[ad_1]
The rapid determination of understandable, uniform and workable crown rules will likely decide the containment of the pandemic.
It can be assumed that everyone is doing the best they can. But that does not change the fact that little by little an insurmountable gap is opening between the anti-crown measures that are decided and what must be lived next in daily life. The most recent example is the debate over the testing of so-called K1 people, which arose around a controversial internal document from Red Cross leader Gerry Foitik.
If people who have had contact with people infected by Covid 19 and therefore must be quarantined for ten days, they should be tested even if they do not show symptoms. No, thinks Foitik, his argument: The test result does not change anything anyway, the quarantined person has to spend his time at home in one way or another (positive or negative) until the bitter end. However, the positive results increase the number of cases and thus damage the tourist location, as travel warnings are issued against Austria on their basis, endangering the winter season in particular.