Just because it is high rise does not mean it is bad.  I once visited old lady in one of these towers in Carlton.  It was very high up, and she just loved living there.  The rooms were small, but the view just spectacular, and she could see planes as they were about to land in Tullamarine airport, some 20km away.  She was also happy that nobody can break in through the windows, and all it too to feel secure was having secure door. 

But it is very crowded when large families with lots of kids live there.  Obviously, you need to be very low income to even qualify to get a flat in these buildings, and many people are disabled and often metally ill.  But the lockdown is not just to protect the community from "them"  it is to protect the people who live there and are not infected.  With thousands of people living in these places, you cannot avoid being close to people the moment they leave their apartment.  They have been all tested now, and in the towers that have been cleared, the lockdown ended. 

The lesson learned?  We should all have bit of extra food in the cupboards, if you are on medication, make sure you have at least a week extra, and do not let your supplied of any  run right down.  necessity

 

 

She's looking forward to a bbq...in Wellington...in winter  Smiley Very Happy


@lionrose.7 wrote:

Welcome to New Zealand

 

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12346829


A terrific article.   Looks like a perfect fit for NZ and her family.

 

And coming from San Francisco, she'll hardly notice the earthquakes.

 

Thanks for posting


@davidc4430 wrote:

One of nine Melbourne public housing towers to remain in strict quarantine due to coronavirus infections

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-07-09/melbourne-public-housing-towers-one-to-remain-under-lockdown/...

 

its prolly a good example of why these high rise slums are a bad idea

 

in saving money by 'housing' thousands on a small site we have built huge virus incubators

 

we certainly have become the clever country

 

we have millions of acres of vacant land in this country but we feel the need to house people in these stupid places


 

hey david, I found a book for you

 

https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/30-Days-to-Taming-Your-Tongue-Workbook-by-Deborah-Smith-Pegues-English-P...


@k1ooo-slr-sales wrote:

@davidc4430 wrote:

One of nine Melbourne public housing towers to remain in strict quarantine due to coronavirus infections

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-07-09/melbourne-public-housing-towers-one-to-remain-under-lockdown/...

 

its prolly a good example of why these high rise slums are a bad idea

 

in saving money by 'housing' thousands on a small site we have built huge virus incubators

 

we certainly have become the clever country

 

we have millions of acres of vacant land in this country but we feel the need to house people in these stupid places


 

hey david, I found a book for you

 

https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/30-Days-to-Taming-Your-Tongue-Workbook-by-Deborah-Smith-Pegues-English-P...


I was thinking.................................

 

images - 2020-07-10T141917.870.jpeg


@k1ooo-slr-sales wrote:

@davidc4430 wrote:

One of nine Melbourne public housing towers to remain in strict quarantine due to coronavirus infections

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-07-09/melbourne-public-housing-towers-one-to-remain-under-lockdown/...

 

its prolly a good example of why these high rise slums are a bad idea

 

in saving money by 'housing' thousands on a small site we have built huge virus incubators

 

we certainly have become the clever country

 

we have millions of acres of vacant land in this country but we feel the need to house people in these stupid places


 

hey david, I found a book for you

 

https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/30-Days-to-Taming-Your-Tongue-Workbook-by-Deborah-Smith-Pegues-English-P...


this ones better

 

https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/My-My-Mythical-Tounge-by-Jesse-Steven-Alecho/184314843431?hash=item2aea0...


@*kazumi* wrote:

Just because it is high rise does not mean it is bad.  I once visited old lady in one of these towers in Carlton.  It was very high up, and she just loved living there.  The rooms were small, but the view just spectacular, and she could see planes as they were about to land in Tullamarine airport, some 20km away.  She was also happy that nobody can break in through the windows, and all it too to feel secure was having secure door. 

But it is very crowded when large families with lots of kids live there.  Obviously, you need to be very low income to even qualify to get a flat in these buildings, and many people are disabled and often metally ill.  But the lockdown is not just to protect the community from "them"  it is to protect the people who live there and are not infected.  With thousands of people living in these places, you cannot avoid being close to people the moment they leave their apartment.  They have been all tested now, and in the towers that have been cleared, the lockdown ended. 

The lesson learned?  We should all have bit of extra food in the cupboards, if you are on medication, make sure you have at least a week extra, and do not let your supplied of any  run right down.  necessity


What did VIC learn from the early Chinese experience ? or New York , Northern Italy , UK 

 

Where is the danger ?

 

Winter time

High density living

Industrial centre 

Not enough ongoing testing 

Central heating 

Gregarious social living

Low exercise in isolation

Low sunshine exposure in isolation

 

Why are deaths rates low in Africa ?

 

Fresh air , exercise , sunshine ? contributing to relative resistance ? possibly ?    

"Fresh air , exercise , sunshine ?"

Lots of all of the above in Texas, Florida and Arizona and have a look at the numbers there.

Africa - how's the testing going. Robot Frustrated