Three teenagers from the indigenous Binjari community recently escaped from one of Australia’s internment facilities, the “Centre for National Resilience”. The authorities had initially rounded them up and interned them, it appears, for the non-crime of being in contact with covid-positive people, not because they carried any virus or posed any sort of threat. — NOS4A2
The facility seems a frightening place, to me, especially for children. — NOS4A2
In Australia's northern quarantine camp, a disused construction workers' hostel outside Darwin, the rooms are basic and the food is, well, institutional. But the fresh air, eucalyptus trees, blue skies and wind on your skin are sources of joy.
Native green parrots chirrup as they swoop by. Geckos cling to the veranda ceiling. The blinding sun reminds you that you are home. — Dixon
No visitors, no toys, no care-packages, round the clock confinement, and an ever-present police force—one wonders the point of it all if it is not an exercise in totalitarianism. According to Washington Post correspondent, Robyn Dixon, who was forced to stay there, "the feeling is part trailer camp, part hospital, part prison". At least the good officials there provide propaganda on how to maintain insanity during your internment: — NOS4A2
My donga faced a vacant lot with bark chips and trees. People opposite on shady south-facing balconies sat out all day and did morning workouts with dancing and burpees. My north-facing balcony was blasted by the sun, and I had to cover the metal chair with a towel. But it was wonderful after sundown, when the block’s yellow lights blinked on.
Someone would strum on a guitar nearby. Another person put up solar fairy lights. A couple tiptoed to put their baby down to sleep in the next room. Someone sat smoking on the veranda.
The alcohol ban applies only to Howard Springs residents. In Sydney hotels, quarantining guests can order care packages, restaurant deliveries and up to a bottle of wine each a day.
But I did not miss wine, getting through the slow, hot days. The fresh air and sunshine helped. So did the Vegemite. — Dixon
You obviously don't need to commit a crime to be sequestered. We also lock up crazy people when they haven't committed a crime. And in this case, being in close contact with a covid-positive person means you can become a vector for transmission as it takes time before viral load is sufficient to be picked up by a PCR test. About 24 hours before a PCR test is positive, you can transmit the virus. In Australia they've opted to quarantaine such people in separate facilities to ensure the disease doesn't spread any further. By comparison, in the Netherlands you're supposed to self-quarantine for five days after the last close contact with a Covid-positive person.
A frightening place? Sure. That's because you're apparently a pussy and your confirmation bias doesn't allow you to quote the upside of the experience. So let me:
Kids under 12 do not have to quarantaine, so the "no toys" doesn't seem like a huge problem but is in any case not true because only balls, skateboards and swimming and playing in drains during rain are prohibited.
You’re either a “vector of transmission” or not. You don’t jail people who cannot spread the virus. If you don’t know whether they can spread the virus or not, you figure it out. — NOS4A2
Aah yes, hearing birds and smelling eucalyptus trees are the upsides to being interned in a camp, confined to a small building. Are you serious? — NOS4A2
Toys or recreational items such as swimming pools (plastic or inflatable), scooters, skateboards, bikes, balls and roller blades. These will be stored until your exit. — NOS4A2
Denying fundamental rights on a hunch is ludicrous. The just and ethical thing to do would be to fix the testing, not toss them in an internment camp just in case. — NOS4A2
Sure, the fact that someone can hear birds and see the sun is nice, but it isn’t much a consolation when you are confined against your will. — NOS4A2
As for the toys, fair enough—even though it says toys are prohibited, gaming systems, puzzles and cellphones could be considered toys—but that wasn’t the only thing I listed. — NOS4A2
I already did link to the Centre for National Resilience in my first post. It was my mistake to think you had read it. — NOS4A2
If people are in contact with a Covid-positive person they should isolate, stay away from others, and get tested as much as possible. — NOS4A2
Vaccines are not 100% safe and unless you can guarantee that you shouldn't be forcing people to take it. — Benkei
Seat belts and helmets are not 100% effective. In fact, they can actually result in worse harm, and death, depending upon the physics of an accident. — James Riley
That's neither here nor there because it doesn't affect bodily integrity. — Benkei
Please continue to demonstrate you don't know about human rights. The floor is yours. — Benkei
I believe its overstepping the bounds of what should be permissible for governments to mandate. Vaccines are not 100% safe and unless you can guarantee that you shouldn't be forcing people to take it. — Benkei
as if people are unable to isolate and stay away from others without government internment. — NOS4A2
The desire to blame someone is strong. These days, China is the usual suspect for everything bad, so let's blame China ... — baker
No concern, no pros and cons, no rights-based approach, just counterfactuals and weasel words. — NOS4A2
You say there is no effective difference between my normative claim “people should isolate” and “the government shouldn’t put people in internment camps”, as if people are unable to isolate and stay away from others without government internment. I’m some sort of hypocrite for making too big a fuss because government internment is no different than staying home. — NOS4A2
Maybe read some actual case law instead of sharing your worthless opinion. — Benkei
I don’t see how I can blame someone else for the actions of some government official. — NOS4A2
But that’s the way collectivism works in a nutshell. The actions of one individual makes the rest guilty by association. — NOS4A2
Rather than consider things on a case-by-case — NOS4A2
This is not because they are right or more just, but because they are easier and involve less effort. — NOS4A2
Principles like due process were devised to protect the individual from the state. It is because of the state’s malfeasances that it exists. — NOS4A2
It wouldn’t exist, in the Magna Carta or the American constitution, for example, if the state had its way. — NOS4A2
The protections of these individual rights are the proper sphere of government, in my opinion, but beyond that it should not go. — NOS4A2
But, as you mention, they have taken on collectivist tasks like providing health and welfare, so rights be damned. — NOS4A2
I think the usual suspect for everything bad these days is the West. Slavery, genocide, global warming, you name it, it's all the fault of the West.
Like the original sin of the Bible, being a Westerner is bad by definition. Tainted, marked, and damned for ever .... — Apollodorus
But I didn't know that subscribing to Buddhism entails standing up for the Chinese Communist Party.
Would you stand up for Putin, too? Or only for Xi?
And what about Tibet?
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