The UK is also having issues with the lack of rule consistency and clarity: each country has its own set, then there are new tiers attempting to bring uniformity, then there are local restrictions within it. It's particularly difficult for anyone whose work/home/support are across a boarder.
An issue is how fast and severely the rules change - the most obvious was when everyone who had travelled legally to celebrate Eid with their family woke up the next morning to find that depending on where they or their family lived, being there and/or travelling back were now illegal as the law had changed without warning the previous evening. This is possibly why changes now have a couple of days notice.
Don't get me started. I could rant all day about the idiots in my country. Our prime minister doesn't want the people to listen to him, but to take their own responsibility as adults to do the right thing! Everything still is only an advise, since most of what is needed can't yet be legally implemented. The neccesary emergency law to get measures legalised is still not past parliament.
One of the most important advisers to the gouvernment still maintains that facemasks don't work and will form an extra risk, because the people don't know how to use them and aren't allowed the medical version that might work. Medical facemask should be reserved for hospital use only.
After Tuesdays press conference that announced the new "Smart" lock-down, the Outbreak Managment Team (nice Dutch title, isn't it?) made sure it was clear that not all of the new rules followed their advise.
The new lockdown started at 10 yesterday evening and in true "smart adult"-style, a restaurant in front of parliament had a last party in a partytent on the square, with dancing, jumping and shouting, at nine thirty!
One could almost forget about other important news, like Brexit, if we didn't have a major crisis: the only Marmite I could buy this week was the stuff in the farting squeeze bottle.