Disagree entirely.
From my experience it’s the younger generation causing the bigger issues
30 odd people congregating in our local park
Parties in the media for New Years
we’re all in the fight and all responsible
the only way to stop it is to reduce contact - and children / teenagers are currently the only ones in close contact
This is something I’m torn on whether to agree or not. As a young adult myself, I have followed every rule to the letter and won’t be taking any risks until I have received my own vaccination (after everyone vulnerable and older than me). I work in a well known UK theme park on rides and my team (also young adults) are very strict on guests with social distancing, mask wearing etc. We don’t take any crap basically, break the rules and you’re kicked out of the attraction/ride. One of my team members even stopped one of the rides to kick someone off who took their mask off halfway round. So I know a lot of young people who are sensible and are acting in everyone’s best interests.
But then I also know a lot of people my age who think the rules don’t apply to them, they don’t care about anyone else and do whatever they want. We’ve seen from New Year’s Eve a lot of young people think they are privileged enough to break the rules as if they get covid it probably won’t make them that sick. But I have a friend who is same age as me (20) and she ended up in hospital with covid in April so I really think we can take nothing granted for here- no underlying problems either.
From working in a theme park I personally can’t put a finger on which stereotypical group is causing the problem- I think it’s a lot of different people from a lot of different ages and backgrounds not following the rules. When we had rule of 6, there were repeatedly groups of 15-20 coming at the theme park and they were 3-4 households who had met up together for the day out, which is illegal. So there’s a lot of families too causing the problem. And categorically there’s a few older people who won’t wear a mask or follow any rules either. But the rule-breakers come from a variety of ages and demographics.
Yes the public are causing a massive problem now, but government messaging and response to this pandemic has been truly awful- enforcement of existing rules is non existent and unless the UK stepped up and actually got strict with penalties and enforcement there’s no way the situation is going to change.
Schools is completely another matter I don’t want to dive into right now, but the lateral flow tests are hardly a solution. They’ve been trialled in many areas and unis and missed a lot of the cases and transmission. Schools should be focusing on distancing, masks and ventilation rather than children being grouped in bubbles like they are at the moment. We could also look to have schools in 50% of the time and 50% distanced learning to allow for better distancing. With the new strain I now being 1.7x more transmissible, in theory we should now leave social distance of 3.4-3.5m rather than 2m.