this is your perpetual refrain. remember when i said above that you've had nothing new to contribute on this topic since 18 months ago?
'if only this had never happened in the first place' ... this is your godrace engineer 'solution' to the crisis? moaning over spilt milk? sorry, that's not a policy.
i don't know if you've noticed dilbert, but businesses don't like paying higher tax rates. in fact, they go to great lengths to avoid them. one of the great characteristics of our current epoch is that multinationals and nation-leading corporations both expend a huge amount of effort to park their proceeds offshore. tax avoidance is the global game. your casual remark that 'profitable businesses can subsidize the ones affected by tourism' is fatuous in the extreme. nevermind that the sectors affected by covid shutdowns are much more numerous than merely tourism or hospitality. we've been here before. didn't your entire university sector almost fall over in the first year's fallout?
i don't know if you've also noticed, dilbert, but on a behavioural level, most regular people, with regular jobs, regular social lives, regular families, etc, – and bear with me here because i know that everything about your situation is most certainly irregular – most people were fed up with compliance. there is a behavioural limit after which people start to fadge and skip on observing the rules. that's human. you have to factor that fried and burnt out element into any prospective 'engineering know-it-all' fix you supposedly have. people just aren't going to follow it with perfect obedience or compliance. that means you're going to have clusters and covid outbreaks. and that means you need to be realistic about 'zero covid'. which you are not.
really you are hopeless. hopeless.
Last edited by uziq (2022-08-01 04:31:50)