Christmas Mission: Everything is crazy | kurier.at



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After all, this is not the first time that regulations have caused confusion. It will have a deeper etymological reason why the verb is called an ordinance. The prefix “see” often has a negative connotation.

Let us remember only the paschal decree (by which the “decree” actually has a positive connection). Or the regulation that only “individuals” are allowed to meet. The conceptual distinction between hard and soft lock. Or the recent dispute over whether the police should monitor the quarantine enforcement of the apartments. She cannot because the clamor was too great. The chaos has long been too great, so even quarter-hour press conferences would not eliminate it.

Now he can cling to the government, criticize it for blindly delving into the virus as it tries to overcome the crisis, or defend it just as furiously on the grounds that things are not going better anywhere else. You can form a loud alliance with indignant sections of the population, or accuse them of ignorance. You can curse like “The Line” or split in two like Rumpelstiltskin.

Pressure creates physical and political back pressure, so in view of this crazy situation, it is useful to step back and look at the problem objectively and without ideologies. The fact is that we lost the fight against the virus at one central point; we cannot get rid of it, especially with the current inconsistency on all sides. The ugliness of pimples won’t go away. Mission lost 1.

So let’s go to Mission 2: Let’s finally learn to live with the virus, at least until vaccination coverage is high enough. Let’s check which risk seems appropriate for what and, when in doubt, we waive it. Let us invest more energy in observing the most banal measures than in rebellion. And let’s wonder if Christmas this year really has to be the way it used to be. Or not as an exception as it used to be.

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