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Polls find majority of public doesn't like mobs doing what they like.
Did they (pollsters) get paid for this?2 -
Pffffffffff.........0
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Surely the Queen wont let her son end up in the US prison system? Not sure how it gets resolved?0
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So basically the upshot of these polls is that for maximum banter we should immediately erect a staue of Prince Andrew in Bristol without public consultation...3
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Considering the rather fruity atmosphere at the moment, I'm surprised as many as 33% said they didn't approve of the statue's removal at all. Especially if it was a phone poll.0
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Has anyone got the latest sonar scan on Teddy Boy Colston. Is he still residing with the Brizzle fishes or has someone dredged him from the deep?0
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"It was a statue toppling party. A straightforward statue toppling party."BluestBlue said:So basically the upshot of these polls is that for maximum banter we should immediately erect a staue of Prince Andrew in Bristol without public consultation...
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I completely agree.BluestBlue said:
An astounding statistic. It does also highlight why the direct transplantation of BLM, kneeling, 'Don't Shoot!', etc etc from the US to the UK and elsewhere, as if all our societies had the same contexts and were equally troubled, rubs even some fair-minded people the wrong way.rcs1000 said:
Because everyone's been locked up for ages, and there's a punch of pent up frustration.Casino_Royale said:
If that's true then why are we all having to suffer these crazed protests?rcs1000 said:
With all due respect @eadric, you don't get the extent to which most Americans fear their police.eadric said:
You actually live in America, and you also don't understand the scale of this madness. Some of them mean literally what they say: give the job of policing to other agencies "better equipped" - social workers, psychotherapists, etcrcs1000 said:
Come come.contrarian said:
From that interview, no reform is being planned. There simply won;t be any forces of law and order in Minneapolis.Nigelb said:
https://world.wng.org/2018/03/camden_s_new_daycontrarian said:Andrew Neil has a bit of an interview with one of the Minneapolis city council members who are disbanding the police.
Listen to her answer when CNN ask what people should so if someone breaks into their home and there are no police to call.
That, apparently is a question that doesn't really need an answer, because it is a question that comes from a person's white privilege.
Simply to ask what the arrangements after the police are gone stems from white privilege. Sit there and take your murder, rape and looting and we'll tell you when we're good and ready.
And now we can see what assigning 'white privilege' is in the minds of some.
Do you really believe there will be no police force in Minneapolis?
A number of times in the last fifty years, whole units of Police in the UK, have been disbanded. That didn't mean there stopped being police, it meant that there were new names, new people at the top, and often significant changes in the composition of the rank and file.
This is a classic phenomenon during these social convulsions. Utopian dreaming. The Putney Debates considered communism. In the late 70s there was a serious movement to legalise pedophilia
I live in prosperous, white Los Angeles.
Most of them have had - at some point - a bad experience with the police.
Now, there are some people in the UK who have been accused of crimes, perhaps wrongly. But almost everyone I know in the UK *generally* has good experiences with the police. That's not true of the US.
In any case, there's a bit of a jurisdictional thing here. There will be a Minneapolis Sheriff's Department that will be different from the the Minneapolis Police Department. Eliminating one (and really, we're not talking about throwing 1,000 people onto the street, we're talking about transferring most of them to a new organisation) is not the same as getting rid of all policing in Minneapolis.
And a lot of US police forces have been out of control, particularly as regards minorities.
Here's my stat for the day. Since 1870, according to Wikipedia, police forces in Great Britain have killed 220 people. Three of them were in 2019, and one in 2018.
In the US, in 2019, 1,098 people were killed by police. Now, criminals have guns in the US. So, you'd expect a disparity. But 5x as many deaths in 2019 as in the last 150 years in the UK is an insane disparity.
While the UK has many problems, importing BLM makes no sense.
I suspect that - when the dust settles - a small network of Twitter bots will have been responsible for getting lots of people riled up in the UK, and will have created the illusion of a groundswell in support... that led to lots of people jumping on the bandwagon.1 -
Seems like Andrew has been talking to the Germans too...
https://twitter.com/christiancalgie/status/12701060819692134442 -
The only thing I have worth taking is my pride.rottenborough said:
If you have anything worth nicking you are privileged.williamglenn said:Afraid of burglary? Check your privilege.
https://twitter.com/eddiezipperer/status/1269951088964370432?s=21
Exactly this. There is talking about UK specifics, which is good, but that direct transplantation in pursuit of a global movement, does not quite work. In itself it is not a bad idea, but adjusts for local circumstances needs to be played up more otherwise it is too easy to dismiss since there's always someplace worse, and it's usually the USA. And from experience on here, saying that leads directly to accusations of being a racist, remarkably.BluestBlue said:
An astounding statistic. It does also highlight why the direct transplantation of BLM, kneeling, 'Don't Shoot!', etc etc from the US to the UK and elsewhere, as if all our societies had the same contexts and were equally troubled, rubs even some fair-minded people the wrong way.rcs1000 said:
Because everyone's been locked up for ages, and there's a punch of pent up frustration.Casino_Royale said:
If that's true then why are we all having to suffer these crazed protests?rcs1000 said:
With all due respect @eadric, you don't get the extent to which most Americans fear their police.eadric said:
You actually live in America, and you also don't understand the scale of this madness. Some of them mean literally what they say: give the job of policing to other agencies "better equipped" - social workers, psychotherapists, etcrcs1000 said:
Come come.contrarian said:
From that interview, no reform is being planned. There simply won;t be any forces of law and order in Minneapolis.Nigelb said:
https://world.wng.org/2018/03/camden_s_new_daycontrarian said:Andrew Neil has a bit of an interview with one of the Minneapolis city council members who are disbanding the police.
Listen to her answer when CNN ask what people should so if someone breaks into their home and there are no police to call.
That, apparently is a question that doesn't really need an answer, because it is a question that comes from a person's white privilege.
Simply to ask what the arrangements after the police are gone stems from white privilege. Sit there and take your murder, rape and looting and we'll tell you when we're good and ready.
And now we can see what assigning 'white privilege' is in the minds of some.
Do you really believe there will be no police force in Minneapolis?
A number of times in the last fifty years, whole units of Police in the UK, have been disbanded. That didn't mean there stopped being police, it meant that there were new names, new people at the top, and often significant changes in the composition of the rank and file.
This is a classic phenomenon during these social convulsions. Utopian dreaming. The Putney Debates considered communism. In the late 70s there was a serious movement to legalise pedophilia
I live in prosperous, white Los Angeles.
Most of them have had - at some point - a bad experience with the police.
Now, there are some people in the UK who have been accused of crimes, perhaps wrongly. But almost everyone I know in the UK *generally* has good experiences with the police. That's not true of the US.
In any case, there's a bit of a jurisdictional thing here. There will be a Minneapolis Sheriff's Department that will be different from the the Minneapolis Police Department. Eliminating one (and really, we're not talking about throwing 1,000 people onto the street, we're talking about transferring most of them to a new organisation) is not the same as getting rid of all policing in Minneapolis.
And a lot of US police forces have been out of control, particularly as regards minorities.
Here's my stat for the day. Since 1870, according to Wikipedia, police forces in Great Britain have killed 220 people. Three of them were in 2019, and one in 2018.
In the US, in 2019, 1,098 people were killed by police. Now, criminals have guns in the US. So, you'd expect a disparity. But 5x as many deaths in 2019 as in the last 150 years in the UK is an insane disparity.0 -
"New York Magazine faces backlash for 'banning' conservative columnist Andrew Sullivan from writing about anti-racism riots - or face the sack
Andrew Sullivan announced on Thursday that the latest installment of his column in New York Magazine would not be running this week
Cockburn, a blog run by UK-based news outlet The Spectator, alleged that New York Magazine would not allow Sullivan to write about the riots
'Presumably Sullivan's editors are frightened that he might make the radically bourgeois point that looting and violence are wrong,' a Cockburn blog post says
Sullivan's Twitter account is studded with criticisms of recent protests sparked by the death of George Floyd
News that his column won't run was met with mixed reactions on Twitter"
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8396935/New-York-magazine-faces-backlash-banning-conservative-columnist-writing-riots.html1 -
Better hope Her Maj throws her weight behind BLM before the unreformed US Police get their hands on Andy.0
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I believe tomorrow we move to Oxford and protests about the Rhodes statue again.0
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A stat that's simultaneously very depressing and heartening, depending on location.rcs1000 said:
Because everyone's been locked up for ages, and there's a punch of pent up frustration.Casino_Royale said:
If that's true then why are we all having to suffer these crazed protests?rcs1000 said:
With all due respect @eadric, you don't get the extent to which most Americans fear their police.eadric said:
You actually live in America, and you also don't understand the scale of this madness. Some of them mean literally what they say: give the job of policing to other agencies "better equipped" - social workers, psychotherapists, etcrcs1000 said:
Come come.contrarian said:
From that interview, no reform is being planned. There simply won;t be any forces of law and order in Minneapolis.Nigelb said:
https://world.wng.org/2018/03/camden_s_new_daycontrarian said:Andrew Neil has a bit of an interview with one of the Minneapolis city council members who are disbanding the police.
Listen to her answer when CNN ask what people should so if someone breaks into their home and there are no police to call.
That, apparently is a question that doesn't really need an answer, because it is a question that comes from a person's white privilege.
Simply to ask what the arrangements after the police are gone stems from white privilege. Sit there and take your murder, rape and looting and we'll tell you when we're good and ready.
And now we can see what assigning 'white privilege' is in the minds of some.
Do you really believe there will be no police force in Minneapolis?
A number of times in the last fifty years, whole units of Police in the UK, have been disbanded. That didn't mean there stopped being police, it meant that there were new names, new people at the top, and often significant changes in the composition of the rank and file.
This is a classic phenomenon during these social convulsions. Utopian dreaming. The Putney Debates considered communism. In the late 70s there was a serious movement to legalise pedophilia
I live in prosperous, white Los Angeles.
Most of them have had - at some point - a bad experience with the police.
Now, there are some people in the UK who have been accused of crimes, perhaps wrongly. But almost everyone I know in the UK *generally* has good experiences with the police. That's not true of the US.
In any case, there's a bit of a jurisdictional thing here. There will be a Minneapolis Sheriff's Department that will be different from the the Minneapolis Police Department. Eliminating one (and really, we're not talking about throwing 1,000 people onto the street, we're talking about transferring most of them to a new organisation) is not the same as getting rid of all policing in Minneapolis.
And a lot of US police forces have been out of control, particularly as regards minorities.
Here's my stat for the day. Since 1870, according to Wikipedia, police forces in Great Britain have killed 220 people. Three of them were in 2019, and one in 2018.
In the US, in 2019, 1,098 people were killed by police. Now, criminals have guns in the US. So, you'd expect a disparity. But 5x as many deaths in 2019 as in the last 150 years in the UK is an insane disparity.1 -
The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
In the UK, only a very small number of criminals have weapons, and the really serious ones the authorities have some idea about already. And of course, we only have specialist units with firearms. It is a lot easier for the police not to end up shooting people, if a) the people don't have them and b) the police don't either.
Where as in the US, I imagine in many scenarios the police presume a criminal has a weapon, and often a firearm, and it escalates from there.1 -
So most Leavers want the Colston statue to stay in place even if most of the country want it to be removed but lawfully0
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The american generally non crime committing public seem impervious to being convinced it's ok to have a reduced gun society (at least in amounts large enough to see that happen) - perhaps instead efforts should be made to convince american criminals that you can have lots of crime without guns too? Still leaves knives, but you cannot have everything.FrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
Or go full Shogun on this and take away weapons from all the peasants.0 -
Interesting thread on Police Demo control tactics:
https://twitter.com/mikerstephens/status/1269933306465923073?s=210 -
FPT
I notice some posters having a bit of fun speculating who might replace Trump if he jumped (or got pushed).
In the unlikely event of such a happening. one cannot rule out Pence who in republican terms has loyalty to Trump but has managed to keep separation via doing not very much.
I also should point out, again, that group of republicans opposed to Trump back in 2016 asked a bloke called Jim Mattis to run against Trump. He didn't bite and they ended up with ex-CIA officer Evin McMullin.
Here's the problem the GOP have, there are a few good choices right now. Trump would have to go of his own accord (with a pardon as a deal) . Any sign of a push and you risk causing ructions with the ultra-Trumps, in the hope of winning the types who backed him in 2016 but are notably shifting away in 2020. Go with a continuity but less controversial candidate you probably will lose anyway, go with a sweep away of the the Trump approach, you lose ultra Trumpers
Result, Trump is maybe the best you have in 2020 in that he can motivate the core, is likely to get beaten in 2020, you let the voters kick him out rather than have a putsch, then you rebuild after a 'period of reflection'. As well as that you avoid having to address a possible pardon for at least 4 years when, as a private citizen, the law starts to go after him.
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An interesting question would have been how many want the statue dredged up, cleaned off and replaced?0
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And of course, when shit starts to hit the fan, the evidence shows there is always an uptake in law abiding citizens purchasing weapons.kle4 said:
The american generally non crime committing public seem impervious to being convinced it's ok to have a reduced gun society (at least in amounts large enough to see that happen) - perhaps instead efforts should be made to convince american criminals that you can have lots of crime without guns too? Still leaves knives, but you cannot have everything.FrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
Or go full Shogun on this and take away weapons from all the peasants.0 -
Why didn't the Labour government from 1997 to 2010 take down these statutes? Probably because they had more important things to do, like running the country.0
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Plenty of Americans seem to exist perfectly well without weapons in the house.kle4 said:
The american generally non crime committing public seem impervious to being convinced it's ok to have a reduced gun society (at least in amounts large enough to see that happen) - perhaps instead efforts should be made to convince american criminals that you can have lots of crime without guns too? Still leaves knives, but you cannot have everything.FrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
Or go full Shogun on this and take away weapons from all the peasants.0 -
Hence the parantheses - there are loads of americans who don't wish to have guns, but not enough as a whole to also see reduction in guns in society, since that would need to be forced on those who love their guns more than their spouses.dixiedean said:
Plenty of Americans seem to exist perfectly well without weapons in the house.kle4 said:
The american generally non crime committing public seem impervious to being convinced it's ok to have a reduced gun society (at least in amounts large enough to see that happen) - perhaps instead efforts should be made to convince american criminals that you can have lots of crime without guns too? Still leaves knives, but you cannot have everything.FrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
Or go full Shogun on this and take away weapons from all the peasants.0 -
I doubt Ted will be returning to his pedestal. Perhaps some enterprising fella will arrange viewings from a glass-bottomed submarine?dixiedean said:An interesting question would have been how many want the statue dredged up, cleaned off and replaced?
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This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:-1 -
Oriel won't be keen on taking it down. Not when an anonymous benefactor to the tune of £100m or so threatens to withdraw their money...FrancisUrquhart said:I believe tomorrow we move to Oxford and protests about the Rhodes statue again.
2 -
Removing it lawfully might be slightly tricky now - unless you are advocating dredging it, screwing it back in, then asking Bristol Council waste dept to fling it in the back of a truck?HYUFD said:So most Leavers want the Colston statue to stay in place even if most of the country want it to be removed but lawfully
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Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel1 -
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel0 -
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.0 -
Nah, just treat it like retrospective planning permission, where in theory if they vote not to remove it they would have to put it back, but since they will now probably vote to remove it, all is well.Anabobazina said:
Removing it lawfully might be slightly tricky now - unless you are advocating dredging it, screwing it back in, then asking Bristol Council waste dept to fling it in the back of a truck?HYUFD said:So most Leavers want the Colston statue to stay in place even if most of the country want it to be removed but lawfully
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This is an excellent article on that very issue: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/07/the-spy-who-came-homeFrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
In the UK, only a very small number of criminals have weapons, and the really serious ones the authorities have some idea about already. And of course, we only have specialist units with firearms. It is a lot easier for the police not to end up shooting people, if a) the people don't have them and b) the police don't either.
Where as in the US, I imagine in many scenarios the police presume a criminal has a weapon, and often a firearm, and it escalates from there.1 -
Couple of weeks ago the Spotify in my car wouldn't work so I pressed play on the cd and it was Tracy Chapmans first album. I don't drive much and hadn't changed the cd probably for a year. Struck me this week that she must be amazed by how little has changed in the 30 odd years since she made it.
Quite a relevant album in the current climate, worth a listen if you've not heard it.1 -
You’d dredge him up?Mexicanpete said:
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel
0 -
Latest US polls uniformly bleak for Trump - the jobs data and the riots seem to have made no difference.
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/0 -
Yep. One of the best.isam said:Couple of weeks ago the Spotify in my car wouldn't work so I pressed play on the cd and it was Tracy Chapmans first album. I don't drive much and hadn't changed the cd probably for a year. Struck me this week that she must be amazed by how little has changed in the 30 odd years since she made it.
Quite a relevant album in the current climate, worth a listen if you've not heard it.0 -
I just don't think it achieves anything much because nobody much cared about the statue anyway, if they'd heard of it before now, and any awareness raised by its toppling is offset by anger at the violence and lockdown breakage.Andy_JS said:Why didn't the Labour government from 1997 to 2010 take down these statutes? Probably because they had more important things to do, like running the country.
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...history should never be airbrushed away. It should be available and contextualised for all to see.Anabobazina said:
You’d dredge him up?Mexicanpete said:
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel0 -
I can see the press release now.kle4 said:
Nah, just treat it like retrospective planning permission, where in theory if they vote not to remove it they would have to put it back, but since they will now probably vote to remove it, all is well.Anabobazina said:
Removing it lawfully might be slightly tricky now - unless you are advocating dredging it, screwing it back in, then asking Bristol Council waste dept to fling it in the back of a truck?HYUFD said:So most Leavers want the Colston statue to stay in place even if most of the country want it to be removed but lawfully
Bristol City Council condemns the acts of the vandals. However, on reflection, we have decided that the sea bed is a better place for Ted Colston than his original plinth. Sub aquatic planning permission is hereby granted retrospectively.0 -
The commonly touted stat is that there are more legally held privately owned weapons in the US than citizens. This fails to account for the gun nut for whom multiple weapons are standard.
In actual reality probably a third of US citizens directly own a legally held weapon or weapons. Some surveys suggest Switzerland may be as high as 20% then there is Israel, where there is a tremendous amount of officially sanctioned firearms in citizen hands but truly private ownership is actually very very tightly controlled.
The difference is the attitude, the latter two countries operate within a system where oversight and control is expected and they accept the states authority. The US, however, has a significant population of gun owners who think the state is an enemy or at least deeply suspect and having a cabinet full of weaponry is part of the checks and balances against an over-reaching government.0 -
Its just ridiculous enough to be plausible.Anabobazina said:
I can see the press release now.kle4 said:
Nah, just treat it like retrospective planning permission, where in theory if they vote not to remove it they would have to put it back, but since they will now probably vote to remove it, all is well.Anabobazina said:
Removing it lawfully might be slightly tricky now - unless you are advocating dredging it, screwing it back in, then asking Bristol Council waste dept to fling it in the back of a truck?HYUFD said:So most Leavers want the Colston statue to stay in place even if most of the country want it to be removed but lawfully
Bristol City Council condemns the acts of the vandals. However, on reflection, we have decided that the sea bed is a better place for Ted Colston than his original plinth. Sub aquatic planning permission is hereby granted retrospectively.1 -
The best way to contextualise it would be with an underground museum in the harbour, with a glass observation tunnel so it can be viewed in its resting place.Mexicanpete said:
...history should never be airbrushed away. It should be available and contextualised for all to see.Anabobazina said:
You’d dredge him up?Mexicanpete said:
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel1 -
It is indeed. If you have no symptoms, and can't transmit, in what sense do you "have" the virus at all?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
It is almost a metaphysical question.
Quite apart from the fact that it causes multiple organ failures in others of similar status.
As a 50+ male of A+ blood group it is all a bit eerily random.0 -
...0
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Theyve got worse.NickPalmer said:Latest US polls uniformly bleak for Trump - the jobs data and the riots seem to have made no difference.
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/
35 million unemployed. A virus not under any kind of control. And massive protests and disorder on the streets.
It's amazing he polls so highly.0 -
The Swiss numbers are somewhat misleading though. If you are part of the reserve - and most Swiss men between 20 and 45 are - then you are required to keep your army rifle at home.Yokes said:The commonly touted stat is that there are more legally held privately owned weapons in the US than citizens. This fails to account for the gun nut for whom multiple weapons are standard.
In actual reality probably a third of US citizens directly own a legally held weapon or weapons. Some surveys suggest Switzerland may be as high as 20% then there is Israel, where there is a tremendous amount of officially sanctioned firearms in citizen hands but truly private ownership is actually very very tightly controlled.
The difference is the attitude, the latter two countries operate within a system where oversight and control is expected and they accept the states authority. The US, however, has a significant population of gun owners who think the state is an enemy or at least deeply suspect and having a cabinet full of weaponry is part of the checks and balances against an over-reaching government.
But... you don't get ammunition. You have a weapon you are responsible for, but cannot fire.
What's the number for Swiss citizens with guns *and* ammunition?0 -
If you don’t have any pre-existing conditions, it’s a low risk to you though. The NHS England showed that 90%+ of all deaths were with pre-existing conditions.dixiedean said:
It is indeed. If you have no symptoms, and can't transmit, in what sense do you "have" the virus at all?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
It is almost a metaphysical question.
Quite apart from the fact that it causes multiple organ failures in others of similar status.
As a 50+ male of A+ blood group it is all a bit eerily random.
I had no idea it was anything like that high.0 -
"For the Savannah police, the biggest obstacle in gaining the community’s trust is the city’s history. Savannah is around fifty-five per cent black, and Georgia practiced segregation well into the second half of the twentieth century;"rcs1000 said:
This is an excellent article on that very issue: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/07/the-spy-who-came-homeFrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
In the UK, only a very small number of criminals have weapons, and the really serious ones the authorities have some idea about already. And of course, we only have specialist units with firearms. It is a lot easier for the police not to end up shooting people, if a) the people don't have them and b) the police don't either.
Where as in the US, I imagine in many scenarios the police presume a criminal has a weapon, and often a firearm, and it escalates from there.
I had a fascinating (if you can call it that) experience there a few years ago. Something I never experienced anywhere but the deep South.
There was an evening of Zydeco music down by the waterfront. They had setup a whole long wooden benches and myself and Mrs U took our drinks and wandered through the crowd attention focused upon finding a free spot. We located one and sat ourselves down on the end of one and started to watch the band on stage.
After the band finished for a break, I turned to talk to other people on the bench, having never seen Zydeco music before and wanting to ask more about it, and they turned away from us. At that point I started to look around the crowd and realized that the crowd had voluntarily segregated themselves between black and white exactly down the middle of the park....and Mrs U and I were sat in the black area. And many people in the white area were staring at us.
Interestingly when the family on the table heard myself and Mrs U talk to one another and realised we weren't from the US, we got the usual question of where in Australia are we from. After obviously correcting them, we had a very pleasant evening being educated about Zydeco music from this family.
The irony of it all, the band were a mix of white and black folk.2 -
I hear you and get you.Anabobazina said:
If you don’t have any pre-existing conditions, it’s a low risk to you though. The NHS England showed that 90%+ of all deaths were with pre-existing conditions.dixiedean said:
It is indeed. If you have no symptoms, and can't transmit, in what sense do you "have" the virus at all?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
It is almost a metaphysical question.
Quite apart from the fact that it causes multiple organ failures in others of similar status.
As a 50+ male of A+ blood group it is all a bit eerily random.
I had no idea it was anything like that high.
Don't fancy it though.1 -
-
Given what happened to some of his human cargoes, that might not be entirely inappropriate.Anabobazina said:
I can see the press release now.kle4 said:
Nah, just treat it like retrospective planning permission, where in theory if they vote not to remove it they would have to put it back, but since they will now probably vote to remove it, all is well.Anabobazina said:
Removing it lawfully might be slightly tricky now - unless you are advocating dredging it, screwing it back in, then asking Bristol Council waste dept to fling it in the back of a truck?HYUFD said:So most Leavers want the Colston statue to stay in place even if most of the country want it to be removed but lawfully
Bristol City Council condemns the acts of the vandals. However, on reflection, we have decided that the sea bed is a better place for Ted Colston than his original plinth. Sub aquatic planning permission is hereby granted retrospectively.
Suggestions along those lines here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/06/let-confederate-monuments-go-seed/612817/0 -
A pretty large percentage of the population have pre-existing conditions of one kind or another, though.Anabobazina said:
If you don’t have any pre-existing conditions, it’s a low risk to you though. The NHS England showed that 90%+ of all deaths were with pre-existing conditions.dixiedean said:
It is indeed. If you have no symptoms, and can't transmit, in what sense do you "have" the virus at all?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
It is almost a metaphysical question.
Quite apart from the fact that it causes multiple organ failures in others of similar status.
As a 50+ male of A+ blood group it is all a bit eerily random.
I had no idea it was anything like that high.0 -
Short of rigging it or Biden being a child murderer he is finished, his base is a rock solid 42-43% and there are few signs he can break upwards much beyond that. The biggest risk to the Democrats is a 3rd party candidate who can skim some off the froth of the Democrat vote and bring Biden's vote down. Key constituencies that make up the 3-4% that get you over the line have been drifting from Trump for well over a year . They either won't turn out or they will switch.NickPalmer said:Latest US polls uniformly bleak for Trump - the jobs data and the riots seem to have made no difference.
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/
Unless something comes from out of the sky about him, Biden is a good candidate versus Trump. He is a pretty straight talking no-nonsense guy, has a generally positive and sunny disposition, doesn't come across as elitist and isn't all rhetoric and unrealistic radicalism. He won't frighten the horses. It amazes me how people didn't get this throughout the primary. He doesn't have to talk high fallutin talk, he doesn't have to be inspired, he just needs to be solid through to November.
2 -
Except it wasn't. Most Egyptologists recognise now it was built by professional, skilled labour.isam said:
Stuff built by slavery tends not to last very long. See secret Nazi wonder weapons and the Confederacy.1 -
The number of deaths in the UK from Covid-19, with no pre existing conditions, up to June 2nd...
0 -
I'm talking about privately owned. There is no firm stats but some surveys suggest its that highrcs1000 said:
The Swiss numbers are somewhat misleading though. If you are part of the reserve - and most Swiss men between 20 and 45 are - then you are required to keep your army rifle at home.Yokes said:The commonly touted stat is that there are more legally held privately owned weapons in the US than citizens. This fails to account for the gun nut for whom multiple weapons are standard.
In actual reality probably a third of US citizens directly own a legally held weapon or weapons. Some surveys suggest Switzerland may be as high as 20% then there is Israel, where there is a tremendous amount of officially sanctioned firearms in citizen hands but truly private ownership is actually very very tightly controlled.
The difference is the attitude, the latter two countries operate within a system where oversight and control is expected and they accept the states authority. The US, however, has a significant population of gun owners who think the state is an enemy or at least deeply suspect and having a cabinet full of weaponry is part of the checks and balances against an over-reaching government.
But... you don't get ammunition. You have a weapon you are responsible for, but cannot fire.
What's the number for Swiss citizens with guns *and* ammunition?0 -
A better question on covid with no pre-existing conditions, how many have suffered life altering damage. Its all well.and good saying only a few 30-40 year old have died, but if 1000s have liver, kidney, heart, lung damage, thats not a good result.0
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Yes, that’s the data I was referring to. Thanks for the link.isam said:The number of deaths in the UK from Covid-19, with no pre existing conditions, up to June 2nd...
1,318 people in the UK have died from coronavirus without any pre-existing conditions, in total.
I wasn’t aware the figure was anything like that low, I must admit. Were most people aware?0 -
Sorry England, not UK. Couldn’t edit post for some reason.Anabobazina said:
Yes, that’s the data I was referring to. Thanks for the link.isam said:The number of deaths in the UK from Covid-19, with no pre existing conditions, up to June 2nd...
1,318 people in the UK have died from coronavirus without any pre-existing conditions, in total.
I wasn’t aware the figure was anything like that low, I must admit. Were most people aware?0 -
Irrespective of Edward Colston's unsavoury past his statue had a value and it belonged, I believe, to the ratepayers of Bristol. It was wantonly vandalised by a criminal gang. The criminals involved, in addition to a lengthy custodial sentence should be made to pay for repairs. If the City of Bristol feels the need to sell it or use in a museum, so be it.williamglenn said:
The best way to contextualise it would be with an underground museum in the harbour, with a glass observation tunnel so it can be viewed in its resting place.Mexicanpete said:
...history should never be airbrushed away. It should be available and contextualised for all to see.Anabobazina said:
You’d dredge him up?Mexicanpete said:
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel5 -
Sure, agreed. Not sure if that data exists?FrancisUrquhart said:A better question on covid with no pre-existing conditions, how many have suffered life altering damage. Its all well.and good saying only a few 30-40 year old have died, but if 1000s have liver, kidney, heart, lung damage, thats not a good result.
0 -
Do we normally chuck people in prison for a long stretch for vandalism?Mexicanpete said:
Irrespective of Edward Colston's unsavoury past his statue had a value and it belonged, I believe, to the ratepayers of Bristol. It was wantonly vandalised by a criminal gang. The criminals involved, in addition to a lengthy custodial sentence should be made to pay for repairs. If the City of Bristol feels the need to sell it or use in a museum, so be it.williamglenn said:
The best way to contextualise it would be with an underground museum in the harbour, with a glass observation tunnel so it can be viewed in its resting place.Mexicanpete said:
...history should never be airbrushed away. It should be available and contextualised for all to see.Anabobazina said:
You’d dredge him up?Mexicanpete said:
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel1 -
So are we saying that we just had a lot of fat and/or otherwise unhealthy people die from Covid?
Is that the summary?0 -
I don't fancy taking my chances. However, since I could have had it without knowing and not passed it on...FrancisUrquhart said:A better question on covid with no pre-existing conditions, how many have suffered life altering damage. Its all well.and good saying only a few 30-40 year old have died, but if 1000s have liver, kidney, heart, lung damage, thats not a good result.
It is this level of uncertainty which disturbs people. And is a huge barrier to the economy.
I mean I've had flu. Real flu which puts you out of any kind of action for a fortnight. And pneumonia and pleurisy together, which is a whole other level. But I know it isn't fatal to me. Or gonna have lifelong effects.0 -
That's the South.FrancisUrquhart said:
"For the Savannah police, the biggest obstacle in gaining the community’s trust is the city’s history. Savannah is around fifty-five per cent black, and Georgia practiced segregation well into the second half of the twentieth century;"rcs1000 said:
This is an excellent article on that very issue: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/07/the-spy-who-came-homeFrancisUrquhart said:The ~1000 a year killed by the US police, of which only 10s were unarmed. Last year, 10 black and 20 white individuals (i dont know for latino). In the cases of black individuals, 5 were attacking an officer, 1 the officers gun went off accidentally (was a black officer) and 2 cases the officer who shot was charged.
By armed, they can mean knives as well as guns.
On top of the race issue, the core underlying problem is too many people have weapons. The public have weapons, so the criminals have weapons, so the police have weapons, so police end up shooting people who have weapons.
In the UK, only a very small number of criminals have weapons, and the really serious ones the authorities have some idea about already. And of course, we only have specialist units with firearms. It is a lot easier for the police not to end up shooting people, if a) the people don't have them and b) the police don't either.
Where as in the US, I imagine in many scenarios the police presume a criminal has a weapon, and often a firearm, and it escalates from there.
I had a fascinating (if you can call it that) experience there a few years ago. Something I never experienced anywhere but the deep South.
There was an evening of Zydeco music down by the waterfront. They had setup a whole long wooden benches and myself and Mrs U took our drinks and wandered through the crowd attention focused upon finding a free spot. We located one and sat ourselves down on the end of one and started to watch the band on stage.
After the band finished for a break, I turned to talk to other people on the bench, having never seen Zydeco music before and wanting to ask more about it, and they turned away from us. At that point I started to look around the crowd and realized that the crowd had voluntarily segregated themselves between black and white exactly down the middle of the park....and Mrs U and I were sat in the black area. And many people in the white area were staring at us.
Interestingly when the family on the table heard myself and Mrs U talk to one another and realised we weren't from the US, we got the usual question of where in Australia are we from. After obviously correcting them, we had a very pleasant evening being educated about Zydeco music from this family.
The irony of it all, the band were a mix of white and black folk.1 -
Wasn't it six months for vandalising the Mrs Thatch' statue. Some might suggest a life sentence would have been appropriate.Anabobazina said:
Do we normally chuck people in prison for a long stretch for vandalism?Mexicanpete said:
Irrespective of Edward Colston's unsavoury past his statue had a value and it belonged, I believe, to the ratepayers of Bristol. It was wantonly vandalised by a criminal gang. The criminals involved, in addition to a lengthy custodial sentence should be made to pay for repairs. If the City of Bristol feels the need to sell it or use in a museum, so be it.williamglenn said:
The best way to contextualise it would be with an underground museum in the harbour, with a glass observation tunnel so it can be viewed in its resting place.Mexicanpete said:
...history should never be airbrushed away. It should be available and contextualised for all to see.Anabobazina said:
You’d dredge him up?Mexicanpete said:
I guess I must now be a Leaver then.Anabobazina said:Should Eddy Colston...
Remain in the Bristol Channel
Leave the Bristol Channel0 -
-
I think that works for schools, but I'm less convinced it's *that* helpful for sporting events and choirs. The reality is that many people who have CV-19 probably think they have a bit of a cold.Andy_JS said:1 -
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.1 -
Most of the media reporting on science issues is terrible, and WHO communication is also terrible.Andy_JS said:
Reuters has a more careful take:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-asymptomatic-expla-idUSKBN23A21S
The key point is that they think people who *never* develop symptoms probably don't spread the virus much, but people who haven't *yet* developed noticeable symptoms do. From the point of view of someone deciding whether they might infect people if they go and sing in a church, this isn't a useful distinction, because you don't know whether you're uninfected, asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic.
I guess it might have implications for schools, since kids don't often seem to get symptoms.1 -
This really isn't true. There may or may not be much difference between *extreme* lockdowns and less drastic measures like avoiding indoor events, but at this point I don't think you can reasonably doubt the effectiveness of less drastic measures, *taken early*.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.0 -
Lockdwon probably saved about three million lives in Europe, thus far.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
Which are those countries that ‘basically ignored’ the virus that are doing no worse ?
0 -
What happened to the edit function ?0
-
He’s going to say Sweden, but you and I know that’s not trueNigelb said:
Lockdwon probably saved about three million lives in Europe, thus far.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
Which are those countries that ‘basically ignored’ the virus that are doing no worse ?0 -
Yes, it’s been pretty awful.edmundintokyo said:
Most of the media reporting on science issues is terrible, and WHO communication is also terrible.Andy_JS said:
Reuters has a more careful take:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-asymptomatic-expla-idUSKBN23A21S
The key point is that they think people who *never* develop symptoms probably don't spread the virus much, but people who haven't *yet* developed noticeable symptoms do. From the point of view of someone deciding whether they might infect people if they go and sing in a church, this isn't a useful distinction, because you don't know whether you're uninfected, asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic.
I guess it might have implications for schools, since kids don't often seem to get symptoms.
Note the correction in the first story:
Correction: An earlier headline should have said most asymptomatic coronavirus patients aren’t spreading new infections. The word “most” was inadvertedly omitted....
(The misspelling of inadvertently is theirs.)1 -
-
There’s a thread here:edmundintokyo said:
This really isn't true. There may or may not be much difference between *extreme* lockdowns and less drastic measures like avoiding indoor events, but at this point I don't think you can reasonably doubt the effectiveness of less drastic measures, *taken early*.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
https://twitter.com/ASlavitt/status/1270139042160693248
Bottom line; the WHO statement was highly misleading.
0 -
-
New York’s lockdown certainly appeared to work.
https://twitter.com/Craig_A_Spencer/status/1270173868150358020
https://twitter.com/BannerHealth/status/12700943945703219210 -
-
All I'd say about the three million claim is that it comes from a group at Imperial College using their model to justify the use of their model.Nigelb said:
Lockdwon probably saved about three million lives in Europe, thus far.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
Which are those countries that ‘basically ignored’ the virus that are doing no worse ?
Like all of the epidemiological models of this illness - and the Imperial model appears to be the one most argued over - it represents a guess and may very well be wrong. Others have suggested, with some apparent evidence to back them up, that the voluntary social segregation practiced by the public prior to lockdown had already started to suppress the virus: the peak of Covid deaths seems to have happened too soon after the date of formal lockdown for the subsequent downward trend to be attributable to that decision - in other words, that the formal lockdown was both excessive and unnecessary.
If that's true then you could still draw the conclusion that the level of mass casualties predicted by the Imperial model might have occurred had the behaviour of the population continued *exactly* as normal, but even that is disputable. If any of the theories regarding naturally occurring resistance in the population, or full or partial immunity conferred by previous infection with other coronaviruses, transpire to be correct then both the lethality of the virus to the average patient and its ability to spread through the population as a whole may have been greatly overestimated.
When the inevitable enquiries into the handling of the pandemic take place then I expect a major bone of contention to be whether the use of a whole population lockdown to deal with it was like the sledgehammer to crack the proverbial nut: an excessively blunt instrument which will end up causing more harm than good, because of the scale and effect of the economic damage that it has caused. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, of course, but it may very well turn out that a combination of targeted measures taken more quickly - proper defence of the care homes, segregated hospitals for Covid patients, self-isolation for the medically vulnerable but perhaps only a ban on mass gatherings and some degree of face covering use for everyone else, and an order to work from home where possible - might have done a better job of preserving life without shuttering whole sectors of the economy and precipitating mass unemployment.1 -
Good morning, everyone.
Mr. Dean, was it not designed by skill labourers, but the heavy lifting/rolling done by slave labour?0 -
One cannot say that the WHO has had a good crisis. Even allowing for Trump's insanity.Nigelb said:
There’s a thread here:edmundintokyo said:
This really isn't true. There may or may not be much difference between *extreme* lockdowns and less drastic measures like avoiding indoor events, but at this point I don't think you can reasonably doubt the effectiveness of less drastic measures, *taken early*.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
https://twitter.com/ASlavitt/status/1270139042160693248
Bottom line; the WHO statement was highly misleading.0 -
Another thread on the economic effects on US hospitals.
Bottom line - without more government help than is currently being provided, the less financially secure ones are going to start going bust.
https://twitter.com/Bob_Wachter/status/12701906252671467520 -
Even if it wasnt the guys it was built for presumably had tons of slaves, ruling a slave owning society.Morris_Dancer said:Good morning, everyone.
Mr. Dean, was it not designed by skill labourers, but the heavy lifting/rolling done by slave labour?
Let's year zero everything.1 -
Under most important news of the day, I see that the Academie Francaise has declared COVID-19 to be Feminine.
Ai, Caramba!
Over here presumably the Fawcett Soiety would have a go at them for hate speech therefore.
0 -
Yes, but I think one of the keys here is "taken more quickly". Having let things get out of control governments took whatever measures they could, without knowing which ones wouldn't be cost-effective. Looking at Lombardy lockdown measures got more and more strict as numbers remained high.Black_Rook said:
All I'd say about the three million claim is that it comes from a group at Imperial College using their model to justify the use of their model.Nigelb said:
Lockdwon probably saved about three million lives in Europe, thus far.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
Which are those countries that ‘basically ignored’ the virus that are doing no worse ?
Like all of the epidemiological models of this illness - and the Imperial model appears to be the one most argued over - it represents a guess and may very well be wrong. Others have suggested, with some apparent evidence to back them up, that the voluntary social segregation practiced by the public prior to lockdown had already started to suppress the virus: the peak of Covid deaths seems to have happened too soon after the date of formal lockdown for the subsequent downward trend to be attributable to that decision - in other words, that the formal lockdown was both excessive and unnecessary.
If that's true then you could still draw the conclusion that the level of mass casualties predicted by the Imperial model might have occurred had the behaviour of the population continued *exactly* as normal, but even that is disputable. If any of the theories regarding naturally occurring resistance in the population, or full or partial immunity conferred by previous infection with other coronaviruses, transpire to be correct then both the lethality of the virus to the average patient and its ability to spread through the population as a whole may have been greatly overestimated.
When the inevitable enquiries into the handling of the pandemic take place then I expect a major bone of contention to be whether the use of a whole population lockdown to deal with it was like the sledgehammer to crack the proverbial nut: an excessively blunt instrument which will end up causing more harm than good, because of the scale and effect of the economic damage that it has caused. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, of course, but it may very well turn out that a combination of targeted measures taken more quickly - proper defence of the care homes, segregated hospitals for Covid patients, self-isolation for the medically vulnerable but perhaps only a ban on mass gatherings and some degree of face covering use for everyone else, and an order to work from home where possible - might have done a better job of preserving life without shuttering whole sectors of the economy and precipitating mass unemployment.
There also seemed to be a very rapid switch in most of Europe from "Things are under control" to "It's inevitable that the majority of people will get this" which were, I think, both big mistakes.0 -
Whole population lockdowns were absolutely not necessary - where governments reacted quickly enough. As South Korea, for one, demonstrated.Black_Rook said:
All I'd say about the three million claim is that it comes from a group at Imperial College using their model to justify the use of their model.Nigelb said:
Lockdwon probably saved about three million lives in Europe, thus far.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
Which are those countries that ‘basically ignored’ the virus that are doing no worse ?
Like all of the epidemiological models of this illness - and the Imperial model appears to be the one most argued over - it represents a guess and may very well be wrong. Others have suggested, with some apparent evidence to back them up, that the voluntary social segregation practiced by the public prior to lockdown had already started to suppress the virus: the peak of Covid deaths seems to have happened too soon after the date of formal lockdown for the subsequent downward trend to be attributable to that decision - in other words, that the formal lockdown was both excessive and unnecessary.
If that's true then you could still draw the conclusion that the level of mass casualties predicted by the Imperial model might have occurred had the behaviour of the population continued *exactly* as normal, but even that is disputable. If any of the theories regarding naturally occurring resistance in the population, or full or partial immunity conferred by previous infection with other coronaviruses, transpire to be correct then both the lethality of the virus to the average patient and its ability to spread through the population as a whole may have been greatly overestimated.
When the inevitable enquiries into the handling of the pandemic take place then I expect a major bone of contention to be whether the use of a whole population lockdown to deal with it was like the sledgehammer to crack the proverbial nut: an excessively blunt instrument which will end up causing more harm than good, because of the scale and effect of the economic damage that it has caused. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, of course, but it may very well turn out that a combination of targeted measures taken more quickly - proper defence of the care homes, segregated hospitals for Covid patients, self-isolation for the medically vulnerable but perhaps only a ban on mass gatherings and some degree of face covering use for everyone else, and an order to work from home where possible - might have done a better job of preserving life without shuttering whole sectors of the economy and precipitating mass unemployment.
And if they reacted quickly with a less targeted whole population lockdown, they are still in a far better place than we are.
Where they didn’t react quickly - like here - it’s absurd to posit that they might have then had the understanding and expertise to react in a more targeted manner.
2 -
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How is that accountability working? Has the government over reached by perhaps locking up 5 times as many citizens as the rest of the world? Or 15 times as many black citizens as the global average?Yokes said:The commonly touted stat is that there are more legally held privately owned weapons in the US than citizens. This fails to account for the gun nut for whom multiple weapons are standard.
In actual reality probably a third of US citizens directly own a legally held weapon or weapons. Some surveys suggest Switzerland may be as high as 20% then there is Israel, where there is a tremendous amount of officially sanctioned firearms in citizen hands but truly private ownership is actually very very tightly controlled.
The difference is the attitude, the latter two countries operate within a system where oversight and control is expected and they accept the states authority. The US, however, has a significant population of gun owners who think the state is an enemy or at least deeply suspect and having a cabinet full of weaponry is part of the checks and balances against an over-reaching government.
Perhaps there are better checks and balances than assault rifles in every street.0 -
“Strategically deflated tyres”...0
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Mr. kle4, quite.0
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Having spent weeks complaining about schools going back, teachers on the BBC are now complaining about schools not going back.0
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Why is everyone assuming that ‘skilled labourers’ and ‘slaves’ are mutually exclusive?Morris_Dancer said:Good morning, everyone.
Mr. Dean, was it not designed by skill labourers, but the heavy lifting/rolling done by slave labour?2 -
You are assuming countries face similar level of risks before policy decisions are made.Nigelb said:
Whole population lockdowns were absolutely not necessary - where governments reacted quickly enough. As South Korea, for one, demonstrated.Black_Rook said:
All I'd say about the three million claim is that it comes from a group at Imperial College using their model to justify the use of their model.Nigelb said:
Lockdwon probably saved about three million lives in Europe, thus far.houndtang said:
Is anyone still buying this bollocks? The whole thing has been totally pointless. Countries that basically ignored the virus are doing no worse than those that totally overreacted to it. No one knows shit and governments and 'scientists' are making it up as they go it seems.Anabobazina said:
Doesn’t it just?FrancisUrquhart said:
This virus just gets stranger and stranger.Anabobazina said:
If that’s true, the entire R policy would appear to be completely pointless.
Which are those countries that ‘basically ignored’ the virus that are doing no worse ?
Like all of the epidemiological models of this illness - and the Imperial model appears to be the one most argued over - it represents a guess and may very well be wrong. Others have suggested, with some apparent evidence to back them up, that the voluntary social segregation practiced by the public prior to lockdown had already started to suppress the virus: the peak of Covid deaths seems to have happened too soon after the date of formal lockdown for the subsequent downward trend to be attributable to that decision - in other words, that the formal lockdown was both excessive and unnecessary.
If that's true then you could still draw the conclusion that the level of mass casualties predicted by the Imperial model might have occurred had the behaviour of the population continued *exactly* as normal, but even that is disputable. If any of the theories regarding naturally occurring resistance in the population, or full or partial immunity conferred by previous infection with other coronaviruses, transpire to be correct then both the lethality of the virus to the average patient and its ability to spread through the population as a whole may have been greatly overestimated.
When the inevitable enquiries into the handling of the pandemic take place then I expect a major bone of contention to be whether the use of a whole population lockdown to deal with it was like the sledgehammer to crack the proverbial nut: an excessively blunt instrument which will end up causing more harm than good, because of the scale and effect of the economic damage that it has caused. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, of course, but it may very well turn out that a combination of targeted measures taken more quickly - proper defence of the care homes, segregated hospitals for Covid patients, self-isolation for the medically vulnerable but perhaps only a ban on mass gatherings and some degree of face covering use for everyone else, and an order to work from home where possible - might have done a better job of preserving life without shuttering whole sectors of the economy and precipitating mass unemployment.
And if they reacted quickly with a less targeted whole population lockdown, they are still in a far better place than we are.
Where they didn’t react quickly - like here - it’s absurd to posit that they might have then had the understanding and expertise to react in a more targeted manner.
Asia doesnt have seasonal flu or cold outbreaks to the extent that Western Europe does, which has big peaks in winter thru early spring. This was also true in the years long before mask usage or other measures were taken in Asia. Covid spreads thru similar, if slightly different, mechanisms to flus and colds.
I think the reasonable assumption is that Western Europe faced a bigger challenge than South Korea.0