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The Georgia runoffs are looking very tight – politicalbetting.com

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  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,950

    Because they are still in Tier 2 - hosting the Covid Hordes from Leeds and Bradford....
    Snap.
    It's bloody obvious to all, isn't it?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    What moral or practical argument for limiting it to EU students?
    It was simply the status quo before the UK gmt pulled the plug unilaterally, and because we were then in the EU.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    rcs1000 said:

    As I'm sure many of you are aware @SeanT was one of the first to get Covid in the UK, early in 2020. Sadly, he was afflicted in a way that is becoming all too common:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/28/health/covid-psychosis-mental.htm

    You truncated the url

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/28/health/covid-psychosis-mental.html
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,698

    Because they are still in Tier 2 - hosting the Covid Hordes from Leeds and Bradford....
    Indeed. I was trying to say that still no action has been taken to address this feck-up.
  • It needs to be a 24-7 operation getting the Oxford vaccine out there. 16 hours of organised vaccinations, 8 hours between 11pm to 7.00am where you can just turn up at your local supermarket car park, stick your arms out at a drive-through. For the army of insomniacs out there, worried sick about Covid.
    Yes Yes Yes let's get on with it national priority number 1 since the War. Too much faffing around so far.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,698
    dixiedean said:

    Snap.
    It's bloody obvious to all, isn't it?
    To all except Bozo and Coco, it would seem.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235

    Covid rates in York now higher than Leeds or Bradford. And they are still in Tier 2.

    Visited York back in February. MPs wanted it to move it into tier 1 recently !
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Alistair said:

    Have you considered that the GOP is populated by absolute fuckers who believe this shit?
    It would almost be better if they were just pretending to, but I fear you are right. Little else makes sense.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Well, I guess I don't know the answer.

    But, I think if the Scottish Government wants to offer free University tuition to ~ 5000 international students -- which I would strongly applaud for educational reasons -- then it makes sense to me to offer the scholarships on the grounds of merit or achievement.
    That is certainly a positive suggestion.

    Re EU only - there are for instance certain scholarships at Oxford which are restricted to e.g. Welsh students, or Wykehamists, and so on. Or were. I don't recall that they were ever declared illegal - thouigh I believe many, perhaps all, have been converted to more open schemes as a matter of educational principle.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    kle4 said:

    It would almost be better if they were just pretending to, but I fear you are right. Little else makes sense.
    Well watching the current GOP ha certainly made me realise Hitler's rise to power was no fluke. Mercifully Trump isn't as good an orator.
  • MonkeysMonkeys Posts: 768
    Pulpstar said:

    Well watching the current GOP ha certainly made me realise Hitler's rise to power was no fluke. Mercifully Trump isn't as good an orator.
    I remember reading about Godel going to his citizenship hearing having studied the US constitution, and having to be stopped by his friend Einstein from derailing the whole thing by going on about how he'd discovered a flaw in the US constitution that could result in the installation of a dictatorship.
  • alex_ said:

    I think that's unlikely. Why are we going to produce 5,000 deaths a day where other countries (even America!) aren't getting close to that.

    I don't say that to try to underplay the problem. But talk of 5,000 deaths a day is hyperbole.
    Ballpark at the moment is about 40,000 cases a day and 400 deaths? Operation Halfassed-Attempt-To-Save-Christmas means this is going to get worse (we're about 1 doubling away from late March), but 5000 deaths is about 500,000 cases. Exponential growth is bad, but surely not even this government can mess things up that much.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,950
    Pulpstar said:

    Visited York back in February. MPs wanted it to move it into tier 1 recently !
    The continued attempts of MP's to force their constituencies down tiers remains one of the virus' great unsolved mysteries.
    Special plead. Downgrading. Visitors flock in. Cases rise. Upgraded.
    Short term gain for long term pain.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Leon said:

    It REALLY is because it is boring. We are in the midst of a much greater crisis than anything Brexit might do. And Brexit is also a done deal. It is happening. Who cares about the small print of a trade treaty compared to the Blaclk Death?

    There will be a time when we can, at leisure, discuss paragraph 4b.3 of subsection 8 of the reciprocal UK-EU health insurance schemes, but this, I feel, ain't it.

    And this is not because I fear scrutiny of Brexit. Brexit was always going to be painful. We will suffer pain. There it is.
    It is possible to discuss more than one thing at a time. Indeed it is possible and necessary to deal with more than one crisis at a time, as the PM's fans have recently praised him for doing.

    On Covid, I agree: everything possible has to be done to get vaccinations done at the highest rate possible as urgently as possible. Is there anyone who disagrees on that? No.

    Repeating it endlessly with a few Battle of Britain references thrown in - and God, these really are boring - adds nothing.

    On schools I don't know. I would listen to teachers on this. If schools and universities are a source of infection then temporary closure may be what is needed. I'd defer to the likes of @ydoethur on this.

    What the Brexit deal actually means matters too. Especially for those who will suffer the pain you so casually accept. And it matters on Covid too because the one thing we are short of is medical staff so trying to get as many as we can to work here would help the NHS.

  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    Labour can win enough seats to form a government losing a few urban seats to the LDs, Labour cannot win losing Red Wall and Midlands marginal seats to the Tories
    Post- Coalition Labour is at little risk in terms of losses to the LDs. Beyond that Brexit has already become a peripheral issue - and will have become much more so by 2024.People have already moved on - whatever the commentariat might care to believe.
  • dixiedean said:

    The continued attempts of MP's to force their constituencies down tiers remains one of the virus' great unsolved mysteries.
    Special plead. Downgrading. Visitors flock in. Cases rise. Upgraded.
    Short term gain for long term pain.
    Short term gain for long term pain is what populists do. Because most of us aren't good at delaying gratification.

    What swung the thing we-shouldn't-mention-ever-again was the idea that there was a huge pile of money that we could reallocate from foreigners to ourselves and the NHS with no downsides. Everything else was noise.

    And the triumph of the "STANDING UP FOR YOURTOWN AT WESTMINSTER" model of politics really hasn't helped.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    GOP currently voting against giving everyone two grand.

    https://twitter.com/JakeSherman/status/1343681516392615938?s=19
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited December 2020
    One presumes that the customs duties will be two-way, which is likely to dampen European demand for @Leon’s hand-knapped flint sex toys.

    I am sure suppliers in Furtwangel and Middelfart will be glad to make up the slack.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    dixiedean said:

    The continued attempts of MP's to force their constituencies down tiers remains one of the virus' great unsolved mysteries.
    Special plead. Downgrading. Visitors flock in. Cases rise. Upgraded.
    Short term gain for long term pain.
    It's not a mystery at all. The economic cost of being shut down of in a higher tier is painful. If Sunak provided a generous support package there would be far less resistance.

    Given the way Covid is going and the inevitable March-style lockdown then Sunak is going to to have to be a damn sight more generous than now. His refusal to provide proper support to those affected is a major obstacle to compliance with the restrictions and stopping the spread of this virus.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    edited December 2020
    ydoethur said:

    To be exact, if you take an office of profit from the crown, you have to check with your constituents that they are happy for you to continue as their representative.

    That was why until 1911 any newly appointed minister had to have a by-election. Could cause awkwardness, as when, for example, Churchill was defeated in 1908 on his elevation to President of the Board of Trade and had to do a ratrun to Dundee.
    I believe that continued to be the case until the 1920s!It also only applied to appointments as Cabinet Ministers. When Churchill became Under Secretary at the Colonial Office in 1906 he did not face a by election.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    There should be a name for futile political navel-gazing that can only alienate potential voters.

    https://twitter.com/d_libris/status/1343648991561592834?s=21
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    dixiedean said:

    The continued attempts of MP's to force their constituencies down tiers remains one of the virus' great unsolved mysteries.
    Special plead. Downgrading. Visitors flock in. Cases rise. Upgraded.
    Short term gain for long term pain.
    The "why isn't Edinburgh in Tier 1" nonseslnse that made it in to my Facebook feed mere days before cases rocketed was exceedingly aggrevating.
  • Cyclefree said:

    It's not a mystery at all. The economic cost of being shut down of in a higher tier is painful. If Sunak provided a generous support package there would be far less resistance.

    Given the way Covid is going and the inevitable March-style lockdown then Sunak is going to to have to be a damn sight more generous than now. His refusal to provide proper support to those affected is a major obstacle to compliance with the restrictions and stopping the spread of this virus.
    But Sunak suffers from the same myopia. I get the hideous expense of doing the necessary to survive Covid, and I know that the economic fallout is one of the things that will define the coming years. It will be rubbish.

    But the choices aren't on the axis Do Something to Do Nothing. They're on the axis Do Something Adequate Now to Do Something Even Bigger In Three Weeks Time. We've had enough examples to show this by now.

    I can understand (just about) overexcited backbenchers not getting this. But Sunak is Chancellor of the Exchequer and supposedly the bright one, and he has repeatedly made the wrong call on this... certainly since the summer.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,950
    Cyclefree said:

    It's not a mystery at all. The economic cost of being shut down of in a higher tier is painful. If Sunak provided a generous support package there would be far less resistance.

    Given the way Covid is going and the inevitable March-style lockdown then Sunak is going to to have to be a damn sight more generous than now. His refusal to provide proper support to those affected is a major obstacle to compliance with the restrictions and stopping the spread of this virus.
    Yes it is. But the economic benefit of a short term 're opening is completely offset, and more, by the almost inevitable harder lockdown to follow.
    There is little evidence it is politically very popular either.
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,932
    Alistair said:

    The "why isn't Edinburgh in Tier 1" nonseslnse that made it in to my Facebook feed mere days before cases rocketed was exceedingly aggrevating.
    All the tier system has really proven is that all the rules and thresholds you can come up with to define who's in what tier are irrelevant anyway and the whole thing really is just a judgement based on as much information as you can bring to bear on the matter at any one time.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Pulpstar said:

    Well watching the current GOP ha certainly made me realise Hitler's rise to power was no fluke. Mercifully Trump isn't as good an orator.
    America's centrist pundits going "See! No dictatorship here, everything is perfect, absolutely no rough edges that need work" deserve a good slap right about now.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    But Sunak suffers from the same myopia. I get the hideous expense of doing the necessary to survive Covid, and I know that the economic fallout is one of the things that will define the coming years. It will be rubbish.

    But the choices aren't on the axis Do Something to Do Nothing. They're on the axis Do Something Adequate Now to Do Something Even Bigger In Three Weeks Time. We've had enough examples to show this by now.

    I can understand (just about) overexcited backbenchers not getting this. But Sunak is Chancellor of the Exchequer and supposedly the bright one, and he has repeatedly made the wrong call on this... certainly since the summer.
    Sunak getting Gupta (virtually) in the room with Johnson should be a career ender.
  • rcs1000 said:

    I would definitely have voted to execute Socrates. Indeed, I'd probably have chucked Plato on the pile with him. I would support digging up Kant's body and hanging it, just to be sure. And let's not even start on Hegel.

    I have a Philosophy degree, so I know of which I speak.
    Please, let's NOT haggle over Hegel! Or spout cant about Kant!! Or fling play-dough at Plato!
  • Alistair said:

    Sunak getting Gupta (virtually) in the room with Johnson should be a career ender.
    It won't be, though, will it?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,163

    Ballpark at the moment is about 40,000 cases a day and 400 deaths? Operation Halfassed-Attempt-To-Save-Christmas means this is going to get worse (we're about 1 doubling away from late March), but 5000 deaths is about 500,000 cases. Exponential growth is bad, but surely not even this government can mess things up that much.
    What we've seen with old covid is that, even if a government doesn't take very effective action, the fear produced when the hospitals reach breaking point is enough to modify behaviour sufficiently to bring spread under control.

    Worst-case scenario is that new covid means that isn't sufficient.

    While I'm an advocate of vaccinating asap, even at 4 million injections a week it will be too slow to bring the current wave under control. We need to bring hospital numbers right down more quickly than vaccination can achieve. The morale situation in hospitals sounds very poor.
  • justin124 said:

    I believe that continued to be the case until the 1920s!It also only applied to appointments as Cabinet Ministers. When Churchill became Under Secretary at the Colonial Office in 1906 he did not face a by election.
    That seems an eminently sensible system. People are supposed to be electing their MPs as their representatives, not as a stepping stone on a career path.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572

    Please, let's NOT haggle over Hegel! Or spout cant about Kant!! Or fling play-dough at Plato!
    We could, but at the end of the day it will just Confucius....
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291

    I meant if he could choose which vaccine. He said Sputnik was perfectly fine. If Sputnik is perfectly fine, then surely he wouldn't care which one he and his family were given?
    Sputnik is not licensed here, so it is a pointless question, but if it was then I would be happy with it. Our Prof of Virology thinks it fine
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572
    Foxy said:

    Sputnik is not licensed here, so it is a pointless question, but if it was then I would be happy with it. Our Prof of Virology thinks it fine
    Are we sure it isn't just an industrial espionaged copy of one of the others?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247
    dixiedean said:

    The continued attempts of MP's to force their constituencies down tiers remains one of the virus' great unsolved mysteries.
    Special plead. Downgrading. Visitors flock in. Cases rise. Upgraded.
    Short term gain for long term pain.
    It is very simple. Each and every day, they are getting a torrent of stories about what restrictions are doing to businesses and lives.

    Cyclefree's daughter * 1000s

    It is quite probable that the number of emails/phone calls etc that they are getting *in favour of* restrictions is less - probably orders of magnitude.

    People rarely contact their MPs to say "That thing the government is doing - keep doing it"
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,698

    There should be a name for futile political navel-gazing that can only alienate potential voters.

    https://twitter.com/d_libris/status/1343648991561592834?s=21

    The question "What the fuck has that got to do with climate change?" springs to mind. I despair.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    I wonder why we have not seen him for so long?
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    @Alistair This is an excellent paper on the whole Godel dictatorship thing

    https://brianmlucey.files.wordpress.com/2016/11/8-guerra-pujol-1.pdf

    C.Non-Gödelian Flaw #3: Article III: The Supreme Court’s Open-Ended Power of Judicial Review
    Despite this, the Supreme Court’s power of judicial review could still easily lead to a dictatorship. The problem is not so much judicial review as it is judicial supremacy—the unfounded and self-serving assertion that the Supreme Court has the last word in matters of constitutional interpretation....
    ~
    The House has just passed $2000 now - off to be killed by Mitch in the senate, and Democrat adverts running in Georgia.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247
    Carnyx said:

    It was simply the status quo before the UK gmt pulled the plug unilaterally, and because we were then in the EU.
    But if we are designing a new system - what is wrong with students from Peru?

    As an aside - many, perhaps most countries (certainly outside the 1st world) have not embraced the higher-education-for-all idea. They can't afford to. So their universities are *only* the high end institutions for egg heads. So very often you find very high standards in surprising places.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572
    So Labour could abstain. Just sayin'...
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,950

    It is very simple. Each and every day, they are getting a torrent of stories about what restrictions are doing to businesses and lives.

    Cyclefree's daughter * 1000s

    It is quite probable that the number of emails/phone calls etc that they are getting *in favour of* restrictions is less - probably orders of magnitude.

    People rarely contact their MPs to say "That thing the government is doing - keep doing it"
    Indeed.
    Not a great advert for the way politics is done really.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    The question "What the fuck has that got to do with climate change?" springs to mind. I despair.
    Well if they want to be more than a single issue party more power to them I guess, but I've always thought the fundamental the Green Party has, in this country at least, is that when the public wants to go Green it can simply pressure Labour and the Tories to become more Green, and do a bunch of other, useful, things.

    That is, the more people care about Green issues the greener the main parties will become, rather than more people vote Green.

    So they need another hook for people to vote for them, hence why they have to find other issues the mainstream parties may not have fully gotten on board with yet, but which by definition are not mainstream issues, to differentiate themselves. Transgender issues isn't something only they will be wrestling with, but given their need to differentiate, get ahead of some issues, maybe it will hit them harder if there is resistance?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    It is very simple. Each and every day, they are getting a torrent of stories about what restrictions are doing to businesses and lives.

    Cyclefree's daughter * 1000s

    It is quite probable that the number of emails/phone calls etc that they are getting *in favour of* restrictions is less - probably orders of magnitude.

    People rarely contact their MPs to say "That thing the government is doing - keep doing it"
    Indeed.

    It's hard - everyone kind of knows and accepts that complainers, valid or not, are likely to be louder, yet you still have to deal with it, pointing to the silent majority will be appropriate for some things but consent cannot simply be assumed for others, so you often, at all levels of politics, see politicians in favour of things, then fold or try to play both sides as the letters roll in.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247
    dixiedean said:

    Indeed.
    Not a great advert for the way politics is done really.
    It's humans being human.

    You have to understand that nearly no-one is a scientist by mentality.

    I still remember my first intersection with the "must appear caring" thing. I said (back in the 80s) that

    - I was in favour of sanctions against South Africa.
    - This would cause suffering and death in the black population.*

    Apparently, it was evil to comprehend the consequences of an action, weigh it and accept it. Somehow this made me a bad person....

    *It did - the effects of this are still with us.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,356
    edited December 2020

    One presumes that the customs duties will be two-way, which is likely to dampen European demand for @Leon’s hand-knapped flint sex toys.

    I am sure suppliers in Furtwangel and Middelfart will be glad to make up the slack.

    I would imagine demand being dampish is what the flinty self-satisfiers are all about.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    justin124 said:
    He's been happy and content?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,291

    Are we sure it isn't just an industrial espionaged copy of one of the others?
    It is a different inactivated virus, so cannot be.

    Russians and Chinese are both pretty good with vaccines.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    rcs1000 said:

    As I'm sure many of you are aware @SeanT was one of the first to get Covid in the UK, early in 2020. Sadly, he was afflicted in a way that is becoming all too common:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/28/health/covid-psychosis-mental.htm

    Its a shame he no longer posts here.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797
    Cyclefree said:

    Given that the Chinese lock up journalists who say otherwise - and would probably also lock up anyone else reporting something different to the outside world - how reliable is such information?
    Impossible to say.

    Equally, it would be pretty well impossible for the Chinese to hide any really large scale outbreaks. However much we might disapprove of the fascistic regime, they do appear to have the disease under control.
  • An almost perfect visual representation of my 'really had enough of your stupid shit' concept.

    https://twitter.com/bellacaledonia/status/1343644978086612995?s=20
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    I'm leaving, don't know when I will be back. All the best.

    I give it 48 hours tops. :smiley:

  • It's humans being human.

    You have to understand that nearly no-one is a scientist by mentality.

    I still remember my first intersection with the "must appear caring" thing. I said (back in the 80s) that

    - I was in favour of sanctions against South Africa.
    - This would cause suffering and death in the black population.*

    Apparently, it was evil to comprehend the consequences of an action, weigh it and accept it. Somehow this made me a bad person....

    *It did - the effects of this are still with us.
    You know that Brecht line about the East German Government dissolving the population and electing a new one?

    It's often used as a sneery knockdown by people who say "The public want X, JFDI." And at the moment, we are going through a time of wanting politicians who JFDI over those who say "yes, but it's more complicated than that, and if we do X it's likely to have bad effec.." "PROJECT FEAR. JFDI."

    To be clear- I don't want to live in East Germany, either the real one or the Brechtian one. But pure JFDI-ery doesn't seem to be doing well, or poised to end well.

    And I don't know what the answer is. Maybe there isn't one.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797
    Estimated transmissibility and severity of novel SARS-CoV-2 Variant of Concern 202012/01 in England
    https://cmmid.github.io/topics/covid19/reports/uk-novel-variant/2020_12_23_Transmissibility_and_severity_of_VOC_202012_01_in_England.pdf
    ... We estimate that VOC 202012/01 is 56% more transmissible (95% credible interval across three regions 50-74%) than preexisting variants of SARS-CoV-2. We were unable to find clear evidence that VOC 202012/01 results in greater or lesser severity of disease than preexisting variants. Nevertheless, the increase in transmissibility is likely to lead to a large increase in incidence, with COVID-19 hospitalisations and deaths projected to reach higher levels in 2021 than were observed in 2020, even if regional tiered restrictions implemented before 19 December are maintained. Our estimates suggest that control measures of a similar stringency to the national lockdown implemented in England in November 2020 are unlikely to reduce the effective reproduction number ​R​t​ to less than 1, unless primary schools, secondary schools, and universities are also closed. We project that large resurgences of the virus are likely to occur following easing of control measures. It may be necessary to greatly accelerate vaccine roll-out to have an appreciable impact in suppressing the resulting disease burden...
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    An almost perfect visual representation of my 'really had enough of your stupid shit' concept.

    https://twitter.com/bellacaledonia/status/1343644978086612995?s=20

    https://twitter.com/embraboffin/status/1343671016090906627?s=21
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247
    Floater said:

    Its a shame he no longer posts here.
    "I felt a great disturbance in the Farce, as if millions of SeanTs suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced."
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    kle4 said:

    He's been happy and content?
    Beginnings of alternate Kent in connection. [15]
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247

    You know that Brecht line about the East German Government dissolving the population and electing a new one?

    It's often used as a sneery knockdown by people who say "The public want X, JFDI." And at the moment, we are going through a time of wanting politicians who JFDI over those who say "yes, but it's more complicated than that, and if we do X it's likely to have bad effec.." "PROJECT FEAR. JFDI."

    To be clear- I don't want to live in East Germany, either the real one or the Brechtian one. But pure JFDI-ery doesn't seem to be doing well, or poised to end well.

    And I don't know what the answer is. Maybe there isn't one.
    I like it myself - for those who bang on about democracy. When they don't actually want it.

    Brecht managed to notice, past his own Stalin worship, what such thinking actually is.

    I have encountered many, many people who, to be frank, would be happier with Cromwell's point of view from the Putney Debates.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,431

    What we've seen with old covid is that, even if a government doesn't take very effective action, the fear produced when the hospitals reach breaking point is enough to modify behaviour sufficiently to bring spread under control.

    Worst-case scenario is that new covid means that isn't sufficient.

    While I'm an advocate of vaccinating asap, even at 4 million injections a week it will be too slow to bring the current wave under control. We need to bring hospital numbers right down more quickly than vaccination can achieve. The morale situation in hospitals sounds very poor.
    4m vaccinations a week would start to bring this under control pretty quickly, I'd have thought.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797
    It’s now apparently a crime in Russia not to lay down and die when the state tries to assassinate you.

    https://twitter.com/sarahrainsford/status/1343614470988431360
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,247
    edited December 2020
    rcs1000 said:

    4m vaccinations a week would start to bring this under control pretty quickly, I'd have thought.
    - 3.2 million over 80s
    - over 80s made up 54% of the fatalities from COVID.
    - vaccination on the 20th December was exceeding 75K shots per day.
    - 75% of the 75K shot were over 80
    - So 56K over 80s per day, assuming no acceleration.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,572
    Nigelb said:

    It’s now apparently a crime in Russia not to lay down and die when the state tries to assassinate you.

    https://twitter.com/sarahrainsford/status/1343614470988431360

    He's given away state secrets, by revealing Novichok is a bit shit really.....
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    I like it myself - for those who bang on about democracy. When they don't actually want it.

    Brecht managed to notice, past his own Stalin worship, what such thinking actually is.

    I have encountered many, many people who, to be frank, would be happier with Cromwell's point of view from the Putney Debates.
    What, votes for landowners only? I think it is a great idea, but would like it delayed until I acquire some land.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Floater said:

    Its a shame he no longer posts here.
    SeanT is a state of mind.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,797
    edited December 2020
    kle4 said:

    SeanT is a state of mind.
    Speak for yourself.
    Not a state my mind has ever approached, even cautiously from a distance.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Nigelb said:

    Speak for yourself.
    Not a state my mind has ever approached, even cautiously from a distance.
    I didn't say it was a state we had all experienced!
This discussion has been closed.