Raveena Tandon blasts people fpr not following SOPs after getting vaccinated
TV&Showbiz
Bollywood starlet Raveena Tandon slammed everyone not maintaining social distancing protocol after getting COVID vaccine.
Tandon, who herself has received the first jab, firstly urged people to register themselves for the vaccine.
She then gave an earful to all flaying COVID restrictions after getting vaccinated.
“A lot of people are under the misconception that if you’re vaccinated, or have recovered from Covid-19, you’ve got kryptonite. You cannot become a superman. In fact, a lot of people become careless, thinking, ‘Now, we’ve got vaccinated, why do we need to care?’. That’s wrong, she said.
One in two people worldwide saw their earnings drop due to the coronavirus, with people in low-income countries particularly hard hit by job losses or cuts to their working hours, research showed on Monday.
When we start talking about money, a whole bunch of double standards start popping up. How people in authority positions treat you. What you re allowed to get away with both socially and legally. And how, suddenly, some of the things that were trashy when you re poor become classy when you re rich.
Well, it s not only us who ve noticed the trashy/classy divide and the massive shifts in our perception that happen when we become aware that someone s rich. Entrepreneur Morgan, aka Cajunventures, posted a video on TikTok asking people to share the things that are considered trashy when you re poor but classy when you re rich.
Shameful and criminal : Long waiting lists for Otago cancer patients
3 May, 2021 05:58 PM
3 minutes to read
A person with a confirmed cancer diagnosis should be able to their first treatment within 31 days, which is not happening at the Southern District Health Board. Photo / Sarah Ivey, File
A person with a confirmed cancer diagnosis should be able to their first treatment within 31 days, which is not happening at the Southern District Health Board. Photo / Sarah Ivey, File
NZ Herald
By: Mike Houlahan
More people than ever in the South are waiting for cancer treatment, as waiting lists reach lengths never before experienced.