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Hate to go right off topic with trivialities while everything is on fire but as the site's most long-standing KLOBUCHAR stan I bring you INSIDER RUMOURS
https://twitter.com/markos/status/12396119955878993930 -
"Life put on hold".
I really hate this stupid framing.
Beyond offices and pubs, there is life.0 -
Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.2 -
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.0 -
I cannot think of any politician that would have had the guts to shut our borders back in January.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.0 -
That might have worked if they'd done it but it's far from the only possible policy option.tlg86 said:
I cannot think of any politician that would have had the guts to shut our borders back in January.0 -
I think the modelling teams might not have been able to see the wood for the trees. Suddenly the wood appeared and we change strategy with the result being thousands of deaths are now a certainty rather than the 260,000 if we had continued.
There isn't enough stuff, masks, ventilators, swabs in the world. Ventilators are the new spitfires, masks are machine guns. Clear out the factories, this is total war.
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You've lived in Japan too long.edmundintokyo said:"Life put on hold".
I really hate this stupid framing.
Beyond offices and pubs, there is life.3 -
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.0 -
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.0 -
In my opinion Edmund has made the Post of the Year below. Nails it.0
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We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.0 -
Don't worry, as Alastair Meeks wrote yesterday, the world has changed for good irrespective of what politicians do.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
And on businesses, the printing presses are being fired up today (will be interesting to see if Macron can get the ECB to do the same).0 -
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.1 -
@GideonWise - that's a good analogy. I suppose it's a stretch, but perhaps the decision not to shutdown international travel in January is akin to what happened in 1919.0
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Good points Gideon.0
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I suspect insurance companies don’t have the funds to keep businesses going. It is one thing to pay out to 1-5% of all insured businesses rather more difficult to pay out to 100% of themMysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.1 -
Good to see the Daily Mirror with a non critical headline. I think the penny has dropped that... essentially the world is at war right now.0
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Gideon et. al., I was out with a friend last night: dinner at a restaurant (I know, I know) and we were discussing the Blitz spirit. She said the same thing as you, that where this differs is that in the Blitz it produced social bonding: people pulling together and working together. This virus may do that in alternative ways but social isolation is the opposite tendency.
By the way, the restaurant was all set up for a party of 12 who cancelled at the last minute. There was us and a couple.
I'm hunkering down soon but last night was a required meeting.
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Yes, the idea of insurance is that we spread the risk between ourselves. Unfortunately, that model fails when everyone's house burns down.eek said:
I suspect insurance companies don’t have the funds to keep businesses going. It is one thing to pay out to 1-5% of all insured businesses rather more difficult to pay out to 100% of themMysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.0 -
1918 surely when the decision was made both sides of the Atlantic but particularly in America that the needs of the war were paramount so new recruits, including infected ones, continued to be packed into troop ships for the three week voyage to trenches.tlg86 said:@GideonWise - that's a good analogy. I suppose it's a stretch, but perhaps the decision not to shutdown international travel in January is akin to what happened in 1919.
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I don't think this one is complicated.tlg86 said:
Yes, the idea of insurance is that we spread the risk between ourselves. Unfortunately, that model fails when everyone's house burns down.
- Insurance companies pay businesses
- Money printer go brrrrr
- Government pays insurance companies0 -
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.4 -
I was thinking more about sowing the seeds of WW2 in the aftermath of WW1 - although, I appreciate that that is a contested point.DecrepiterJohnL said:
1918 surely when the decision was made both sides of the Atlantic but particularly in America that the needs of the war were paramount so new recruits, including infected ones, continued to be packed into troop ships for the three week voyage to trenches.tlg86 said:@GideonWise - that's a good analogy. I suppose it's a stretch, but perhaps the decision not to shutdown international travel in January is akin to what happened in 1919.
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Yes that was the key mistake weeks ago.DecrepiterJohnL said:
1918 surely when the decision was made both sides of the Atlantic but particularly in America that the needs of the war were paramount so new recruits, including infected ones, continued to be packed into troop ships for the three week voyage to trenches.tlg86 said:@GideonWise - that's a good analogy. I suppose it's a stretch, but perhaps the decision not to shutdown international travel in January is akin to what happened in 1919.
That was when normalcy bias was at its peak.0 -
Both of these long posts are really good. I have nothing to add except my admiration.GideonWise said:
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.1 -
I think we might have to invent new ways to bond, create our own myths.Mysticrose said:Gideon et. al., I was out with a friend last night: dinner at a restaurant (I know, I know) and we were discussing the Blitz spirit. She said the same thing as you, that where this differs is that in the Blitz it produced social bonding: people pulling together and working together. This virus may do that in alternative ways but social isolation is the opposite tendency.
By the way, the restaurant was all set up for a party of 12 who cancelled at the last minute. There was us and a couple.
I'm hunkering down soon but last night was a required meeting.
Wearing masks and dropping off food to elderly relatives or neighbours doesn't have the same allure but we can work with it.0 -
That adds complexity especially given that no insurance company would be geared up to handle the claim levels. Better to find another way to do it probably via payeedmundintokyo said:
I don't think this one is complicated.tlg86 said:
Yes, the idea of insurance is that we spread the risk between ourselves. Unfortunately, that model fails when everyone's house burns down.
- Insurance companies pay businesses
- Money printer go brrrrr
- Government pays insurance companies0 -
Something to watch:
https://twitter.com/dannyshawbbc/status/1239592613243748353?s=21
There have been riots in Italian prisons about Covid-19.0 -
I think the Italian prison riots were due to a ban on visitors.AlastairMeeks said:Something to watch:
https://twitter.com/dannyshawbbc/status/1239592613243748353?s=21
There have been riots in Italian prisons about Covid-19.
Certainly face to face visiting should stop. COVID19 in a prison would be horrible, though with a young population most would survive.0 -
SK has now had less than 100 new cases for 3 days in a row. Like China they seem to have controlled the virus. I find their example hopeful because they started off with it completely out of control with large scale community transmission where tracing seemed impossible. And yet with very aggressive testing they have done it.
This virus can be beaten. It requires us to take it very seriously, to cut off the vectors for transmission and to limit its opportunities. I think that we are now doing that. I also understand the logic of our earlier policy and the reasons that we wanted to address this now rather than in winter. But there is ultimately no alternative. To stop the virus from killing large numbers of vulnerable people it’s transmission needs to be stopped.
Our numbers will deteriorate for at least 2 weeks yet. That means thousands of additional cases and several hundred additional deaths. And then we shall see.1 -
The Sun: “Hose Ban Looms”
WTF?0 -
Has this question been asked? How many members of the House of Lords are NOT over 70? And does this represent a problem for passing legislation?0
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Wonder if we're heading for deflation. Velocity of money must be heading south.0
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I thought that was more about cutting off the drugs supply from visitors.AlastairMeeks said:Something to watch:
https://twitter.com/dannyshawbbc/status/1239592613243748353?s=21
There have been riots in Italian prisons about Covid-19.1 -
So, the budget lasted just a week. Has that happened before?0
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Good morning, everyone.0
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Somebody was saying this on the twitters but it's amazing how fast Universal Basic Income has gone from being a fringe idea to pretty much the only way forward.Pulpstar said:Wonder if we're heading for deflation. Velocity of money must be heading south.
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I'd say it represents an opportunity to pass legislation!alex_ said:Has this question been asked? How many members of the House of Lords are NOT over 70? And does this represent a problem for passing legislation?
Morning troops.1 -
I remember pasty-gate...Jonathan said:So, the budget lasted just a week. Has that happened before?
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There are two fronts in this war: the health one and the economic one. In a war you do absolutely everything, make whatever sacrifices necessary, to win. There is no reason to believe the government is getting it wrong on the health front. The change of approach yesterday in the lght if new evidence was absolutely right. However, on the economic front it still has thinking to do and much more intervention is needed. This comes with a heavy long-term cost. It will mean higher taxes and more borrowing. But the alternative is far, far worse.1
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Two at least of the Groups (interest sub-etc) of the U3a to which I belong are setting up WhatsApp and similar Groups.As has my wife with the 'gossip group'..... one-time fellow teachers ..... to which she belongs.GideonWise said:
I think we might have to invent new ways to bond, create our own myths.Mysticrose said:Gideon et. al., I was out with a friend last night: dinner at a restaurant (I know, I know) and we were discussing the Blitz spirit. She said the same thing as you, that where this differs is that in the Blitz it produced social bonding: people pulling together and working together. This virus may do that in alternative ways but social isolation is the opposite tendency.
By the way, the restaurant was all set up for a party of 12 who cancelled at the last minute. There was us and a couple.
I'm hunkering down soon but last night was a required meeting.
Wearing masks and dropping off food to elderly relatives or neighbours doesn't have the same allure but we can work with it.0 -
Typical of these clowns, data ignored because it was from "foreigners", we all know they are stupid compared to the stout sovereign Brits.GideonWise said:I think the modelling teams might not have been able to see the wood for the trees. Suddenly the wood appeared and we change strategy with the result being thousands of deaths are now a certainty rather than the 260,000 if we had continued.
There isn't enough stuff, masks, ventilators, swabs in the world. Ventilators are the new spitfires, masks are machine guns. Clear out the factories, this is total war.
Boris looking for cheap option.0 -
Key points:
1. Protect incomes
2. Do not allow cashflow issues to kill businesses
3. Be clear there will be consequences for everyone as a result
4. Be clear these consequences are far better than the alternatives3 -
Hardly new evidence , unbelievable that the public had to point it out , the useless lickspittle press were berating people for not believing these absolute clowns.SouthamObserver said:There are two fronts in this war: the health one and the economic one. In a war you do absolutely everything, make whatever sacrifices necessary, to win. There is no reason to believe the government is getting it wrong on the health front. The change of approach yesterday in the lght if new evidence was absolutely right. However, on the economic front it still has thinking to do and much more intervention is needed. This comes with a heavy long-term cost. It will mean higher taxes and more borrowing. But the alternative is far, far worse.
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Mr. Tokyo, it is a fringe idea. It may be a tool needed currently, but so is quarantining the elderly. It doesn't make quarantining the elderly, or those with asthma, all the time during normal life a good idea.1
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I think that's right, There are only so many jobs which can be done from home, although in an ideal world a lot more activities could, perhaps, be done remotely. Humans are social animals though, and need to be able to interact.SouthamObserver said:There are two fronts in this war: the health one and the economic one. In a war you do absolutely everything, make whatever sacrifices necessary, to win. There is no reason to believe the government is getting it wrong on the health front. The change of approach yesterday in the lght if new evidence was absolutely right. However, on the economic front it still has thinking to do and much more intervention is needed. This comes with a heavy long-term cost. It will mean higher taxes and more borrowing. But the alternative is far, far worse.
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Never mind the budget not lasting a week, yesterday's mealy-mouthed "advice" won't last 24 hours. They either shut pubs etc or they don't. Even Piers Morgan gets this. OK so the insurance companies won't be able to pay out - thats where the government comes in.
I understand the Tories political problem. Having criticised the bank bailouts and spending government money, having claimed were were on the verge of bankruptcy before they doubled the national debt there will be a whiff of bullshit when they print a gazillion pounds. But thats what political hubris does to you.
Print the bloody money. No business to go bankrupt, no jobs to be lost, no people to starve. This is war. All wages will be frozen - what you earned last week you will earn this week. That way we still have an economy and a society when we come out the other side.1 -
100% correct.RochdalePioneers said:Never mind the budget not lasting a week, yesterday's mealy-mouthed "advice" won't last 24 hours. They either shut pubs etc or they don't. Even Piers Morgan gets this. OK so the insurance companies won't be able to pay out - thats where the government comes in.
I understand the Tories political problem. Having criticised the bank bailouts and spending government money, having claimed were were on the verge of bankruptcy before they doubled the national debt there will be a whiff of bullshit when they print a gazillion pounds. But thats what political hubris does to you.
Print the bloody money. No business to go bankrupt, no jobs to be lost, no people to starve. This is war. All wages will be frozen - what you earned last week you will earn this week. That way we still have an economy and a society when we come out the other side.
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The way
We should see some effect from the hand washing etc.. Can't even remember when that was!DavidL said:SK has now had less than 100 new cases for 3 days in a row. Like China they seem to have controlled the virus. I find their example hopeful because they started off with it completely out of control with large scale community transmission where tracing seemed impossible. And yet with very aggressive testing they have done it.
This virus can be beaten. It requires us to take it very seriously, to cut off the vectors for transmission and to limit its opportunities. I think that we are now doing that. I also understand the logic of our earlier policy and the reasons that we wanted to address this now rather than in winter. But there is ultimately no alternative. To stop the virus from killing large numbers of vulnerable people it’s transmission needs to be stopped.
Our numbers will deteriorate for at least 2 weeks yet. That means thousands of additional cases and several hundred additional deaths. And then we shall see.
The most crucial thing for me I keeping people out of hospital, and that means some form of treatment at home. There was a 'doctor' app heavily advertised last year, could we use that for consultations? There also needs to be some form of prescription that can be offered and home delivered. Even vitamin c and zinc would be better than nothing as a placebo.0 -
Utterly OT, but when I looked into some stuff for my Quarantine Reading blog (https://thaddeusthesixth.blogspot.com/2020/03/quarantine-reading.html) the other day I happened to notice, but forgot to mention, that if anyone happens to have books 20-28ish of Lone Wolf, original versions in good condition, they're (weirdly) worth something like $150-200.
It's a shame that publishing changes/problems got in the way, and Joe Dever never got to see the final books out there.0 -
The fact that the gold price turned around and is now sinking also, coupled with the relative resilience of bonds (except for companies potentially in difficulty) suggests the market is starting to think that way. Index linked bonds have also taken a hit.Pulpstar said:Wonder if we're heading for deflation. Velocity of money must be heading south.
We could get a short inflationary spike followed by a longer deflationary crisis.
The indices will also be potentially misleading in the short term, as they will contain things that are cheaper but nobody is buying.0 -
There is not the moral fibre in UK today to ever get anywhere near the Blitz spirit. Too many selfish greedy grasping people only out for themselves for it ever to be anything like the war spirit. More likely to be breaking into your house to get your toilet rolls.AlastairMeeks said:
Both of these long posts are really good. I have nothing to add except my admiration.GideonWise said:
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.0 -
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.0 -
I remembered the name of the app, it's called push doctor. I might download it and report back if it doesn't ask for payment upfront.Luckyguy1983 said:The way
We should see some effect from the hand washing etc.. Can't even remember when that was!DavidL said:SK has now had less than 100 new cases for 3 days in a row. Like China they seem to have controlled the virus. I find their example hopeful because they started off with it completely out of control with large scale community transmission where tracing seemed impossible. And yet with very aggressive testing they have done it.
This virus can be beaten. It requires us to take it very seriously, to cut off the vectors for transmission and to limit its opportunities. I think that we are now doing that. I also understand the logic of our earlier policy and the reasons that we wanted to address this now rather than in winter. But there is ultimately no alternative. To stop the virus from killing large numbers of vulnerable people it’s transmission needs to be stopped.
Our numbers will deteriorate for at least 2 weeks yet. That means thousands of additional cases and several hundred additional deaths. And then we shall see.
The most crucial thing for me I keeping people out of hospital, and that means some form of treatment at home. There was a 'doctor' app heavily advertised last year, could we use that for consultations? There also needs to be some form of prescription that can be offered and home delivered. Even vitamin c and zinc would be better than nothing as a placebo.0 -
As I said last night the only thing that I can see that will work is allowing firms to draw on credit to replace their lost cash flow on the condition that they pass this on to their staff and gig workers. I can’t think of anything else that is going to allow cash to flow through the system sufficiently. The benefits system could not possibly cope. The banks could not survive so many of their securities becoming non functioning at once or the collapse of asset prices. Some of these businesses will ultimately fail in the changed world, especially those dealing with travel, holidays, cruises etc. So be it. The priority now is to keep enough businesses alive to ensure we still have an economy when the health war is won.SouthamObserver said:Key points:
1. Protect incomes
2. Do not allow cashflow issues to kill businesses
3. Be clear there will be consequences for everyone as a result
4. Be clear these consequences are far better than the alternatives0 -
Our car needs an MOT. Do I get it done or drive without one? Need car to complete food/medical journeys.0
-
Meanwhile on the markets, the size of yesterday’s collapse plus the likelihood of government announcements on the economy (certainly in the UK) means that today feels like a recovery day, if of the dead cat variety, I might try the odd small buy gamble if it looks like markets have some strength, but otherwise am staying out today. I will try to remember that casinos love winning punters when they become reckless.0
-
I have a brilliant book called The Secret State by Professor Peter Hennessey. It details the Transition To War period conceived by the government at various stages during the Cold War. Like now, they assumed a timetable in the leadup which would likely accelerate rapidly.
Yesterday we declared war. Today the government need to initiate the war powers act onto the economy. Print money. Freeze prices, wages, debts. Requisition industry / hospitality etc to provide wartime functions like manufacturing things we need like masks and providing overflow isolation facilities for patients.
Treat this as war and its clear that you MUST act decisively. Not ah but er yes can you erm maybe strongly advise Boris bullshit.0 -
They will be too busy looking after their own fortunes and that of their chums, we will be well down the pecking order.RochdalePioneers said:Never mind the budget not lasting a week, yesterday's mealy-mouthed "advice" won't last 24 hours. They either shut pubs etc or they don't. Even Piers Morgan gets this. OK so the insurance companies won't be able to pay out - thats where the government comes in.
I understand the Tories political problem. Having criticised the bank bailouts and spending government money, having claimed were were on the verge of bankruptcy before they doubled the national debt there will be a whiff of bullshit when they print a gazillion pounds. But thats what political hubris does to you.
Print the bloody money. No business to go bankrupt, no jobs to be lost, no people to starve. This is war. All wages will be frozen - what you earned last week you will earn this week. That way we still have an economy and a society when we come out the other side.0 -
OTOH during the Blitz people needed to get into teensy little metal boxes filled with petrol and covered in bits of fabric and engage in death-defying dogfights in the skies of South-East England, whereas defeating this new enemy mostly requires them to stay at home watching pornhub.malcolmg said:
There is not the moral fibre in UK today to ever get anywhere near the Blitz spirit. Too many selfish greedy grasping people only out for themselves for it ever to be anything like the war spirit. More likely to be breaking into your house to get your toilet rolls.0 -
I've a dental check-up on 24th? Do I, don't I?Jonathan said:Our car needs an MOT. Do I get it done or drive without one? Need car to complete food/medical journeys.
0 -
*sigh* ok, Boris is a twat, the UK is doomed, every other country is handling this sooo much better and you know exactly what to do.malcolmg said:
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.2 -
MOT yes. (Medium benefit, low risk)OldKingCole said:
I've a dental check-up on 24th? Do I, don't I?Jonathan said:Our car needs an MOT. Do I get it done or drive without one? Need car to complete food/medical journeys.
Dental check-up no. (Low benefit, medium risk)0 -
Good excuse to miss the dentist I'd say.OldKingCole said:
I've a dental check-up on 24th? Do I, don't I?Jonathan said:Our car needs an MOT. Do I get it done or drive without one? Need car to complete food/medical journeys.
0 -
Now come on, Malcolm isn’t partisan. He thinks *all* politicians are twats.kingbongo said:
*sigh* ok, Boris is a twat, the UK is doomed, every other country is handling this sooo much better and you know exactly what to do.malcolmg said:
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.0 -
There was a lot of looting during the Blitz - even of newly bombed homes while the family were still in the shelter. It just got hushed up.malcolmg said:
There is not the moral fibre in UK today to ever get anywhere near the Blitz spirit. Too many selfish greedy grasping people only out for themselves for it ever to be anything like the war spirit. More likely to be breaking into your house to get your toilet rolls.AlastairMeeks said:
Both of these long posts are really good. I have nothing to add except my admiration.GideonWise said:
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.1 -
Yep. There is no alternative. Ideally, this needs to be as coordinated and internationalised as possible. Trump cannot be trusted to be a part if it, and would not want to be anyway, so the US government will have to be bypassed. But that leaves plenty more that can play a part. In Europe, Germany needs to step up, for example.DavidL said:
As I said last night the only thing that I can see that will work is allowing firms to draw on credit to replace their lost cash flow on the condition that they pass this on to their staff and gig workers. I can’t think of anything else that is going to allow cash to flow through the system sufficiently. The benefits system could not possibly cope. The banks could not survive so many of their securities becoming non functioning at once or the collapse of asset prices. Some of these businesses will ultimately fail in the changed world, especially those dealing with travel, holidays, cruises etc. So be it. The priority now is to keep enough businesses alive to ensure we still have an economy when the health war is won.SouthamObserver said:Key points:
1. Protect incomes
2. Do not allow cashflow issues to kill businesses
3. Be clear there will be consequences for everyone as a result
4. Be clear these consequences are far better than the alternatives
0 -
This is true. But nobody will demand to continue quarantining the elderly once the crisis ends, whereas once started the UBI could well be here to stay.Morris_Dancer said:Mr. Tokyo, it is a fringe idea. It may be a tool needed currently, but so is quarantining the elderly. It doesn't make quarantining the elderly, or those with asthma, all the time during normal life a good idea.
0 -
Anyone who has a steady income, from employment or investment, is sitting relatively pretty right now, and you could justify an exceptional income tax for the current financial year.0
-
Except Alex Salmond. He's just a bit of a lad.ydoethur said:
Now come on, Malcolm isn’t partisan. He thinks *all* politicians are twats.kingbongo said:
*sigh* ok, Boris is a twat, the UK is doomed, every other country is handling this sooo much better and you know exactly what to do.malcolmg said:
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.0 -
The government has made two major mistakes now. The first was misjudging the need to contain much more aggressively. The second was to announce the need to avoid social venues without supporting those venues.
At least it is identifying its mistakes quite quickly.0 -
Zinc is not a placebo. There is pretty good evidence for it as an antiviral.Luckyguy1983 said:The way
We should see some effect from the hand washing etc.. Can't even remember when that was!DavidL said:SK has now had less than 100 new cases for 3 days in a row. Like China they seem to have controlled the virus. I find their example hopeful because they started off with it completely out of control with large scale community transmission where tracing seemed impossible. And yet with very aggressive testing they have done it.
This virus can be beaten. It requires us to take it very seriously, to cut off the vectors for transmission and to limit its opportunities. I think that we are now doing that. I also understand the logic of our earlier policy and the reasons that we wanted to address this now rather than in winter. But there is ultimately no alternative. To stop the virus from killing large numbers of vulnerable people it’s transmission needs to be stopped.
Our numbers will deteriorate for at least 2 weeks yet. That means thousands of additional cases and several hundred additional deaths. And then we shall see.
The most crucial thing for me I keeping people out of hospital, and that means some form of treatment at home. There was a 'doctor' app heavily advertised last year, could we use that for consultations? There also needs to be some form of prescription that can be offered and home delivered. Even vitamin c and zinc would be better than nothing as a placebo.
https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1239559464858144771?s=090 -
Follow the processes of the ones that are being successful, that would be the sensible option rather than our lot modelling on some ancient flu epidemic. The evidence points to how to stop it, China and SK have managed to fix the hotspots, a sane person might look at that, unfortunately they are not keen on taking advice from foreigners as they are fixated on their sovereignty etc.kingbongo said:
*sigh* ok, Boris is a twat, the UK is doomed, every other country is handling this sooo much better and you know exactly what to do.malcolmg said:
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.0 -
Good morning.
Under a week ago I posed some innocent questions about government policy that attracted sneering from several quarters.
Great to be vindicated.
There’s a model for how to beat this, in the Far East.
It does not require welding people inside.
It *does* require mass testing, and a belief this can be beat, rather than “managed”. Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher would never have accepted that “a virus may never be found”.
I agree we are now at War.
Let us now approach this with wartime spirit, and wartime confidence. Let us think about how we save the lives of each other; how we protect our communities from starvation and ruin.0 -
There are actually a fair few mothballed clothing factories in the UK. Not hard to produce masks. Someone just needs to order them, at a price that makes it viable.SouthamObserver said:There are two fronts in this war: the health one and the economic one. In a war you do absolutely everything, make whatever sacrifices necessary, to win. There is no reason to believe the government is getting it wrong on the health front. The change of approach yesterday in the lght if new evidence was absolutely right. However, on the economic front it still has thinking to do and much more intervention is needed. This comes with a heavy long-term cost. It will mean higher taxes and more borrowing. But the alternative is far, far worse.
0 -
The proof of my being right keeps on coming.ydoethur said:
Now come on, Malcolm isn’t partisan. He thinks *all* politicians are twats.kingbongo said:
*sigh* ok, Boris is a twat, the UK is doomed, every other country is handling this sooo much better and you know exactly what to do.malcolmg said:
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.0 -
Do you think the Dutch are ******?AlastairMeeks said:The government has made two major mistakes now. The first was misjudging the need to contain much more aggressively. The second was to announce the need to avoid social venues without supporting those venues.
At least it is identifying its mistakes quite quickly.0 -
We also need to extend the transition period. We just do.0
-
I am sure there were a good few roasters then , but no comparison of the modern day Brit to those in WWII , today's lot would be found wanting.IanB2 said:
There was a lot of looting during the Blitz - even of newly bombed homes while the family were still in the shelter. It just got hushed up.malcolmg said:
There is not the moral fibre in UK today to ever get anywhere near the Blitz spirit. Too many selfish greedy grasping people only out for themselves for it ever to be anything like the war spirit. More likely to be breaking into your house to get your toilet rolls.AlastairMeeks said:
Both of these long posts are really good. I have nothing to add except my admiration.GideonWise said:
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.0 -
I agree, but it would have a placebo type benefit too.Foxy said:
Zinc is not a placebo. There is pretty good evidence for it as an antiviral.Luckyguy1983 said:The way
We should see some effect from the hand washing etc.. Can't even remember when that was!DavidL said:SK has now had less than 100 new cases for 3 days in a row. Like China they seem to have controlled the virus. I find their example hopeful because they started off with it completely out of control with large scale community transmission where tracing seemed impossible. And yet with very aggressive testing they have done it.
This virus can be beaten. It requires us to take it very seriously, to cut off the vectors for transmission and to limit its opportunities. I think that we are now doing that. I also understand the logic of our earlier policy and the reasons that we wanted to address this now rather than in winter. But there is ultimately no alternative. To stop the virus from killing large numbers of vulnerable people it’s transmission needs to be stopped.
Our numbers will deteriorate for at least 2 weeks yet. That means thousands of additional cases and several hundred additional deaths. And then we shall see.
The most crucial thing for me I keeping people out of hospital, and that means some form of treatment at home. There was a 'doctor' app heavily advertised last year, could we use that for consultations? There also needs to be some form of prescription that can be offered and home delivered. Even vitamin c and zinc would be better than nothing as a placebo.
https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1239559464858144771?s=090 -
How do you do mass testing when you don't have the facilities to do more than x,000 tests a day?Gardenwalker said:Good morning.
Under a week ago I posed some innocent questions about government policy that attracted sneering from several quarters.
Great to be vindicated.
There’s a model for how to beat this, in the Far East.
It does not require welding people inside.
It *does* require mass testing, and a belief this can be beat, rather than “managed”. Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher would never have accepted that “a virus may never be found”.
I agree we are now at War.
Let us now approach this with wartime spirit, and wartime confidence. Let us think about how we save the lives of each other; how we protect our communities from starvation and ruin.0 -
We do not know that yet , he appears to be at best , stupid with the drink. Going by evidence so far he just looks like a dinosaur from the past.Luckyguy1983 said:
Except Alex Salmond. He's just a bit of a lad.ydoethur said:
Now come on, Malcolm isn’t partisan. He thinks *all* politicians are twats.kingbongo said:
*sigh* ok, Boris is a twat, the UK is doomed, every other country is handling this sooo much better and you know exactly what to do.malcolmg said:
Did Boris send you out to try and pretend he is making a good job of it rather than the clusterfcuk we see in front of us..kingbongo said:
the differences between the UK and the rest of northern Europe are being massively exagerrated in the UK - yes there are some differences but these are largely the result of different specific aspects of the outbreak - Sweden for example is cross with Denamrk over the border closure as they think it unncessary, Denmark's scientists have been critical of the WHO director's testing message and Denmark switched to UK style testing last week.Mysticrose said:
We're getting dragged there. The failure to make the closures mandatory is crass and means the businesses cannot claim on insurance. I really am beginning to think Boris isn't bright.tlg86 said:
Hang on, haven't we just fallen into line with the rest of Europe bar the Netherlands?Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
We're also still leaving schools open.
And our borders are open.
The UK approach, like everyone else's is all about making the best calls possible based on the information available and the UK government is being more up-front than others over length of time. Here in Denmark the government is persisting with the fantasy of a two week closure just like Macron
- I wish the idea of a flexible and rapid change of direction could be seen as what it is - a sign of grown up emergency response handling rather than some of the claims of 'U-turns, 'failure' etc being written about. As for how things are done in Japan and S Korea I think it is quite clear that lessons are being learned but this is not something you can just map from 1 place to another for many economic and cultural reasons.
PS: I was not aware he was still a politician and if he had been I would have been as critical of him being as stupid as the rest.0 -
Sorry Malc, but that's rubbish. Of course there'd be a mixture of good and bad, but plenty would 'step up to the plate' just as their grandparents did. See that among my and my friends children and grandchildren.malcolmg said:
I am sure there were a good few roasters then , but no comparison of the modern day Brit to those in WWII , today's lot would be found wanting.IanB2 said:
There was a lot of looting during the Blitz - even of newly bombed homes while the family were still in the shelter. It just got hushed up.malcolmg said:
There is not the moral fibre in UK today to ever get anywhere near the Blitz spirit. Too many selfish greedy grasping people only out for themselves for it ever to be anything like the war spirit. More likely to be breaking into your house to get your toilet rolls.AlastairMeeks said:
Both of these long posts are really good. I have nothing to add except my admiration.GideonWise said:
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.0 -
err wouldn't that be the "experts" since HMG has been following their advice ?AlastairMeeks said:The government has made two major mistakes now. The first was misjudging the need to contain much more aggressively. The second was to announce the need to avoid social venues without supporting those venues.
At least it is identifying its mistakes quite quickly.0 -
Good luck with that. I fear Germany will not only respond weakly itself but make the use of monetary policy through the ECB much more difficult. The role of the central bank is absolutely key in this response. Can you really see the Germans allowing it to pump the required liquidity into the PIGS? And yet these countries need it even more than we do with their larger tourist industries absolutely dead.SouthamObserver said:
Yep. There is no alternative. Ideally, this needs to be as coordinated and internationalised as possible. Trump cannot be trusted to be a part if it, and would not want to be anyway, so the US government will have to be bypassed. But that leaves plenty more that can play a part. In Europe, Germany needs to step up, for example.DavidL said:
As I said last night the only thing that I can see that will work is allowing firms to draw on credit to replace their lost cash flow on the condition that they pass this on to their staff and gig workers. I can’t think of anything else that is going to allow cash to flow through the system sufficiently. The benefits system could not possibly cope. The banks could not survive so many of their securities becoming non functioning at once or the collapse of asset prices. Some of these businesses will ultimately fail in the changed world, especially those dealing with travel, holidays, cruises etc. So be it. The priority now is to keep enough businesses alive to ensure we still have an economy when the health war is won.SouthamObserver said:Key points:
1. Protect incomes
2. Do not allow cashflow issues to kill businesses
3. Be clear there will be consequences for everyone as a result
4. Be clear these consequences are far better than the alternatives0 -
Is your insurace not at risk of being invalidated if you drive without an MOT?Charles said:
There was a story a couple of weeks ago about suspending the need for MOT. But drive anyway.Jonathan said:Our car needs an MOT. Do I get it done or drive without one? Need car to complete food/medical journeys.
Something for the Govt. to clarify pronto.0 -
10% of my department already self isolating with coughs etc.
The need for testing of staff with symptoms is obvious to anyone apart from numpties, but still not happening.
It's not much fun being in the poor bloody infantry when the generals haven't equipped us.0 -
The government’s position is weird.
Strong (entirely optional) emergency measures to be implemented strictly (or so far as practically possible), ASAP (by the weekend maybe).0 -
Correct. Truth is most people most of the time do the right thing. Thyose sniping from the sidelines all the time rae just irritating little twats with even smaller minds. I say this under full lockdown here in Spain. Those who are screeching for their marching orders in the UK and to blindly follow Spain, Italy, etc - really should be careful what they wish for. Truth is there are no righ answers or good outcomes in the current situation - just some very difficult choices. So far the UK government has done no better or worse than anyone else.IanB2 said:
There was a lot of looting during the Blitz - even of newly bombed homes while the family were still in the shelter. It just got hushed up.malcolmg said:
There is not the moral fibre in UK today to ever get anywhere near the Blitz spirit. Too many selfish greedy grasping people only out for themselves for it ever to be anything like the war spirit. More likely to be breaking into your house to get your toilet rolls.AlastairMeeks said:
Both of these long posts are really good. I have nothing to add except my admiration.GideonWise said:
It's a mistake for sure. But if we start changing our frame of reference then it isn't as bad as it appears.Mysticrose said:
This is a brilliant post.edmundintokyo said:
That's a great question.Mysticrose said:Last night we discussed PM's who'd have had handled this better. There is one STANDOUT (sorry to shout) leader in my lifetime who would have been absolutely brilliant in this. The kind of leader who would have been calm, authoritarian, decisive and inspirational:
Margaret Thatcher.
That's right. Me, a lefty, is craving a Maggie.
The core of the failure in the west seems to be failing to take seriously things that happened in China and the rest of the far east - both the seriousness of the initial outbreak, and options you have to contain it, many of them learned through bitter experience in screwing up the attempt to deal with SARS. So if you want a politician who might have been able to get ahead of things you need someone who pays attention to things that happen in east asia, instead of trying to understand it based on the lessons from the 1918 flu pandemic.
I think it's significant that Jeremy Hunt, one of the only people to speak out against the consensus last week when the British were busy getting knocked on their arses - lived in Japan and was learning Chinese.
Your point about Jeremy Hunt is super-smart. I think you've crystallised why I am so irritated by our approach.
Think of this as a world war. Then think of the mistakes made during WW1 or WW2. Simple tactical mistakes that cost thousands of lives in a stroke. A ship sunk because a message didnt get through etc. We've just done one of those.
But what we haven't done is get to within 80 miles of Moscow and then hit the Winter. Then turned all the way back home and routed. We have caught our mistake fairly early, we considered invading Russia. We stepped over their border but it was an accident and the Russians believed us.
The problem now is we all have to hunker down for a long war. We will need Blitz spirit without any of the bits of the Blitz that made it fun and inspirational.0 -
Since you flagged this up a couple of weeks ago, I have been taking a zinc and selenium supplement. Thanks.Foxy said:
Zinc is not a placebo. There is pretty good evidence for it as an antiviral.Luckyguy1983 said:The way
We should see some effect from the hand washing etc.. Can't even remember when that was!DavidL said:SK has now had less than 100 new cases for 3 days in a row. Like China they seem to have controlled the virus. I find their example hopeful because they started off with it completely out of control with large scale community transmission where tracing seemed impossible. And yet with very aggressive testing they have done it.
This virus can be beaten. It requires us to take it very seriously, to cut off the vectors for transmission and to limit its opportunities. I think that we are now doing that. I also understand the logic of our earlier policy and the reasons that we wanted to address this now rather than in winter. But there is ultimately no alternative. To stop the virus from killing large numbers of vulnerable people it’s transmission needs to be stopped.
Our numbers will deteriorate for at least 2 weeks yet. That means thousands of additional cases and several hundred additional deaths. And then we shall see.
The most crucial thing for me I keeping people out of hospital, and that means some form of treatment at home. There was a 'doctor' app heavily advertised last year, could we use that for consultations? There also needs to be some form of prescription that can be offered and home delivered. Even vitamin c and zinc would be better than nothing as a placebo.
https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1239559464858144771?s=091 -
I don’t know what Germany will do. But I know what it should do. Ditto for the UK!DavidL said:
Good luck with that. I fear Germany will not only respond weakly itself but make the use of monetary policy through the ECB much more difficult. The role of the central bank is absolutely key in this response. Can you really see the Germans allowing it to pump the required liquidity into the PIGS? And yet these countries need it even more than we do with their larger tourist industries absolutely dead.SouthamObserver said:
Yep. There is no alternative. Ideally, this needs to be as coordinated and internationalised as possible. Trump cannot be trusted to be a part if it, and would not want to be anyway, so the US government will have to be bypassed. But that leaves plenty more that can play a part. In Europe, Germany needs to step up, for example.DavidL said:
As I said last night the only thing that I can see that will work is allowing firms to draw on credit to replace their lost cash flow on the condition that they pass this on to their staff and gig workers. I can’t think of anything else that is going to allow cash to flow through the system sufficiently. The benefits system could not possibly cope. The banks could not survive so many of their securities becoming non functioning at once or the collapse of asset prices. Some of these businesses will ultimately fail in the changed world, especially those dealing with travel, holidays, cruises etc. So be it. The priority now is to keep enough businesses alive to ensure we still have an economy when the health war is won.SouthamObserver said:Key points:
1. Protect incomes
2. Do not allow cashflow issues to kill businesses
3. Be clear there will be consequences for everyone as a result
4. Be clear these consequences are far better than the alternatives
0 -
This’d be bad news for Dura Ace’s competition
https://twitter.com/antonkreil/status/1239738569595342850?s=210 -
It is easy to tell that this is a real crisis, no one is moaning about the new Vanilla format1
-
It is perfectly clear they are trying to have as much of the impact the lockdown will have in Italy, Spain and France without the damage enforcement of the lockdown will have (whilst reserving the option to go lockdown later on).Jonathan said:The government’s position is weird.
Strong (entirely optional) emergency measures to be implemented strictly (or so far as practically possible), ASAP (by the weekend maybe).
Excellent policy imo rather than weird.1 -
We have been taking zinc as well as Vit-C overdoses for a week now. We have two month's supply.Foxy said:Zinc is not a placebo. There is pretty good evidence for it as an antiviral.
https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1239559464858144771?s=090