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Let’s stop this faux outrage over Boris being seen cycling 7 miles from Downing Street – politicalbe

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  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Cyclefree said:

    Of more concern to me is why the government is not insisting on a negative Covid test for travellers from Ireland, given the very high rates of infection there.

    Also why are the courts still insisting that lawyers have to attend courts for hearings which are perfectly doable remotely? There have been a number of cases of people catching Covid as a result.

    I don't trust the police to understand or enforce the rules fairly. But some people are certainly taking the piss. Common-sense is what is needed. I could easily walk for 3 hours outside my front door well beyond 7 miles without seeing a living soul. In London it is that much harder to go for exercise without being close to people.

    The key message must surely be this: when you absolutely have to go out wear a mask and try and stay as far away as possible from other people.

    Cycling 7 miles in London is nothing. That was my daily one way commute when I cycled to work regularly. But driving somewhere to cycle seems a bit off when there are plenty of parks nearby where the PM could run, walk or cycle (though some of the Royal Parks can be a bit sniffy about cyclists so that might explain it).

    Anyway it is a gorgeous day here so I am off to the hills.

    There was a time (no idea if that's still the case) where you could theoretically get fined for biking in the Royal Parks. Of course, most cyclists completely ignore that moronic rule and nothing bad happens to them. However, a mate once somehow manage to get fined – he remains to this day the only person I have ever known to actually be fined. He is the sort of bloke that is forever an outlier!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    Nigelb said:

    We basically are, so long as we're collecting sufficient data.
    Again, the issue was raised on the last How to Vaccinate the World podcast.

    We are not. No one is. We should be.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,639
    Nigelb said:

    We basically are, so long as we're collecting sufficient data.
    Surely we will have one arm of 2 dose people who are older and another of 1 dose people who are younger?
    That's not a great comparison... There was a great discussion on more or less on this I heard on the radio about this yesterday I think.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,609
    Dura_Ace said:

    Not unknown in the pro peleton. You need a dom pushing to keep the speed up.


    It's better if it's raining then you just piss yourself. Done it many times.
    On a bike?
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    He has already had covid and recovered hasn't he?
    The risk is that he will encourage others to do the same thing. Anyone who cycles to Olympic Park from anywhere else in London can now expect a free pass.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,541

    His only crime was assuming that people have more sense than to obsess about such trivialities.
    Well that was a pretty stupid thing for him to do then because all the evidence is that they do just that, particularly the media.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    On a bike?
    Take a look around you if you run a marathon. Piss and worse happening all over the place.
  • Foxy said:

    Yes it is. Apart from the rip off pricing, it is hard to see how to make much of an edible meal from the Chartwell package.

    https://twitter.com/Munchbunch87/status/1348747916563918849?s=19
    Lock them up! Would a lawyer please explain to a layman why that is not fraud?
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,471
    SandraMc said:

    Did you see the edition of the TV game show "Pointless" when a contestant identified a photo of Cressida Dick as Caressa Dick?
    That's very funny!
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,235
    Scott_xP said:

    https://twitter.com/DPJHodges/status/1348930787580801024
    It is interesting to measure this against the insurrection stuff in the US.

    Apart from the ranting there is a raft calm, dispassionate, apparently measured bollocks being written. By apparently intelligent people. As you read it and pick apart the nonsense, you realise that these people have created a model of reality. All incoming data is seen in the light of this model.

    It does make you wonder - was https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Duranty a liar, or had he created such a mind state that he could not see the starving people in front of him?

    The most extreme version - I read a book which revolved around studying the letters from German soldiers home in WWII.

    In Russia, as they were describing their own atrocities, they condemned the Russians for being atrocious. Not for committing acts as they (the German soldiers) were, but being guilty of being "lower people".

    They had created a world in which their own actions (utter evil) were of no account, yet living in a hut without a bath was a crime for which torture murder was righteous act.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,367
    TOPPING said:

    Yeah, he's a dick over details. But he's in a park cycling. He is likely no closer or further away than he would be anywhere else, including St. James's Park. Olympic Park is 10x the size of St. James's.
    Something else that people need to consider is that I doubt Boris can just nip out the back door, hop on his bike, and go for a ride. I would assume a bunch of people go with him and it all has to be planned. So it's quite possible that he didn't even pick the location himself.
  • There was a time (no idea if that's still the case) where you could theoretically get fined for biking in the Royal Parks. Of course, most cyclists completely ignore that moronic rule and nothing bad happens to them. However, a mate once somehow manage to get fined – he remains to this day the only person I have ever known to actually be fined. He is the sort of bloke that is forever an outlier!
    Has any cyclist ever been fined for breaking the speed limit? It's 20mph in most London Boroughs. Cyclists regularly exceed this but never seen one done for it.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,235

    Ironically, Boris is said to have wondered after his non-local bike ride whether the Olympic Park was too crowded and whether others were following the rules.
    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/boris-johnson-cycle-7-miles-downing-street-olympic-park-b827961.html
    A friend drives to Richmond park to cycle - he said he started doing that in the middle of the night, to avoid the crowds....
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    Lock them up! Would a lawyer please explain to a layman why that is not fraud?
    Not to excuse it at all but I would imagine that logistics/admin plays a big part. Hence a voucher would make more sense although that would leave it open to vouchers for vodka charges.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,508

    Do you live anywhere near Slebech? There's a brilliant hotel there which we visited regularly before lockdown.

    Can't wait to get back.

    Tiwas was a superb programme with extraordinarily talented presented - Chris Tarrant, Lenny Henry, Frank Carson, Bob Carolgees and Spit the Dog. CT tried an adult version later (Over The Top) but it died at birth, largely through political correctness, I think.
    Tiswas was quite tame originally but it soon went madcap. We live in south pembs, (little england etc), North of the bridge is really nice and pretty, but it has some weird people. Watch the Pembrokeshire murders programme for great scenery etc.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Charles said:

    People should use their judgement

    Derbyshire police were idiots

    Boris has behaved reasonably in the context

    The problem with the 4m limit is I can imagine that in central London there are parts where you would be forcing everyone to a very limited amount of open space
    Exactly right, you would then be limiting people to parkland which would become very busy. If you live in, say, Wood Green, it would be far safer for you (and far more enjoyable) to sling the bike in the car and spend a few hours biking around Epping Forest.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited January 2021
    Andrea on the VoteUK forum says the Italian government may collapse at any moment.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited January 2021
    TOPPING said:

    I say this genuinely, because you are a poster on here who I always read and I respect. But that response, together with your "pain cave" (tmi?) situation does explain much of your attitude to lockdown = lock us down long and hard.

    For people on the 12th floor of a council tower block, their basement pain cave is their downstairs neighbour's sitting room.
    Is a fair point / criticism. I am lucky that lockdown doesn't hugely effect me. I already work from home, i have a decent sized garden and live rurally so I can head out without worrying about bumping into other people. I am fully aware that if the above isn't the case, it going to be a lot shitter...

    However, I have never seriously suggested we should go like China, or even France / Spain, where lockdown really did mean not going outside at all, except for food / medicine. I thought the government policy on outside exercise is perfectly sensible, and also that we should allow things like golf, cycling i.e. activities where you aren't going to be in close contact with other people.

    What I have advocated is normally get the lockdown in place quickly and for enough time...which can come off as being an lockdown absolutist.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    Floater said:
    The Alabama example is at the extreme end of the scale. For the majority of outdoor activity, away from packed crowds, I think this applies.
    https://twitter.com/OutbreakJake/status/1348894973954052097
  • TOPPING said:

    Not to excuse it at all but I would imagine that logistics/admin plays a big part. Hence a voucher would make more sense although that would leave it open to vouchers for vodka charges.
    Err what logistics are we talking about? The department for dividing a £30 box of food into 8 separate boxes?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    The risk is that he will encourage others to do the same thing. Anyone who cycles to Olympic Park from anywhere else in London can now expect a free pass.
    Well I was considering heading down there last Saturday (they have a good all-weather MTB circuit). If I bike to the Olympic Park from my house and back again, are you saying that is immoral?
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,795
    Andy_JS said:

    Andrea on the VoteUK forum says the Italian government may collapse at any moment.

    Is it a tuesday?
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,397
    Andy_JS said:

    Andrea on the VoteUK forum says the Italian government may collapse at any moment.

    For what reason?
  • TOPPING said:

    Makes no sense. You have a central London park and have thousands of people congregating there from likely a few hundred yards away (take a look at Hyde Park during the first lockdown). Or you have some random AONB which attracts a similar number but is likely an order of magnitude bigger.

    No one is saying relax the social distancing requirements in either place.
    Unfortunately random AONBs don't work like that. Mountain paths are usually narrow with a bog on one side and a rocky precipice on the other. Walkers grope their way in both directions along the Pyg Track or Miners' Track in search of the great outdoors and when they reach the top the crowd on the summit cairn looks suspiciously like a rave. When millions of people simultaneously decide to look for a little peace and quiet they tend to select from a rather limited menu.

    And don't even mention SSSIs.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Has any cyclist ever been fined for breaking the speed limit? It's 20mph in most London Boroughs. Cyclists regularly exceed this but never seen one done for it.

    I can't say I have ever heard of it either.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,580

    Do you live anywhere near Slebech? There's a brilliant hotel there which we visited regularly before lockdown.

    Can't wait to get back.

    Tiwas was a superb programme with extraordinarily talented presented - Chris Tarrant, Lenny Henry, Frank Carson, Bob Carolgees and Spit the Dog. CT tried an adult version later (Over The Top) but it died at birth, largely through political correctness, I think.
    Pembrokeshire is a place I want to go to soon, too. We have some shares in the organisation which owns the St Brides Castle, not far from Marloes. We had an excellent holiday there a few years ago and want to get back. There are a number of sites not far away, too, which are 'significant' in my family history, and which I'd like to visit.
  • Scott_xP said:
    She can have a view on it, she cant unilaterally decide her view is the law. It is perfectly legal to exercise by running:

    from work to home
    from support bubble to work
    from shops to home
    from education location to any of the above

    etc. If I was being petulant I would also point out there are some who need to exercise their eyes by travelling 350 miles.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Foss said:

    For what reason?
    Disagreements between the parties.

    https://vote-2012.proboards.com/thread/1214/italian-politics?page=31
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Yes, you're just restating the point I was parodying.

    Eye of the beholder, really. A reasonable person would conclude that there have been both successes and failures in the government handling of Covid-19. They've got some things right straight off the bat, but also failed to correct the same errors they've been making from the start.
    But the problem is, that many in the media, especially the political commentariat, have beeen driven totally nuts by Brexit, and their opinion on this subject clouds their judgement on anything else the government does. They don’t believe that the government are capable of doing anything right, and don’t want to discuss anything that might show the government in a good light.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Has any cyclist ever been fined for breaking the speed limit? It's 20mph in most London Boroughs. Cyclists regularly exceed this but never seen one done for it.
    I believe the speed limit applies only to powered vehicles
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Floater said:
    The authorities must be stupid to allow this to happen.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,639
    If only there were private companies that had experience in delivering groceries like food to people's homes.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188
    Well said Mike, though the 'one hour' notion was never the case in law. I think it was Michael Gove answer on an interview?
  • Andy_JS said:

    The authorities must be stupid to allow this to happen.
    It's Alabama. So.... yes.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,133

    A friend drives to Richmond park to cycle - he said he started doing that in the middle of the night, to avoid the crowds....
    Cycling in the daytime you could easily run into pairs of mulled wine drinkers staggering about the place, down there?
  • IshmaelZ said:

    I believe the speed limit applies only to powered vehicles
    Correct, you can do them for cycling furiously though, yes its a thing.
  • TOPPING said:

    Not to excuse it at all but I would imagine that logistics/admin plays a big part. Hence a voucher would make more sense although that would leave it open to vouchers for vodka charges.
    Have had this pointed out to me:

    https://www.chartwellscanhelp.com/

    Whilst the fortnightly food parcel there is less shabby than the one under discussion, it still doesn't look like great value for money.

    But that's what happens when the government spends taxpayer money on other people- value for money goes out the window. That's the Thatcherite script, isn't it? (In many cases, that script is correct.)
  • alednamalednam Posts: 186
    The fact that Newham's coronavirus cases are close to 3 times the level of Westminster's cases might be taken to show that Newham and Westminster are in different parts of London. At any rate I think the Prime Minister failed to remain in the part of London in which he lives. A sign that they are in different
    You resort to the word 'area'. That is not how the guidance is stated.
    If the guidance should be better formulated -- as surely it should be -- then Johnson should have clarified the guidance rather than said simply that his accusers were wrong.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Well I was considering heading down there last Saturday (they have a good all-weather MTB circuit). If I bike to the Olympic Park from my house and back again, are you saying that is immoral?
    If it's not in your local area, yes. Why would you do anything that could potentially increase the risk of infection in an area that has already seen more than its share of illness and death?
    We should all be doing our best to protect each other. I have gone on bike rides in recent days but never more than a mile or two from home, which in my view is what is clearly meant by "local area" in an area of high population density like London.
    I think that pushing the rules to the very edge of interpretation just because one likes riding one's bike is extremely selfish behaviour. Johnson has set a bad example.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    Err what logistics are we talking about? The department for dividing a £30 box of food into 8 separate boxes?
    No idea. Buying it, delivering it, sorting it? No idea what's involved but it's different from you or I going out to buy it all at Asda (for a fiver, obvs).

    Anyone know any more?
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,330
    Maybe Marriott and Citigroup think they can get away with a bit of virtue signalling now that Trump has lost his power (having got the tax breaks they wanted), but this just reminds people that these rotten corporations are quite happy donating to the likes of Hawley, while at the same time annoying the Trump cultists when they tell everyone they are stopping.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/12/us-companies-political-funding-republicans-capitol-riot
  • eekeek Posts: 29,741
    rkrkrk said:

    If only there were private companies that had experience in delivering groceries like food to people's homes.

    No profit for Compass in that.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    You might need to show your working. Remember that thousands of younger people will be vaccinated as part of the priority groups, as part of Group 6. By the time run through the priority vaccinations, the only people who remain are under 50s with no comorbidities – a group for whom the risk from Covid is very low indeed.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-vaccination-care-home-and-healthcare-settings-posters/covid-19-vaccination-first-phase-priority-groups
    What's the IFR for those groups without hospital assistance (the "natural" IFR)?
    I mean, they're not in hospital for fun.

    I make it that the approximate risk of hospitalisation for a 47-year-old (which I do look at, because I'm 47) is around 2.0%, compared to a death rate of under 0.2%.
    Assuming that hospitalisation occurs because it is needed to protect life (otherwise, why hospitalise them?), the natural IFR for someone in their late forties would be considerably closer to 2% than 0.2%.

    We often quote the "about 1%" IFR for the virus as a whole and then say "but that's heavily skewed by the elderly"
    The hospitalisation rate looks to go past 1% at around age 37.
    Hospitalisation rates are a lot less subject to co-morbidities. They seem to be more likely to what will push you over the edge into death even when hospitalised.

    If hospitals get overwhelmed, we will find out first hand what the natural IFR (without medical intervention) actually is. And it is nowhere near as low as it is with medical intervention, and the difference is overwhelmingly likely to be greatest for the young and those without co-morbidities (age and co-morbidities are what makes medical intervention less likely to help).

    Here's a graphic to show the difference in hospitalisation by age and how it changed between the end of November and the start of January.


  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188
    Charles said:

    People should use their judgement

    Derbyshire police were idiots

    Boris has behaved reasonably in the context

    The problem with the 4m limit is I can imagine that in central London there are parts where you would be forcing everyone to a very limited amount of open space
    Part of the problem as I see it is the London media objecting to 7m as if it is some mad distance.

    7m isn't really that long a walk in the shires, let alone a long cycle.

    I think the law is drafted very well. Restrictions on individual liberty are already onerous (and in my view, go overboard), there is no need to tighten.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,133
    IshmaelZ said:

    I believe the speed limit applies only to powered vehicles
    Many cycles are powered, at least partly, nowadays
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,133
    Mortimer said:

    Part of the problem as I see it is the London media objecting to 7m as if it is some mad distance.

    7m isn't really that long a walk in the shires, let alone a long cycle.

    I think the law is drafted very well. Restrictions on individual liberty are already onerous (and in my view, go overboard), there is no need to tighten.
    Seven miles from home is, at best, half of a fourteen mile trip.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    edited January 2021

    Both Derbyshire Police, with their overzealousness, and the UK media, with their enthusiasm to undermine the stay at home message in order to conjure up a headline, are endangering our health by muddying the message. It’s time someone in authority has a serious word with them. I wonder whether anywhere in the world has such an irresponsible media as the UK.

    I can think of one very obvious example across the pond.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,333



    On a bike?

    Bien sûr. Especially in competition. I mean, do you want to win or not?
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,080

    Thats a picture from July last year, look at the clothes the other cyclists are wearing, no coat, no gloves
    Leaves on the trees.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188
    IanB2 said:

    Seven miles from home is, at best, half of a fourteen mile trip.
    And? Good exercise.
  • TOPPING said:

    No idea. Buying it, delivering it, sorting it? No idea what's involved but it's different from you or I going out to buy it all at Asda (for a fiver, obvs).

    Anyone know any more?
    This is a £20 box from Morrison's that they have miraculously managed to prepare without logistical problems, contains at least 5x as much and better quality.

    https://www.morrisons.com/food-boxes/box/cupboard-essentials-box

    Rather than worrying about the definition of exercise the met should be interviewing the directors of Chartwell this morning (imo!).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    Already two Congresswomen, who were sheltering in the Capitol safe room along with Republicans who refused to wear masks, have since tested positive for Covid.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    edited January 2021
    TOPPING said:

    Not to excuse it at all but I would imagine that logistics/admin plays a big part. Hence a voucher would make more sense although that would leave it open to vouchers for vodka charges.
    A voucher against a limited number of food items. Supermarkets would have to do some systems works, but they get the kudos of supporting a well regarded social cause as well as a captive customer.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,856
    edited January 2021
    eek said:

    No profit for Compass in that.
    And we must protect that. Their (now recently ex) boss signing the "please vote Tory" letter from big business to encourage the plebs has absolutely nothing to do with it.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,924
    edited January 2021

    Has any cyclist ever been fined for breaking the speed limit? It's 20mph in most London Boroughs. Cyclists regularly exceed this but never seen one done for it.
    I've triggered a speed camera in a 30 limit but that was a bit of a cheat as it was at the bottom of a hill. Strangely no ticket arrived in the post. :)

    I recall someone being pulled over in Scotland for doing 70mph (Sorry, 112km/h, rules is rules).

    I'm not sure the speed limit applies to cyclists but you can definitely be done for 'furious' cycling.

  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Mortimer said:

    Part of the problem as I see it is the London media objecting to 7m as if it is some mad distance.

    7m isn't really that long a walk in the shires, let alone a long cycle.

    I think the law is drafted very well. Restrictions on individual liberty are already onerous (and in my view, go overboard), there is no need to tighten.
    In the context of an infectious disease pandemic there is a big difference between a seven mile walk in the countryside and the same distance in an urban conurbation. Show me where in the Shires a seven mile walk would take you within a short distance on millions of homes?
  • She can have a view on it, she cant unilaterally decide her view is the law. It is perfectly legal to exercise by running:

    from work to home
    from support bubble to work
    from shops to home
    from education location to any of the above

    etc. If I was being petulant I would also point out there are some who need to exercise their eyes by travelling 350 miles.
    It is also entirely lawful (and reasonable) to exercise by running:

    from somewhere you've driven to that is appropriate to exercise in and back to your car again.
  • As somebody once said....I got 99 problems, but Boris on a bike ain't one of them.....
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,330

    Merkel handling of first wave very good...then downhill from there...summer vacation policy, idiotic, diet lockdown equally stupid and went on for too long until they finally gave in and went for a proper one.
    Merkel has been not very good from start to finish. Completely absent until the middle of March, and little leadership since. The federal government is a bit hampered by the German constitution (which I generally like), but she should have acted earlier at pretty much every step. Germany only did well early on because of the high early testing capacity, which I don't think we can give any credit to Merkel for.
  • IanB2 said:

    Seven miles from home is, at best, half of a fourteen mile trip.
    Sounds like a good form of exercise then.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited January 2021

    In the context of an infectious disease pandemic there is a big difference between a seven mile walk in the countryside and the same distance in an urban conurbation. Show me where in the Shires a seven mile walk would take you within a short distance on millions of homes?
    Maybe but it's too complicated to have one law for city dwellers and another for everyone else.
  • People without health problems and the under-60s are faring better in the latest wave of Covid-19 than they did in the first, an analysis of hospital deaths by The Times suggests.

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/latest-wave-of-covid-better-for-under-60s-but-worse-for-women-bsrs96qwx

    I still don't fancy getting it.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited January 2021

    What's the IFR for those groups without hospital assistance (the "natural" IFR)?
    I mean, they're not in hospital for fun.

    I make it that the approximate risk of hospitalisation for a 47-year-old (which I do look at, because I'm 47) is around 2.0%, compared to a death rate of under 0.2%.
    Assuming that hospitalisation occurs because it is needed to protect life (otherwise, why hospitalise them?), the natural IFR for someone in their late forties would be considerably closer to 2% than 0.2%.

    We often quote the "about 1%" IFR for the virus as a whole and then say "but that's heavily skewed by the elderly"
    The hospitalisation rate looks to go past 1% at around age 37.
    Hospitalisation rates are a lot less subject to co-morbidities. They seem to be more likely to what will push you over the edge into death even when hospitalised.

    If hospitals get overwhelmed, we will find out first hand what the natural IFR (without medical intervention) actually is. And it is nowhere near as low as it is with medical intervention, and the difference is overwhelmingly likely to be greatest for the young and those without co-morbidities (age and co-morbidities are what makes medical intervention less likely to help).

    Here's a graphic to show the difference in hospitalisation by age and how it changed between the end of November and the start of January.


    Your graph isn't a great deal of use for this discussion, because yet again it captures everyone in those age groups, rather than just those without underlying health conditions.

    How many people under 40/under 50, nationwide, without comorbidities, have

    a) died and
    b) been hospitalised

    by Covid 19?

    I have a good idea on a), as the NHS publishes this data (it's a remarkably low number). But we need to know b) – and I'm not sure there is an official source for it?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,133

    Sounds like a good form of exercise then.
    It is quite likely we'll find out in due course how he got there and back
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    IanB2 said:

    Seven miles from home is, at best, half of a fourteen mile trip.
    That's absolutely nothing on a bike. I used to cycle 13 miles to work in the summer months. It took me less than an hour.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited January 2021
    The review stated the statue had attracted public debate in part due to references to colonial campaigns on its plinth which 'sought to advance British imperialist interests in other countries'.

    An equality impact assessment carried out as part of the review also concluded the statue would impact anybody who 'does not define themselves in binary gender terms'.

    It read: 'The General Buller statue represents the patriarchal structures of empire and colonialism which impact negatively on women and anyone who does not define themselves in binary gender terms.

    'The consultation will need to ensure that the views of women, transgender and non-binary people are captured and given due weight.'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9135913/Council-slammed-historical-wokery-plans-remove-statue-British-war-hero.html
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    IanB2 said:

    Many cycles are powered, at least partly, nowadays
    Maybe in some parts of the country but not round here.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    edited January 2021
    Looking at the outcomes to date, the gradient of relative risk by age for both death and hospitalisation looks to be something similar to this:



    We keep looking at the black line and saying that when we get low enough on the axis (going from right to left in vaccinations), we can declare victory.
    But the rec line is closer to where the covid death risk would naturally be - because that's where you get so seriously ill as to need hospital, and dexamethasone, or tocilizumab, or sarilumab, or hooked up to a CPAP machine, or to be regularly proned, or even attached to a ventilator.

    And all of that effort pushes that red line all the way down to the black line, where with all the effort we can give, we can't push it further down.

    It's an important note that co-morbidities have far less effect on hospitalisation risk than death risk. Quite possibly because they could get in the way of treatment, I guess.

    The debate is at what point we can let the black line spring up towards the red one - because that's what happens when the hospitals are overwhelmed and can't do their thing of pushing the red line down to the black one.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    Is a fair point / criticism. I am lucky that lockdown doesn't hugely effect me. I already work from home, i have a decent sized garden and live rurally so I can head out without worrying about bumping into other people. I am fully aware that if the above isn't the case, it going to be a lot shitter...

    However, I have never seriously suggested we should go like China, or even France / Spain, where lockdown really did mean not going outside at all, except for food / medicine. I thought the government policy on outside exercise is perfectly sensible, and also that we should allow things like golf, cycling i.e. activities where you aren't going to be in close contact with other people.

    What I have advocated is normally get the lockdown in place quickly and for enough time...which can come off as being an lockdown absolutist.
    Thank you for the answer. I absolutely understand.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,235

    I've triggered a speed camera in a 30 limit but that was a bit of a cheat as it was at the bottom of a hill. Strangely no ticket arrived in the post. :)

    I recall someone being pulled over in Scotland for doing 70mph (Sorry, 112km/h, rules is rules).

    I'm not sure the speed limit applies to cyclists but you can definitely be done for 'furious' cycling.

    I recall a thing in the US for getting speeding tickets, using prone/streamlined bikes. Some of those are crazy fast...

    There was a small group who have got a 55mph ticket, IIRC.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,330
    IanB2 said:

    Many cycles are powered, at least partly, nowadays
    and the power cuts out at 15.5mph otherwise it is no longer legally a bicycle.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,133

    It is also entirely lawful (and reasonable) to exercise by running:

    from somewhere you've driven to that is appropriate to exercise in and back to your car again.
    Yes and no. The real world problem police like in Derbyshire are trying to prevent is large numbers of people choosing the same location. The longer the distance allowed and the looser the guidelines, the more likely it is that everyone will congregate on the same small number of beauty spots.

    Admittedly we are probably safe in today's miserable weather
  • Tougher measures will simply penalise more people who are trying to get by, while persistent rule breakers - lookig at your Piers, no, both of you - will likely not change their behaviour anyway.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    alednam said:

    The fact that Newham's coronavirus cases are close to 3 times the level of Westminster's cases might be taken to show that Newham and Westminster are in different parts of London. At any rate I think the Prime Minister failed to remain in the part of London in which he lives. A sign that they are in different
    You resort to the word 'area'. That is not how the guidance is stated.
    If the guidance should be better formulated -- as surely it should be -- then Johnson should have clarified the guidance rather than said simply that his accusers were wrong.

    Newham probably has a high rate because it has lots of households with large numbers of people, but that's unavoidable because the Bangladeshi and other communities choose to live like that and it wouldn't be acceptable to tell them to live in smaller groups.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,471
    OT. There is a woman on Death Row in the US about to be executed. The last time a woman was executed in the US was 1953. Ruth Ellis* the last woman executed in the UK was in 1955. This is surprising. I always though the US could out barbaric the UK any day even with a Tory government.

    (*I photographed her daughter Georgie)

  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    Just seen the reports of the secret service officer who made posts about Antifa being to blame for the violence, calling law makers treasonous and saying it's time to go on the offensive.....

    And then I saw this

    https://twitter.com/EWErickson/status/1348795165880803328

    And still no official comment from the Federal authorities
  • ... and all that is before we recognise that the rules themselves are less strict in some key ways.

    *support bubbles did not exist
    *little exemption for working

    for a start

    be brave to get rid of those two.

    Make more effort in praising good behaviour and finding ways to support safe behaviour within the rules.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Andy_JS said:

    Maybe but it's too complicated to have one law for city dwellers and another for everyone else.
    There isn't a different law though. The rules say you should stay in your local area. Clearly Newham and Westminster are not in the same area (otherwise they could not have such different Covid infection rates and wouldn't be different London boroughs), whereas two hamlets in a sparsely populated shire seven miles apart might be. I think the rules are fairly clear and Johnson has at the very least pushed them to their limit. Add the fact that he chose to travel to the Borough with one of the highest number of Covid cases in the UK and I think it looks like a really poor choice. Not a resigning matter, but not unimportant.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,550
    edited January 2021

    Tougher measures will simply penalise more people who are trying to get by, while persistent rule breakers - lookig at your Piers, no, both of you - will likely not change their behaviour anyway.

    Without going full China, I don't think any further tinkering will make much difference. We know that one of the biggest problems is people bending / breaking the rules on key things like isolation. They do x days, feel fine and decide to pop to Tescos to get something nice to eat.

    Arguing over 3m vs 2m, its total irrelevance. Really it all comes down to frequency / length in presence of others and when you know you have it to make sure you don't come into contact with anybody else.
  • IanB2 said:

    Yes and no. The real world problem police like in Derbyshire are trying to prevent is large numbers of people choosing the same location. The longer the distance allowed and the looser the guidelines, the more likely it is that everyone will congregate on the same small number of beauty spots.

    Admittedly we are probably safe in today's miserable weather
    Derbyshire Police may want to stop that but it is not against the law.

    If people are choosing to exercise within their own city, or local to themselves, then I fail to see an issue. Someone's own street may not be appropriate to exercise in.

    If someone travels a hundred miles then that's a different issue. But even that's not currently illegal.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724

    It is also entirely lawful (and reasonable) to exercise by running:

    from somewhere you've driven to that is appropriate to exercise in and back to your car again.
    In Lockdown I I had a copy of the SI on my phone in my back pocket so that if plod decided to stop me on any of my three bike rides, I could point to the legislation. I frequently posted on here the nuances between the law and the guidance.

    Now? I really can't be bothered to see what are the rules, the guidance, the law, the regulations, or whatever.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    Floater said:

    Just seen the reports of the secret service officer who made posts about Antifa being to blame for the violence, calling law makers treasonous and saying it's time to go on the offensive.....

    And then I saw this

    https://twitter.com/EWErickson/status/1348795165880803328

    And still no official comment from the Federal authorities

    I feel like the revolution was a significant armed protest on american soul, but I wouldn't want to mention it to them.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited January 2021

    There isn't a different law though. The rules say you should stay in your local area. Clearly Newham and Westminster are not in the same area (otherwise they could not have such different Covid infection rates and wouldn't be different London boroughs), whereas two hamlets in a sparsely populated shire seven miles apart might be. I think the rules are fairly clear and Johnson has at the very least pushed them to their limit. Add the fact that he chose to travel to the Borough with one of the highest number of Covid cases in the UK and I think it looks like a really poor choice. Not a resigning matter, but not unimportant.
    Newham and Westminster are the same area, they're both London. They have the same Mayor. They're segments of the same city. 🤷🏻‍♂️
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,235

    The review stated the statue had attracted public debate in part due to references to colonial campaigns on its plinth which 'sought to advance British imperialist interests in other countries'.

    An equality impact assessment carried out as part of the review also concluded the statue would impact anybody who 'does not define themselves in binary gender terms'.

    It read: 'The General Buller statue represents the patriarchal structures of empire and colonialism which impact negatively on women and anyone who does not define themselves in binary gender terms.

    'The consultation will need to ensure that the views of women, transgender and non-binary people are captured and given due weight.'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9135913/Council-slammed-historical-wokery-plans-remove-statue-British-war-hero.html

    Buller fought against the Boers - while the reasons for the war weren't especially nice, the Boers originally trekked North, in large measure because of the objections to their practises in regards to..... Slavery. Which the British abolished in South Africa in 1834....
  • Your graph isn't a great deal of use for this discussion, because yet again it captures everyone in those age groups, rather than just those without underlying health conditions.

    How many people under 40/under 50, nationwide, without comorbidities, have

    a) died and
    b) been hospitalised

    by Covid 19?

    I have a good idea on a), as the NHS publishes this data (it's a remarkably low number). But we need to know b) – and I'm not sure there is an official source for it?
    Here's a data point from early in the first wave. https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.23.20076042v1

    47% of those in hospital had no comorbidities. Not stratified by age, but of course elderly people are *unlikely* to have no comorbidities at all, so I suspect that a majority of young patients in hospital have none.

    I think you are mistaken in believing that patients under 50, and even under 40, with no comorbidities are rarely in hospital. They rarely die, if they receive good treatment, but they need that treatment.

    --AS
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,191
    Roger said:

    OT. There is a woman on Death Row in the US about to be executed. The last time a woman was executed in the US was 1953. Ruth Ellis* the last woman executed in the UK was in 1955. This is surprising. I always though the US could out barbaric the UK any day even with a Tory government.

    (*I photographed her daughter Georgie)

    I think that the dig in that is completely unnecessary Roger. The woman was guilty of a horrific crime, almost beyond belief, but the American justice system really cannot do anything to reduce the level of violence and barbarism in the country. When the State uses this level of violence is it really surprising that so many others think that they are entitled to do likewise?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818
    On Topic: Disagree with the Header completely. In fact I think it's flat out wrong. "Boris" Johnson is not in his early fifties. He's 56.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,235
    Roger said:

    OT. There is a woman on Death Row in the US about to be executed. The last time a woman was executed in the US was 1953. Ruth Ellis* the last woman executed in the UK was in 1955. This is surprising. I always though the US could out barbaric the UK any day even with a Tory government.

    (*I photographed her daughter Georgie)

    Why do you think it is more barbarous to judicially execute a woman than a man? Isn't that "Women and Children First!' style sexism?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,724
    IanB2 said:

    Yes and no. The real world problem police like in Derbyshire are trying to prevent is large numbers of people choosing the same location. The longer the distance allowed and the looser the guidelines, the more likely it is that everyone will congregate on the same small number of beauty spots.

    Admittedly we are probably safe in today's miserable weather
    Beautiful weather outside now. Looking forward to getting out at lunchtime.

    And surely using the gravity model of exercise (?!), the further away a place, the fewer people are likely to congregate there?
  • IanB2 said:

    It is quite likely we'll find out in due course how he got there and back
    Who cares?

    Whether he rode there or drove there does not matter. It is legal either way.
This discussion has been closed.