We have previously noted how fear is being used to control the population. The government has been spreading fear, and one young lady has given us a very thorough demonstration of how well it has worked:
I’m a vaccinated anaesthetist and this is how I shop for my family.
A thread 1/n. pic.twitter.com/CYhUVYhL4q
— Tanya Selak (@GongGasGirl) July 25, 2021
She posted a series of ten tweets in the thread, which I’ve quoted and linked below, to save space. I have also condensed her two paragraph tweets into single paragraphs.
- First tweet: I’m a vaccinated anaesthetist and this is how I shop for my family.
- Second tweet: Preparation is key. If possible, I go at quieter times or click and collect if I’m organised. If I need to go in, I have my respirator mask, sanitiser, a list, and the bags which I always forgot pre-pandemic.
- Third tweet: Current rules are that maximum one person per household can go each day. We minimise this as much as possible. Either my hubby or I go. Never together. No kids.
- Fourth tweet: Once parked I put on my respirator. I’m in healthcare so have a stock of self-purchased N95’s in the car. I take a moment to ensure that it is fitted correctly. No leaks.
- Fifth tweet: At the entrance I check in using the QR code the furtherest away from the front door. I sanitise my hands. Big smile with my eyes and thank you to the greeter.
- Sixth tweet: Once inside, it’s a race. I assume I have covid. I assume everyone else has covid. I shop with laser sharp focus. No browsing. I avoid crowded aisles. Keep distant. Get only what I need, touch only what is necessary. I don’t squeeze every avocado to see which is ripe….
- Seventh tweet: Once I have everything, I pay via self-service usually at the end one if free. I get outta there ASAP. Smile and thank the attendant. Sanitise on exit. Check out via the app. A long shop is 15 mins, usually 7.
- Eighth tweet: So why do I do this? Am I outta my mind? I didn’t care about germs before the pandemic. Well, in my job we are all about risk minimisation. I want to protect myself, my family, my patients and my colleagues. I don’t need to spend ages faffing about in there.
- Ninth tweet: I don’t want to bring covid into my hospitals. I want to do all I can as an individual to minimise risk. Also, if the supermarket ends up being an exposure site, I don’t want contact tracers to need to trace me and my contacts.
- Tenth tweet: Kudos to all the folk doing the right thing, and those working frontline in our supermarkets.
Note that these were tweeted on Saturday, July 24, 2021, not sometime during the summer of 2020.
Of course, everything she has said her husband and she are doing is perfectly legal, and they have every legal right to take the precautions she has mentioned. But this is the second summer — although it’s winter for her, in Australia and New Zealand — of COVID-19, and at some point people have to return to being the social animals that we are.
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Update: 10:03 PM EDT
Naturally, I notified the original tweet author, but it seems that she didn’t like it. When I tried to bring up the tweets again this evening, I got: