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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Joe Biden: tough seasoned candidate or bumbling geriatric?

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  • Options
    alteregoalterego Posts: 1,100
    dr_spyn said:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52077997

    @alterego
    13 deaths without underlying medical problems. (unless I have misread the final sentence).

    1 This is the BBC interpretation
    2 It doesn't address which is responsible for death twixt underlying problems and CV where both are present.

    CV may have a heavy weighting (like smoking and lung cancer) but I think it's important to not lose sight of proclivities per the Government's list of health issues being high risk in association with CV.
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,886
    felix said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also wtf is he doing going out on a 'daily forage for victuals'? And he's worried that some ethnic groups don't understand what is happening. Why on earth would a sane sentient person choose to go out on to the streets DAILY in the midst of a highly contagious pandemic.?
    'While recklessly disobeying Govt advice I saw other people recklessly disobeying Govt advice, what stupid people they are.'
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,592
    Andy_JS said:

    It's concerning that a coroner apparently decided to class a death as linked to coronavirus just because there was a report of the victim having coughed. I hope this isn't happening in other places. If so the figures may be higher than they should be.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/27/chloe-middleton-death-21-year-old-not-recorded-nhs-covid-19-related

    I am surprised at no post mortem in a sudden death in a fit 21 year old. Toxicology in particular.

    She wouldn't feature in the figures published, as these are only hospital deaths with confirmed COVID19 on testing (hence some died on previous days and swab results awaited).

    As the only people being tested are suspect hospital patients with respiratory symptoms, these are deaths due to COVID19, not just with it as an incidental finding, and likely to be a significant underestimate of all deaths.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961
    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    But that's what people have been discussing in this thread, and in the tweet quoted by TSE.
    All I can see here is a lot of people thinking wrongly that it comes from the modelling of the Ferguson group at Imperial, and mouthing off on that basis.
    I don't think anyone has suggested it came from Ferguson's group.
    Look at Freedman's tweet, describing it as "the best case Imperial model"!

    In fact it's not a model at all - it's just shifting the Chinese curve into alignment with the curves from other countries.
    Ah, I thought you were referring to PBers. Yes. If anything this highlights how suspect the Chinese numbers actually are.
    For heaven's sake, I replied to the post quoting that tweet, pointing out that the Imperial College models were looking at a range of assumptions, so it would hardly be surprising if we were worse than the "best case", and you yourself replied:
    "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330."

    Obviously you thought it came from the Imperial College models yourself!
    Huh? I was referring to the same model in the tweet, unless Ferguson's group also predicted 260 cases per day as the peak in their best case?
    I repeat. You were replying to my comment that because the IC models looked at a range of assumptions it wouldn't be surprising if we worse than the "best case" they looked at. And you replied "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330." Clearly you thought 260 came from the IC models.
    The tweet said it was the best case scenario, and that was incorrect, it was the central estimate for the prediction.
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,713
    isam said:

    alterego said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    Surely the peak day should be 1st April.
    I was sentbthis today. No idea of whether it is correct or spam

    This is a text from an NHS worker

    As of tomorrow, do not leave home for bread for anything! Because the worst begins tomorrow as the incubation date is met and many people that are positive with the virus start to peak!! It’s at this time other people are most vulnerable! so it is very important to stay home and not to be in contact with anybody, even members of your family if possible!! Being very careful is very important and very crucial at this time!!

    As from tomorrow we are going to see the start of the peak of those that are positive, then there will be two weeks of calm and then two weeks where it decreases.

    * What happened in Italy is that they neglected the contagion period and that is why all the cases turned out together and so badly, plus they didn’t know what they were dealing with *.

    * And finally, please do not receive visits from anyone, not even from the same family. This is all for the good of all. *

    WE WILL BE IN THE MAXIMUM STAGE OF INFECTION.

    * DO NOT HOLD ON TO THIS MESSAGE, PASS IT ON TO ALL YOUR CONTACTS *
    Had that off different people on WhatsApp every day this week
    Use of tomorrow rather than a specific date isnt much help in that case!
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332
    edited March 2020
    eadric said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also why COVID is likely to rip through BAME communities. Many videos out there showing lockdown being completely ignored by some Muslim and African communities

    In France it is even worse, and the police have admitted they simply can’t enforce social distancing in the bain lieues

    Multiculturalism is about to exact a heavy price on those who can least afford it.
    Three groups around where I live don't seem to be able to do social distancing - the young and the.... un-assimilated asians and eastern europeans. All three bimble along the pavements, often in groups and seems pained when you cross the road to avoid them.

    The Chinese and Japanese are masked up (surgical masks only) and often walk in the road to avoid pedestrians.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,655

    Re Covid 19 - could see the fall of football as we know it

    Yesterday Sky allowed me to pause their sports subscription and today BT have credited one month sport subscription with further reviews

    Assuming wholesale cancellation of sports subscriptions are happening now just how many will reinstate their full packages when sport returns, but maybe of an even wider concern to subscription channels is where will the money come from to afford them from the populace. I can see a large uptake of freeview

    I assume the broadcasters will litigate over broken contracts but the obscene flow of money into football is going to come to a juddering halt.

    Many clubs , including famous ones, will not survive this going forward

    Or maybe... the market pressures that drove the rise of megabucks football in the first place will recur again once C-19 is under control?
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,133

    HYUFD said:

    Floater said:

    I remind myself that only yesterday the comment sections on the Daily Mail site were saying this is a scare story by the NWO to set up a global government.......

    Peter Hitchens still thinks that
    I'm surprised he hasn't yet proclaimed a link between contracting COVID-19 and marijuana use.
    He has been on question time about 26 times, it seems the more extreme and ridiculous you can be, the more likely you are to be invited back.
    I mentioned on here the other day that I got my worst ever chest infection from a spliff I shared at a party in Cambridge. So he may have a point if he did.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited March 2020
    ABZ said:

    Floater said:

    If anybody needed reminding before todays figures, the next month or so at least is going to be very grim.

    Yes - the peak is allegedly at least a couple of weeks off
    For London....other parts of the country are 2-3 weeks behind. So I think we have to brace for appalling scenes first from the capital and then everywhere else on our screens for 4-5 weeks.
    I don't understand the rationale here - the lockdown takes place at the same time everywhere - hence you will, approximately, have peaks at the same time everywhere. The timing of the peak is a direct function of the measures you put in place - as these have been implemented nationally the peaks should be roughly synchronous. What will differ is that the amplitude of the peak will be larger in those areas that started with more cases once the lockdown was implemented.
    Not quite....its quite complicated as a number of factors at play. Current spread when you enable the lockdown, the density of population, % of people who obey the measures, focal points, etc etc etc.

    This might give you some of the ideas and how they can shift not only the peak, but the shape of the curve.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxAaO2rsdIs
  • Options
    alteregoalterego Posts: 1,100

    HYUFD said:

    Floater said:

    I remind myself that only yesterday the comment sections on the Daily Mail site were saying this is a scare story by the NWO to set up a global government.......

    Peter Hitchens still thinks that
    I'm surprised he hasn't yet proclaimed a link between contracting COVID-19 and marijuana use.
    He has been on question time about 26 times, it seems the more extreme and ridiculous you can be, the more likely you are to be invited back.
    That's show business
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,713
    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    But that's what people have been discussing in this thread, and in the tweet quoted by TSE.
    All I can see here is a lot of people thinking wrongly that it comes from the modelling of the Ferguson group at Imperial, and mouthing off on that basis.
    I don't think anyone has suggested it came from Ferguson's group.
    Look at Freedman's tweet, describing it as "the best case Imperial model"!

    In fact it's not a model at all - it's just shifting the Chinese curve into alignment with the curves from other countries.
    Ah, I thought you were referring to PBers. Yes. If anything this highlights how suspect the Chinese numbers actually are.
    For heaven's sake, I replied to the post quoting that tweet, pointing out that the Imperial College models were looking at a range of assumptions, so it would hardly be surprising if we were worse than the "best case", and you yourself replied:
    "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330."

    Obviously you thought it came from the Imperial College models yourself!
    Huh? I was referring to the same model in the tweet, unless Ferguson's group also predicted 260 cases per day as the peak in their best case?
    I repeat. You were replying to my comment that because the IC models looked at a range of assumptions it wouldn't be surprising if we worse than the "best case" they looked at. And you replied "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330." Clearly you thought 260 came from the IC models.
    The tweet said it was the best case scenario, and that was incorrect, it was the central estimate for the prediction.
    It is just a table showing what would happen if x happened.

    Its like showing how the Premier League would play out if the favourites won all their matches. It doesnt mean its going to happen or anyone ever expected it to.
  • Options
    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,149

    The Chinese and Japanese are masked up (surgical masks only) and often walk in the road to avoid pedestrians.

    I've seen a few comments from Japanese people in Europe about getting racist abuse when they walk around wearing masks, so potentially the mask is to avoid getting attacked by the virus, and the walking in the road is to avoid getting attacked by the human.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,655
    edited March 2020
    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    But that's what people have been discussing in this thread, and in the tweet quoted by TSE.
    All I can see here is a lot of people thinking wrongly that it comes from the modelling of the Ferguson group at Imperial, and mouthing off on that basis.
    I don't think anyone has suggested it came from Ferguson's group.
    Look at Freedman's tweet, describing it as "the best case Imperial model"!

    In fact it's not a model at all - it's just shifting the Chinese curve into alignment with the curves from other countries.
    There is surely far too much of this 'aligning curves' business going on, proving diddly squat.

    E.g: http://nrg.cs.ucl.ac.uk/mjh/covid19
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited March 2020
    eadric said:

    eadric said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also why COVID is likely to rip through BAME communities. Many videos out there showing lockdown being completely ignored by some Muslim and African communities

    In France it is even worse, and the police have admitted they simply can’t enforce social distancing in the bain lieues

    Multiculturalism is about to exact a heavy price on those who can least afford it.
    Three groups around where I live don't seem to be able to do social distancing - the young and the.... un-assimilated asians and eastern europeans. All three bimble along the pavements, often in groups and seems pained when you cross the road to avoid them.

    The Chinese and Japanese are masked up (surgical masks only) and often walk in the road to avoid pedestrians.

    The Chinese and Japanese will likely survive. The Muslims and east Europeans will likely die.

    I went on a long walk the other day, along the Penarth cliffs. Everyone was social distancing, apart from four Romanians/Albanians (the accents were definitely south east European)

    They were having a barbecue. They were very friendly. “Lovely day’”

    They seemed bemused when I stepped back to keep my social distance.
    We don't know if it is still true, but last week Maajid Nawaz said that 25% of the dead at that time were Asian.

    Could be an unfortunate cluster, could be related to going to the mosque / temple in which an individual had it. But there are probably other factors, more likely to have certain underlying health conditions and live in multi-generational households.
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    Chameleon said:

    felix said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also wtf is he doing going out on a 'daily forage for victuals'? And he's worried that some ethnic groups don't understand what is happening. Why on earth would a sane sentient person choose to go out on to the streets DAILY in the midst of a highly contagious pandemic.?
    'While recklessly disobeying Govt advice I saw other people recklessly disobeying Govt advice, what stupid people they are.'
    And being very rude about posters on here being obsessed by a poll - which they weren't - then writing reams of explanation as to why the poll didn't count. 'Methinks he doth protest too much milord'.
  • Options

    Re Covid 19 - could see the fall of football as we know it

    Yesterday Sky allowed me to pause their sports subscription and today BT have credited one month sport subscription with further reviews

    Assuming wholesale cancellation of sports subscriptions are happening now just how many will reinstate their full packages when sport returns, but maybe of an even wider concern to subscription channels is where will the money come from to afford them from the populace. I can see a large uptake of freeview

    I assume the broadcasters will litigate over broken contracts but the obscene flow of money into football is going to come to a juddering halt.

    Many clubs , including famous ones, will not survive this going forward

    Or maybe... the market pressures that drove the rise of megabucks football in the first place will recur again once C-19 is under control?
    The damage is happening now and I do believe it is going to lay waste to football as we know it.

    Of course I could be wrong but I do not see where the money is coming from in the populace for sports subscriptions after this economic armageddon
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,713
    alterego said:

    HYUFD said:

    Floater said:

    I remind myself that only yesterday the comment sections on the Daily Mail site were saying this is a scare story by the NWO to set up a global government.......

    Peter Hitchens still thinks that
    I'm surprised he hasn't yet proclaimed a link between contracting COVID-19 and marijuana use.
    He has been on question time about 26 times, it seems the more extreme and ridiculous you can be, the more likely you are to be invited back.
    That's show business
    Inform, educate, and entertain, not just entertain.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,216

    DavidL said:

    OllyT said:

    DavidL said:

    eadric said:
    That would be an incredible result but I fear that if the model is largely based on China's "actual" results it may prove to be optimistic.
    China is desperately trying to save face and salvage its international reputation. I would be amazed if their cumulative death figures are anywhere near accurate.
    I agree. The problem is that they have seriously underestimated how bad this would be in western countries with advanced medical systems and their figures look increasingly incredible. Their figures for the rest of China outside Wuhan, particularly so.
    I am sure initially there was probably a fair bit of thought that less developed healthcare, high levels of smoking and pollution and incredibly high density housing would mean the Chinese higher death rates would be higher than the West.
    Yes and that still seems likely if you think about what we know of the disease. And yet the Chinese are claiming a far lower death rate than elsewhere.

    To put this into context of the resolved cases the world average is currently 17% resolved by death. Italy is currently at 45%. China, on the same basis, is claiming to be at 4%. So either the death/recovered ratio in the rest of the world is about to fall off a cliff (and it has been climbing steadily in the wrong direction since the start of this month when, dominated by China, it was at 6) or the China experience is misreported. I also fear that the final death estimates are going to creep up from our current assumptions.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    But that's what people have been discussing in this thread, and in the tweet quoted by TSE.
    All I can see here is a lot of people thinking wrongly that it comes from the modelling of the Ferguson group at Imperial, and mouthing off on that basis.
    I don't think anyone has suggested it came from Ferguson's group.
    Look at Freedman's tweet, describing it as "the best case Imperial model"!

    In fact it's not a model at all - it's just shifting the Chinese curve into alignment with the curves from other countries.
    Ah, I thought you were referring to PBers. Yes. If anything this highlights how suspect the Chinese numbers actually are.
    For heaven's sake, I replied to the post quoting that tweet, pointing out that the Imperial College models were looking at a range of assumptions, so it would hardly be surprising if we were worse than the "best case", and you yourself replied:
    "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330."

    Obviously you thought it came from the Imperial College models yourself!
    Huh? I was referring to the same model in the tweet, unless Ferguson's group also predicted 260 cases per day as the peak in their best case?
    I repeat. You were replying to my comment that because the IC models looked at a range of assumptions it wouldn't be surprising if we worse than the "best case" they looked at. And you replied "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330." Clearly you thought 260 came from the IC models.
    The tweet said it was the best case scenario, and that was incorrect, it was the central estimate for the prediction.
    It is just a table showing what would happen if x happened.

    Its like showing how the Premier League would play out if the favourites won all their matches. It doesnt mean its going to happen or anyone ever expected it to.
    The abstract doesn't read that way. It says that decline in the growth of mortality rates are converging with those seen in China, and they can use that to estimate the total deaths in a number of countries.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,133
    Jonathan said:

    HYUFD said:

    Jonathan said:

    HYUFD said:

    Jonathan said:

    Charles said:

    This was a fun snapshot of the British class system from the briefings yesterday:

    Boris Johnson, PM (Oxford Union president 1986, Balliol) has coronavirus.
    So Michael Gove, his effective deputy (Oxford Union president 1988, LMH) takes press conference with
    Simon Stevens, NHS head (Oxford Union president 1987, Balliol).

    It’s a massive improvement in social mobility that LMH gets a look in 😂
    Proof if proof were needed it ain’t what you know it’s who you know.
    And you need to know someone to get into LMH and Balliol to meet the people you need to know in the first place
    Corrected for you.

    Jonathan said:

    eadric said:

    Grimly amusing.

    There are better epidemiologists on PB than at Imperial
    UCL is a dump.
    What have UCL got to do with it, or was that just a random observation thrown in there?
    A precisely calibrated comment.
    Given over 90% of Oxbridge students have at least 3 A grade A levels that is not correct
    Tell me you’re not naive enough to believe colleges select purely on merit?
    My Dad, a very good footballer who played for English Universities, got a sportsman’s third from Hull. He then applied to St Edmund Hall, Oxford two months after the deadline to do a Postgrad Cert Ed. The tutors met him off the train, gave him a lift to interview and offered him a place there and then. The University left back (soccer was a bigger deal then and the Varsity Match played at Wembley) had been badly injured and they needed a replacement.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,655

    Re Covid 19 - could see the fall of football as we know it

    Yesterday Sky allowed me to pause their sports subscription and today BT have credited one month sport subscription with further reviews

    Assuming wholesale cancellation of sports subscriptions are happening now just how many will reinstate their full packages when sport returns, but maybe of an even wider concern to subscription channels is where will the money come from to afford them from the populace. I can see a large uptake of freeview

    I assume the broadcasters will litigate over broken contracts but the obscene flow of money into football is going to come to a juddering halt.

    Many clubs , including famous ones, will not survive this going forward

    Or maybe... the market pressures that drove the rise of megabucks football in the first place will recur again once C-19 is under control?
    The damage is happening now and I do believe it is going to lay waste to football as we know it.

    Of course I could be wrong but I do not see where the money is coming from in the populace for sports subscriptions after this economic armageddon
    Players will still play but on a fraction of their current salaries.
  • Options
    ABZABZ Posts: 441

    ABZ said:

    Floater said:

    If anybody needed reminding before todays figures, the next month or so at least is going to be very grim.

    Yes - the peak is allegedly at least a couple of weeks off
    For London....other parts of the country are 2-3 weeks behind. So I think we have to brace for appalling scenes first from the capital and then everywhere else on our screens for 4-5 weeks.
    I don't understand the rationale here - the lockdown takes place at the same time everywhere - hence you will, approximately, have peaks at the same time everywhere. The timing of the peak is a direct function of the measures you put in place - as these have been implemented nationally the peaks should be roughly synchronous. What will differ is that the amplitude of the peak will be larger in those areas that started with more cases once the lockdown was implemented.
    Not quite....its quite complicated as a number of factors at play. Current spread when you enable the lockdown, the density of population, % of people who obey the measures, focal points, etc etc etc.

    This might give you some of the ideas and how they can shift not only the peak, but the shape of the curve.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxAaO2rsdIs


    Thanks - that's interesting. Still not sure why you would expect London to be first though?
  • Options
    nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    ABZ said:

    Floater said:

    If anybody needed reminding before todays figures, the next month or so at least is going to be very grim.

    Yes - the peak is allegedly at least a couple of weeks off
    For London....other parts of the country are 2-3 weeks behind. So I think we have to brace for appalling scenes first from the capital and then everywhere else on our screens for 4-5 weeks.
    I don't understand the rationale here - the lockdown takes place at the same time everywhere - hence you will, approximately, have peaks at the same time everywhere. The timing of the peak is a direct function of the measures you put in place - as these have been implemented nationally the peaks should be roughly synchronous. What will differ is that the amplitude of the peak will be larger in those areas that started with more cases once the lockdown was implemented.
    I think the issue is about critical mass that once that is reached then there are many more infection opportunities. You could see the numbers in London rising faster than the rest of the country, apart from the early hotspots that tracking resolved. If as it looks in spain, the less badly hit areas will peak first despite being slower to take off. Others have pointed out that London has the underground, lots of migrant workers living on top off each other, not to different to Madrid.
  • Options
    ABZABZ Posts: 441
    ABZ said:

    ABZ said:

    Floater said:

    If anybody needed reminding before todays figures, the next month or so at least is going to be very grim.

    Yes - the peak is allegedly at least a couple of weeks off
    For London....other parts of the country are 2-3 weeks behind. So I think we have to brace for appalling scenes first from the capital and then everywhere else on our screens for 4-5 weeks.
    I don't understand the rationale here - the lockdown takes place at the same time everywhere - hence you will, approximately, have peaks at the same time everywhere. The timing of the peak is a direct function of the measures you put in place - as these have been implemented nationally the peaks should be roughly synchronous. What will differ is that the amplitude of the peak will be larger in those areas that started with more cases once the lockdown was implemented.
    Not quite....its quite complicated as a number of factors at play. Current spread when you enable the lockdown, the density of population, % of people who obey the measures, focal points, etc etc etc.

    This might give you some of the ideas and how they can shift not only the peak, but the shape of the curve.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxAaO2rsdIs
    Thanks - that's interesting. Still not sure why you would expect London to be first though?
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    Floater said:

    I remind myself that only yesterday the comment sections on the Daily Mail site were saying this is a scare story by the NWO to set up a global government.......

    Peter Hitchens still thinks that
    I'm surprised he hasn't yet proclaimed a link between contracting COVID-19 and marijuana use.
    He has been on question time about 26 times, it seems the more extreme and ridiculous you can be, the more likely you are to be invited back.
    I mentioned on here the other day that I got my worst ever chest infection from a spliff I shared at a party in Cambridge. So he may have a point if he did.
    Snap - me also - in 1972 I think.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332
    felix said:

    Chameleon said:

    felix said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also wtf is he doing going out on a 'daily forage for victuals'? And he's worried that some ethnic groups don't understand what is happening. Why on earth would a sane sentient person choose to go out on to the streets DAILY in the midst of a highly contagious pandemic.?
    'While recklessly disobeying Govt advice I saw other people recklessly disobeying Govt advice, what stupid people they are.'
    And being very rude about posters on here being obsessed by a poll - which they weren't - then writing reams of explanation as to why the poll didn't count. 'Methinks he doth protest too much milord'.
    To be fair - if you didn't stock up before the rush, it is very hard to go a day or 2 without going out. Much more fresh stuff than long life/cans etc
  • Options
    alteregoalterego Posts: 1,100
    OllyT said:

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    DavidL said:

    eadric said:
    That would be an incredible result but I fear that if the model is largely based on China's "actual" results it may prove to be optimistic.
    China is desperately trying to save face and salvage its international reputation. I would be amazed if their cumulative death figures are anywhere near accurate.
    China's got to stop eating fad shit (for certain and for ever) if it wants to salvage its reputation
    I understand that live markets have been banned but will it just go underground? I expect so.

    IIUC Sars, Covid-19, HIV-Aids and Ebola all caused by species-jumping disease from eating wild animals. Will humans learn their lesson. No.
    I'm not sure anyone else imports as many wild animals to eat or use "medicinally" as does China. It's fads seriously threaten many species.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    But that's what people have been discussing in this thread, and in the tweet quoted by TSE.
    All I can see here is a lot of people thinking wrongly that it comes from the modelling of the Ferguson group at Imperial, and mouthing off on that basis.
    I don't think anyone has suggested it came from Ferguson's group.
    Look at Freedman's tweet, describing it as "the best case Imperial model"!

    In fact it's not a model at all - it's just shifting the Chinese curve into alignment with the curves from other countries.
    There is surely far to much of this 'aligning curves' business going on, proving diddly squat.

    E.g: http://nrg.cs.ucl.ac.uk/mjh/covid19
    "Torturing the data" is what my stats prof at university called it.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited March 2020
    Back the f##k up mother-truckers...

    Social distancing: new study suggests two metres is not enough

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/03/27/social-distancing-new-study-suggests-two-metres-not-enough/
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332
    edited March 2020
    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    DavidL said:

    eadric said:
    That would be an incredible result but I fear that if the model is largely based on China's "actual" results it may prove to be optimistic.
    China is desperately trying to save face and salvage its international reputation. I would be amazed if their cumulative death figures are anywhere near accurate.
    China's got to stop eating fad shit (for certain and for ever) if it wants to salvage its reputation
    I understand that live markets have been banned but will it just go underground? I expect so.

    IIUC Sars, Covid-19, HIV-Aids and Ebola all caused by species-jumping disease from eating wild animals. Will humans learn their lesson. No.
    I'm not sure anyone else imports as many wild animals to eat or use "medicinally" as does China. It's fads seriously threaten many species.
    If the Chinese Communist Party decide that this is a choice between them and the animal markets, then the animal markets will go and the recalcitrant will get to meet quite a few Muslims - in their new homes in the prison camps.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,133
    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    DavidL said:

    eadric said:
    That would be an incredible result but I fear that if the model is largely based on China's "actual" results it may prove to be optimistic.
    China is desperately trying to save face and salvage its international reputation. I would be amazed if their cumulative death figures are anywhere near accurate.
    China's got to stop eating fad shit (for certain and for ever) if it wants to salvage its reputation
    I understand that live markets have been banned but will it just go underground? I expect so.

    IIUC Sars, Covid-19, HIV-Aids and Ebola all caused by species-jumping disease from eating wild animals. Will humans learn their lesson. No.
    I'm not sure anyone else imports as many wild animals to eat or use "medicinally" as does China. It's fads seriously threaten many species.
    BSE came from eating domesticated animals (albeit after feeding them to themselves) so maybe we should just stop doing that
  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,884

    Although the garage a mile away sells Tunnocks tea cakes. So could survive a few weeks....

    https://twitter.com/geminiorchard2/status/1243874866283130882
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    stodge said:

    Barnesian said:

    kle4 said:


    Your point may be more effective if you don't precede it with a charmless, self important and arrogant introduction. Lighten up, and not for the first time perhaps don't judge people for not choosing to be as efficient in their density of useful information per post as your good self. Different strokes for different folks. People are quite capable of judging for themselves if quality maches quantity.

    Stodge is normally very polite. He usually starts with a "Good morning" or "Good Afternoon".
    Unfortunately the truth is somewhere in the middle. I try to be polite as often as I can and perhaps I'm too verbose in developing an argument but that's how I roll as a non-user of twitter.

    I'm irritated that people who opine several times a day on matters political seem genuinely surprised Johnson and Sunak are scoring such high ratings and take the Conservative figure of 54% as some huge vote of confidence.

    We go through this every time there's a crisis - people seem surprised leadership approval ratings spike up.

    MY point is none of this is politically significant and once this is over the awkward questions may well start being asked such as who decided what, when and on what basis? Was the debate about the "herd immunity" business as usual theory held in Cabinet, at Cobra or elsewhere? Were the potential consequences of the "herd immunity" strategy in terms of deaths understood or explained? If so, by whom and when?

    On the gross politics of it, I'd ask why the Spanish Flu - despite being one of the most significant events of the 20th century - has almost no profile in the public mind. The answer seems to be that pandemics create such a visceral horror in the population that there is no incentive to dwell on them afterwards, and every incentive to forget.

    I suspect that there will be little political capital to be gained by the Opposition from harping on about the details of herd immunity or who knew or did what and when. Essentially, everyone will be too happy to be out of lockdown and alive to do anything other than want to forget the whole ugly experience as quickly as possible. The Government will have to fuck up very, very badly indeed to pay a serious political price.
    How high a profile does the Korean War have? Of the KMT’s retreat to Formosa?

    They were both fairly significant events about which the average Brit knows little
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,022
    Floater said:

    An NHS surgeon who worked in London has become the first in the UK to die of coronavirus.

    Adil El Tayar was an organ transplant consultant who worked in two of London's biggest hospitals - St Mary's and St George's.

    Dr El Tayar died on March 25 at West Middlesex University Hospital in west London.

    He had been self-isolating after noticing symptoms in mid-March.

    He was admitted to hospital on 20 March.

    I believe he is actually the second as I understand a doctor in Southend has died too

    Quite a moving tribute to him from his cousin, the tv jouro Zeinab Badawi, on R4's Our Own Correspondent this am.
  • Options
    alteregoalterego Posts: 1,100

    alterego said:

    HYUFD said:

    Floater said:

    I remind myself that only yesterday the comment sections on the Daily Mail site were saying this is a scare story by the NWO to set up a global government.......

    Peter Hitchens still thinks that
    I'm surprised he hasn't yet proclaimed a link between contracting COVID-19 and marijuana use.
    He has been on question time about 26 times, it seems the more extreme and ridiculous you can be, the more likely you are to be invited back.
    That's show business
    Inform, educate, and entertain, not just entertain.
    I wasn't defending it
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332
    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    HYUFD said:

    Jonathan said:

    HYUFD said:

    Jonathan said:

    Charles said:

    This was a fun snapshot of the British class system from the briefings yesterday:

    Boris Johnson, PM (Oxford Union president 1986, Balliol) has coronavirus.
    So Michael Gove, his effective deputy (Oxford Union president 1988, LMH) takes press conference with
    Simon Stevens, NHS head (Oxford Union president 1987, Balliol).

    It’s a massive improvement in social mobility that LMH gets a look in 😂
    Proof if proof were needed it ain’t what you know it’s who you know.
    And you need to know someone to get into LMH and Balliol to meet the people you need to know in the first place
    Corrected for you.

    Jonathan said:

    eadric said:

    Grimly amusing.

    There are better epidemiologists on PB than at Imperial
    UCL is a dump.
    What have UCL got to do with it, or was that just a random observation thrown in there?
    A precisely calibrated comment.
    Given over 90% of Oxbridge students have at least 3 A grade A levels that is not correct
    Tell me you’re not naive enough to believe colleges select purely on merit?
    My Dad, a very good footballer who played for English Universities, got a sportsman’s third from Hull. He then applied to St Edmund Hall, Oxford two months after the deadline to do a Postgrad Cert Ed. The tutors met him off the train, gave him a lift to interview and offered him a place there and then. The University left back (soccer was a bigger deal then and the Varsity Match played at Wembley) had been badly injured and they needed a replacement.
    I've heard of success by changing to the viola, so as to apply the year that the viola player from a very successful quartet was leaving....
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050

    Re Covid 19 - could see the fall of football as we know it

    Yesterday Sky allowed me to pause their sports subscription and today BT have credited one month sport subscription with further reviews

    Assuming wholesale cancellation of sports subscriptions are happening now just how many will reinstate their full packages when sport returns, but maybe of an even wider concern to subscription channels is where will the money come from to afford them from the populace. I can see a large uptake of freeview

    I assume the broadcasters will litigate over broken contracts but the obscene flow of money into football is going to come to a juddering halt.

    Many clubs , including famous ones, will not survive this going forward

    The Jury is out on what is going to survive economically....

    I've been shocked about how much my obsessive compulsive fascination with football has simply dissipated these last three weeks....

    I've kept my own subscriptions going.....


  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,022

    HYUFD said:

    Floater said:

    I remind myself that only yesterday the comment sections on the Daily Mail site were saying this is a scare story by the NWO to set up a global government.......

    Peter Hitchens still thinks that
    I'm surprised he hasn't yet proclaimed a link between contracting COVID-19 and marijuana use.
    Tbf having a big wet doob passed to you would be a maximum risk activity at the moment.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Charles said:

    This was a fun snapshot of the British class system from the briefings yesterday:

    Boris Johnson, PM (Oxford Union president 1986, Balliol) has coronavirus.
    So Michael Gove, his effective deputy (Oxford Union president 1988, LMH) takes press conference with
    Simon Stevens, NHS head (Oxford Union president 1987, Balliol).

    It’s a massive improvement in social mobility that LMH gets a look in 😂
    I remember having to walk there a couple of times - it felt like I was on a voyage to the moon... :wink:
    I used to drive to LMH...
  • Options
    AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    On topic, it’s hard to square this polling with current betting:

    https://twitter.com/colinkahl/status/1243912323619631104?s=21
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    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,884
    stodge said:

    I fear there are people who will die alone, unaided, as a result of this. I fear there are those who will try to manage their illness at home without outside help and hope their family or house mates can help them if things get bad.

    There are reports of such things happening already, including people who allegedly called 999 and were told they were not in a priority group.

    The pictures from the Excel centre this morning are remarkable, but even more so when you realise it may soon be full of people in acute medical distress.
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124

    felix said:

    Chameleon said:

    felix said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also wtf is he doing going out on a 'daily forage for victuals'? And he's worried that some ethnic groups don't understand what is happening. Why on earth would a sane sentient person choose to go out on to the streets DAILY in the midst of a highly contagious pandemic.?
    'While recklessly disobeying Govt advice I saw other people recklessly disobeying Govt advice, what stupid people they are.'
    And being very rude about posters on here being obsessed by a poll - which they weren't - then writing reams of explanation as to why the poll didn't count. 'Methinks he doth protest too much milord'.
    To be fair - if you didn't stock up before the rush, it is very hard to go a day or 2 without going out. Much more fresh stuff than long life/cans etc
    I normally go shopping daily - I'm retired and have the time - I enjoy it. Now I keep it to once a week without any difficulty. It benefits me obviously but also makes me one less nuisance for the authorities to worry about. Everyone should be trying to pull together.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    RobD said:

    ABZ said:

    RobD said:

    ABZ said:

    Jonathan said:

    eadric said:

    Grimly amusing.

    There are better epidemiologists on PB than at Imperial
    UCL is a dump.
    To be fair, they were not epidemiologists. The model was naive and not based on anything to do with epidemic modelling, so really unfair to equate it to the work of Neil Ferguson et al., who are absolute pros at this...
    Why in God's name are they publicising it then?
    I don't think Imperial were to be fair...
    Maybe a better question is, why are they even making these naive models in the first place? Seems highly irresponsible.

    How many models get made and shared on PB?
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    DavidL said:

    Re Covid 19 - could see the fall of football as we know it

    Yesterday Sky allowed me to pause their sports subscription and today BT have credited one month sport subscription with further reviews

    Assuming wholesale cancellation of sports subscriptions are happening now just how many will reinstate their full packages when sport returns, but maybe of an even wider concern to subscription channels is where will the money come from to afford them from the populace. I can see a large uptake of freeview

    I assume the broadcasters will litigate over broken contracts but the obscene flow of money into football is going to come to a juddering halt.

    Many clubs , including famous ones, will not survive this going forward

    To be honest if we no longer had a world where footballers were earning more than £200k a week I would be far from devastated.
    Quite - why on earth is such nonsense even being posted?
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050
    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    More importantly why do we allow Imperial College to be called that? It’s a disgrace! We should rename it Exhibition College or something. It’s upsetting for people who directly suffered from the Empire otherwise!
  • Options
    FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    What mask should I be buying for when I go out?
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    Re Covid 19 - could see the fall of football as we know it

    Yesterday Sky allowed me to pause their sports subscription and today BT have credited one month sport subscription with further reviews

    Assuming wholesale cancellation of sports subscriptions are happening now just how many will reinstate their full packages when sport returns, but maybe of an even wider concern to subscription channels is where will the money come from to afford them from the populace. I can see a large uptake of freeview

    I assume the broadcasters will litigate over broken contracts but the obscene flow of money into football is going to come to a juddering halt.

    Many clubs , including famous ones, will not survive this going forward

    To be honest if we no longer had a world where footballers were earning more than £200k a week I would be far from devastated.
    Likely the only country able to afford those kind of wages will be China.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,192

    On topic, it’s hard to square this polling with current betting:

    https://twitter.com/colinkahl/status/1243912323619631104?s=21

    Kaboom!!!!
  • Options
    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,149

    On topic, it’s hard to square this polling with current betting:

    https://twitter.com/colinkahl/status/1243912323619631104?s=21

    It seems like there's a portion of American voters who support their president in a time of crisis and that's showing up in the approval numbers, but that doesn't mean they're going to vote for him.
  • Options
    alteregoalterego Posts: 1,100

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    DavidL said:

    eadric said:
    That would be an incredible result but I fear that if the model is largely based on China's "actual" results it may prove to be optimistic.
    China is desperately trying to save face and salvage its international reputation. I would be amazed if their cumulative death figures are anywhere near accurate.
    China's got to stop eating fad shit (for certain and for ever) if it wants to salvage its reputation
    I understand that live markets have been banned but will it just go underground? I expect so.

    IIUC Sars, Covid-19, HIV-Aids and Ebola all caused by species-jumping disease from eating wild animals. Will humans learn their lesson. No.
    I'm not sure anyone else imports as many wild animals to eat or use "medicinally" as does China. It's fads seriously threaten many species.
    If the Chinese Communist Party decide that this is a choice between them and the animal markets, then the animal markets will go and the recalcitrant will get to meet quite a few Muslims - in their new homes in the prison camps.
    They've played hokey cokey with this for years. The problem is that it's the rich and influential who are largely responsible for the most troubling abuses. Fad shit is expensive!
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,133
    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    This was a fun snapshot of the British class system from the briefings yesterday:

    Boris Johnson, PM (Oxford Union president 1986, Balliol) has coronavirus.
    So Michael Gove, his effective deputy (Oxford Union president 1988, LMH) takes press conference with
    Simon Stevens, NHS head (Oxford Union president 1987, Balliol).

    It’s a massive improvement in social mobility that LMH gets a look in 😂
    I remember having to walk there a couple of times - it felt like I was on a voyage to the moon... :wink:
    I used to drive to LMH...
    When I was at Trinity we shared a rugby team with LMH. Total pain. The convention was to alternate captains between colleges every year and the captain would favour his own college in selections. You can punt directly from the college though - which is nice. Also my best friend from school was there so I knew the walk well.
  • Options
    squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,340
    alterego said:

    dr_spyn said:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52077997

    @alterego
    13 deaths without underlying medical problems. (unless I have misread the final sentence).

    1 This is the BBC interpretation
    2 It doesn't address which is responsible for death twixt underlying problems and CV where both are present.

    CV may have a heavy weighting (like smoking and lung cancer) but I think it's important to not lose sight of proclivities per the Government's list of health issues being high risk in association with CV.
    Dont necessarily believe that about underlying health problems or reasons for death. I guess there is little time for in depth post moterms unless absolutely necessary .
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,216
    Scott_xP said:

    Although the garage a mile away sells Tunnocks tea cakes. So could survive a few weeks....

    https://twitter.com/geminiorchard2/status/1243874866283130882
    Now this is a crisis.
  • Options
    ukpaulukpaul Posts: 649
    eadric said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also why COVID is likely to rip through BAME communities. Many videos out there showing lockdown being completely ignored by some Muslim and African communities

    In France it is even worse, and the police have admitted they simply can’t enforce social distancing in the bain lieues

    Multiculturalism is about to exact a heavy price on those who can least afford it.
    Actually, it doesn't seem to be culture but socio-economic.

    Looking around here(not a very large BAME community), there are streams of people coming out of the areas populated by the lower socio-economic end and, looking the other way, in the higher end, virtually nothing.

    Now that may be because it's easier to cope in a big place and less so in more packed living conditions, but there does also seem to be a different attitude as well.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,022
    Charles said:

    malcolmg said:

    IanB2 said:

    Just back from walking the dog, ISTM that there are a lot fewer people out and about today. The weather isn’t quite as nice, although fairly decent this morning. I wonder whether the top trio having come down with the virus has made it real for more people?

    Lovely day here for a change
    Looks like independence is not going to happen no matter how much you 'will' it too Malc

    Todays poll is evidence of the appreciation of the union by the Scots who recognise the strength of the union at times of national emergency

    I have always maintained the Scots would not vote for independence, but covid 19 has ensured it
    Weren't you recently humpfing about someone passing comment on a country in which they didn't live? Was it because you thought they didn't have right to stick their oar in or that they didn't have a clue, being so far away 'n' everything?
    My family have an absolute right to comment on Scots independence and will continue to do so. My children and grandchildren are half Scots and are entitled to wear their kilts

    Of course you may have some difficulty in understanding independence is over, but over it is

    And by the way, I was schooled in Berwick on Tweed and have lived with the desire of some for independence since those days in the 1950's, and of course lived in Edinburgh and was married in Lossiemouth
    Thinking someone has to be 'entitled' to be able to wear a kilt is a pretty good signifier of faux Jockism if ever I saw it. I have to break it to you that Chas & Dave could have worn kilts if they'd fancied it.

    Still, at least we know that you think some people are permitted to pass comment from a distance and others not.
    He said “their” rather than “a” - I’d read that as “their” tartan.
    Again, you can wear any old tartan you wish, no one but nobs and the McTourist industry gives a ****.
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050

    On topic, it’s hard to square this polling with current betting:

    https://twitter.com/colinkahl/status/1243912323619631104?s=21

    It seems like there's a portion of American voters who support their president in a time of crisis and that's showing up in the approval numbers, but that doesn't mean they're going to vote for him.

    His approval ratings for the crisis are very poor....they should be up in the 70's...
  • Options
    ChrisChris Posts: 11,119
    Andrew said:

    Similar sort of progression for UK daily cases as we've seen elsewhere - this is since we hit 100 cases (ignore that the trendline is linear, just put in there to compare daily variance with the different time periods)


    I can't believe the official number of cases - 17,000 - bears any relation to the real number now, so I can't believe a slight trend in the percentage growth rate of the daily number of new cases is telling us much at all.

    Given the number of deaths, there must be several hundred thousand cases now. Maybe half a million.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,258
    Freggles said:

    What mask should I be buying for when I go out?

    You don’t need a mask, just cough now and again, and no-one will come near enough to infect you.
  • Options
    IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Chorizo and broad bean risotto is less nice than it sounds. Two finger kitkats are unacceptably moreish.
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Good lord - we have everything we need - shops are well stocked with all of our regular goodies and some. Yesterday pasta and minced beef; tonight southern fried chicken with peas and broccoli, sunday loin of pork roast potatoes, etc......
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    Scott_xP said:

    Although the garage a mile away sells Tunnocks tea cakes. So could survive a few weeks....

    https://twitter.com/geminiorchard2/status/1243874866283130882
    I could really eat one of those bad boys now.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,914
    Freggles said:

    What mask should I be buying for when I go out?

    Do we need one ?

    It's the one bit of PPE I'm not going to bother with. Then again I'm in quite a rural area.
    Filled the misses' car today - Disposable gloves for the petrol pump. We have to travel during the lockdown, that won't apply to everyone mind.
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    felix said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also wtf is he doing going out on a 'daily forage for victuals'? And he's worried that some ethnic groups don't understand what is happening. Why on earth would a sane sentient person choose to go out on to the streets DAILY in the midst of a highly contagious pandemic.?
    He is a Lib Dem...
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    rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038
    Anyone know what the UK doubling time is, before and after lockdown?

    The difference between two and three days makes the difference between ~500,000 cases and 17,000,000 cases ... around now.
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    ChrisChris Posts: 11,119
    Charles said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    More importantly why do we allow Imperial College to be called that? It’s a disgrace! We should rename it Exhibition College or something. It’s upsetting for people who directly suffered from the Empire otherwise!
    Funnily enough, the "technology transfer" division of the College used to be called "Imperial Exploitation". I think it's now known as IMPEL for some reason.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited March 2020

    Anyone know what the UK doubling time is, before and after lockdown?

    The difference between two and three days makes the difference between ~500,000 cases and 17,000,000 cases ... around now.

    Charts on this thread showing various countries rates etc. Up from 2 to about 2.5 days. Scary one is Spain, no real sign of any slowing down.

    Interesting that even before the lockdown the UK was already "flattening the curve".

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/52075063/page/2
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,258
    eadric said:

    eadric said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also why COVID is likely to rip through BAME communities. Many videos out there showing lockdown being completely ignored by some Muslim and African communities

    In France it is even worse, and the police have admitted they simply can’t enforce social distancing in the bain lieues

    Multiculturalism is about to exact a heavy price on those who can least afford it.
    Three groups around where I live don't seem to be able to do social distancing - the young and the.... un-assimilated asians and eastern europeans. All three bimble along the pavements, often in groups and seems pained when you cross the road to avoid them.

    The Chinese and Japanese are masked up (surgical masks only) and often walk in the road to avoid pedestrians.

    The Chinese and Japanese will likely survive. The Muslims and east Europeans will likely die.

    I went on a long walk the other day, along the Penarth cliffs. Everyone was social distancing, apart from four Romanians/Albanians (the accents were definitely south east European)

    They were having a barbecue. They were very friendly. “Lovely day’”

    They seemed bemused when I stepped back to keep my social distance.
    So now you met four Albanians at once? Talk about doubling down when onto a loser! Quadrupling, even.
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    FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    What mask should I be buying for when I go out?

    Do we need one ?

    It's the one bit of PPE I'm not going to bother with. Then again I'm in quite a rural area.
    Filled the misses' car today - Disposable gloves for the petrol pump. We have to travel during the lockdown, that won't apply to everyone mind.
    Seems to be some evidence for them, especially if it becomes normalized
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,216
    Charles said:

    felix said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also wtf is he doing going out on a 'daily forage for victuals'? And he's worried that some ethnic groups don't understand what is happening. Why on earth would a sane sentient person choose to go out on to the streets DAILY in the midst of a highly contagious pandemic.?
    He is a Lib Dem...
    You can't write about those potholes if you don't do your basic research.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    I see twitter have switched back from Boris is personally hiding all the bodies to Boris the Butcher again.
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050
    IshmaelZ said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Chorizo and broad bean risotto is less nice than it sounds. Two finger kitkats are unacceptably moreish.
    I'm not a meat eater...but chorizo and broad bean risotto doesn't sound that nice...

    Hmmm...I love a courgette risotto....but sadly have no risotto rice, courgettes, or parmiggiano., or garlic....but I have white wine which I would splashed a little into...


  • Options
    alteregoalterego Posts: 1,100

    alterego said:

    dr_spyn said:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52077997

    @alterego
    13 deaths without underlying medical problems. (unless I have misread the final sentence).

    1 This is the BBC interpretation
    2 It doesn't address which is responsible for death twixt underlying problems and CV where both are present.

    CV may have a heavy weighting (like smoking and lung cancer) but I think it's important to not lose sight of proclivities per the Government's list of health issues being high risk in association with CV.
    Dont necessarily believe that about underlying health problems or reasons for death. I guess there is little time for in depth post moterms unless absolutely necessary .
    I understand time issue but the more we know about correlation between deaths and risk factors the better we can shelter those most at risk. A difficult balance like most decisions at present.
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    edited March 2020
    Glancing at the UK dashboard - at first glance the virus seems to be very much more prevalent in Remain than Leave areas. Very striking. At the risk of re-igniting the fires.......
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,192
    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    As I remainer, I was completely against a stupid No Deal Brexit, but in an example of unintended consequences, I had built up a fair supply of canned and dried goods in case one happened.

    So, ok for food at moment.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,258
    ABZ said:

    Floater said:

    If anybody needed reminding before todays figures, the next month or so at least is going to be very grim.

    Yes - the peak is allegedly at least a couple of weeks off
    For London....other parts of the country are 2-3 weeks behind. So I think we have to brace for appalling scenes first from the capital and then everywhere else on our screens for 4-5 weeks.
    I don't understand the rationale here - the lockdown takes place at the same time everywhere - hence you will, approximately, have peaks at the same time everywhere. The timing of the peak is a direct function of the measures you put in place - as these have been implemented nationally the peaks should be roughly synchronous. What will differ is that the amplitude of the peak will be larger in those areas that started with more cases once the lockdown was implemented.
    No lockdown is ever perfect, and the virus will continue to spread faster where the current infection rate is higher, and where breaking the lockdown rules is more likely to bring you into contact with other people (directly or via surfaces)
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332
    IanB2 said:

    eadric said:

    eadric said:

    Andy_JS said:

    stodge said:

    I'm still worried by what I saw this morning while on my daily forage for victuals.

    Social distancing within stores but the people queuing to get into stores all bunched up together.

    I'm also far from convinced those for whom English isn't a first language fully comprehend what is happening and what they need to do. Groups of men hanging round street corners smoking and drinking but if you are in a house of 15 to 20 and one of them is sick what can you do?

    I'm also far from convinced the number of reported cases is anywhere near the number of actual cases.

    This is why London is likely to be hit harder by the virus than elsewhere.
    Also why COVID is likely to rip through BAME communities. Many videos out there showing lockdown being completely ignored by some Muslim and African communities

    In France it is even worse, and the police have admitted they simply can’t enforce social distancing in the bain lieues

    Multiculturalism is about to exact a heavy price on those who can least afford it.
    Three groups around where I live don't seem to be able to do social distancing - the young and the.... un-assimilated asians and eastern europeans. All three bimble along the pavements, often in groups and seems pained when you cross the road to avoid them.

    The Chinese and Japanese are masked up (surgical masks only) and often walk in the road to avoid pedestrians.

    The Chinese and Japanese will likely survive. The Muslims and east Europeans will likely die.

    I went on a long walk the other day, along the Penarth cliffs. Everyone was social distancing, apart from four Romanians/Albanians (the accents were definitely south east European)

    They were having a barbecue. They were very friendly. “Lovely day’”

    They seemed bemused when I stepped back to keep my social distance.
    So now you met four Albanians at once? Talk about doubling down when onto a loser! Quadrupling, even.
    Did I mention there were 3 other Albanians in the taxi?
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    stodge said:

    Time for some elementary politics for those on here who, despite posting thirty or forty thousands items of drivel, still seem to struggle to comprehend the basics.

    All leaders do well at times of crisis - if we had a Labour Government and Prime Minister they would be polling well with high approval ratings. Trump and Merkel are doing well - I suspect Varadkar is doing well.

    At times of crisis, people rally round whether out of fear, self preservation, patriotism or a genuine belief the Government is trying to do the right thing by them and their family.

    At times of crisis, the Government and Prime Minister get hours of coverage and opposition is generally silenced. There will (I hope) be a full and rigorous enquiry when all this is over to ask who knew what and the bases on which decisions were taken or not taken.

    In a democracy, it is right for a Government to be held to account and subject to scrutiny and while that should not impede the immediate handling of the crisis, it should once life returns to normal. What lessons can and should be learned in case something like this happens again?

    It's not the big things that entrap Governments - it's the little things becoming big things. The day-to-day normality of Government is far more treacherous than times of trial.

    The Conservatives may be at 54% now - one day they will be at 24%. Just last year, they polled 9% in a national election. It's almost Newtonian to suggest the higher one flies the further one falls. One day the current Conservatives will be forced to re-learn this lesson as they have before.

    For now, I'd simply suggest Johnson has been weakened by the rise of Sunak - there is now a credible popular alternative where there (arguably) was none before. If Johnson starts looking vulnerable, Sunak could no doubt be persuaded in the interests of the Party to step forward. Johnson isn't the first PM to worry about his next door neighbour and he won't be the last.

    Perhaps. Personally, I think that if Boris is seen to have led the country through this crisis with an acceptable level of damage, then he will as untouchable as Thatcher was after the Falklands, both inside the party and nationally. Sunak is definitely one to watch for the future, though - perhaps this experience will forge the two into a kind of Cameron-Osborne duumvirate that would serve the interests of them both.
    I don't believe the Falklands comparison works here. That was a UK v Argentina issue whilst Covid19 is worldwide - the first Gulf War might be a better analogy. Beyond that , the 1983 election was just a year after the conflict ended. Thatcher's 1987 victory was based on the Lawson boom not the success in the South Atlantic - indeed she came close to being toppled early in 1986 over the Westland affair.
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    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,551
    edited March 2020
    felix said:

    Glancing at the UK dashboard - at first glance the virus seems to be very much more prevalent in Remain than Leave areas. Very striking. At the risk of re-igniting the fires.......

    That's mainly because Remain areas tend to be more urban. The Highlands of Scotland also voted Remain but I doubt they'll be as affected, so it probably isn't anything to do with how people voted in the referendum.
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    tysontyson Posts: 6,050
    felix said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Good lord - we have everything we need - shops are well stocked with all of our regular goodies and some. Yesterday pasta and minced beef; tonight southern fried chicken with peas and broccoli, sunday loin of pork roast potatoes, etc......

    I hated going to the supermarket food shopping at the best of times...now facing the prospect of dying to undertake this horrible inconvenience, I'm postponing it as long as possible...

    My wife has metamorphosed into a female incarnate of Howard Hughes which is hardly helping matters...
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    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,886
    A few days ago I joked about having an exclusive clip from a new BBC public information film.

    Today that clip is now a new BBC public information film: https://twitter.com/BBC/status/1243523414838718472
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,100
    edited March 2020
    Pulpstar said:

    Freggles said:

    What mask should I be buying for when I go out?

    Do we need one ?

    It's the one bit of PPE I'm not going to bother with. Then again I'm in quite a rural area.
    Filled the misses' car today - Disposable gloves for the petrol pump. We have to travel during the lockdown, that won't apply to everyone mind.
    Our local garage provides disposable gloves for everybody, whether buying fuel or newspapers (or Tunnock's tea cakes). And we aren't exactly a hot-spot - I think Devon has had 15 extra cases this week, from 50 to 65. But everyone is taking it VERY seriously, even though the odds of coming into contact with it are still quite remote. Fuel sales are W-A-Y down.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,258

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    As I remainer, I was completely against a stupid No Deal Brexit, but in an example of unintended consequences, I had built up a fair supply of canned and dried goods in case one happened.

    So, ok for food at moment.
    I would be OK if I could deal with these mice raiding my emergency food store every night.
  • Options
    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460
    IanB2 said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    As I remainer, I was completely against a stupid No Deal Brexit, but in an example of unintended consequences, I had built up a fair supply of canned and dried goods in case one happened.

    So, ok for food at moment.
    I would be OK if I could deal with these mice raiding my emergency food store every night.
    Tried a cat?
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,332
    alterego said:

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    alterego said:

    OllyT said:

    DavidL said:

    eadric said:
    That would be an incredible result but I fear that if the model is largely based on China's "actual" results it may prove to be optimistic.
    China is desperately trying to save face and salvage its international reputation. I would be amazed if their cumulative death figures are anywhere near accurate.
    China's got to stop eating fad shit (for certain and for ever) if it wants to salvage its reputation
    I understand that live markets have been banned but will it just go underground? I expect so.

    IIUC Sars, Covid-19, HIV-Aids and Ebola all caused by species-jumping disease from eating wild animals. Will humans learn their lesson. No.
    I'm not sure anyone else imports as many wild animals to eat or use "medicinally" as does China. It's fads seriously threaten many species.
    If the Chinese Communist Party decide that this is a choice between them and the animal markets, then the animal markets will go and the recalcitrant will get to meet quite a few Muslims - in their new homes in the prison camps.
    They've played hokey cokey with this for years. The problem is that it's the rich and influential who are largely responsible for the most troubling abuses. Fad shit is expensive!

    But when the Party decides that you are not acting in the interests of the Party....
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    IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    tyson said:

    IshmaelZ said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Chorizo and broad bean risotto is less nice than it sounds. Two finger kitkats are unacceptably moreish.
    I'm not a meat eater...but chorizo and broad bean risotto doesn't sound that nice...

    Hmmm...I love a courgette risotto....but sadly have no risotto rice, courgettes, or parmiggiano., or garlic....but I have white wine which I would splashed a little into...


    I think the next risotto will be broad bean, pea and mint. Covid doing its bit for veganism.
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050
    Andy_JS said:

    felix said:

    Glancing at the UK dashboard - at first glance the virus seems to be very much more prevalent in Remain than Leave areas. Very striking. At the risk of re-igniting the fires.......

    That's mainly because Remain areas tend to be more urban.
    I don't think the intellectual middle classes are that clean....not good at washing hands and that kind of thing....it's why I speculated that Boris got it last night....
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,216

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    RobD said:

    Chris said:

    Why do people find it so, so hard to understand the very basic fact that the Imperial College modelling is producing a range of predictions based on different conditions?

    It's hardly surprising that we are doing worse than the "best case" model. By definition of "best case". Is it perhaps a problem with understanding English rather than Maths?
    Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330.

    https://twitter.com/theJeremyVine/status/1243243397281972225
    That's not from the Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team at all.

    It's from a preprint by one W. T. Pike of Imperial College and one V. Saini of "the Lown Institute" in Brookline, Massachusetts:
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.25.20041475v1.full.pdf
    But that's what people have been discussing in this thread, and in the tweet quoted by TSE.
    All I can see here is a lot of people thinking wrongly that it comes from the modelling of the Ferguson group at Imperial, and mouthing off on that basis.
    I don't think anyone has suggested it came from Ferguson's group.
    Look at Freedman's tweet, describing it as "the best case Imperial model"!

    In fact it's not a model at all - it's just shifting the Chinese curve into alignment with the curves from other countries.
    Ah, I thought you were referring to PBers. Yes. If anything this highlights how suspect the Chinese numbers actually are.
    For heaven's sake, I replied to the post quoting that tweet, pointing out that the Imperial College models were looking at a range of assumptions, so it would hardly be surprising if we were worse than the "best case", and you yourself replied:
    "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330."

    Obviously you thought it came from the Imperial College models yourself!
    Huh? I was referring to the same model in the tweet, unless Ferguson's group also predicted 260 cases per day as the peak in their best case?
    I repeat. You were replying to my comment that because the IC models looked at a range of assumptions it wouldn't be surprising if we worse than the "best case" they looked at. And you replied "Actually, 260 was the estimate. Lower and upper bounds were 210 and 330." Clearly you thought 260 came from the IC models.
    The tweet said it was the best case scenario, and that was incorrect, it was the central estimate for the prediction.
    It is just a table showing what would happen if x happened.

    Its like showing how the Premier League would play out if the favourites won all their matches. It doesnt mean its going to happen or anyone ever expected it to.
    Much though I hate to admit it Liverpool had a pretty good go.
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    IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    welshowl said:

    IanB2 said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    As I remainer, I was completely against a stupid No Deal Brexit, but in an example of unintended consequences, I had built up a fair supply of canned and dried goods in case one happened.

    So, ok for food at moment.
    I would be OK if I could deal with these mice raiding my emergency food store every night.
    Tried a cat?
    Very little meat on them.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,258
    welshowl said:

    IanB2 said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    As I remainer, I was completely against a stupid No Deal Brexit, but in an example of unintended consequences, I had built up a fair supply of canned and dried goods in case one happened.

    So, ok for food at moment.
    I would be OK if I could deal with these mice raiding my emergency food store every night.
    Tried a cat?
    Would merely be entertainment for my dog.
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    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Just walked the dog

    Saw less than 20 people in total and only 8 vehicles moving.

    This is in Colchester

    However reports from extended family in London are pretty much the opposite - where is our epicentre again?
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,100
    felix said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Good lord - we have everything we need - shops are well stocked with all of our regular goodies and some. Yesterday pasta and minced beef; tonight southern fried chicken with peas and broccoli, sunday loin of pork roast potatoes, etc......
    Vegetarian tagine with grilled haloumi cheese last night; a beef chilli tonight; roast chicken dinner tomorrow (with a crumble and custard).

    We are surviving.....
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    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460
    IanB2 said:

    welshowl said:

    IanB2 said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    As I remainer, I was completely against a stupid No Deal Brexit, but in an example of unintended consequences, I had built up a fair supply of canned and dried goods in case one happened.

    So, ok for food at moment.
    I would be OK if I could deal with these mice raiding my emergency food store every night.
    Tried a cat?
    Would merely be entertainment for my dog.
    Ah. Good point.
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    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,182
    Well it's Saturday but you wouldn't know it. Every day is exactly the same.
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    ABZABZ Posts: 441
    Floater said:

    Just walked the dog

    Saw less than 20 people in total and only 8 vehicles moving.

    This is in Colchester

    However reports from extended family in London are pretty much the opposite - where is our epicentre again?

    It's crazy... I don't understand what is going on there at all...
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    tysontyson Posts: 6,050
    IshmaelZ said:

    tyson said:

    IshmaelZ said:

    tyson said:

    Food wise...how are people going?

    we are now onto mash potatoes and baked beans with some cheddar ontop...lovely actually...my goto dish as a student....I'm holding out going back to the supermarket as long as possible

    Chorizo and broad bean risotto is less nice than it sounds. Two finger kitkats are unacceptably moreish.
    I'm not a meat eater...but chorizo and broad bean risotto doesn't sound that nice...

    Hmmm...I love a courgette risotto....but sadly have no risotto rice, courgettes, or parmiggiano., or garlic....but I have white wine which I would splashed a little into...


    I think the next risotto will be broad bean, pea and mint. Covid doing its bit for veganism.
    You would want some parmiggiano in that too....but does sound delicious....
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    kinabalu said:

    Well it's Saturday but you wouldn't know it. Every day is exactly the same.

    I have to say I am losing track of days. I am a WFHer, but obviously weekends we usually have sport to keep me in check with things.
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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    On topic, it’s hard to square this polling with current betting:

    https://twitter.com/colinkahl/status/1243912323619631104?s=21

    It seems like there's a portion of American voters who support their president in a time of crisis and that's showing up in the approval numbers, but that doesn't mean they're going to vote for him.
    I think this is a very important insight.
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