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封不封城?美国现任总统:坚决不封!澳洲墨尔本:在经历世界上最长时间封城后迎来连续15天0新增病例的好局面!

李林博士 东成西就教育文化交流 2021-07-11


美国一天新增17万新冠病例?


是的,你没看错,美国11月13日新增病例数又创历史新高,为17万7千多例,全美累计病例数已高达1070万!


纽约时报、华盛顿邮报等媒体都对此进行了及时报道。



美国现任总统特朗普在周五的最新讲话中对持续飙升的病例数只字不提,但对新冠疫苗研发进展大加称赞,并表示其政府不考虑封城限制措施。








澳大利亚墨尔本112天封城之后持续15天无新增病例!!


墨尔本居民经历了世界上最严格、最长时间(2020年7月8日晚-10月28日,共计112天)的新冠疫情下的封城生活。
















可喜的是在经历了漫长的封城和艰苦疫情防控努力之后维多利亚州墨尔本迎来连续15天(10月31日-11月14日)每日0新增病例、0死亡的难得好局面!




这怎能不让人感慨和欢欣鼓舞?! 


以下这位叫Virginia Trioli的ABC Radio Melbourne电台主持人没有公共卫生专业背景,不是政府疫情防控官员,但她和她的团队从二月份疫情初发到现在以极其投入的敬业精神、非常仔细周密的调查研究、广泛联系和倾听各界人士的心声,以极大的勇气、毅力和同情心及时报道分享新冠疫情及其防控的方方面面(包括成功的经验和失败的惨痛教训),成为澳大利亚维多利亚墨尔本艰苦卓绝的新冠抗疫战斗中深具影响力的重要声音和力量。



下面附上她今天早上给听众朋友发的邮件,可以看出维多利亚墨尔本连续14天无新增病例的消息给她带来的鼓舞和感动,她传达的是一种关爱,一种信念,一种责任。正是无数这样有担当的个体、家庭、组织和社会各界的共同努力和付出使病毒俯首,使遭受病毒重创的社区更加团结和强大,使复产、复工、复学成为可能,使生活回归正常逐渐成为现实。





Good morning Alex,


Well, will you look at us?

Fourteen days straight in Victoria with no new coronavirus infections. By comparison, NSW yesterday recorded its sixth straight day of no new locally acquired cases.

It's not a competition, of course.

What am I saying? You bet it is.

Yesterday the Prime Minister declared all internal borders would unconditionally open by Christmas (except WA — honestly, are you guys ok? Are you going to start wearing tissue boxes next?) and that's a phenomenal achievement for every state and territory. But especially for us.

Just before sitting down to write this, I went back through all the columns I have written on this subject in the year of our Pandemic Lord, 2020.

I've written more than 30, and that's about 28 more times than is generally acceptable to keep returning to the same subject. (Unless you're writing for a particularly well-known news group about political correctness gone mad, in which case you're just getting started.)

I'm kind of amazed looking back at the pieces — on community spirit and teacher dedication; on pivoting businesses and driveway Anzac services; on the loneliness and hardship of lockdown and job losses — at how optimistic and sure I seemed that this community would get through this.

My professional scepticism saw me return more than once to question the systems and structures that were supposed to support our path out — testing, tracing and isolating and proper protection for health care workers — and I'm glad I kept asking those questions. But my faith in this community? Barely a tremble. It feels incredibly powerful to realise that we know each other this well.

I can tell you that throughout the waves of our various lockdowns here, I've been hammered with complaint and outrage by people who didn't like the strategy one bit — in particular, by people from the hospitality industry, the tourism sector, sometimes even the education sector and also by a lot of accountants, oddly enough.

The accountants have been very cross at not being able to go back to work in their offices, particularly to meet the needs of older clients. And I get it. Every time I had one of those conversations, I could see the argument and a reason to allow a variation for their industry, just theirs, because they, I was assured, could return to normality safely and with zero risk of infection.

The problem was, and always will be, that an effective public health strategy is never just about science: it's not just about the transmission of the virus itself and how you prevent that. An effective policy is really all about people and behaviour: what we say we will do and then what we really end up doing, and for a control strategy to work it has to take account of the varying percentage of us who will not or feel we cannot abide by the rules. There will always be a degree of allowance built in for the fact that we are merely human: flawed.

And as I also wrote here — such a policy also has to take account of the holes in the social fabric through which the unsupported fall, and I'm not sure that any such policy can do that when disadvantage is so entrenched.

Not all of the exchanges I had were that polite, mind you. I've been yelled at and flat-out abused for not "stopping this dictatorship" single-handedly. I'm working on achieving that super power, believe me.

Intriguingly, however, despite strong connections to and many friends within the performing arts and creative industries that are worth $111 billion to our national economy and are key drivers and catalysts of economic activity in Victoria, I've barely heard a word of complaint or lament from them.

They were the first locked out, and will be the stone, motherless-last back in; they were denied much of the federal assistance, with many sole workers unable to access JobKeeper, but this industry's stoicism and, frankly, dignified response to an utterly crap situation, should stand as a rebuke to others who, unlike these performers, were still able to get on with their paid work in some form.

It will probably take distance and time to realise what we did here, and how we could do it better should that time come again — and it probably will.

I hope creative Victorians haven't lost faith in us. I hope those who fell through the cracks are helped back up — I'm watching state and federal spending very closely.

I don't judge or condemn those who doubted the strategy — what experience did they or any of us have to compare? And I hope like hell we don't find ourselves back here.

This weekend you can dip back into the still-contested US election result with a look at just how far Donald Trump can push his argument, and as NAIDOC week ends meet the brilliant rapper Barkaa and read of her painful and complex battle to raise her voice.

Have a safe and happy weekend — please bear in mind that you stand this weekend on the same kind of sunny shores that a happy complacent Europe did just three months ago, casting distance and caution to their Mediterranean sea, just before the tsunami of their third wave rolled over them. They are in a shocking state right now, UK hospitals now at total capacity and Sweden — hey, remember Sweden — at levels almost beyond the reach of the chartists.

As Sgt Phil Esterhaus always told us, let's be careful out there.


I'm fairly sure your crowded beach wont mind you pumping up ACDC's first album in six years, Power Up — they've released a new single, and it feels as familiar as sticky carpet under Dunlop Volleys.

But if you worry that this much thumping might get you kicked off the foreshore, try this — just the right kind of mood for that sunset-time, dear-god-let-this-year-end vibe …

Lights out. Go well.






墨尔本因第二波疫情封城长达110多天,你认为这样做值得吗?


欢迎通过本文最后的“写留言”处留下您的感受、体会和宝贵意见。

谢谢!




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