tidefan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2007
- Messages
- 4,370
Yes, I think it is going better than it seems. For instance, here in Alabama, we are moving into Phase 1B today, even though our "official" inoculation counts are only about 130,000 vaccinated so far, which, of course, USAToday and others jump on as "worst" in the nation a couple of days ago. But there are caveats to that..To the mods - I hope this is on point enough. I am posting in the thread devoted to the vaccine and I think it relates directly to when we can return to cruising.
I know I, and others, have been accused of being overly optimistic (or having our heads in the sand or similar sentiments). I don't even necessarily disagree and I am completely open to the idea that I am being unrealistic as to when things will return to normal. But if it helps me to think there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and this isn't the "new normal" as some people think (and even seem to want sometimes), I'm cool with that. The New York Times Morning Brief made the same point I have been making - the vaccine is being way undersold, which will be harmful to its acceptance. Here is what it said (red emphasis is mine):
First off, Alabama only updates numbers weekly, so yesterday, for instance, we went from around 40,000 to 130,000 once weekly numbers updated. Also, some counties may only record a "vaccination" when the second dose has been administered and some are not. Many states are reporting it per shot. Again, what are you comparing?
Also, as we (and other states) move out of phase 1a (Healthcare), you will see it get out to many more people, and hopefully, cases will start going down.
I do think that you may see a "vaccination passport" in some effect with DCL. Hawaii is looking at it now as there is a proposal that if you have both vaccine shots that you may can bypass the testing requirement. I wonder if DCL could implement something similar. Tests for those not vaccinated, but perhaps relaxed guidelines (maybe even still take a test, but you could do a rapid antigen test, etc) for those that are vaccinated.