
He was granted a temporary visa to enter Australia on 18 November, and received a letter from the chief medical officer of Tennis Australia on 30 December recording he had a “medical exemption from Covid vaccination” on the ground that he had recently recovered from the virus.
On New Year’s Day, Djokovic had also received a document from the home affairs department about his Australian travel declaration, which told Djokovic that “[his] Australia travel declaration [had] been assessed” and that “[his] responses indicate[d] that [he met] the requirements for a quarantine-free arrival into Australia where permitted by the jurisdiction of your arrival”.
Tennis Australia informed players that a prior infection would be a reason to exempt them from Australia’s tough border restrictions. That advice was given despite the health department telling Tennis Australia on two occasions that exemptions did not exist for those recently infected with Covid.
That makes him look worse.shpalman wrote: ↑Sat Jan 08, 2022 9:09 amThe documents reveal that Djokovic relied on a very recent Covid-19 infection, recorded on 16 December by the Institute of Public Health of Serbia, to argue he was exempt from vaccine travel requirements.
He was granted a temporary visa to enter Australia on 18 November, and received a letter from the chief medical officer of Tennis Australia on 30 December recording he had a “medical exemption from Covid vaccination” on the ground that he had recently recovered from the virus.
On New Year’s Day, Djokovic had also received a document from the home affairs department about his Australian travel declaration, which told Djokovic that “[his] Australia travel declaration [had] been assessed” and that “[his] responses indicate[d] that [he met] the requirements for a quarantine-free arrival into Australia where permitted by the jurisdiction of your arrival”.Tennis Australia informed players that a prior infection would be a reason to exempt them from Australia’s tough border restrictions. That advice was given despite the health department telling Tennis Australia on two occasions that exemptions did not exist for those recently infected with Covid.
Ben Rothenberg
@BenRothenberg
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There’s more:
On December 17th, the day *after* Djokovic’s purported positive PCR test on December 16th, Djokovic attended an award ceremony for children at the Novak Tennis Center.
Many posts from the kids there posing for pictures with him that day, again masklessly indoors.
That's the charitable interpretation.
The ABF did not confirm their names, but one is understood to be Czech player Renata Voráčová, according to Sky News.