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First polling response to the lockdown changes look positive pic.twitter.com/b6my26yx9C
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First polling response to the lockdown changes look positive pic.twitter.com/b6my26yx9C
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Will it be postal only? (The election that is?)
My brother-in-law had a mysterious flu like illness in December which refused to go away quickly, and my nephew also caught it. My nephew had chilblains on his toes, which is somewhat unusual.
He caught this illness from a friend who is a care worker. Some of his 'clients' at the time did not fare well _at all_.
This friend has just tested antibody positive.
There's always a possibility that this friend had it asymptomatically (or a very mild case) since, but...hmm...
I'm not sure how you can get tested in this situation? Presumably the antibody tests are still restricted.
https://twitter.com/twmentality1/status/1275485268322267138
I shall hang fire.
Indeed, one of my closest locals has decided to not open until the Monday, precisely to avoid that manic weekend.
And there's a reasonable case that working testing and the residual measures will stop a spike, and that the economic and political will for further significant lockdown have evaporated. If the UK can manage to keep the death rate at about 100 a day, that's 35 000 a year, and the comparison with a moderately bad flu year is sad but valid.
(Worth noting in passing that 1 m spacing won't solve the school problem entirely though)
However, the UK is unlocking at a significantly higher death rate than our European neighbours (France seem to have plateaued about 30 deaths a day, Germany about a dozen).
Hopefully, we'll get away with it, and I'm sanguine rather than pessimistic. But it's not impressive that the UK has got cornered like this.
"If it ain't Covid-19, it'll do 'til Covid-19 get's here....."
Lots of them on PB 😉
Just spoke to a mate who I sat next to at a Christmas dinner. Turned out he had the same around 21st-27th.
Reckons he picked it up from his mate a few days earlier. Who had just returned from a business trip to....
Wuhan!
Did anyone in close contact with someone who had a mystery 'flu' get covid later on ?
Did anyone who possibly got covid from March onwards get a mystery 'flu' previously ?
Did anyone in close contact with someone who possibly got covid get a mystery 'flu' previously ?
I’m of the view that the England Test team all has it when struck down by ‘flu’ on the Saffer tour.
If it turns out that the virus has gone through a large segment of the population asymptomatically then there will be hell to pay (politically) for stopping tests across the population to determine the overall infection rate. The UK only tested people in hospitals.
Was the lockdown necessary? What would be the political price if people think the lockdown was a mistake?
Given how close some parts of the UK came to having healthcare overwhelmed, and how parts of Italy and the US saw exactly that, I'm not sure any 'lockdown was unnecessary' theory will work.
Is this the real reason SK and Japan did better? And to some extent Germany (who got started early, and used the slower growth to work out how to deal with it better).
I'd like to see more test results before jumping to conclusions though...
The counter-argument is an apparent lack of excess deaths in the national stats. If COvid was spreading then surely the mortuary alarm bells would have gone off, so to speak...
https://www.bbc.com/sport/motorsport/53159686
Perhaps a weaker strain? Or just happened to be unlucky to get another coronavirus....
I think the short sharp shock is best - and Bozza faffed around with Happy Birthday handwashing for a fortnight when all the international evidence showed locking down early was the way to go.
There were population tests from the very beginning though, and they showed nothing. And the current antibody tests are also not showing vast numbers of people having had it.
It is just a bit weird, that's all. Like everything connected to this virus.
https://twitter.com/henryrodgersdc/status/1275527981470035969?s=21
Once again I notice a poll showing Trump outperforming Republicans (Public Policy Polling Jun 19-20 has Biden +9, but Dems +11 in the generic ballot). He's clearly not the toxic drag on the ticket I would like to think he was. Trump is still in this.
Trump 1.07
Pence 29
Haley 40
Romney 200
Ryan 480
https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1292288/US-election-2020-donald-trump-poll-results-democracy-institute-of-america
So maybe stuff the national numbers into an average if you like, but ignore the claims about individual states.
The housing secretary had an extension to his £2.6 million Westminster townhouse approved by Conservative councillors despite officials objecting to the scheme three times, The Times can reveal.
The couple submitted plans to turn a first-floor roof terrace into an extra room as part of renovations costing £830,000, but the scheme was twice rejected by a planning officer who concluded it would damage the character and appearance of the building and conservation area.
In August 2014, two months after Mr Jenrick had been elected as a Conservative MP, a third planning application was made. Although the first two had been made in Mr Jenrick’s own name, the latest application was listed in his wife’s name, although she was misgendered as “Mr Michal Berkner”.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/tories-gave-robert-jenrick-home-renovation-the-go-ahead-9s6580zkm
Eric Kaufmann"
https://quillette.com/2020/06/22/toward-a-new-cultural-nationalism/
ETA on Sandown
The housing secretary is facing fresh scrutiny over his use of planning powers after he intervened in a development project backed by prominent Conservatives and party donors.
Robert Jenrick has used his ministerial planning powers to recover an appeal by Britain’s largest horse-racing organisation, the Jockey Club, for its development of 318 homes and a hotel at the Sandown Park Racecourse in Esher, Surrey.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/housing-secretary-robert-jenrick-mired-in-new-planning-row-kwj0p5n6q (£££)
But not one that takes comments
This would be on topic:
Black eyes for Trump, Meadows in North Carolina primary
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/23/trump-meadows-north-carolina-primary-cawthorn-bennett-337223
... The result was a blow to Trump, who has boasted about having a perfect endorsement record in congressional primaries. As word of Bennett’s defeat ricochet around Trump’s orbit Tuesday evening, some close to him wondered how he would take the news.
For Trump, it’s the most striking in a sudden string of downballot setbacks. The North Carolina loss comes less than two weeks after another Trump-endorsed candidate lost his fight for renomination. Rep. Denver Riggleman (R-Va.) lost a district convention attended by roughly 2,500 Republican delegates, many of whom were angered by his officiating a gay wedding last year...
Very contagious, though. Apparently patient zero is, or was, a regular here.
https://twitter.com/StevenTDennis/status/1275229073871196160
F1: got an e-mail. Bit groggy but it sounds like Ladbrokes have made the Hamilton bet mentioned yesterday null and void. No complaints really, I think that's fair, although I may back it again anyway.
People in their 20s and 30s are spreading the virus
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/22/opinions/20-and-30-year-olds-spreading-covid-19-bromage/index.html
...In South Korea, with extensive early testing and an enviable contact tracing program, more than 75% of infections were in people under 60 years old, and about 45% of infections were in people under the age of 40.
In contrast, the US initially had the resources to test only the sickest of patients and because of this limitation in testing capacity, data skewed heavily toward those who were older and more likely to be hospitalized. The rate of viral infections in the elderly caught fire and blazed, and in the effort to contain and stop this unfolding tragedy, we took our eyes off what was happening to the younger people. What was and is their role in this pandemic?
The role of the young and healthy in this pandemic is beginning to reveal itself.
The 20- to 40-year-olds appear to be spreading the infection unperceived. They are just as easily infected as the elderly, but much more likely to show no or mild symptoms. People in these age groups are the ones who have allowed the virus to smolder through our communities and erupt into flames when they make contact with a susceptible population.
Unlike the older populations, where the fraction of tests that are positive have decreased markedly over time -- likely evidence that we are doing better at protecting vulnerable people -- when we look at the 18 to 49-year-olds, we see that the number of positive cases has remained more or less constant throughout time.
We are now seeing that more than 60% of all infections in the US are occurring in people under the age of 50...
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