It is not easy to keep up with the corona rules.

This is due to the volatile level of danger and knowledge, but also to the federal polyphony.

One of the most reliable constants is the inability of the federal and state governments to agree on memorable principles.

Anyone who hoped for a new formula for assessing the situation from the Prime Minister's Conference was disappointed.

First of all, the Chancellor had the reins tightened at an incidence of 35.

Now the federal states are stamping in their step-by-step plans, and in Stuttgart it is even announced that incidence no longer plays a role in everyday life.

Of course, that sounds more post-pandemic than it is, because only those who have been vaccinated, those who have recovered and those who have just been tested enjoy this everyday life.

In the future, a PCR test will even be mandatory for some activities.

Bavaria's Prime Minister Söder, in turn, announced to the citizens just minutes after the joint deliberations, instead of the newly reaffirmed 3G rule, a 2G regime in which non-immunized people would no longer get a ticket to social life even with tests.

Whether the courts allowed this is questionable, as there are very reliable tests and, conversely, infected people who are vaccinated.

But Söder rarely bothered to talk differently than to act. Should that lead to a few insecure people pushing their way through to the vaccination this time, this volatility would at least once be something good.