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  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,767
    Scott_xP said:

    https://twitter.com/Jderbyshire/status/1246227307574054919

    Is Corbyn's legacy going to be BoZo delivering his agenda...

    Covid-19 legacy will be. Nothing to do with Corbyn.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Any tips for the National?
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,364
    There is hope for Labour not that Jezza has departed. I can see myself voting for them again.

    If only they'd picked a pretty woman.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,381
    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,505

    IanB2 said:

    Anyway, an early outing for Moth-trap News. Warmer, cloudier, flat calm = moths. 103 moths of 18 species, including 5 new for the year. Highlight was a Streamer.



    Nothing a good can of fly spray wouldn't sort out.
    Harsh. There are 2,600 species of moths in the UK. Only 2 of which will eat your clothes! (And they are both tiny. Basically, if you can tell its a moth, it's not going to eat your clothes. Some bits of your garden? Maybe not so safe....)
    The pic you posted yesterday (or day before) looked like a 100ft wingspan moth on a farmer's field. I'm guessing it was actually about 1in on a table.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,895
    CD13 said:

    There is hope for Labour not that Jezza has departed. I can see myself voting for them again.

    If only they'd picked a pretty woman.

    RLB?
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,505

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    Yes, there is something obvious.
  • CD13 said:

    There is hope for Labour not that Jezza has departed. I can see myself voting for them again.

    If only they'd picked a pretty woman.

    RLB?
    Sexist talk that wil have you taken away by Momentum shock troops later this morning
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,527
    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    I’m relying on Google Translate but I think this is the same story

    https://milano.repubblica.it/cronaca/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus_in_lombardia_positivi_ma_asintomatici_il_caso_dei_donatori_di_sangue_di_castiglione_d_adda-252956628/?refresh_ce
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,364
    Mr Pioneers,

    Politics isn't about logic or science. It's what about you hope or want to be true.

    Political science? A complete oxymoron.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Today is a good day for the Labour Party. Potentially the first really good day for 10 or even 13 years.

    dream on

    Not a dream. Reality. All three are better than Corbyn. Two out of three are better than Milliband and potentially better than Brown.

    Rejoice!
    youre back to the window dressing argument.. What policies has Starmer got to attract voters in the areas Labour has lost ?
    Leaders matter. The policies will follow. Rejoice!
    Yes they matter, and Starmer is a grey suit versus the colourful Boris.

    I struggle to see how a metropolitan Londony type will connect with a welder in Stoke.

    Labour's old reliable argument "not a Tory" got blown out of the water at the last eslection, what is going to replace it ?
    You’re not seeing the big picture. From today Corbyn is not leader of the Labour Party. Nothing determined the result of the last election more than that. This is the necessary first step to any progress.

    Rejoice.

    Yuri Andropov has replaced Leonid Brezhnev.
    Rejoice!
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    Movie watch party ? Everyone is different though so what might work for one couple perhaps won't for t'other
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,505
    Jonathan said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    Yes, there is something obvious.
    How about writing poetry? Or maybe even a song. Either together, or one could do lyrics then the other the tune. Then switch roles for next time (if it works).
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769
    Jonathan said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    Yes, there is something obvious.
    Pointing her to politicalbetting.com ?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 27,477
    edited April 2020

    Scott_xP said:

    https://twitter.com/Jderbyshire/status/1246227307574054919

    Is Corbyn's legacy going to be BoZo delivering his agenda...

    Covid-19 legacy will be. Nothing to do with Corbyn.
    Even before Covid-19 Boris had lifted Labour's "near-miss" ge2017 platform, and looking at the FT shot shown in the tweet, we see it also includes treating public services as assets, which I'd predicted the Saj (remember him?) would lift from McDonnell to avoid the balance sheet blowing up. Boris won by being a better Corbyn than Jeremy Corbyn, not by being a better Theresa May or David Cameron.

    Ah, you might say, but Boris has a record of saying things he does not mean in order to get elected.

    So you may be right it is Covid-19 and nothing to do with Corbyn that he actually follows through on what was promised.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,381

    Jonathan said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    Yes, there is something obvious.
    How about writing poetry? Or maybe even a song. Either together, or one could do lyrics then the other the tune. Then switch roles for next time (if it works).
    This is quite a good idea actually! Thanks
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    Pulpstar said:

    Jonathan said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    Yes, there is something obvious.
    Pointing her to politicalbetting.com ?
    Watching Zulu obviously.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,356
    Thanks @MarqueeMark

    Though perhaps I need a good beginners guide to identification. While megafauna are magnificent, and I am grateful to have seen such wonders as sperm whales and black Rhino in the wild, the microfauna of our own isles has real potential.

    Tis a beautiful spring day here, and life seems particularly precious at the moment. Time to get out in that garden, and admire the lambs in my field.

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769
    Is today the day we pick up the Keith Stormer winnings :) ?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,356

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    I would hold back on competitive moth trapping for a little longer...
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    What’s wrong with the pub and a few drinks? It’s been enough for the last 20 years! ;)
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,381
    Foxy said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    I would hold back on competitive moth trapping for a little longer...
    That’s clearly a euphemism isn’t it.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,160
    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    They have a working antibody test?
  • SockySocky Posts: 404
    CD13 said:

    Things could still go badly wrong for the Tories but they have the armour of the experts behind them. The sight of thick journalists trying to make debating points when they don't know what they're talking about is unedifying.

    In normal times the UK Left can rely on the media to be their "armed wing". I wonder if the current terrible performance of the BBC et al might blunt its effectiveness for Labour in future?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,356
    DougSeal said:

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    I’m relying on Google Translate but I think this is the same story

    https://milano.repubblica.it/cronaca/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus_in_lombardia_positivi_ma_asintomatici_il_caso_dei_donatori_di_sangue_di_castiglione_d_adda-252956628/?refresh_ce
    It seems to translate as swab testing. Is there a reliable antibody test out yet?

    Hancock seemed to suggest on Thursday that Porton Down had one in use, but that was the first that I had heard of it.
  • ABZABZ Posts: 441

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    They have a working antibody test?
    If you perform an ELISA that is sensitive and specific enough, but it is not scalable and needs to be performed in a specialised lab.

    What we (and no-where else) do not have is a mass-use antibody test that is sensitive / specific enough.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 35,675

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    You could try this. These are amazing...

    https://twitter.com/MollyOCath/status/1242465390933901314
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    ABZ said:

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    They have a working antibody test?
    If you perform an ELISA that is sensitive and specific enough, but it is not scalable and needs to be performed in a specialised lab.

    What we (and no-where else) do not have is a mass-use antibody test that is sensitive / specific enough.
    Though when you have up to 70% of a given population displaying antibodies, the absolute accuracy of a test is far less relevant than it would be for a population where only 5% had developed immunity.

    For a really poor test which was only 70% accurate, you’re talking about perhaps an additional 10% of false positives in the first case, versus nearly 30% of false positives in the second.
  • ArtistArtist Posts: 1,892
    Ladbrokes have Starmer vote share brackets
    40-45% 10/1
    45-50% 5/2
    50-55% 6/4
    55%-60% 7/2
    60% 6/1
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,207

    IanB2 said:

    Anyway, an early outing for Moth-trap News. Warmer, cloudier, flat calm = moths. 103 moths of 18 species, including 5 new for the year. Highlight was a Streamer.



    Nothing a good can of fly spray wouldn't sort out.
    Harsh. There are 2,600 species of moths in the UK. Only 2 of which will eat your clothes! (And they are both tiny. Basically, if you can tell its a moth, it's not going to eat your clothes. Some bits of your garden? Maybe not so safe....)
    The pic you posted yesterday (or day before) looked like a 100ft wingspan moth on a farmer's field. I'm guessing it was actually about 1in on a table.
    The hawkmoths can be 3 or 4 inches across. But yeah, we haven't yet had a sighting of Mothra in Devon!
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Aaron Bastani has decided that today is a good day to bury bad news:

    https://twitter.com/aaronbastani/status/1246188035932336132?s=21
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,554

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    They have a working antibody test?
    I thought the challenge was one people could self conduct at home to a sufficient degree of accuracy - presumably in a blood donation setting the testing is a bit more rigorous
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,652
    edited April 2020
    Jonathan said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Jonathan said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    ²
    Yes, there is something obvious.
    Pointing her to politicalbetting.com ?
    Watching Zulu obviously.
    We are watching a series on Sky about the North Yorkshire Moors railway . Its a repeat but interesting nevertheless for both the guys and the gals.
  • fox327fox327 Posts: 369
    edited April 2020
    Surgery and chemotherapy for cancer is being suspended for some patients as a result of coronavirus measures, including for those with curable conditions. One example is https://metro.co.uk/2020/04/02/teacher-handed-life-sentence-cancer-op-cancelled-coronavirus-12499749/, and another example is https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-52032411.

    In some cases, patients have been told not to come into hospital as they could catch the virus, although they may already have had it. Apparently, some private hospitals may be used as cancer treatment centres.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,207

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
    Shhhh!

    You've been told.....
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,725
    fox327 said:

    Surgery and chemotherapy for cancer is being suspended for some patients as a result of coronavirus measures, including for those with curable conditions. One example is https://metro.co.uk/2020/04/02/teacher-handed-life-sentence-cancer-op-cancelled-coronavirus-12499749/, and another example is https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-52032411.

    In some cases, patients have been told not to come into hospital as they could catch the virus, although they may already have had it. Apparently, some private hospitals may be used as cancer treatment centres.

    Yes, I have a friend of a friend due for a mastectomy; she's been told her cancer is very slow growing and she can wait until the autumn for it.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    For a date night, try cooking or baking together. If you’re really lucky/messy, it might end up like the beginning of Ghost.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 27,477
    alex_ said:

    Any tips for the National?

    The virtual race has already been run and the winner decided which is probably why (at least some) bookies are limiting states to a tenner. All bookies are offering the same prices. All profits go to the NHS Covid-19 charity.

    10/1 Any Second Now has attracted the early money (in from 25/1); has there been a leak? If not then I'd look at 18/1 Potters Corner who is in form, having won his last two races, and who has previously won at this distance, which very few have (in fact I think it is only him and previous real Grand National winner Tiger Roll).
  • TGOHF666TGOHF666 Posts: 2,052
    Interesting

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/04/03/coronavirus-swedish-experiment-could-prove-britain-wrong/

    "But public health officials have one more trick up their sleeves to dampen down the fears over the virus. The country is also about to start releasing figures that show how many people died "from" coronavirus rather than died "with" coronavirus, as the British statistics show."
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    On topic, David is right about what the new leader should prioritise.

    As for the actual politics, the Conservatives are going to struggle for a generation to say that anything is too expensive. The political debate is going to be around value for money, not the price tag itself.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    TGOHF666 said:

    Interesting

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/04/03/coronavirus-swedish-experiment-could-prove-britain-wrong/

    "But public health officials have one more trick up their sleeves to dampen down the fears over the virus. The country is also about to start releasing figures that show how many people died "from" coronavirus rather than died "with" coronavirus, as the British statistics show."

    Good luck with that endeavour. For many it will be like working out who wielded the death blow on the Orient Express.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
    Shhhh!

    You've been told.....
    There are plenty of Citizen Science projects to become involved in. They give you the training necessary and then your results are used by professional researchers and scientists.

    The original GalaxyZoo project provided data from the public that was as accurate as that done by professional astronomers and the dataset generated has produced several papers on Galactic Morphology and other topics.

    There are a range of projects from astrophysics to examining ship's logs from the sailing era

    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects

    and since you are into birds and bugs...

    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects?discipline=nature&page=1&status=live
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 13,677

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
    I cleaned and honed my Fairbairn-Sykes this morning.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    Foxy said:

    DougSeal said:

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    I’m relying on Google Translate but I think this is the same story

    https://milano.repubblica.it/cronaca/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus_in_lombardia_positivi_ma_asintomatici_il_caso_dei_donatori_di_sangue_di_castiglione_d_adda-252956628/?refresh_ce
    It seems to translate as swab testing. Is there a reliable antibody test out yet?

    Hancock seemed to suggest on Thursday that Porton Down had one in use, but that was the first that I had heard of it.
    They’re just doing very small scale, but widespread, community blood sampling, and taking samples back to their lab.
    Of course even small scale testing like this would fairly quickly pick up if 50-70% of the population were displaying antibodies. Distinguishing between lower levels of infection is much more difficult.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    alex_ said:

    alex_ said:

    TGOHF666 said:


    I’m sure what the public want to hear now is some know it all wealthy Labour lawyer who isn’t hurting at all due to the crisis, scold us all that we should have all been locked up earlier and stricter and ergo for longer.

    We are all gagging to hear that.

    Why would he be saying that? The lockdown is what happened when the government failed to do less disruptive things earlier and ran out of runway.

    Why are you locked up? Because your government fucked up.
    I know you’re consistently very keen on this line because, well, Japan. But virtually every country in the world is currently locked up. Including countries with very few disclosed cases. And many in Europe weeks before us. And even some of your favoured East Asian countries are now locking down.

    So the idea, i’m afraid, that taking some different course would have avoided the present lockdown (which remains less extreme and more bearable than the lockdowns in many parts of Europe and the world) really is fantasy IMO. Regardless of Japan.

    The only seriously pushed criticism in this country (excluding the herd immunity, let it rip crowd) is why lockdown was delayed so long. Not, why did it happen at all.
    Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore. They have all managed so far to substantially slow the growth of the virus without the drastic lockdowns that become necessary when you let it get out of control. It may yet turn out not to be enough, and they may end up resorting to more drastic responses like the British one, but if they do it'll be after gaining valuable time. A complete lockdown is not the only policy option.

    Look, we already know a lot about how this thing transmits. We know that some situations are high-risk, and others pose some risk. Removing all the situations that pose *some* risk is extremely disruptive. Removing the situations that pose *high* risk is also disruptive, but much less so.

    Now, you may be right that this is not really understood in Britain. A lot of people on this website really seem to assume that there's nothing between "ask people to wash their hands" and "nobody is allowed to leave their house any more", and maybe that's representative of British voters. But think about what happens next. You can't stay in your house forever. Sooner or later the general lockdown is going to have to end. But when it ends the virus will still be there. You can't just go back to normal - if you do it'll just get out of control again, and you'll go straight back into lockdown. What's going to have to happen is exactly what's already been happening in East Asia: Life goes on, but with restrictions, designed to keep the world turning but keep the virus in its box. And when that happens, people are going to wonder why they weren't doing it in the first place.
    Your missing my main point. Which is that with the arguable exception of your small group, MOST govts have introduced lockdowns. Many with far far fewer declared cases than here. They had just as much warning as us, and time to observe “what works”. But they still went down the lockdown route. They have not chosen your preferred policy prescription. The U.K. is not out of line on this.

    There will be little political mileage in the U.K. from a new Labour leader trying to argue that the U.K. should have been able to avoid a lockdown by acting differently. Not when a lockdown of varying degrees is the consensus approach in most of the World. And ours is more bearable than most.
    You're right that it's not out of line with the US or the rest of Europe, they mostly screwed up in the same way: They left it too late until all they could do was a complete lockdown. But that doesn't mean it wasn't a monster failure or that the voters will think it's fine - Gordon Brown didn't get let off the hook for spending too much before the Lehman Shock just because other European countries had also spent too much before the Lehman Shock.

    And although it probably didn't alter the big picture much, the British added a few extra flourishes of their own, like the abortive herd immunity thing and the lie about shaking hands with infected people.

    The British government made very serious mistakes, with catastrophic consequences on a scale not seen in most voters' lifetimes. Other governments made similar mistakes, that's true. But the opposition would be mad not to try to hold the government it opposes accountable for them.
    Even best case scenario there would be mistakes which an opposition will be obliged to point out. And we appear to be a long way off a best case scenario.

    The public, during an economic catastrophe, however necessary, are likely to focus on the negatives once the crisis has abated somewhat
  • ABZABZ Posts: 441
    Nigelb said:

    ABZ said:

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    They have a working antibody test?
    If you perform an ELISA that is sensitive and specific enough, but it is not scalable and needs to be performed in a specialised lab.

    What we (and no-where else) do not have is a mass-use antibody test that is sensitive / specific enough.
    Though when you have up to 70% of a given population displaying antibodies, the absolute accuracy of a test is far less relevant than it would be for a population where only 5% had developed immunity.

    For a really poor test which was only 70% accurate, you’re talking about perhaps an additional 10% of false positives in the first case, versus nearly 30% of false positives in the second.
    That's true. I guess the random sampling of the population that is currently being performed (as alluded to by PHE last week) will provide information on this. Will be very interesting to have these results; and also to see what happens in Sweden of course!
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,705
    Nigelb said:

    ABZ said:

    ABZ said:

    DougSeal said:

    Lombardy may be approaching herd immunity. 70% of blood donors in one of the epicentres had antibodies but had never developed symptoms -

    https://www.lastampa.it/topnews/primo-piano/2020/04/02/news/coronavirus-castiglione-d-adda-e-un-caso-di-studio-il-70-dei-donatori-di-sangue-e-positivo-1.38666481/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

    Interesting! That seems to be a paywalled article - do you know if there's a version elsewhere of the same story?
    They have a working antibody test?
    If you perform an ELISA that is sensitive and specific enough, but it is not scalable and needs to be performed in a specialised lab.

    What we (and no-where else) do not have is a mass-use antibody test that is sensitive / specific enough.
    Though when you have up to 70% of a given population displaying antibodies, the absolute accuracy of a test is far less relevant than it would be for a population where only 5% had developed immunity.

    For a really poor test which was only 70% accurate, you’re talking about perhaps an additional 10% of false positives in the first case, versus nearly 30% of false positives in the second.
    It depends how it's being used, doesn't it?

    For random testing, an imperfect test with error rates that we can estimate is going to give useful information on the general level of immunity in the population.

    For decisions about individual behaviour, you need a test with a higher degree of accuracy, for which the result can be verified rather than relying on trust.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,652

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    Get themselves embroiled?
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    geoffw said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    Get themselves embroiled?
    Which government ministers are too incompetent and need replacing from the opposition benches?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 35,675

    What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?

    Dip their hands in the blood...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    Dura_Ace said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
    I cleaned and honed my Fairbairn-Sykes this morning.
    Good to see you’re intending to avoid unnecessarily burdening A&E...
    ... It is essential that the blade have a sharp stabbing point and good cutting edges, because an artery torn through (as against a clean cut) tends to contract and stop the bleeding. If a main artery is cleanly severed, the wounded man will quickly lose consciousness and die....

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Just Plain cruel to put Nandy's picture under an article about the new leader.

    I hope she does reasonably. Not perfect, of course, but she had some ideas.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,652

    geoffw said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    Get themselves embroiled?
    Which government ministers are too incompetent and need replacing from the opposition benches?
    Should have added a smiley, obvs

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Today is a good day for the Labour Party. Potentially the first really good day for 10 or even 13 years.

    dream on

    Not a dream. Reality. All three are better than Corbyn. Two out of three are better than Milliband and potentially better than Brown.

    Rejoice!
    youre back to the window dressing argument.. What policies has Starmer got to attract voters in the areas Labour has lost ?
    Leaders matter. The policies will follow. Rejoice!
    Yes they matter, and Starmer is a grey suit versus the colourful Boris.

    I struggle to see how a metropolitan Londony type will connect with a welder in Stoke.

    Labour's old reliable argument "not a Tory" got blown out of the water at the last eslection, what is going to replace it ?
    You’re not seeing the big picture. From today Corbyn is not leader of the Labour Party. Nothing determined the result of the last election more than that. This is the necessary first step to any progress.

    Rejoice.

    He will always be the leader of our hearts!

    Says someone online, probably.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,160

    Aaron Bastani has decided that today is a good day to bury bad news:

    https://twitter.com/aaronbastani/status/1246188035932336132?s=21

    Throw him out of the Labour party on Monday?
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    geoffw said:

    geoffw said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    Get themselves embroiled?
    Which government ministers are too incompetent and need replacing from the opposition benches?
    Should have added a smiley, obvs

    I can see why it is the Prime Minister’s interests to have no opposition. I can even see why it might be in Labour’s interests to accept the offer. It is not, however, in the country’s interests for the government to go unscrutinised by a loyal opposition.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    Scott_xP said:

    https://twitter.com/Jderbyshire/status/1246227307574054919

    Is Corbyn's legacy going to be BoZo delivering his agenda...

    Covid-19 legacy will be. Nothing to do with Corbyn.
    I think it frankly bizarre how often the argument gets made that responses to a very very unusual situation prove a proposed response in normal times has been proven right. Even if supportive of that approach generally.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,163

    Aaron Bastani has decided that today is a good day to bury bad news:

    https://twitter.com/aaronbastani/status/1246188035932336132?s=21
    Throw him out of the Labour party on Monday?

    Surely some sort of punishment would be more appropriate than a reward?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    Aaron Bastani has decided that today is a good day to bury bad news:

    https://twitter.com/aaronbastani/status/1246188035932336132?s=21

    Happy to accept is a curious phrase. Legally advised to accept more like .
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,207

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
    Shhhh!

    You've been told.....
    There are plenty of Citizen Science projects to become involved in. They give you the training necessary and then your results are used by professional researchers and scientists.

    The original GalaxyZoo project provided data from the public that was as accurate as that done by professional astronomers and the dataset generated has produced several papers on Galactic Morphology and other topics.

    There are a range of projects from astrophysics to examining ship's logs from the sailing era

    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects

    and since you are into birds and bugs...

    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects?discipline=nature&page=1&status=live
    Thank you!
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,705
    edited April 2020
    TGOHF666 said:
    I think relaxing the lockdown a couple of weeks after the plateau is attained translates to a more gradual form of the original herd immunity concept - probably with several percent of the population being infected every week for several months - still without any hard evidence about how long immunity will last, of course.

    Nice for those who are lucky enough to be able to sit it out. Not so good for the others, including NHS staff.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    Its just a gesture. Theres not much benefit to either in actually doing it. So presumably it's to demonstrate a willingness to talk with them directly and hopefully for them to focus opposition to important stuff not every day politics. Which both sides are basically doing anyway .
  • Sky News on
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    kle4 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    https://twitter.com/Jderbyshire/status/1246227307574054919

    Is Corbyn's legacy going to be BoZo delivering his agenda...

    Covid-19 legacy will be. Nothing to do with Corbyn.
    I think it frankly bizarre how often the argument gets made that responses to a very very unusual situation prove a proposed response in normal times has been proven right. Even if supportive of that approach generally.
    True. But against that, a similar national effort in response to a crisis - WWII - led to a Labour government.
    The two things are not the same, obviously. But the overturning of normal politics leads to unpredictable outcomes.
  • Aaron Bastani has decided that today is a good day to bury bad news:

    https://twitter.com/aaronbastani/status/1246188035932336132?s=21

    Throw him out of the Labour party on Monday?
    RLB will make him General Secretary
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 21,939

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Today is a good day for the Labour Party. Potentially the first really good day for 10 or even 13 years.

    dream on

    Not a dream. Reality. All three are better than Corbyn. Two out of three are better than Milliband and potentially better than Brown.

    Rejoice!
    youre back to the window dressing argument.. What policies has Starmer got to attract voters in the areas Labour has lost ?
    He needs to make Nandy head of policy. Except for trans issues.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163
    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    The End Times..... ;)

    But I suspect you are near the truth. One thing you missed is the structure of the govt.s compensation / support scheme for Small Business is such that, for many, it is inaccessible. I noted the other day that word of this had reached The Snake and he issued instructions to the financial system that Things Must Change. Whether they change quickly enough (or sufficiently) remains to be seen.

    People are great problem solvers. I expect, in the short term, an increase in barter / favours / money-under-the-counter / black market trading because it is quick, easy and answers immediate needs
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    geoffw said:

    geoffw said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    Get themselves embroiled?
    Which government ministers are too incompetent and need replacing from the opposition benches?
    Should have added a smiley, obvs

    I can see why it is the Prime Minister’s interests to have no opposition. I can even see why it might be in Labour’s interests to accept the offer. It is not, however, in the country’s interests for the government to go unscrutinised by a loyal opposition.
    I doubt work together means let's have no scrutiny. As much as governments would love that at any time, there is a middle ground between normal operations and full partnership.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    I’d agree with that (though I liked David’s article).
    Starmer’s task is to turn Labour back into a party capable of practical and pragmatic politics. If that is possible.

  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,073
    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    That is an excellent post, which lays out how the economic catastrophe has been underplayed and/or not understood. I would add that I think that many still underestimate the health consequences of Covid-19. At some point we are going to realise that the best working hypothesis to adopt is that we are (almost) all going to get this virus at some point and the death toll will be awful.
  • TGOHF666TGOHF666 Posts: 2,052

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Today is a good day for the Labour Party. Potentially the first really good day for 10 or even 13 years.

    dream on

    Not a dream. Reality. All three are better than Corbyn. Two out of three are better than Milliband and potentially better than Brown.

    Rejoice!
    youre back to the window dressing argument.. What policies has Starmer got to attract voters in the areas Labour has lost ?
    He needs to make Nandy head of policy. Except for trans issues.
    He needs to have nobody with a job title to do with trans issues.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Chris said:

    TGOHF666 said:
    I think relaxing the lockdown a couple of weeks after the plateau is attained translates to a more gradual form of the original herd immunity concept - probably with several percent of the population being infected every week for several months - still without any hard evidence about how long immunity will last, of course.

    Nice for those who are lucky enough to be able to sit it out. Not so good for the others, including NHS staff.
    I kind of thought the whole idea sans vaccine was stretching out herd immunity, since we cannot lockdown for 2 years or whatever so its about building up and spreading capacity.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    Well that's me thoroughly depressed. We look to have had a particular poor fight against the virus and we're inevitably and irretrievably ruined.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,028

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Today is a good day for the Labour Party. Potentially the first really good day for 10 or even 13 years.

    dream on

    Not a dream. Reality. All three are better than Corbyn. Two out of three are better than Milliband and potentially better than Brown.

    Rejoice!
    youre back to the window dressing argument.. What policies has Starmer got to attract voters in the areas Labour has lost ?
    Leaders matter. The policies will follow. Rejoice!
    Yes they matter, and Starmer is a grey suit versus the colourful Boris.

    I struggle to see how a metropolitan Londony type will connect with a welder in Stoke.

    Labour's old reliable argument "not a Tory" got blown out of the water at the last eslection, what is going to replace it ?
    You’re not seeing the big picture. From today Corbyn is not leader of the Labour Party. Nothing determined the result of the last election more than that. This is the necessary first step to any progress.

    Rejoice.

    Yuri Andropov has replaced Leonid Brezhnev.
    This is really more like Gorbachev replacing Chernenko.

    That isn’t however the happiest of parallels given as Robert Service commented, ‘If Lenin was the USSR’s midwife, Gorbachev was its gravedigger.’
  • NorthofStokeNorthofStoke Posts: 1,758
    We haven't got much to compare the current situation with in terms of economic impact. The analogues that are being cited such as war, the great depression and 2008 financial systems crash are all very different.

    My tentative model is that government and central bank emergency actions are like life support. I don't think that there will be bad long term economic consequences like long term unemployment or raging inflation as log as bold measures are taken that apply for the duration of the social/medical crises and are then removed fairly rapidly.

    The current UK measures are good but there will need to be more. I suggest that for three months all mortgages, loans (apart from government bonds) and rents (commercial and residential) are suspended with no interest or debt accruing. It would need primary legislation.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,705
    kle4 said:

    Chris said:

    TGOHF666 said:
    I think relaxing the lockdown a couple of weeks after the plateau is attained translates to a more gradual form of the original herd immunity concept - probably with several percent of the population being infected every week for several months - still without any hard evidence about how long immunity will last, of course.

    Nice for those who are lucky enough to be able to sit it out. Not so good for the others, including NHS staff.
    I kind of thought the whole idea sans vaccine was stretching out herd immunity, since we cannot lockdown for 2 years or whatever so its about building up and spreading capacity.
    Maybe it is, though I don't think that's the impression that's been given publicly. The impression I've got is that the strategy is to keep infections at a low level through counter-measures during the pre-vaccine period.

    To get herd immunity, something like two thirds of the population will need to be infected. I don't think spreading it out over a longer period will have that much impact on the fatality rate. I reckon you would be talking about a quarter of a million deaths.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,325
    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    Yes but. Politics is the law of comparative advantage. If people want to sweep the government away it has to be in favour of something else. If Labour spend time putting themselves on the very short list of parties that most normal people could conceivably vote for if they had to they will have done themselves, and the poor old voter and centrist democracy a favour.



  • MattWMattW Posts: 22,571
    edited April 2020

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    We're doing "fight club". Not exactly a date tho.
    Shhhh!

    You've been told.....
    There are plenty of Citizen Science projects to become involved in. They give you the training necessary and then your results are used by professional researchers and scientists.

    The original GalaxyZoo project provided data from the public that was as accurate as that done by professional astronomers and the dataset generated has produced several papers on Galactic Morphology and other topics.

    There are a range of projects from astrophysics to examining ship's logs from the sailing era

    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects

    and since you are into birds and bugs...

    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects?discipline=nature&page=1&status=live
    I've been planning to commission an oil painting of my (died last November) mum from a very old friend who is very firmly locked down by the Govt, and even more firmly by his wife. This has persuaded me to bring it forward and get it underway now.

    Is this interesting amusements with a partner, or in reading groups and so on?

    There are any numbers of interesting courses online.

    Or what about virtual City Breaks?

    Or learn the birds, if you can't face the 2500 species of moth. The RSPB have a very good Smartphone App.

    Or do some dancing?

    For exercise read the entire back archive of Val Policella Toynbee? :-D You get to jump up and down in fury.

    I'm planning to listen to some archives of the Food Programme on R4 - 700 editions available.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    kle4 said:

    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    Well that's me thoroughly depressed. We look to have had a particular poor fight against the virus and we're inevitably and irretrievably ruined.
    It's being so cheerful that keeps me going!
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 21,939

    Jonathan said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Jonathan said:

    OT
    Can anyone think of any good “date like” activities to do whilst in lockdown?

    So far we’ve done “book club” - reading a book chapter by chapter and discussing it, and “art club” drawing the same subject matter and comparing with much hilarity.

    ²
    Yes, there is something obvious.
    Pointing her to politicalbetting.com ?
    Watching Zulu obviously.
    We are watching a series on Sky about the North Yorkshire Moors railway . Its a repeat but interesting nevertheless for both the guys and the gals.
    Wor Lass gets a bit fed up with me shouting out 'Dreadful!' every time the Class 37 or 26 appears.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,631
    edited April 2020
    Breaking (and the timing)

    In a letter Boris invites all leaders to work together at this moment of national emergency
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,705
    Chris said:

    kle4 said:

    Chris said:

    TGOHF666 said:
    I think relaxing the lockdown a couple of weeks after the plateau is attained translates to a more gradual form of the original herd immunity concept - probably with several percent of the population being infected every week for several months - still without any hard evidence about how long immunity will last, of course.

    Nice for those who are lucky enough to be able to sit it out. Not so good for the others, including NHS staff.
    I kind of thought the whole idea sans vaccine was stretching out herd immunity, since we cannot lockdown for 2 years or whatever so its about building up and spreading capacity.
    Maybe it is, though I don't think that's the impression that's been given publicly. The impression I've got is that the strategy is to keep infections at a low level through counter-measures during the pre-vaccine period.

    To get herd immunity, something like two thirds of the population will need to be infected. I don't think spreading it out over a longer period will have that much impact on the fatality rate. I reckon you would be talking about a quarter of a million deaths.
    Deaths from the virus, I mean.

    I don't know how many other deaths from the NHS being unable to treat other conditions for months on end.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    Breaking (and the timing)

    Boris invites all leaders to work together at this moment of national emergency

    Doing what exactly?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,381
    So Becky is being announced as leader at 10:45 right?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654

    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    The End Times..... ;)

    But I suspect you are near the truth. One thing you missed is the structure of the govt.s compensation / support scheme for Small Business is such that, for many, it is inaccessible. I noted the other day that word of this had reached The Snake and he issued instructions to the financial system that Things Must Change. Whether they change quickly enough (or sufficiently) remains to be seen.

    People are great problem solvers. I expect, in the short term, an increase in barter / favours / money-under-the-counter / black market trading because it is quick, easy and answers immediate needs
    The only thing that will work is immediate grants. Sort of like what was being offered to pubs and restaurants but on a much bigger scale. There are 2 kinds of insolvency, cash flow and balance sheet. Loans help with cash flow but at the cost of balance sheet. The money is never coming back anyway.
  • Breaking (and the timing)

    Boris invites all leaders to work together at this moment of national emergency

    Doing what exactly?
    To attend a meeting next week to discuss the way forward on covid 19
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,705

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    If they're invited to meet, they'll be doing the usual kind of things people do in meetings. Sitting in a room together, shaking hands, coughing and so on.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,028
    Scott_xP said:
    I think I would politely decline that invitation for now. Given Johnson has Covid-19, offering to meet the new Labour leader sounds like an attempt to use biological warfare.

    Perhaps we should rename him Borgia Johnson?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,160
    Scott_xP said:
    I've got three and its only day 15 for me.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 13,677

    Breaking (and the timing)

    In a letter Boris invites all leaders to work together at this moment of national emergency

    He obviously feels it's time to start spreading the blame a bit wider.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163

    On topic, David is right about what the new leader should prioritise.

    As for the actual politics, the Conservatives are going to struggle for a generation to say that anything is too expensive. The political debate is going to be around value for money, not the price tag itself.

    Surely that is a good thing? Politicians have been accused for generations of knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing. Indeed, it seems to have been a feature of UK govts for quite some time that things are done in a miserly fashion or held or delayed to the point where the Return on Investment is miniscule.

  • Chris said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Doing what exactly? The loyal opposition performs the duty of scrutiny. What is Boris Johnson proposing that the opposition do instead of scrutinise the government’s actions?
    If they're invited to meet, they'll be doing the usual kind of things people do in meetings. Sitting in a room together, shaking hands, coughing and so on.
    Hardly and a silly comment

    Meetings are now always done on line, indeed even the cabinet meet this way
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163
    DavidL said:

    DavidL said:

    I hate to say it because I really enjoy David's pieces but that is one of the worst examples of normalisation that I have seen for a while.

    I don't think David or indeed many others have picked up on the scale of what is coming. This month the best part of 100k businesses are forecast to go bankrupt. They won't officially go bankrupt because the courts are shut but they will cease to trade and make payment of their liabilities. Unemployment is about to increase by at least 2m, probably more. The majority of coffee shops, hairdressers and small shops will never open again or, if they do it will be a closing down sale. Our high street, already in a precarious state, will be utterly devastated. Those not in the public sector or with very large employers are about to suffer a major drop in income even if they retain their employment. Many self employed will never pay the tax they will be due on last years income.

    Rishi Sunak has produced, with the BoE, one of the boldest and innovative action plans in the world. It will not be enough. Nothing would be enough for the devastation that is to come. God knows what will be left to be picked up on. What is certain is that there will be mountainous government debt, probable inflation, a collapse in GDP worse than the 30s and a completely different landscape where essential businesses are kept going with a level of government support and control that McDonnell would never have dreamed of.

    This may prove a world where the government that has to handle this shit storm is simply swept away as Labour was in 2010 but 5x worse. Or it may not if Boris and Rishi are seen to be doing the best that could realistically be done. Either way its really not going to matter a damn what Starmer gets up to.

    The End Times..... ;)

    But I suspect you are near the truth. One thing you missed is the structure of the govt.s compensation / support scheme for Small Business is such that, for many, it is inaccessible. I noted the other day that word of this had reached The Snake and he issued instructions to the financial system that Things Must Change. Whether they change quickly enough (or sufficiently) remains to be seen.

    People are great problem solvers. I expect, in the short term, an increase in barter / favours / money-under-the-counter / black market trading because it is quick, easy and answers immediate needs
    The only thing that will work is immediate grants. Sort of like what was being offered to pubs and restaurants but on a much bigger scale. There are 2 kinds of insolvency, cash flow and balance sheet. Loans help with cash flow but at the cost of balance sheet. The money is never coming back anyway.
    I agree. A bit like Student Loans ;)
This discussion has been closed.