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  • isamisam Posts: 41,349
    Just been speaking to someone related to a Doctor in Iran... probably not a surprise to anyone, but if you took the number of deaths the Iranian govt are reporting from Coronavirus so far, then pick a number between 10 and 20 and multiply it by that number, then double it, then double it again...
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,848
    eadric said:

    Air con is not a bad guess, to my mind.

    IF I caught it back in Bangkok in January (and I pray that I did, immunity!) then I surely got it through sitting in bars and restaurants in steamy Bangkok, alongside lots of Chinese tourists, all of us enjoying the aircon
    Especially if you're talking a lot, like at a conference, and/or under stress, like a doctor. It doesn't explain the German carnival outbreak, which would have been outdoors I suppose?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,137

    If you do close schools to slow/stop the outbreak when do you open them again? When there's a vaccine? When there are 0 cases? That could be weeks or months. And if you reopen before either of those dont we just start the infection curve off all over again?

    Pending a miracle, that’s the expectation - not that any politician will want to spell it out. See yesterday’s Newsnight.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    Sort of on topic, Boris isn't parricularly loved in the Tory party. He doesn't have a natural base.

    He was chosen because MPs were terrified of annihilation under May and he could win an election and get Brexit done.

    Life gets harder for him from 2021 onwards. If he starts to seriously challenge the fundamentals of the constitution or operate a dictatorship then as it shows up in the polls and rumblings amongst the base, he will be swiftly dispatched.

    I agree with David Herdson that I can't see him lasting a full Parliament.

    That`s an interesting post. I guess the polls are key.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651

    All good points and questions. Obviously hand shaking is not mandatory and has little benefit beyond maintaining social norms. Its up to us to do is what is right for us and for some that will mean additional precautions. But the stop handshake message should be driven by the CMO rather than twitter.
    Problem is, if HMG aren't being upfront about what individual, personal steps we can take (beyond using disposable tissues and washing our hands) to protect ourselves, then well-intentioned people seeking to look after them and theirs are going to turn elsewhere for advice. Like FrancisU of this parish taking extra steps to protect his vulnerable parents. HMG have a far clearer picture than we do about what actions would be effective or ineffective - it's obvious this goes far beyond tissues and handwashing and the most high-risk people could reduce their chances of infection by taking appropriate additional steps - but they're not telling us how.

    That is the natural but unfortunate consequence of various tensions in their messaging strategy. Their core focus is on public health and slowing community transmission (rather than risk-minimisation for any individual subgroup), they want to achieve clarity and educate people about the basics (like message discipline during election campaigns, some stuff needs to be repeated hundreds of times until Joe Average "gets it"), they don't want to issue lots of confusing and apparently contradictory messages for different subgroups, they want to control timing of messaging and not ramp up premature panic, yet they need to balance this with a certain level of trust-building and transparency. Tough call, and I'm prepared to cut them a lot of slack.

    If they decide the best balance to meet their objectives is some way away from transparency, then so be it and I hope they made the correct call. But if that means leaving us to our own devices to assess the risks/benefits of our own actions, even when they have performed a more thorough and better-evidenced analysis of those actions than us individuals ever could, then it must be accepted that people will look elsewhere for advice. (In fact that's an inherent risk of HMG's information drip-feed strategy, and one they will surely have baked in to their decision-making.)

    If a reasonably well-informed person has spent the last week shaking hundreds of hands at conference centres, that may not have been actively inadvisable but it's clearly not risk-minimising. If they then spent their evenings visiting their elderly mum in her care home, how many of us would find that "wise" regardless of whether the CMO hadn't formally proclaimed the kibosh on it?
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited March 2020
    Unlike most, I actually think both luckyguy's ideas may be right to a certain extent. It may be several centuries before science catches up with the interaction of fear and optimism on the one hand, and disease on the other, though - if we're around that long.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    Our very own Tissue Price on his feet.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264
    DavidL said:

    A coin toss?
    To be more precise, a £5 coin rested on a bad of two £50 notes. To be provided by the testee then permanently kept by me for health & safety reasons.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,137
    edited March 2020
    Tissue Price laying into internet experts who think they know best. What’s he been reading I wonder?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    nunu2 said:

    How is Joe Biden the best the Dems have?

    Like seriously. Where is the Bill Clinton or Obama type figure? Biden can barely finish a thought, and no that isnt just his stutter

    I guess it shows how unusual these figures are.

    Buttigieg tried but it seems he was one term too soon.

    Kennedy is waiting in the wings.
  • ukpaulukpaul Posts: 649
    DavidL said:

    A lot turns on the question asked by the SNP woman: are children spreaders or not? Didn't get an answer.
    Because the plan revolves around the idea that we don’t know for sure. Admitting otherwise negates the plan.

    You’d think that the plan’s contact with the reality would change minds but they seem to have fixated on what they plan to happen. With knowledge of the virus multiplying so quickly, it’s not advisable and is hostage to a large number of fortunes.

    It’s a gamble in tune with this site. Unfortunately it appears as though they’ve staked their house on Bernie Sanders.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    That's why I said near, and then they will just extend them continuously.

    I am rather nervous now of the strategy. I can only think that the numbers (which aren't public) are still looking ok-ish and not doing an Italy of 50% increase day on day.
    Interesting point.

    We have lots of Chinese clients and from memory what happened there was that everyone went off from work for Chinese New Year, as normal, then the government locked the country down by extending the holiday for several more weeks.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,485

    Sort of on topic, Boris isn't parricularly loved in the Tory party. He doesn't have a natural base.

    He was chosen because MPs were terrified of annihilation under May and he could win an election and get Brexit done.

    Life gets harder for him from 2021 onwards. If he starts to seriously challenge the fundamentals of the constitution or operate a dictatorship then as it shows up in the polls and rumblings amongst the base, he will be swiftly dispatched.

    I agree with David Herdson that I can't see him lasting a full Parliament.

    He'll be dominant as long as he is a winner. He won a GE convincingly and many of the new intake owe him their jobs but as we know the Conservative Parliamentary Party is utterly ruthless when it comes to its own self preservation.

    When (not if) Boris starts losing ground in the polls and looking unpopular the very same MPs and activists who cheer him to the rafters now will turn on him and send him packing as long as they can find an alternative who can keep their seats. Without said alternative, Johnson, like Major before him, can continue no matter how bad the polls and the Council seat losses get.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,297
    edited March 2020
    I've spend the evening walking around central London and it doesn't seem particularly abnormal. The number of people is slightly down on what you'd expect, but not massively so. It's a bit like the period between Christmas and New Year (well, up to 30th December). There are still loads of people in certain places like Waterloo station. Restaurants and cafes are reasonably busy. Difficult to imagine London being shut down like Italy has been.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    edited March 2020
    Shut up you fool, we don’t want him getting ideas.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,401
    Stocky said:

    That`s an interesting post. I guess the polls are key.
    That's kind of how our system works.

    I don't like Boris much either. There are many sensible people on the Tory backbenches.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited March 2020
    Andy_JS said:
    Very impressive figures, if that's the right word, and whatever the reason is.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    eadric said:
    :+1: I had yet another conversation this evening with an extended family member which revolved around 'it's all hysteria and media hype'.

    I really hope that in three month's time they get to tell me: I told you so.

  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    RobD said:

    Will it? Or perhaps in person meetings are more effective at connecting job seekers with jobs?
    Clearly you’ve never worked in a JobCentre!
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,364

    Clearly you’ve never worked in a JobCentre!
    Are you suggesting phoning in will be more effective? :)
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    isam said:

    Just been speaking to someone related to a Doctor in Iran... probably not a surprise to anyone, but if you took the number of deaths the Iranian govt are reporting from Coronavirus so far, then pick a number between 10 and 20 and multiply it by that number, then double it, then double it again...

    The Iranian regime looks under severe pressure right now thanks to Covid-19, with a side order of an oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,197
    ukpaul said:

    Because the plan revolves around the idea that we don’t know for sure. Admitting otherwise negates the plan.

    You’d think that the plan’s contact with the reality would change minds but they seem to have fixated on what they plan to happen. With knowledge of the virus multiplying so quickly, it’s not advisable and is hostage to a large number of fortunes.

    It’s a gamble in tune with this site. Unfortunately it appears as though they’ve staked their house on Bernie Sanders.
    It's tricky. There is some evidence that adults are not spreaders when they are asymptomatic. Most children are almost always asymptomatic (there are a handful of exceptions). Are they therefore not spreaders? If they are not then the argument for closing the schools is very different.
  • ukpaulukpaul Posts: 649
    RobD said:

    A microbiology professor? What do they know. :)
    WHO says that studies have shown that people can shed the virus up to 48 hours before symptoms show. They don’t think it’s as likely for this to happen as from the symptomatic but there is a lot of uncertainty.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    The Iranian regime looks under severe pressure right now thanks to Covid-19, with a side order of an oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.
    They've had really quite a tough 2020.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,297
    edited March 2020
    The very best health care systems seem to be coping better with the situation. For instance, Norway has had 602 cases and no fatalities so far. That's 136 cases more than the UK.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    @FrancisUrquhart

    GCSEs start on the 11th May. A-levels on the 18th. If schools shut down for six weeks from April 1st, we have a logistical nightmare on our hands.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    ydoethur said:

    @FrancisUrquhart

    GCSEs start on the 11th May. A-levels on the 18th. If schools shut down for six weeks from April 1st, we have a logistical nightmare on our hands.

    There will be a lot of nightmares before this is done. Most will be nowhere as bad as the bad ones.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,568

    You saved me posting a similar thing, but it's possible the correct model is SIRS or SEIRS (rather than SIR or SEIR). Recovered people may become susceptible again (immunity fades or virus mutates). This seems a more plausible worst-case, rather than R0=5.
    A lot of the modelling of this one seems to come up with about 5-7% of the population catching it in a peak year, probably the coming winter. Someone posted a Harvard modelling paper on here a few days ago.

    I don't know if coronavirusses are generally less efficient than influenzas, but that is also what Jeremy Hunt tweeted as the most likely trajectory, the 20% being stated as a not expected worst case planning assumption.

    The modelling paper also mooted the possibility of some degree of co-immunity between COVID and two strains of common cold Coronavirus that do show co-immunity with each other.


    Anyway, I've seen nothing to change my calculations of 2k Italy deaths this time out, and 20k over the 2-3 year course of the pandemic.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    The Iranian regime looks under severe pressure right now thanks to Covid-19, with a side order of an oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.
    And randomly shooting down passenger airliners.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571

    Clearly you’ve never worked in a JobCentre!
    There was a sitcom about a job centre a few years ago. I rather liked it. What happened to it?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,137
    US conservative publication National Review nails Trump’s failings:

    “In a serious public-health crisis, the public has the right to expect the government's chief executive to lead in a number of crucial ways: by prioritizing the problem properly, by deferring to subject-matter experts when appropriate while making key decisions in informed and sensible ways, by providing honest and careful information to the country, by calming fears and setting expectations, and by addressing mistakes and setbacks. Trump so far hasn't passed muster on any of these metrics."
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,137

    There was a sitcom about a job centre a few years ago. I rather liked it. What happened to it?
    It got laid off.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    More accurate to say it's a hostile environment for shirkers.
    The one I used to work in was a hostile environment for everyone - particularly the staff and the very many jobseekers who were trying their best to find work while avoiding unwanted attention and often verbal abuse from a minority of clients who made the whole experience an ordeal.

    Better to phone it in.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    Andy_JS said:

    I've spend the evening walking around central London and it doesn't seem particularly abnormal. The number of people is slightly down on what you'd expect, but not massively so. It's a bit like the period between Christmas and New Year (well, up to 30th December). There are still loads of people in certain places like Waterloo station. Restaurants and cafes are reasonably busy. Difficult to imagine London being shut down like Italy has been.

    Once they see the evening news with corridors full of non-ventilated virus sufferers gasping their last whilst medics run around in tears, then the bars will empty.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    I must be unusual because everyone I deal with is seriously concerned about Covid-19. The most relaxed person I know is my mother.
  • mattmatt Posts: 3,789

    The Iranian regime looks under severe pressure right now thanks to Covid-19, with a side order of an oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.
    As with Romania, it all looks stable(ish) until it isnt. The question is really, is the Revolutionary Guard interested in revolution?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,848

    Especially if you're talking a lot, like at a conference, and/or under stress, like a doctor. It doesn't explain the German carnival outbreak, which would have been outdoors I suppose?
    Apparently the German outbreak wasn't outdoors, it was in a party in a community hall.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,138
    edited March 2020

    I guess it shows how unusual these figures are.

    Buttigieg tried but it seems he was one term too soon.

    Kennedy is waiting in the wings.
    Kennedy-Buttigieg 2024 v Pence in my view if Biden fails to beat Trump in November but I think Biden v Trump will be very close, maybe the closest election since Bush v Gore in 2000.

    At the moment my closest guess is Biden picks up Pennsylvania and North Carolina but Trump holds Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida to win 270 to 268
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,808
    eadric said:

    That thread is quite fascinating.

    A common reaction to people who realised all this weeks ago, who try to tell friends, family, colleagues, is outright anger. Born of fear, I suppose.

    This in turn is a feature of plagues through the ages, as I've been discovering. The first guy who says Uh, look, all these people with bubos, I don't reckon it's particularly a good sign - is not a popular person.
    On declining to shake hands today, I was told I was being politically correct....
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,808
    HYUFD said:

    Kennedy-Buttigieg 2024 v Pence in my view if Biden fails to beat Trump in November but I think Biden v Trump will be very close, maybe the closest election since Bush v Gore in 2000
    Your fascination with Kennedy is an odd one.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,577
    IanB2 said:

    US conservative publication National Review nails Trump’s failings:

    “In a serious public-health crisis, the public has the right to expect the government's chief executive to lead in a number of crucial ways: by prioritizing the problem properly, by deferring to subject-matter experts when appropriate while making key decisions in informed and sensible ways, by providing honest and careful information to the country, by calming fears and setting expectations, and by addressing mistakes and setbacks. Trump so far hasn't passed muster on any of these metrics."

    And by contrast, Boris passes that test with flying colours.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    HYUFD said:

    Kennedy-Buttigieg 2024 v Pence in my view if Biden fails to beat Trump in November but I think Biden v Trump will be very close, maybe the closest election since Bush v Gore in 2000.

    At the moment my closest guess is Biden picks up Pennsylvania and North Carolina but Trump holds Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida to win 270 to 268
    2024 is Haley's year.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    I must be unusual because everyone I deal with is seriously concerned about Covid-19. The most relaxed person I know is my mother.

    You must mix in different circles to me. Up here in the midlands nobody seems concerned. Just annoyed that there`s no bog rolls in Waitrose.
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    eadric said:

    https://twitter.com/BNODesk/status/1237826622838931462?s=20

    Every country is now doing this.... except us....

    We're going to cop this really really badly.

    "Everybody knows that
    The Plague is coming
    Everybody knows
    that it's moving fast

    Everybody knows that you're in
    trouble
    Everybody knows what you've been
    through
    From the bloody Cross on top of Calvary
    to the beach at Malibu
    Everybody knows it's coming apart
    Take one last look at this Sacred Heart
    Before it blows
    And everybody knows."


    Sorry. Just when you're feeling depressed about something there's no-one quite like Leonard Cohen :wink:
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,138
    edited March 2020

    Sort of on topic, Boris isn't parricularly loved in the Tory party. He doesn't have a natural base.

    He was chosen because MPs were terrified of annihilation under May and he could win an election and get Brexit done.

    Life gets harder for him from 2021 onwards. If he starts to seriously challenge the fundamentals of the constitution or operate a dictatorship then as it shows up in the polls and rumblings amongst the base, he will be swiftly dispatched.

    I agree with David Herdson that I can't see him lasting a full Parliament.

    If Boris is fading the Tories are likely doomed anyway, Boris polls clearly above his party, hence the reason the Tories turned to him in the first place after May became unpopular and hence so many Leavers in the North and Midlands lent their votes to Boris (note Boris not the Tory Party) to get Brexit done. In that sense Boris had a unique appeal to the white working class as Trump has had in the USA
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,568
    If second wave Coronavirus has hit the USA in a sizeable way by early November, do we even end up having an election?
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Stocky said:

    You must mix in different circles to me. Up here in the midlands nobody seems concerned. Just annoyed that there`s no bog rolls in Waitrose.
    There are people out there that actually think this is not a serious situation?
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    edited March 2020

    Once they see the evening news with corridors full of non-ventilated virus sufferers gasping their last whilst medics run around in tears, then the bars will empty.
    Yep. If you think back to 8 weeks, then 4 weeks, then 2 weeks, then 1 week ago the nation is clearly, very very clearly, getting properly anxious about it. The Normalcy Bias trope is fading fast.

    I don't glory in this. I wish to god the dismissives were right. But they aren't and they won't be.

    We are in deep, deep, trouble.
  • ukpaulukpaul Posts: 649
    DavidL said:

    It's tricky. There is some evidence that adults are not spreaders when they are asymptomatic. Most children are almost always asymptomatic (there are a handful of exceptions). Are they therefore not spreaders? If they are not then the argument for closing the schools is very different.
    The study I referred to found that children showed few symptoms, a bit of a cough and suchlike. The supposition is that it’s due to ‘pristine lungs’ as to why children appear with such weak signs of the virus. The opposite being the polluted, heavy smokers of Wuhan.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,990

    The one I used to work in was a hostile environment for everyone - particularly the staff and the very many jobseekers who were trying their best to find work while avoiding unwanted attention and often verbal abuse from a minority of clients who made the whole experience an ordeal.

    Better to phone it in.
    Last time I was in a Job Centre a security man stormed over and demanded that I stopped using my mobile phone. I was speaking to a potential employer about a job interview.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,137
    Nigelb said:

    On declining to shake hands today, I was told I was being politically correct....
    It’s Social Distancing gone mad?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,577
    matt said:

    As with Romania, it all looks stable(ish) until it isnt. The question is really, is the Revolutionary Guard interested in revolution?
    If there is a mass outbreak of the virus amongst the ranks of the Revolutionary Guards, then the Ayatollahs should be worried.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    nichomar said:

    There are people out there that actually think this is not a serious situation?
    50,000 people in GL50 couldn't care less either.

    Lots of handshaking and mwah mwah-ing.

    That said another shocking day. Couldn't buy a winner.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    Stocky said:

    You must mix in different circles to me. Up here in the midlands nobody seems concerned. Just annoyed that there`s no bog rolls in Waitrose.
    Well, that’s not true of Cannock. I’ve been bombarded with questions all day about what happens if the school has to close. Then I went to Chase Hospital for a routine appointment to find the doors had massive signs saying ‘Do Not Enter’ all over them. Turns out it was intended only for people with Covid 19 symptoms, but it was quite confusing.

    I think at the moment the perception, the likes of Eadric, is doing an awful lot of damage - far more, indeed, than the current reality.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Today was the first time people at my work had gotten into an extended discussion about about the coronavirus. Concern without extravagant posturing was the general tone.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    nichomar said:

    There are people out there that actually think this is not a serious situation?
    Well, I`d say loads of people are sanguine about it, think this is something we will have to learn to live with. Containment won`t work. Death rate will be low enough to temper serious concern (unless old and frail).

    I think a lot of people think like that.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,228
    Pro_Rata said:

    If second wave Coronavirus has hit the USA in a sizeable way by early November, do we even end up having an election?

    It wasn't cancelled during a Civil War, so it probably will happen no matter what
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    Yeah it's bollocks. I have friends in the West Midlands and both of today's deaths are from there.

    Everyone is getting extremely concerned.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    TOPPING said:

    50,000 people in GL50 couldn't care less either.

    Lots of handshaking and mwah mwah-ing.

    That said another shocking day. Couldn't buy a winner.
    I thought you only did that in a selling race, which they don’t normally have at Cheltenham?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,571
    ydoethur said:

    Well, that’s not true of Cannock. I’ve been bombarded with questions all day about what happens if the school has to close. Then I went to Chase Hospital for a routine appointment to find the doors had massive signs saying ‘Do Not Enter’ all over them. Turns out it was intended only for people with Covid 19 symptoms, but it was quite confusing.

    I think at the moment the perception, the likes of Eadric, is doing an awful lot of damage - far more, indeed, than the current reality.
    I disagree. We are two weeks or so from Italy. Unless someone can come up with some reasons why it will be different here.
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    I find the Wai greeting does the job admirably. It looks sincere and respectful. Just don't touch your face with your hands whilst you do it ...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_greeting
  • eadric said:

    Christ, I hope you're right but if you are right (and I too saw the Jeremy Hunt tweets), why is a clever, responsible, sober politician like Angela Merkel telling the Germans to expect 60-70% of them to be infected?
    Did she? Have you watched the press conference?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,401
    IanB2 said:

    It’s Social Distancing gone mad?
    Happened to me too. The social more is so strong people take offence to it and think you're overreacting.

    The implication is that you're saying they're unclean. Hence the offence.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575

    I disagree. We are two weeks or so from Italy. Unless someone can come up with some reasons why it will be different here.
    I would have thought the more pertinent question is why Italy has been hit so very hard so very swiftly. What has been going on there that is not replicated in, say, France?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,138
    Nigelb said:

    Your fascination with Kennedy is an odd one.
    If he wins the Massachusetts Senate race this year and Trump is re elected he is in pole position for 2024
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,401
    Also, in my line of work, people are starting to get pretty keen for the order to work from home to be announced.

    And it never does.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    It's a slow process but Biden is starting to catch Sanders in California. I doubt he'll get there but the gap is now 6.8%
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    ydoethur said:

    I thought you only did that in a selling race, which they don’t normally have at Cheltenham?
    Good point. I was using rhetoric but I appreciate that PB-ers are beyond such trivialities.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,138

    2024 is Haley's year.
    Probably only if Trump is defeated, if Trump is re elected VP Pence will almost certainly be GOP nominee
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    Pulpstar said:

    It's a slow process but Biden is starting to catch Sanders in California. I doubt he'll get there but the gap is now 6.8%

    Some good news for @rottenborough?
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Stocky said:

    Well, I`d say loads of people are sanguine about it, think this is something we will have to learn to live with. Containment won`t work. Death rate will be low enough to temper serious concern (unless old and frail).

    I think a lot of people think like that.
    But if there is a 10% increase in the demand for icu beds the system will be stretched beyond recognition. If as looks the case 5% of infections require icu care then it’s not difficult to work out when the uk hits trouble.
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    edited March 2020
    eadric said:

    It's a weird mix. Some of my friends who I expected to be smart and insightful are the worst kind of Just The Fluers. And still at it. Idiots.

    Others are now very very worried, where they were entirely unconcerned a week ago. So things are changing, but are they changing fast enough?
    No, I don't think they are. We had an opportunity a couple of weeks ago to do an Israel. Ironically creating an island fortress might have been right up some Brexiteers' street. We could have done it. And if we didn't go as far as that, we could have had some really responsible proactive leadership from Johnson. That's simply not his thing though. He's reactive. Lazy. Always has been.

    We've blown it.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255

    No, I don't think they are. We had an opportunity a couple of weeks ago to do an Israel. Ironically creating an island fortress might have been right up some Brexiteers' street. We could have done it. And if we didn't go as far as that, we could have had some really responsible proactive leadership from Johnson. That's simply not his thing though. He's reactive. Lazy. Always has been.

    We've blown it.
    I thought you were one of those who thought it was a good idea to listen to the experts?
  • ParistondaParistonda Posts: 1,844
    So our local supermarket staff are all wearing disposable gloves now, but still no signs of stock shortages. It's a small shop in city centre so I think these types of supermarkets fare better, panic buyers will take their car to a big supermarket to stock up. We have finally been told that we can work from home if we really feel its necessary (the higher ups have their heads completely in the sand).

    Macron has announced an official speech tomorrow at 8pm (like a downing Street podium speech), its likely that France will be announcing much more strict measures at that point. Possibly a countrywide "soft" quarantine (work from home, social distancing, close schools and stop transport etc) with more stringent rules in certain regions. The outbreak here is very clustered compared to the UK which seems more spread out.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Last time I was in a Job Centre a security man stormed over and demanded that I stopped using my mobile phone. I was speaking to a potential employer about a job interview.
    Doesn’t surprise me. The security guys are so on edge. My role was more crowd control / conflict negotiator than employment advisor.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,539

    Also, in my line of work, people are starting to get pretty keen for the order to work from home to be announced.

    And it never does.

    My place is now asking staff to take their laptops home at night just in case the decision to stop people coming into London is taken overnight. But they aren’t recommending people work from home where possible, which they could easily have done. It’s a bit naughty really as no one really wants to ask to work from home.
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688

    I thought you were one of those who thought it was a good idea to listen to the experts?
    I am.

    They're Chinese.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,137

    No, I don't think they are. We had an opportunity a couple of weeks ago to do an Israel. Ironically creating an island fortress might have been right up some Brexiteers' street. We could have done it. And if we didn't go as far as that, we could have had some really responsible proactive leadership from Johnson. That's simply not his thing though. He's reactive. Lazy. Always has been.

    We've blown it.
    Simply not a sustainable strategy. You need to do better than think only one move ahead.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    Yep. If you think back to 8 weeks, then 4 weeks, then 2 weeks, then 1 week ago the nation is clearly, very very clearly, getting properly anxious about it. The Normalcy Bias trope is fading fast.

    I don't glory in this. I wish to god the dismissives were right. But they aren't and they won't be.

    We are in deep, deep, trouble.
    As deep as the snowdrifts you predicted for election day last December?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,138
    edited March 2020

    No, I don't think they are. We had an opportunity a couple of weeks ago to do an Israel. Ironically creating an island fortress might have been right up some Brexiteers' street. We could have done it. And if we didn't go as far as that, we could have had some really responsible proactive leadership from Johnson. That's simply not his thing though. He's reactive. Lazy. Always has been.

    We've blown it.
    Yet we are not even in the top 10 nations for coronavirus cases.

    Not only are we behind China, the US, France, Germany, Italy and Spain and Japan and South Korea for Covid 19 cases but we are even behind smaller countries like Norway, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland.

    Being an island probably also helps a bit

    https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Also, in my line of work, people are starting to get pretty keen for the order to work from home to be announced.

    And it never does.

    Why not just implement it anyway, like several hundreds of other companies have done?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,197
    6,700 new cases today. By far the most so far, excluding the day when the Chinese changed their definitions. Been quite a strong upward trend in daily numbers for more than 2 weeks now.
  • eadric said:

    No, I just read the headline. Have I got it wrong? Hope so.

    She gave a 90 min press conference today with the sec of health and the head of RKI (PHE equivalent).
    They repeated what had already been communicated over recent days.
    They pointed out that the universally accepted (with the exception of the USA and North Korea) WHO reasonable worst case scenario suggested max infection rates of "up to" 40-70%.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,152
    DavidL said:

    6,700 new cases today. By far the most so far, excluding the day when the Chinese changed their definitions. Been quite a strong upward trend in daily numbers for more than 2 weeks now.

    These graphs have been updated. Not encouraging

    https://hgis.uw.edu/virus/
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    tlg86 said:

    My place is now asking staff to take their laptops home at night just in case the decision to stop people coming into London is taken overnight. But they aren’t recommending people work from home where possible, which they could easily have done. It’s a bit naughty really as no one really wants to ask to work from home.
    Why not? Some of these companies seem completely backward I must say. WFH has been a thing for years.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    edited March 2020
    Scott_xP said:
    Horton is the loathsome twat who published a paper linking MMR to autism and refused to retract it for twelve years despite overwhelming evidence that it was fraudulent. He is a fool, a liar and also a noted and dogmatic left wing political activist. I wouldn’t trust him if he said Dominic Cummings was an idiot.

    Edit - I find out he was also a supporter of Roy Meadow. He should have been struck off years ago for those two together. He clearly has no interest in science and no understanding of it.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,575
    Endillion said:

    As deep as the snowdrifts you predicted for election day last December?
    The snowflakes failed to turn out...
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,197
    Pulpstar said:
    Have to say, it sounds familiar.
  • tysontyson Posts: 6,121
    Pulpstar said:
    If Italy could look back two weeks they would absolutely quarantine the country...for fucks sake...Italy today....dead people cannot be collected, and anyone over 60 is not being hospitalised.....we have a two week window to do the right thing.....and Liverpool are playing Madrid with a full stadium....
  • ParistondaParistonda Posts: 1,844

    Why not just implement it anyway, like several hundreds of other companies have done?
    Ours have said that those who "feel it is necessary" may discuss options for working from home. It was said very much with an air of "you will be judged". What makes it more ridiculous is that we all regularly have worked from home previously on odd days or even during a week or so when it's been necessary. So it's just complete denial about the situation.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,401
    tlg86 said:

    My place is now asking staff to take their laptops home at night just in case the decision to stop people coming into London is taken overnight. But they aren’t recommending people work from home where possible, which they could easily have done. It’s a bit naughty really as no one really wants to ask to work from home.
    Yep. Same.

    My consulting firm won't do anything unless the client says it's ok. And the client is following the Government.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,539

    Ours have said that those who "feel it is necessary" may discuss options for working from home. It was said very much with an air of "you will be judged". What makes it more ridiculous is that we all regularly have worked from home previously on odd days or even during a week or so when it's been necessary. So it's just complete denial about the situation.
    That’s my experience so far - it’s completely ridiculous.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,698
    tlg86 said:

    My place is now asking staff to take their laptops home at night just in case the decision to stop people coming into London is taken overnight. But they aren’t recommending people work from home where possible, which they could easily have done. It’s a bit naughty really as no one really wants to ask to work from home.
    If you are in a job that can be performed effectively from home then there is no need to go in. I'm fortunate enough to be in that position and I've made the decision for myself.
This discussion has been closed.