The rain it raineth, the
less than happy household cougheth and sneezeth. It is not a bad cold but inconvenient and
annoying.
We know how we got
it. A return rail journey, two
Underground short runs and an afternoon in a theatre. During all of them there were people coughing
and sneezing without bothering, blasting out the germs looking for a new
location to thrive.
This is now the norm, it
is rare for people to do as we were trained and expected to do, take out a
handkerchief, or a bit of cloth or tissue or anything to cover the nose and
mouth to stop the projectile germ distribution and reduce the racket.
One of the ironies is
people thoroughly sprayed and plastered with deodorants and fragrances to
prevent the merest hint of any natural body odour escaping a few inches unleashing
their germs the full length of a carriage or across most of an auditorium.
The pictures above are
from a time when a nanny (literally almost) state issued posters and relentless
propaganda in the war against disease.
It did need saying.
This was a time before antibiotics
and other medications were available to curb or cure the effects. Homes were cold and often damp and air
pollution common.
A common cold could turn
nasty in a number of ways, especially among the vulnerable. Also, production was of critical
importance. People needed to be at
work.
These days we rely on
consumption and it is the retail figures that can suffer. It would look ridiculous for the state to
lecture people on health for the sake of shopping.
There is a further aspect
which is of another age. That is the
notion of common courtesy. Then you
simply did not strew your germs all over others at will but had regard for
their interests. particularly with the children and the old.
Today's individualism
insists that we must not restrain our behaviour just because someone else might
suffer for it.
Has anyone attempted to
cost the consequences of this?
Mass immigration and migration. Of germs and ignorance.
ReplyDeleteI think supermarkets are good places to pick up infections. At one time, fruit and veg were only handled by the grocer and there were none of those flimsy plastic bags where people have to lick their fingers to open the things.
ReplyDelete