politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » WH2020: Punters still not fully convinced that it’ll be Trump

The chart shows the latest betting on who will be the next President in Betfair’s now £30m market. The amount that’s been gambled so far is by far a record this far out but the interesting thing is that the uncertainty that still remains over who is going to be heading the ticket for either side.
Comments
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FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.0 -
I'm laying Trump rather than backing Biden0
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Except walking away will be a disaster whatever Boris fanboys sayPhilip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.3 -
FPT:Black_Rook said:
I've made this point before about the schools, only I'm not so sure in most cases that it will mean part-time working for parents. It'll most likely mean parents slung out of work and replaced by people without childcare responsibilities. It is not as if there won't be plenty of surplus labour available.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
Unless this thing is somehow over, or close to it, by September then stay-at-home Mummies (because it will mostly be women who fall victim to this issue) are due to make a major comeback this Autumn.0 -
What evidence do you have that the EU isn't expecting us to walk away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.
As I've said multiple times before the only reason for talks to avoid being blamed when the talks fall apart.0 -
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.0 -
How are you defining walking away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.0 -
Any evidence of that - every school I know is working with the 2m rule and trying to work out what to do.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.0 -
I was never convinced of the rationale for partially shutting schools in the first place.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
But I’m more worried right now that even if schools reopen parents won’t send their children in. What do we do then? Prosecute? Wouldn’t look good, nor would it be cheap. Set learning online? But if for them, why not others? Build elastic classrooms, dining facilities and more toilets to enforce social distancing?
I’m not a member of the NEU, but they are quite right to say there are more questions than answers out there right now. I don’t know if they’re asking the right questions, but at least they are not offering a free ride.0 -
Barnier's already in retreat on fishing. He knows he's on dodgy grounds and can't defend it, he's entirely stopped trying to defend his attempts to get our sovereign waters completely now. It was intriguing in Barnier's letter that there are 0 (zero) references to the EU's demands for access to our sovereign fishing waters.eek said:
What evidence do you have that the EU isn't expecting us to walk away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.
As I've said multiple times before the only reason for talks to avoid being blamed when the talks fall apart.
There's been a number of media reports recently that Barnier was preparing to give up on demanding that and the fact that he hasn't even referenced it in the letter whereas Frost did certainly seems to indicate that. Barnier seems to know full well he's lost that battle and is moving on to other areas.
Its different negotiating with a government that is willing and able to simply walk away if need be, not like May's mess. Barnier could lay down the law to May because he knew that his allies like Grieve would prevent us walking away. Now he's in very difficult terrain and he's struggling to get us to concede in the same way.1 -
And thus community transmission is interrupted and cases steadily decline - all our lockdowns and other interventions just make it happen a bit faster than it otherwise would. And the disease ultimately fades away. It would be nice to think so. I don't know about anyone else but I'm not looking forward to a socially distanced Christmas.turbotubbs said:
The pre-existing immunity has been mentioned and it would help explain quite some of the behaviour of the virus. It is surely possible that some or many people will not catch it, or just shrug it off. Possibly from related common cold corona virus exposure. Who knows. The initial studies of confined environments (Diamond Princess etc) lend some credence to this. It's now looking much less likely that there is an iceberg of those who have had it asymptomatically. but maybe a lot will just never allow the virus to take hold and thus won't show antibodies, but also won't become ill.Pulpstar said:
Perhaps the virus is mutating ?Black_Rook said:Recently home from work and just catching up on the news of zero new Covid diagnoses in London in a 24-hour period.
It is also more than a week since Boris Johnson dumped the Stay Home message and started encouraging people to go back to work. One is therefore entitled to wonder what has happened to the much-feared disease spike caused by passengers allegedly cramming back into buses and the Tube, going back into workplaces, and spending as much time as they please enjoying sunny parks. Indeed, if this continues to fail to materialise for very much longer then it'll be the best news since this whole miserable saga began.
I also wonder if it might be possible - just possible - that, as contagious as it is, this disease finds it a lot more difficult to infect some people than others. If a substantial fraction of the population is quite simply resistant to Covid - something that would be very hard to prove, given that a scientific study of such a possible phenomenon could only be conducted by trying to deliberately infect a group of volunteers - then this would correspondingly reduce the numbers of people who would need to have contracted the illness and developed antibodies, before at least some degree of collective immunity develops in the population as a whole.
Yes, I know - another notion for the "too good to be true" collection. But I'm not sure what the alternative explanation for new infections having crashed to nil in a densely-packed city of nearly nine million people could be.
The decline around the world, with all kinds of different levels and types of lockdowns all look a bit similar, and maybe this is why.0 -
This will be a net loss to the EU.Philip_Thompson said:
Barnier's already in retreat on fishing. He knows he's on dodgy grounds and can't defend it, he's entirely stopped trying to defend his attempts to get our sovereign waters completely now. It was intriguing in Barnier's letter that there are 0 (zero) references to the EU's demands for access to our sovereign fishing waters.eek said:
What evidence do you have that the EU isn't expecting us to walk away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.
As I've said multiple times before the only reason for talks to avoid being blamed when the talks fall apart.
No, I will not put my coat on, it’s too bloody hot.3 -
Johnson knows it too.MikeSmithson said:
Except walking away will be a disaster whatever Boris fanboys sayPhilip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.0 -
Don't know if this has already been posted and discussed, but some interesting breakdowns on positions between GOP, Dems and true Independents, particularly when it comes to blame for COVID.
Some really depressing numbers in there, particularly on how the Independent voting intention breaks
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/20/voters-divided-over-coronavirus-cnbcchange-research-poll-finds.html0 -
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings0 -
I misread that tweet at first, and was baffled at the heartlessness of a government that would give immigrant workers indefinite leave to remain only if they died. After all, it would be moot by then.CorrectHorseBattery said:
Then I realised the indefinite leave part referred to families.0 -
But that won’t work if we have multiple year groups back in. The only way it can happen it is if there are spare classrooms and teachers to use.RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings
If that’s in place in September it’s going to be very, very difficult.0 -
Seems the testing increase was driven by the expansion of testing eligibility to basically anyone who wants one. Pillar2 was 118k tests alone - might be this spikes for a few days then drops back a bit, who knows.0
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It seems that the government is using opening up testing, to push testing capacity *usage*.Andrew said:Seems the testing increase was driven by the expansion of testing eligibility to basically anyone who wants one. Pillar2 was 118k tests alone.
I will be very interested when the eventual enquiry is done, to find out who was pushing back against increasing capacity.0 -
Permission to be buried here if you die? Bloody tories...ydoethur said:
I misread that tweet at first, and was baffled at the heartlessness of a government that would give immigrant workers indefinite leave to remain only if they died. After all, it would be moot by then.CorrectHorseBattery said:
Then I realised the indefinite leave part referred to families.0 -
"London records no new coronavirus cases for full 24 hour period"
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/coronavirus-cases-london-figures-decline-phe-a4446336.html1 -
If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?1
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Quite right too. Periclean, even:CorrectHorseBattery said:
ἔργῳ οἱ θαπτόμενοι τὰ μὲν ἤδη κεκόσμηνται, τὰ δὲ αὐτῶν τοὺς παῖδας τὸ ἀπὸ τοῦδε δημοσίᾳ ἡ πόλις μέχρι ἥβης θρέψει, ὠφέλιμον στέφανον τοῖσδέ τε καὶ τοῖς λειπομένοις τῶν τοιῶνδε ἀγώνων προτιθεῖσα· ἆθλα γὰρ οἷς κεῖται ἀρετῆς μέγιστα, τοῖς δὲ καὶ ἄνδρες ἄριστοι πολιτεύουσιν.
Thuc.2.46
'... those who are buried have already been honoured in deed, and as for their children, the state shall nurture them henceforth at public expense until adulthood, offering a beneficial prize both for these men and for those they have left behind after such struggles as theirs. For where the rewards for virtue are greatest, there are the finest men enlisted in the service of the state'.0 -
"Face masks will be mandatory in Spain from Thursday"
https://www.thelocal.es/20200519/what-you-need-to-know-about-spains-new-rule-to-make-face-masks-mandatory0 -
FPT
No. of A380s built compared to no. of Boeing 777s?Malmesbury said:
No, it wasn't. It isa perfectly sensible product, of itself.ydoethur said:
The A380 is the Sinclair C5 of aviation.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Production of the A380 ceased permanently some time agoCarlottaVance said:Flying is going to get worse (and probably a lot more expensive...)
https://twitter.com/DaveWallsworth/status/1263144671947227138?s=20
Not viable even before covid
Discuss.
It is too big - bit like the hyper sized oil tankers that were tried a while back.
The C5 was shit product that also had essentially no demand.0 -
(FPT)
Shortsighted.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Production of the A380 ceased permanently some time agoCarlottaVance said:Flying is going to get worse (and probably a lot more expensive...)
https://twitter.com/DaveWallsworth/status/1263144671947227138?s=20
Not viable even before covid
It’s the one aircraft large enough to allow social distancing.0 -
242 vs 1634Sunil_Prasannan said:FPT
No. of A380s built compared to no. of Boeing 777s?Malmesbury said:
No, it wasn't. It isa perfectly sensible product, of itself.ydoethur said:
The A380 is the Sinclair C5 of aviation.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Production of the A380 ceased permanently some time agoCarlottaVance said:Flying is going to get worse (and probably a lot more expensive...)
https://twitter.com/DaveWallsworth/status/1263144671947227138?s=20
Not viable even before covid
Discuss.
It is too big - bit like the hyper sized oil tankers that were tried a while back.
The C5 was shit product that also had essentially no demand.1 -
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/12627748540356075540 -
My tip, you can lay Hilary Clinton at 28 on betfair to be popular vote winner.
No way there is a 3-4% chance of Biden dropping out, Clinton being chosen, Clinton winning popular vote.0 -
I would love to know what these cards are, all jokers I think.eek said:
What evidence do you have that the EU isn't expecting us to walk away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.
As I've said multiple times before the only reason for talks to avoid being blamed when the talks fall apart.0 -
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
0 -
That is a cracking annualised return, but I raise you laying for VP all of Michelle Obama (16-20), Hillary Clinton (36-40), and Barack Obama (100) for a combined return of around 8-10% in less time.rkrkrk said:My tip, you can lay Hilary Clinton at 28 on betfair to be popular vote winner.
No way there is a 3-4% chance of Biden dropping out, Clinton being chosen, Clinton winning popular vote.
We should have an occasional PB thread about the best return possible in a given period (say 6 months) with a negligible risk.0 -
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
0 -
Exposure Notification API launches to support public health agencies
https://blog.google/inside-google/company-announcements/apple-google-exposure-notification-api-launches/
NHSX better get their skates on.
One thing I noted is that the API now requires Android 6.0 (API level 23) rather than the earlier version's requirement of Android 5.0 (API level 21).1 -
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.0 -
There is one politician who rates Thucydides as the greatest writer on politics ever. You are Denis Healey AICMFP.BluestBlue said:
Quite right too. Periclean, even:CorrectHorseBattery said:
ἔργῳ οἱ θαπτόμενοι τὰ μὲν ἤδη κεκόσμηνται, τὰ δὲ αὐτῶν τοὺς παῖδας τὸ ἀπὸ τοῦδε δημοσίᾳ ἡ πόλις μέχρι ἥβης θρέψει, ὠφέλιμον στέφανον τοῖσδέ τε καὶ τοῖς λειπομένοις τῶν τοιῶνδε ἀγώνων προτιθεῖσα· ἆθλα γὰρ οἷς κεῖται ἀρετῆς μέγιστα, τοῖς δὲ καὶ ἄνδρες ἄριστοι πολιτεύουσιν.
Thuc.2.46
'... those who are buried have already been honoured in deed, and as for their children, the state shall nurture them henceforth at public expense until adulthood, offering a beneficial prize both for these men and for those they have left behind after such struggles as theirs. For where the rewards for virtue are greatest, there are the finest men enlisted in the service of the state'.0 -
I was never a communist, and my eyebrows are mediocre, but I do have at least some things in common with good old Denis.DecrepiterJohnL said:
There is one politician who rates Thucydides as the greatest writer on politics ever. You are Denis Healey AICMFP.BluestBlue said:
Quite right too. Periclean, even:CorrectHorseBattery said:
ἔργῳ οἱ θαπτόμενοι τὰ μὲν ἤδη κεκόσμηνται, τὰ δὲ αὐτῶν τοὺς παῖδας τὸ ἀπὸ τοῦδε δημοσίᾳ ἡ πόλις μέχρι ἥβης θρέψει, ὠφέλιμον στέφανον τοῖσδέ τε καὶ τοῖς λειπομένοις τῶν τοιῶνδε ἀγώνων προτιθεῖσα· ἆθλα γὰρ οἷς κεῖται ἀρετῆς μέγιστα, τοῖς δὲ καὶ ἄνδρες ἄριστοι πολιτεύουσιν.
Thuc.2.46
'... those who are buried have already been honoured in deed, and as for their children, the state shall nurture them henceforth at public expense until adulthood, offering a beneficial prize both for these men and for those they have left behind after such struggles as theirs. For where the rewards for virtue are greatest, there are the finest men enlisted in the service of the state'.0 -
We don't hold a set of Jokers, it's a single Joker, Master Bun the Bakers Son,a Pokemon collectors card, the top trump card that always loses and the missing card from an Uno gamemalcolmg said:
I would love to know what these cards are, all jokers I think.eek said:
What evidence do you have that the EU isn't expecting us to walk away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.
As I've said multiple times before the only reason for talks to avoid being blamed when the talks fall apart.0 -
That's going to rule out a lot of android phones that were never upgraded by their manufacturer, At least Apple have an all or nothing approach due to their limited range.glw said:Exposure Notification API launches to support public health agencies
https://blog.google/inside-google/company-announcements/apple-google-exposure-notification-api-launches/
NHSX better get their skates on.
One thing I noted is that the API now requires Android 6.0 (API level 23) rather than the earlier version's requirement of Android 5.0 (API level 21).1 -
Were you the beach master at Anzio?BluestBlue said:
I was never a communist, and my eyebrows are mediocre, but I do have at least some things in common with good old Denis.DecrepiterJohnL said:
There is one politician who rates Thucydides as the greatest writer on politics ever. You are Denis Healey AICMFP.BluestBlue said:
Quite right too. Periclean, even:CorrectHorseBattery said:
ἔργῳ οἱ θαπτόμενοι τὰ μὲν ἤδη κεκόσμηνται, τὰ δὲ αὐτῶν τοὺς παῖδας τὸ ἀπὸ τοῦδε δημοσίᾳ ἡ πόλις μέχρι ἥβης θρέψει, ὠφέλιμον στέφανον τοῖσδέ τε καὶ τοῖς λειπομένοις τῶν τοιῶνδε ἀγώνων προτιθεῖσα· ἆθλα γὰρ οἷς κεῖται ἀρετῆς μέγιστα, τοῖς δὲ καὶ ἄνδρες ἄριστοι πολιτεύουσιν.
Thuc.2.46
'... those who are buried have already been honoured in deed, and as for their children, the state shall nurture them henceforth at public expense until adulthood, offering a beneficial prize both for these men and for those they have left behind after such struggles as theirs. For where the rewards for virtue are greatest, there are the finest men enlisted in the service of the state'.0 -
All the cards, as David Davis said.eek said:
We don't hold a set of Jokers, it's a single Joker, Master Bun the Bakers Son,a Pokemon collectors card, the top trump card that always loses and the missing card from an Uno gamemalcolmg said:
I would love to know what these cards are, all jokers I think.eek said:
What evidence do you have that the EU isn't expecting us to walk away?Philip_Thompson said:FPT
Because the EU don't want us to walk away and the government is prepared to do so.williamglenn said:
Why should Barnier care about UK public opinion, or to put it differently, why is UK public opinion more important than EU27 public opinion?Philip_Thompson said:
I think if we end up walking away then in the battle of public opinion the UK government has easily won this round over Barnier.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
Quoting chapter and verse what they're looking for, why its been deemed acceptable before and to whom was a stroke of genius. Barnier stammering that the UK can't get the same without a reason is going to impress nobody neutral.
The UK holds the cards.
As I've said multiple times before the only reason for talks to avoid being blamed when the talks fall apart.0 -
6.0 covers 85% of devices using the Play Store, 5.0 takes you to 95%, so it's lower but still the vast majority of Android phones using Google's services. AFAIK the NHSX app still requires Android 8.0, which only covers about 60% of devices.eek said:
That's going to rule out a lot of android phones that were never upgraded by their manufacturer, At least Apple have an all or nothing approach due to their limited range.glw said:Exposure Notification API launches to support public health agencies
https://blog.google/inside-google/company-announcements/apple-google-exposure-notification-api-launches/
NHSX better get their skates on.
One thing I noted is that the API now requires Android 6.0 (API level 23) rather than the earlier version's requirement of Android 5.0 (API level 21).0 -
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.1 -
However if you do that for big money akin to what you might put into a bank saver you have to factor in Betfair Paddy credit risk. They are not covered under the deposit protection scheme.Quincel said:
That is a cracking annualised return, but I raise you laying for VP all of Michelle Obama (16-20), Hillary Clinton (36-40), and Barack Obama (100) for a combined return of around 8-10% in less time.rkrkrk said:My tip, you can lay Hilary Clinton at 28 on betfair to be popular vote winner.
No way there is a 3-4% chance of Biden dropping out, Clinton being chosen, Clinton winning popular vote.
We should have an occasional PB thread about the best return possible in a given period (say 6 months) with a negligible risk.0 -
Canada's top doctor advises use of 'nonmedical' masks as provinces reopen
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/20/canada-non-medical-masks-provinces-reopen-2710080 -
I'm amazed the gap is so small, I'd have guessed at least ten times as many 777sTimT said:
242 vs 1634Sunil_Prasannan said:FPT
No. of A380s built compared to no. of Boeing 777s?Malmesbury said:
No, it wasn't. It isa perfectly sensible product, of itself.ydoethur said:
The A380 is the Sinclair C5 of aviation.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Production of the A380 ceased permanently some time agoCarlottaVance said:Flying is going to get worse (and probably a lot more expensive...)
https://twitter.com/DaveWallsworth/status/1263144671947227138?s=20
Not viable even before covid
Discuss.
It is too big - bit like the hyper sized oil tankers that were tried a while back.
The C5 was shit product that also had essentially no demand.0 -
Somebody sort of did. Damien Hirst at the peak of britpop 90s opened a restaurant in Notting Hill called Pharmacy. You ate surrounded by all white decor and glass shelves full of bottles of pills. There was cool and there was ubercool - and then there was this place. I loved it. Went bust in less than a year.Cyclefree said:
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
1 -
Hmmm... It's not going to run on my Huawei Mate XSglw said:
6.0 covers 85% of devices using the Play Store, 5.0 takes you to 95%, so it's lower but still the vast majority of Android phones using Google's services. AFAIK the NHSX app still requires Android 8.0, which only covers about 60% of devices.eek said:
That's going to rule out a lot of android phones that were never upgraded by their manufacturer, At least Apple have an all or nothing approach due to their limited range.glw said:Exposure Notification API launches to support public health agencies
https://blog.google/inside-google/company-announcements/apple-google-exposure-notification-api-launches/
NHSX better get their skates on.
One thing I noted is that the API now requires Android 6.0 (API level 23) rather than the earlier version's requirement of Android 5.0 (API level 21).0 -
Yeah - why let the prospect of a few hundred thousand people dying stand in the way of socialising? Especially when it's mainly useless old people who will die, not the ones socialising. The cost of caring for all those old people was cramping our style far too much even before all this fuss.Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.0 -
Goldman Sachs did a Phantom Menace party there.kinabalu said:
Somebody sort of did. Damien Hirst at the peak of britpop 90s opened a restaurant in Notting Hill called Pharmacy. You ate surrounded by all white decor and glass shelves full of bottles of pills. There was cool and there was ubercool - and then there was this place. I loved it. Went bust in less than a year.Cyclefree said:
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
0 -
Evening all
The glorious weather notwithstanding, it seems my mask isn't keeping the pollen at bay and sneezing with a mask on doesn't end well.
Dowden had the rare good fortune of having nothing negative or downbeat to say and it's amazing how easy Press Conferences are when the news is all good. It won't do him any harm in the pecking order and I wonder if he will move up the Cabinet at the next re-shuffle.
Flash Services and Manufacturing PMI numbers due tomorrow morning which may be of interest though the financial markets seem willing to ignore all bad news currently - there seems a belief the recovery will be swift thought what that is based on I'm not sure.
This caught my eye from one of the countries which has arguably been most successful in responding to covid-19:
https://www.rte.ie/news/coronavirus/2020/0520/1139468-world-coronavirus/
I imagine Sunak and some on here might not approve but the notion of extra public holidays and a shorter working week to get people to travel and spend in the UK doesn't seem the most fanciful.
2020- the summer of the great "staycation" - the summer that never ends.0 -
?Andy_JS said:"London records no new coronavirus cases for full 24 hour period"
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/coronavirus-cases-london-figures-decline-phe-a4446336.html
How is it that the number of confirmed cases in London reported today was 50 more than yesterday, then? And that the daily number of new cases has been around 80 a day over the past few days?0 -
Isn't it 2 metres for secondary but not primary?RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings0 -
Thus proving @Cyclefree right. Some people are not thinking straight about risk.Chris said:
Yeah - why let the prospect of a few hundred thousand people dying stand in the way of socialising? Especially when it's mainly useless old people who will die, not the ones socialising. The cost of caring for all those old people was cramping our style far too much even before all this fuss.Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.
We do not all need to spend the rest of eternity sealed in individual concrete tombs to prevent a total massacre of everybody over the age of 65.0 -
For anyone interested the 'expectations' on those PMIs arestodge said:Evening all
The glorious weather notwithstanding, it seems my mask isn't keeping the pollen at bay and sneezing with a mask on doesn't end well.
Dowden had the rare good fortune of having nothing negative or downbeat to say and it's amazing how easy Press Conferences are when the news is all good. It won't do him any harm in the pecking order and I wonder if he will move up the Cabinet at the next re-shuffle.
Flash Services and Manufacturing PMI numbers due tomorrow morning which may be of interest though the financial markets seem willing to ignore all bad news currently - there seems a belief the recovery will be swift thought what that is based on I'm not sure.
This caught my eye from one of the countries which has arguably been most successful in responding to covid-19:
https://www.rte.ie/news/coronavirus/2020/0520/1139468-world-coronavirus/
I imagine Sunak and some on here might not approve but the notion of extra public holidays and a shorter working week to get people to travel and spend in the UK doesn't seem the most fanciful.
2020- the summer of the great "staycation" - the summer that never ends.
Manufacturing around 37
Services around 24
Composite around 26
My gut reaction is those look toppy, but I'm the arch pessimist.
0 -
I was being sarcastic, you moron.Black_Rook said:
Thus proving @Cyclefree right.Chris said:
Yeah - why let the prospect of a few hundred thousand people dying stand in the way of socialising? Especially when it's mainly useless old people who will die, not the ones socialising. The cost of caring for all those old people was cramping our style far too much even before all this fuss.Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.0 -
I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?0 -
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-52742519
Devon's beaches "like August" now so wtf are they going to be like in August?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-52742519stodge said:Evening all
The glorious weather notwithstanding, it seems my mask isn't keeping the pollen at bay and sneezing with a mask on doesn't end well.
Dowden had the rare good fortune of having nothing negative or downbeat to say and it's amazing how easy Press Conferences are when the news is all good. It won't do him any harm in the pecking order and I wonder if he will move up the Cabinet at the next re-shuffle.
Flash Services and Manufacturing PMI numbers due tomorrow morning which may be of interest though the financial markets seem willing to ignore all bad news currently - there seems a belief the recovery will be swift thought what that is based on I'm not sure.
This caught my eye from one of the countries which has arguably been most successful in responding to covid-19:
https://www.rte.ie/news/coronavirus/2020/0520/1139468-world-coronavirus/
I imagine Sunak and some on here might not approve but the notion of extra public holidays and a shorter working week to get people to travel and spend in the UK doesn't seem the most fanciful.
2020- the summer of the great "staycation" - the summer that never ends.
Devon's beaches "like August" now so wtf are they going to be like in August? I am praying for rubbish weather.0 -
Nopeukpaul said:
Isn't it 2 metres for secondary but not primary?RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings0 -
Ah. Reading a little further, it says "no new cases" was because of a technical glitch over the weekend.Chris said:
?Andy_JS said:"London records no new coronavirus cases for full 24 hour period"
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/coronavirus-cases-london-figures-decline-phe-a4446336.html
How is it that the number of confirmed cases in London reported today was 50 more than yesterday, then? And that the daily number of new cases has been around 80 a day over the past few days?
Not that that explains why the report gives credence to the nonsense about a claim based on modelling that the infection rate in London is only a couple of dozen a day - when even the official figure is much higher than that, and the antibody testing indicates that the official figure is still a severe underestimate.
We seem to have politicians, modellers and journalists vying to show who can talk most nonsense.1 -
-
I complemented teachers I never posted crap about them and did you read the bloody advice yourself? The bloody advice as you said it confirmed what I bloody said.RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings
We know that, unlike older children and adults, early years and primary age children cannot be expected to remain 2 metres apart from each other and staff. In deciding to bring more children back to early years and schools, we are taking this into account.0 -
You surprise me!kinabalu said:
Somebody sort of did. Damien Hirst at the peak of britpop 90s opened a restaurant in Notting Hill called Pharmacy. You ate surrounded by all white decor and glass shelves full of bottles of pills. There was cool and there was ubercool - and then there was this place. I loved it. Went bust in less than a year.Cyclefree said:
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
0 -
"2m distancing doesn't apply in schools" except for the schools covered by this guidance which is all of them.Philip_Thompson said:
I complemented teachers I never posted crap about them and did you read the bloody advice yourself? The bloody advice as you said it confirmed what I bloody said.RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings
We know that, unlike older children and adults, early years and primary age children cannot be expected to remain 2 metres apart from each other and staff. In deciding to bring more children back to early years and schools, we are taking this into account.0 -
PMIs are based on a month on month comparison, or at least they're meant to be. In theory, as long as May was even a bit better than April then the index should be over 50, even if the level of activity is still way below normal in May. In practice that's not how PMI respondents seem to fill in the surveys, at least not in the West, so I doubt if the PMIs are anywhere near 50, but I think they should be materially higher than in April (and equally, I wouldn't read too much into that).contrarian said:
For anyone interested the 'expectations' on those PMIs arestodge said:Evening all
The glorious weather notwithstanding, it seems my mask isn't keeping the pollen at bay and sneezing with a mask on doesn't end well.
Dowden had the rare good fortune of having nothing negative or downbeat to say and it's amazing how easy Press Conferences are when the news is all good. It won't do him any harm in the pecking order and I wonder if he will move up the Cabinet at the next re-shuffle.
Flash Services and Manufacturing PMI numbers due tomorrow morning which may be of interest though the financial markets seem willing to ignore all bad news currently - there seems a belief the recovery will be swift thought what that is based on I'm not sure.
This caught my eye from one of the countries which has arguably been most successful in responding to covid-19:
https://www.rte.ie/news/coronavirus/2020/0520/1139468-world-coronavirus/
I imagine Sunak and some on here might not approve but the notion of extra public holidays and a shorter working week to get people to travel and spend in the UK doesn't seem the most fanciful.
2020- the summer of the great "staycation" - the summer that never ends.
Manufacturing around 37
Services around 24
Composite around 26
My gut reaction is those look toppy, but I'm the arch pessimist.0 -
Republicans are going to open up the Ukraine Biden stuff again, and attack the original basis for the Russia investigation, and claim Biden is China's candidate. It will be 99% BS.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?
Meanwhile Trump is repeatedly firing Inspectors General to keep them from investigating his probably criminal behaviour.0 -
The former deputy leader of the SNP, Jim Sillars.
"Scots are now locked in a woke chamber: virtue signalling, pandering to perceived victimhood, punishing any who assert biological fact, placing a halter of criminality on free thought when articulated by speech, abandoning common sense. It is all there in the Scottish government’s hate crime and public order bill. From the towering height of the Enlightenment, the Scottish nation’s leaders have fallen to a low where intellectual rigour is not only an unknown concept, but can put those who practice it in the clink."
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/beware-scotland-s-hate-crime-bill1 -
Well fuck you you sarcastic cuntChris said:
I was being sarcastic, you moron.Black_Rook said:
Thus proving @Cyclefree right.Chris said:
Yeah - why let the prospect of a few hundred thousand people dying stand in the way of socialising? Especially when it's mainly useless old people who will die, not the ones socialising. The cost of caring for all those old people was cramping our style far too much even before all this fuss.Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.0 -
Should be fairly easy to turn it onto the economy, which sounds like it'll be in the crapper by election day.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?0 -
Someone needs to inform the Evening Standard if they've got it wrong.Chris said:
?Andy_JS said:"London records no new coronavirus cases for full 24 hour period"
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/coronavirus-cases-london-figures-decline-phe-a4446336.html
How is it that the number of confirmed cases in London reported today was 50 more than yesterday, then? And that the daily number of new cases has been around 80 a day over the past few days?0 -
The guidance literally says the 2m distancing can't apply to young children so alternative guidance does. Exactly as I said.RochdalePioneers said:
"2m distancing doesn't apply in schools" except for the schools covered by this guidance which is all of them.Philip_Thompson said:
I complemented teachers I never posted crap about them and did you read the bloody advice yourself? The bloody advice as you said it confirmed what I bloody said.RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings
We know that, unlike older children and adults, early years and primary age children cannot be expected to remain 2 metres apart from each other and staff. In deciding to bring more children back to early years and schools, we are taking this into account.0 -
Channel 4 News surprised to find that no-one in Copenhagen is wearing a face mask.0
-
CBO predicts a second quarter drop of 38% on an annualised basis.Andrew said:
Should be fairly easy to turn it onto the economy, which sounds like it'll be in the crapper by election day.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?0 -
Yes, did you see my earlier response to your and NigelB's comments?Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.
Edit Previous thread at 07:580 -
This is a joke now. Total lockdown meltdown around my little patch. Three sets of neighbours having barbecue or drinks on the lawn with family and friends (none of whom normally live there).
This is great. Weather fantastic. School out. Work cancelled for weeks. Etc etc.
Meanwhile the economy collapses and we enter the Covid Depression.0 -
Not so cool that night then.rcs1000 said:
Goldman Sachs did a Phantom Menace party there.kinabalu said:
Somebody sort of did. Damien Hirst at the peak of britpop 90s opened a restaurant in Notting Hill called Pharmacy. You ate surrounded by all white decor and glass shelves full of bottles of pills. There was cool and there was ubercool - and then there was this place. I loved it. Went bust in less than a year.Cyclefree said:
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
0 -
No, but seriously, if - given the fact that 60,000-70,000 are estimated to have died as a result of around 10% of the population having been infected - you have trouble with seeing that hundreds of thousands are going to die if we prioritise "socialising" over preventing the spread of the virus, then you're hardly in a position to lecture people about the evaluation of risk!Black_Rook said:
Thus proving @Cyclefree right. Some people are not thinking straight about risk.Chris said:
Yeah - why let the prospect of a few hundred thousand people dying stand in the way of socialising? Especially when it's mainly useless old people who will die, not the ones socialising. The cost of caring for all those old people was cramping our style far too much even before all this fuss.Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.
.0 -
But he sold the fittings for £11 million.Cyclefree said:
You surprise me!kinabalu said:
Somebody sort of did. Damien Hirst at the peak of britpop 90s opened a restaurant in Notting Hill called Pharmacy. You ate surrounded by all white decor and glass shelves full of bottles of pills. There was cool and there was ubercool - and then there was this place. I loved it. Went bust in less than a year.Cyclefree said:
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://artdaily.cc/news/11351/Damien-Hirst-s-Pharmacy-Sells-For-11-1-Million
0 -
For absolute clarity for the small
Mate you said it doesn't apply in schools. They accept it can't be maintained with the tiddlers but even reception classes have to be split to seat them 2m apart. Same 2m apart seating in high schools.Philip_Thompson said:
The guidance literally says the 2m distancing can't apply to young children so alternative guidance does. Exactly as I said.RochdalePioneers said:
"2m distancing doesn't apply in schools" except for the schools covered by this guidance which is all of them.Philip_Thompson said:
I complemented teachers I never posted crap about them and did you read the bloody advice yourself? The bloody advice as you said it confirmed what I bloody said.RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings
We know that, unlike older children and adults, early years and primary age children cannot be expected to remain 2 metres apart from each other and staff. In deciding to bring more children back to early years and schools, we are taking this into account.
If 2m doesn't apply why are they being sat 2m apart and being taught part time in classes cut in size to allow 2m spacing?0 -
I think this upcoming election is existential for America as not just leader of the free world but part of it.glw said:
Republicans are going to open up the Ukraine Biden stuff again, and attack the original basis for the Russia investigation, and claim Biden is China's candidate. It will be 99% BS.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?
Meanwhile Trump is repeatedly firing Inspectors General to keep them from investigating his probably criminal behaviour.0 -
Some news about a Chinese COVID vaccine: experiments on monkeys showed that when exposed after vaccination they had no detectable virus in their respiratory tracts a week later (if I understand this correctly), whereas the equivalent experiment for the Oxford vaccine did not show this. Thus the monkeys with the Chinese vaccine were not sick, but they were also not infectious.
I hope that the government is prepared for the possibility that the most effective vaccine against COVID will be developed overseas, possibly in China.0 -
Annualised GDP numbers have always been stupid.glw said:
CBO predicts a second quarter drop of 38% on an annualised basis.Andrew said:
Should be fairly easy to turn it onto the economy, which sounds like it'll be in the crapper by election day.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?
It will also result in journalists (who should know better) saying things like "Germany's economy, which contracted 9% in the quarter did better than the US which fell 38%".
NO YOU MORON. THE GERMAN NUMBER IS A QUARTERLY CHANGE. THE US NUMBER IS AN ANNUALISED CHANGE - IE FOUR TIMES LARGER.3 -
Well, yes, the start of the article is ridiculously misleading.Andy_JS said:
Someone needs to inform the Evening Standard if they've got it wrong.Chris said:
?Andy_JS said:"London records no new coronavirus cases for full 24 hour period"
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/coronavirus-cases-london-figures-decline-phe-a4446336.html
How is it that the number of confirmed cases in London reported today was 50 more than yesterday, then? And that the daily number of new cases has been around 80 a day over the past few days?
But if you'd read more than the first sentence of the article before rushing here to quote it, you'd have known that.
I wouldn't mind so much if people weren't so sensitive when it's pointed out they're behaving moronically.1 -
Did you not go there?Cyclefree said:
You surprise me!kinabalu said:
Somebody sort of did. Damien Hirst at the peak of britpop 90s opened a restaurant in Notting Hill called Pharmacy. You ate surrounded by all white decor and glass shelves full of bottles of pills. There was cool and there was ubercool - and then there was this place. I loved it. Went bust in less than a year.Cyclefree said:
Ah yes, all the ambience of an operating theatre. Amazing that some entrepreneur didn’t come up with that idea before.kinabalu said:
Well you know what they say - a restaurant is all about the ambience.Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
0 -
I suspect that's not how the index actually functions but no one seems very clear and that may make interpreting the figure tomorrow "interesting".OnlyLivingBoy said:
PMIs are based on a month on month comparison, or at least they're meant to be. In theory, as long as May was even a bit better than April then the index should be over 50, even if the level of activity is still way below normal in May. In practice that's not how PMI respondents seem to fill in the surveys, at least not in the West, so I doubt if the PMIs are anywhere near 50, but I think they should be materially higher than in April (and equally, I wouldn't read too much into that).contrarian said:
For anyone interested the 'expectations' on those PMIs are
Manufacturing around 37
Services around 24
Composite around 26
My gut reaction is those look toppy, but I'm the arch pessimist.
Irish consumer sentiment rebounded from its April low but still a long way from March. I believe March was 77.3, April 42.6, May 52.3 - whether this is of any relevance I don't know.
0 -
2m guidance where possible is being stuck to of course but where it isn't then alternative solutions like bubbles of children are being implemented instead. Exactly like I said.RochdalePioneers said:For absolute clarity for the small
Mate you said it doesn't apply in schools. They accept it can't be maintained with the tiddlers but even reception classes have to be split to seat them 2m apart. Same 2m apart seating in high schools.Philip_Thompson said:
The guidance literally says the 2m distancing can't apply to young children so alternative guidance does. Exactly as I said.RochdalePioneers said:
"2m distancing doesn't apply in schools" except for the schools covered by this guidance which is all of them.Philip_Thompson said:
I complemented teachers I never posted crap about them and did you read the bloody advice yourself? The bloody advice as you said it confirmed what I bloody said.RochdalePioneers said:
Simply incorrect . Schools are being required to set their school up to maintain 2m distancing - smaller classes, desks set apart. They accept that it can't be strictly maintained, but the majority of time it should be. Hence part time schooling at best.Philip_Thompson said:
2m social distancing doesn't apply in schools, like in many other locales. The schools will be using alternative methods to do social distancing like "bubbles" which have been demonstrated in schools overseas already.RochdalePioneers said:The criticism over schools is bizarre. The key consideration is 2m social distancing. Which practically speaking means kids are going back part time. Which practically speaking means their working parents can only go back part time. Schools are open to keyworkers, lessons are being set online, students are being spoken to on the phone and via email. The idea teachers are sat with their feet up refusing to "go back to work" is just dumb.
So, that 2m distancing. Until it gets completely removed our kids are not going back to school - not full time normal school. You need to set aside the 1st June hysteria and start looking at the start of the new academic year. If 2m spacing remains in place, schools remain part time things for kids and with it employment for their parents. Permanently. Until its dropped. Even 1m with mandatory masks like in South Korea means part time schooling and with it part time employment. Pitiful whining about teachers from some doesn't change this rather large problem...
I have every respect for teachers and I strongly suspect almost all teachers will be more than happy to be back teaching their pupils. I believe teachers go into teaching to help children not play politics.
Read the bloody advice before posting crap about teachers: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings/coronavirus-covid-19-implementing-protective-measures-in-education-and-childcare-settings
We know that, unlike older children and adults, early years and primary age children cannot be expected to remain 2 metres apart from each other and staff. In deciding to bring more children back to early years and schools, we are taking this into account.
If 2m doesn't apply why are they being sat 2m apart and being taught part time in classes cut in size to allow 2m spacing?0 -
Hmm. I may be wrong, but I think someone criticised that comparison on the basis that the virus was introduced directly into the lung in the Chinese study, bypassing the parts of the respiratory tract tested for the virus in the Oxford study.fox327 said:Some news about a Chinese COVID vaccine: experiments on monkeys showed that when exposed after vaccination they had no detectable virus in their respiratory tracts a week later (if I understand this correctly), whereas the equivalent experiment for the Oxford vaccine did not show this. Thus the monkeys with the Chinese vaccine were not sick, but they were also not infectious.
I hope that the government is prepared for the possibility that the most effective vaccine against COVID will be developed overseas, possibly in China.
0 -
Only if Trump has control of senate and house. If not he's constrained, by y' know, democracy.kinabalu said:
I think this upcoming election is existential for America as not just leader of the free world but part of it.glw said:
Republicans are going to open up the Ukraine Biden stuff again, and attack the original basis for the Russia investigation, and claim Biden is China's candidate. It will be 99% BS.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?
Meanwhile Trump is repeatedly firing Inspectors General to keep them from investigating his probably criminal behaviour.0 -
Some of this sort of thing is inevitable. The lockdown has been going on for about two months now, and expecting the whole population to keep away from family and friends indefinitely was never a realistic notion.rottenborough said:This is a joke now. Total lockdown meltdown around my little patch. Three sets of neighbours having barbecue or drinks on the lawn with family and friends (none of whom normally live there).
This is great. Weather fantastic. School out. Work cancelled for weeks. Etc etc.
Meanwhile the economy collapses and we enter the Covid Depression.
The longer such prohibitions exist, the more people will lose patience, or discipline, or get desperate, and break them. Especially if the households concerned consist only of members who are at very low risk (which is essentially everyone under 50 apart from those who are clinically vulnerable.)
The Government has the power to shutter businesses quite easily, but we're not a police state. There is very little it can do to forcibly separate private citizens. We'll all simply have to hope that these kinds of interactions don't make a massive difference to the rate of transmission of the illness or significantly increase the exposure of more vulnerable groups.0 -
I agree that they are stupid, I'm just reporting what they said.rcs1000 said:
Annualised GDP numbers have always been stupid.glw said:
CBO predicts a second quarter drop of 38% on an annualised basis.Andrew said:
Should be fairly easy to turn it onto the economy, which sounds like it'll be in the crapper by election day.rottenborough said:I see Trump is aggressively attacking China again to deflect blame.
This election is going to be hijacked into a who is toughest on China event. Can Biden make it about anything else?
It will also result in journalists (who should know better) saying things like "Germany's economy, which contracted 9% in the quarter did better than the US which fell 38%".
NO YOU MORON. THE GERMAN NUMBER IS A QUARTERLY CHANGE. THE US NUMBER IS AN ANNUALISED CHANGE - IE FOUR TIMES LARGER.0 -
Along with the inevitable tit-for-tat, Barnier makes two interesting points in that letter, in my view.williamglenn said:"There is no automatic entitlement to any benefits that the EU may have offered or granted in other contexts and circumstances to other, often very different, partners."
https://twitter.com/MichelBarnier/status/1263118957944483842
First that the only precedent for the agreement is the Political Declaration, not any other deals that the EU has made in the past, as Gove and Frost claim. Barnier clearly interprets the PD to his advantage, but he's right on the principle. The UK and Johnson in particular signed up to the PD as the negotiating brief.
Secondly that the Level Playing Field protections are a two way street. The UK is protected as well. He doesn't say this, generally the weaker party sign treaties for protection. Which is precisely why Trump is tearing up treaties.1 -
I would put the Covid-19 death toll between 50,000-55,000 currently in the UK. If you model a 1% fatality rate that would assume 5-5.5 million cases in the UK so about 7.5% of the population.Chris said:
No, but seriously, if - given the fact that 60,000-70,000 are estimated to have died as a result of around 10% of the population having been infected - you have trouble with seeing that hundreds of thousands are going to die if we prioritise "socialising" over preventing the spread of the virus, then you're hardly in a position to lecture people about the evaluation of risk!
That would imply roughly 20 unreported cases for every reported case based on 250,000 actual cases which I've always thought was in the right area.
The mortality rate for those aged 60 or over is about 4% while for those under 60 it's more like 0.33% based on those case numbers.
We are still a long way from a true picture - it's all supposition looking at numbers who have had very mild symptoms let alone the asymptomatic.0 -
some people questioning why its not safe to work or travel, but its safe to sun yourself on furlough on the beach at the taxpayers expenseBlack_Rook said:
Some of this sort of thing is inevitable. The lockdown has been going on for about two months now, and expecting the whole population to keep away from family and friends indefinitely was never a realistic notion.rottenborough said:This is a joke now. Total lockdown meltdown around my little patch. Three sets of neighbours having barbecue or drinks on the lawn with family and friends (none of whom normally live there).
This is great. Weather fantastic. School out. Work cancelled for weeks. Etc etc.
Meanwhile the economy collapses and we enter the Covid Depression.
The longer such prohibitions exist, the more people will lose patience, or discipline, or get desperate, and break them. Especially if the households concerned consist only of members who are at very low risk (which is essentially everyone under 50 apart from those who are clinically vulnerable.)
The Government has the power to shutter businesses quite easily, but we're not a police state. There is very little it can do to forcibly separate private citizens. We'll all simply have to hope that these kinds of interactions don't make a massive difference to the rate of transmission of the illness or significantly increase the exposure of more vulnerable groups.
0 -
I wonder if the BBC Evening News (and I gather CH4 too) leading on the Rolls Royce job losses will start to focus minds about returning to work?0
-
I did, thank you. Very interesting.TimT said:
Yes, did you see my earlier response to your and NigelB's comments?Cyclefree said:
Yes - but you will have to shout loudly at people to make yourself heard thus presumably spreading any germs you have more widely and effectively than if you were close to them and speaking in a normal way.TimT said:
Or where social distancing of >2m is possible if I read it correctlyCyclefree said:
I see that you don’t have to wear a mask if you’re eating or drinking or have something like asthma.Nigelb said:
Well.....Cyclefree said:If masks have to be worn inside restaurants in Spain, how do the customers eat their food?
https://twitter.com/gad_media/status/1262774854035607554
So this requirement is less than it seems in practice.
It’s utter balls, frankly. Trying to socialise in such a way under penalty of enforcement is ludicrous. We really are not thinking straight about risk nor are we learning the lessons from our forefathers who did have to live with such risks - and much more recently than many realise.
Edit Previous thread at 07:580