"You vill take your AZ vaccine and you vill like it!!" Colonel Klink
#151

I am not having any vaccine, not been tested not going to be tested, If you can’t see the biased reporting from mainstream media, big tech part in the narrative, Numbers that don’t add up, it you want to believe all the spin and lies knock yourself out, good for you, take the vaccine.
The fear for a virus that the vast majority need to be tested to see if they have it, let’s ruin the worlds economy, ignore mental health, cancer and all manner of other deaths. Now we hear cases as there are no deaths, MSM keeping the fear going.
Big tech spent a year spinning Fauci cover up that the virus wasn’t man made, labelled posts, cancelled people labelled them conspiracy theorites that expressed it could have come from a bat virus lab in Wuhan Seems the 5000 emails have exposed those lies.
The difference between a conspiracy and the truth seems to be about 6-12 months
The fear for a virus that the vast majority need to be tested to see if they have it, let’s ruin the worlds economy, ignore mental health, cancer and all manner of other deaths. Now we hear cases as there are no deaths, MSM keeping the fear going.
Big tech spent a year spinning Fauci cover up that the virus wasn’t man made, labelled posts, cancelled people labelled them conspiracy theorites that expressed it could have come from a bat virus lab in Wuhan Seems the 5000 emails have exposed those lies.
The difference between a conspiracy and the truth seems to be about 6-12 months


#152
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 13,949












And how many billions in excess economic shutdown days / dollars / lost jobs / lost businesses / weeks of kids out of school--(yeah, sure, that's all the states' fault
)--did that idiotic/ideological 'hardline' negotiation stance cost us, compared to Pfizer holding the line on what they have ended up charging us per dose anyway...?


#153

all good geeze, we can't all agree on everything. The way I see it is Australia had 2 choices with vaccination roll out. 1, do the Australian thing and hold off a bit and learn from other's mistakes (arguably sensible considering our limited cases) or 2, be at the forefront of world vaccine rollout.
What they've done is put us on a wobbly confused line somewhere between the two which isn't succeeding. I'd have been happy with 1 or 2 but 1.5 sucks donkey balls.
What they've done is put us on a wobbly confused line somewhere between the two which isn't succeeding. I'd have been happy with 1 or 2 but 1.5 sucks donkey balls.

#154
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 13,949












I was just listening to a piece on the radio about how our government 'negotiated' with Pfizer last year - basically they didn't. Pfizer wanted to smash supply into Australia as an example of how a whole country could be vaccinated quickly. Our government in response demanded access to Pfizer's IP and pushed them on price (which I have no problem with actually). All this did was piss Pfizer off. I like Morrison but his claim last year that Australia was at the front of the queue for vaccines was basically bullshit
Interesting conversation with some of the younger parents at my kids school. They are all struggling to get a vax booking. All around the early 40's mark. The consensus was that they have pumped their bodies with enough crap in their times, been on long haul flights, done the contraceptive pill, blood clots are a risk in so many places, if AZ becomes available to their age bracket then they are all over it, rather than wait for whenever we get enough Pfizer supply.
Last edited by Beoz; Jun 22nd 2021 at 12:15 am.

#155

Interesting conversation with some of the younger parents at my kids school. They are all struggling to get a vax booking. All around the early 40's mark. The consensus was that they have pumped their bodies with enough crap in their times, been on long haul flights, done the contraceptive pill, blood clots are a risk in so many places, if AZ becomes available to their age bracket then they are all over it, rather than wait for whenever we get enough Pfizer supply.

#156
Banned










Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 22,348













#157
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 22,348













#158
BE Enthusiast





Thread Starter
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 682












I logged in this morning to the VIC gov vaccine booking website, in order to see if I could book something new. Turns out my booking wasn't cancelled after all, so I couldn't look at potential new bookings online through that site (because I was still locked in to the original one). Meanwhile, the site was abysmally slow to respond to anything, so I gave up, and went to work.
A mate of mine at work saw an apparent Pfizer-related appointment available *today* at a major Melbourne site (which had previously shown no appointment availability at all, for at least a month). I thought, hmm, maybe a late cancellation, well I can make that, but I can't do it online cuz I'm still locked into the other one.
So I called the hotline again. And now the story is:
- The major Melbourne site's "today" opportunity, that my mate found, doesn't actually exist. There might be second-dose Pfizer jab availability at that site, but the hotline CSR couldn't understand why the apparent first-shot booking opportunity was shown at all. (Note that my mate was still on the VIC vaccine-booking website while I was on the call, refreshing regularly, and telling me "nope, it's still there", even while the CSR was telling me otherwise.)
- Meanwhile, it is apparently lucky that last night's hotline CSR actually didn't cancel my own original booking after all. Because, apparently, "vaccine unallocated" status for an appointment is a 'good thing' at that location, which is also the only location anywhere in Metro Melbourne that actually currently has 1st-dose Pfizer shots available. So I'm still booked in for early July, for what *should* be a Pfizer shot.
- Unfortunately, last night's hotline CSR *did* manage to cancel my wife's appointment, though not my own. So she has now been bumped by 3 further weeks to receive a first Pfizer jab.
Or so I'm told now.
Please note, I don't blame the CSRs. (The last CSR did kinda flame the second-last CSR, but apparently treated it as a "training opportunity".) All came across in a professional manner, and appeared to make an effort, reflecting whatever training and/or current information they had about how to handle the change in policy.
But it's clear that the VIC booking system is not keeping up to rapid policy changes, in a context where it *has to expect to be able* to keep up with rapid policy changes.
Last edited by abner; Jun 22nd 2021 at 8:12 am.

#159

Hard times create good leaders
Good leaders create good times
Good times creates soft leaders
Soft leaders create hard times
Or something along those lines
Repeat
Good leaders create good times
Good times creates soft leaders
Soft leaders create hard times
Or something along those lines
Repeat

#161
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 22,348












Which reminds me, how's things going on your end of this great continent?

#162
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Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 682












For all the armchair critics who second-guessed my preference to receive Pfizer (or Moderna) over Astra Zeneca:
Even the government is bailing out on AZ
Even the government is bailing out on AZ

#163

Things are good, work is busy. I work 3 days a week from home and 2 days in the the city - a balance I enjoy. In August, my wife and I are doing a road trip North to Exmouth, Coral Bay and Monkey Mia - our first time up there and really looking forward to it - our first holiday in 2 years
My son finished school last year and has just recently been selected for either the Defence Force Academy or the Royal Military College in Canberra to train as an officer in the army. He wants to do infantry (WTF!!) or army aviation. He's turned out to be a great bloke and we're very proud of him - we've got something right
It's been so cold here recently - probably the coldest I've known it - especially working at home here in this big draughty old place we call home!

#164
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 22,348












Yes. If you really want to truly, f**k something up, get a socialist involved so a Labor government would be a disaster for Australia. I was more alluding to the fact that we live in good times but our world is full of soft leaders. Look at them - Johnson, Trudeau, Biden, Morrison, Ardern, Macron etc. Some of them may be competent and/or doing a good job but none of them are exactly inspirational or making tough choices. It will take a crisis to bring out the best leaders - cometh the hour, cometh the (wo)man
Things are good, work is busy. I work 3 days a week from home and 2 days in the the city - a balance I enjoy. In August, my wife and I are doing a road trip North to Exmouth, Coral Bay and Monkey Mia - our first time up there and really looking forward to it - our first holiday in 2 years
My son finished school last year and has just recently been selected for either the Defence Force Academy or the Royal Military College in Canberra to train as an officer in the army. He wants to do infantry (WTF!!) or army aviation. He's turned out to be a great bloke and we're very proud of him - we've got something right
It's been so cold here recently - probably the coldest I've known it - especially working at home here in this big draughty old place we call home!
Things are good, work is busy. I work 3 days a week from home and 2 days in the the city - a balance I enjoy. In August, my wife and I are doing a road trip North to Exmouth, Coral Bay and Monkey Mia - our first time up there and really looking forward to it - our first holiday in 2 years
My son finished school last year and has just recently been selected for either the Defence Force Academy or the Royal Military College in Canberra to train as an officer in the army. He wants to do infantry (WTF!!) or army aviation. He's turned out to be a great bloke and we're very proud of him - we've got something right
It's been so cold here recently - probably the coldest I've known it - especially working at home here in this big draughty old place we call home!
Cool, so your son is coming over to my part of the country. He'll enjoy it here, and also be an easy distance from Sydney and Melbourne. Drop me a line if I can be any help. My sons are a bit older (23 and 25), and have also turned into fine strapping young men. My wife and I also feel like somehow we just got everything right with them. Must be this awesome Australian environment. I'm sure they would be more than happy to show him around the city, etc if he wants.
Usually this time of the year we're already into -5, -6 kinds of temperatures overnight and so far this year it's struggled to get below zero. But we've had heaps and heaps of rain - actually it's raining now. All of our dams are literally overflowing and everything looks amazingly lush and green. PM me your email addy and I'll share some drone footage with you.
Enjoy your holiday. Two years without a good break is a long time to wait.
Last edited by paulry; Jun 23rd 2021 at 3:25 pm.

#165
Account Closed
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 0


I'm quite happy to have had the AZ, but if us that have had it end up on some second tier 'vaccinated but still scum' list I'm going to be pretty filthy about it.
