4 year olds don't often currently live hundreds of miles from their place of education. Many students require travelling on public transport to get there. Four year olds are generally less capable of being educated by teachers from home. An extra month of education at that early point in their lives is a significant portion of their overall learning.UndercoverElephant wrote: 4 year olds can go to school but university students who have paid for their tuition and the accommodation that they aren’t living in, can’t go back to university.
I could sit in the park on Monday 23rd of March, but the next day I couldn't. Did the risk change? No. The line has to be drawn somewhere. Or perhaps we shouldn't be allowed into the park ever again?UndercoverElephant wrote: I can sit in a park, but not tomorrow or Tuesday but by Wednesday that’ll be fine.
Why can I go to the supermarket with other people but can't go to the clothes shop?UndercoverElephant wrote: I can work all day with my colleagues but I can’t sit in their garden for a chat after work.
Their stated aim is reduce unnecesary interaction and hence infections. In this context, working is important for the economy so has been judged necessary - sitting in the garden chatting, less so. Perhaps if we every single person stoped working and supermarkets closed we could use our 'interaction allowance' on going to the pub one final time.
I would like unlimited beer, or even money, perhaps the government can give me that? What is even the point being raised here? Get fitter?UndercoverElephant wrote: I can now do unlimited exercise when quite frankly just doing an hour a day felt like I was some kind of fitness guru. I can think of lots of things that I would like to be unlimited but exercise definitely isn’t one of them.
There is no limit so it's not wrong - do you need to be told if each thing you do is 'wrong'?. The rules still clearly prohbit visiting another household and hotels are closed to the public so your 500 mile day trip to Brighton is not really feasible.UndercoverElephant wrote: I can drive to other destinations although which destinations is unclear. I was supposed to be in Brighton this weekend. Can I drive there? It’s hundreds of miles away but no one has said that’s wrong.
You shouldn't get a bus wherever possible. But if you need to us one, you can. What is difficult to understand? It says it very clearly in the guidance.UndercoverElephant wrote: The buses are still running past my house but I shouldn’t get on one. We should just let empty buses drive around so bus drivers aren’t doing nothing.
Children have an extremely low risk of getting ill so the consequence of them catching it is generall low.UndercoverElephant wrote: Our youngest children go back to school first because... they are notoriously good at not touching things they shouldn’t, maintain personal space at all times and never randomly lick you.
There was critisim of the government for not treating the population like adults, and now the roadmap has been issued, people are saying 'oh what about if my mobile hairdresser wants to cut the hair of my window cleaner while up a ladder but wearing a face mask - is that allowed?'. To clarify, I don't agree with some/many aspects of the plan, but it is easy to see from the government's point of view, the answers to the questions raised.
H&S legislation in this country works by the government setting the framework and not by giving huge prescriptive lists of measures to 1000's of different industries. This principle works well.