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McConnell’s impeachment move means Trump looks set to serve a full term and there’ll be no President

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  • We have gone from 40% --> 60% complete compliance at a time when the rates of covid in the population have gone through the roof.

    Either we have a small number of prodigious super-spreaders - or people are getting Covid when they do their on-line shopping....
    Or people are spreading this asymptomatically and presymptomatically.

    If everyone is on average spreading it to one person, then if someone perfectly isolates after getting a positive test but they've already spread it to someone else before they tested positive then that meets the average.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,583

    Or you belatedly realise she was the love of your life. All the hot chicks you thought would flock your way think you're just a sad weird old man. You still have to meet your ex wife all the time to discuss boring custody and alimony issues - the same arguing as before, but without the make up sex afterwards. She seems to be managing fine without you. You find yourself increasingly reliant on specialist hand crafted sex toys to find any joy in life. As you tuck into another tasteless TV dinner for one, binge watching Cash in the Attic and fingering the flint dildo, you find yourself asking, where did it all go wrong?
    Lol. Nicely done.

    Except that, of course, the EU was never ‘the love of my life’ for anyone but ScottP. The idea is preposterous. We only married for money, not for love, and that was the problem. Those kind of marriages are always somewhat toxic and generally doomed in the long term. So the rest of the analogy falls away.
  • eek said:

    Have we seen this yet

    https://twitter.com/fishingforleave/status/1347450935472254977

    Yes we voted for leave and granted you are not involved in fishing but it's remain's fault that we have problem exporting fish.

    "David Noble, whose Aegirfish buys from Scottish fleets to export to Europe, said he would have to pay between £500 to £600 per day for paperwork, wiping out most profit.

    His concern is that this marks more than just teething problems, and says he cannot pass on the higher costs of doing business."
  • dixiedean said:

    12 hours and counting of snow. Not hard but persistent here.
    Youngest unhappy there is no snow day when the schools are Online.
    That is very harsh indeed. Start a petition!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,583
    TOPPING said:

    I was pondering setting up a spreadsheet and that was only Ep.1. Two years back...20 years forward..24 years back...two years forward...

    sheesh.
    It gets WORSE in episode 2. That’s where I gave up
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-55649947
    Do you really think it will stay at six? And we can already see there are more with @MaxPB's comment.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,130
    TOPPING said:

    Foxy anecdata abounds about this (three on this board so far have mentioned it) in the NHS. No idea about private, perhaps it does perhaps it doesn't.

    And as I said, if you poke, you will find many people you know with a similar experience. Now of course it's also a numbers game. The NHS is the only show in town and hence of course there are going to be issues. A 99.9% success rate with the millions of people it treats means there will be a substantial number of problems.

    But the problems all seem to have a similar theme - conditions being overlooked and that's only the ones that we are aware of. When I visited my mother in her ward full of super-oldies there were visitors there I would say for about 20% of patients. What about them? Had one of those had water on the brain, say, they would have been written off and no one would have been any the wiser.
    Of course errors are made, but I wouldn't ascribe them to the NHS, as they are a feature of medical care systems universally.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087
    MaxPB said:

    It's got to be more than six pharmacies, there's two starting COVID jabs next week within walking distance of my parents. I highly doubt that a tiny part of Enfield has got 33% of the pilot programme.

    I would imagine it is 6 to start with, with a bunch of clipboardistas to verify the process is all good. Which leads to a thumbs up for Monday.
  • I think you miss the point

    We are politically engaged on here but the public are only interested in one subject and that is covid, hence why EU issues only resonate with the political elite, not the public at large
    Yet you don't mention that belief in response to people talking about impeachment, cricket, honorifics, or lunchtime bike rides.

    I wonder what it is about other people having that conversation that makes you uncomfortable.
  • RobD said:

    Do you really think it will stay at six? And we can already see there are more with @MaxPB's comment.
    Of course it wont stay at six. I just dont understand why we are asking volunteers to be involved ahead of trained pharmacists who do this every year for millions. There is a probably a good reason, but it has yet to be given.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,905
    edited January 2021
    Stocky said:

    Government needs to get hold of this. Recall all the guff about GDPR that blighted our lives about trivial matters - are private companies going to be allowed to request details about our health record? I do agree with @Charles the other day when he said this should be legislated against. Dictate by elected government is one this, by a private company is another.
    But. If they're required for foreign travel they'll happen anyway.
    Or will our "sovereignty" allow us to legislate against that?
  • The question 'Were they the only ones that would have her?' breaks the surface of my subconscious.

    https://twitter.com/RogerQuimbly/status/1349693076072263681?s=20
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,681

    The Republicans are now in the bizarre situation where the Congressional party is moving increasingly against him, but about 70%, or more, of their voters still think he's great. It can't last for long without some sort of cratering.
    Good point but I'd hope not 70% of the voters. If it is, my model needs material adjustment. I have the size of his base - those for whom HE was why they voted Republican - at around 20m.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    "David Noble, whose Aegirfish buys from Scottish fleets to export to Europe, said he would have to pay between £500 to £600 per day for paperwork, wiping out most profit.

    His concern is that this marks more than just teething problems, and says he cannot pass on the higher costs of doing business."
    You mean Brexit results in higher costs due to extra paperwork - I'm shocked...

    (I'm not shocked as I make money trying to automate stuff away but there is only so much you can automate and often all you are doing is moving the manual task somewhere else).
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    Yet you don't mention that belief in response to people talking about impeachment, cricket, honorifics, or lunchtime bike rides.

    I wonder what it is about other people having that conversation that makes you uncomfortable.
    Because people aren't bored to death with those topics, unlike Brexit.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    edited January 2021
    TOPPING said:

    Oh. Didn't know it was on. Yes will absolutely.

    What's the scoop on them? Different to the tv prog?
    AIUI it was the result of the deal struck by Wilkins with the TV reporter, Hill, in the first episode. Unless the series itself was.
  • I don't think there looks like much issue with capacity in terms of vaccinations. There looks like more taps that can be turned on fairly easily.

    It is getting all those 20 odd million doses through QA and bottled.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    For this purpose I'd go with the amusingly-named Magas of Cyrene, who managed to make himself king in a manner that The Donald would envy.

    p.s. I don't usually insist on titles, but if anything, it's 'Dr.' (formerly 'Mr.'), not 'Ms.'!
    I consider you a friend. And my friends call me Eagle. Or Golden Eagle. Either of those would work. Or John. Or Coach.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    Of course it wont stay at six. I just dont understand why we are asking volunteers to be involved ahead of trained pharmacists who do this every year for millions. There is a probably a good reason, but it has yet to be given.
    Perhaps the reason is that we want the pharmacists to stay in the pharmacies for the time being, especially given the hospitals are effectively at capacity?
  • RobD said:

    Because people aren't bored to death with those topics, unlike Brexit.
    Speak for yourself. People on here are talking about it because it interests them.
  • Fled to Italy....interesting choice...

    The Harry Potter said that while she was currently isolating at her home in Italy, she'd only return to the UK when it's safe to get the jab.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-9146637/Miriam-Margolyes-slams-clown-Boris-Johnson-handling-COVID-19-pandemic.html
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    Speak for yourself. People on here are talking about it because it interests them.
    Yeah, but I don't think anyone would claim that PB is a representative cross-section of society. We are all politics nerds.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited January 2021
    Dura_Ace said:

    You need these on your 'snow' bike - I use a BMC URS 01.

    https://www.universalcycles.com/shopping/product_details.php?id=31425

    Riding in snow is magnificent. You can pretend to be Hinault in the '81 Liège - Bastogne - Liège.
    Before you jink right to avoid a pothole, the bike, studs and all, goes from under you, and you end up staring directly into the headlights of the 4x4 (note: not one of your support vehicles) behind you.

    Is my level.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    Leon said:

    Lol. Nicely done.

    Except that, of course, the EU was never ‘the love of my life’ for anyone but ScottP. The idea is preposterous. We only married for money, not for love, and that was the problem. Those kind of marriages are always somewhat toxic and generally doomed in the long term. So the rest of the analogy falls away.
    I would say it was more like one of those marriages where you were never a perfect fit but over time you could have come to a deep and lasting love. But you had this stupid pisshead mate, let's call him Nigel, who kept telling you that she was a fucking bitch, pointing out all her small flaws, and telling you you'd be better off without her. Since the divorce Nigel doesn't seem to want to meet up anymore. Someone even told you he'd started dating your ex. Why did I ever listen to Nigel, you think, as another evening of debasing, joyless solo sex with your bespoke flint accessories beckons.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    edited January 2021
    kinabalu said:

    I'm afraid Dr Blue sounds like a Bond villain or a Hollywood pill peddler. So I will not be using it.
    You're saying it's a Dr. No from you?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    Endillion said:

    Perhaps the reason is that we want the pharmacists to stay in the pharmacies for the time being, especially given the hospitals are effectively at capacity?
    I think we have the slow start because it was done with the Pfizer jab and at the start they wanted places able to deal with a full batch of 975 each week.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    The question 'Were they the only ones that would have her?' breaks the surface of my subconscious.

    https://twitter.com/RogerQuimbly/status/1349693076072263681?s=20

    UKIP has to announce it as Katie Hopkins is banned from all social media outlets so can't announce it herself.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    dixiedean said:



    But. If they're required for foreign travel they'll happen anyway.
    Or will our "sovereignty" allow us to legislate against that?
    I think it will be inevitable for foreign travel, as I argued the other day, because other countries will insist. Just pragmatism. I think the danger is creeping use to other aspects of our lives, which I would oppose.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Foxy said:

    Of course errors are made, but I wouldn't ascribe them to the NHS, as they are a feature of medical care systems universally.
    I don't doubt it. But our medical care system is the NHS.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    Of course it wont stay at six. I just dont understand why we are asking volunteers to be involved ahead of trained pharmacists who do this every year for millions. There is a probably a good reason, but it has yet to be given.
    The volunteers will be working at the NHS-run sites, so they will augment capacity at existing locations. This is about bringing even more locations online.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    AIUI it was the result of the deal struck by Wilkins with the TV reporter, Hill, in the first episode. Unless the series itself was.
    But the veracity of the verdict is not in doubt?
  • Phil said:

    If there are no consequences, what’s to stop politicians trying again in the future? After all, they learned that nothing would happen to them if they failed the first time, so it makes it even more likely that they’ll try again.

    No. Inciting armed insurrection against the democratic transfer of power is a step to far for the "lets all forget about it and move forward" option. There have to be consequences, or else we’ll be going through all this again, but worse in the future.

    (Frankly, I suspect we’ll be going through this again anyway, but it’ll be /worse/ if we don’t start showing some backbone, so best to get on with it.)
    Saw a tweet yesterday that mentioned that Hitler was originally given 5 years for the Munich putsch but was released after one in the interests of healing and reconciliation. Much healing and many reconciliations followed.
  • anothernickanothernick Posts: 3,591
    edited January 2021

    Or you belatedly realise she was the love of your life. All the hot chicks you thought would flock your way think you're just a sad weird old man. You still have to meet your ex wife all the time to discuss boring custody and alimony issues - the same arguing as before, but without the make up sex afterwards. She seems to be managing fine without you. You find yourself increasingly reliant on specialist hand crafted sex toys to find any joy in life. As you tuck into another tasteless TV dinner for one, binge watching Cash in the Attic and fingering the flint dildo, you find yourself asking, where did it all go wrong?
    Lol!
  • IanB2 said:

    Here it is warm (for January), wet and miserable.

    But we already have half an hour more daylight than we did in the depths of December
    Been snowing hard in Lincolnshire since about 7am. Not stopped at all. around about zero C at the moment.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,452
    Leon said:

    Lol. Nicely done.

    Except that, of course, the EU was never ‘the love of my life’ for anyone but ScottP. The idea is preposterous. We only married for money, not for love, and that was the problem. Those kind of marriages are always somewhat toxic and generally doomed in the long term. So the rest of the analogy falls away.
    Some might say it was an arranged marriage.

    Or perhaps an Orthodox Jewish marrige, where the system makes it very difficult where one party refuses to accept that the other wants a divorce.
  • Yet you don't mention that belief in response to people talking about impeachment, cricket, honorifics, or lunchtime bike rides.

    I wonder what it is about other people having that conversation that makes you uncomfortable.
    I am not uncomfortable with anything on here

    It is a political forum with lots of views and to be honest at my age I am just grateful for all the blessing my wife and I have and to be able to isolate thanks to Asda and Amazon delivering to our door

    And on Asda another biggish order for us today and nothing missing at all.

    I do believe if food shortages start showing then that could be a problem for HMG
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    I would say it was more like one of those marriages where you were never a perfect fit but over time you could have come to a deep and lasting love. But you had this stupid pisshead mate, let's call him Nigel, who kept telling you that she was a fucking bitch, pointing out all her small flaws, and telling you you'd be better off without her. Since the divorce Nigel doesn't seem to want to meet up anymore. Someone even told you he'd started dating your ex. Why did I ever listen to Nigel, you think, as another evening of debasing, joyless solo sex with your bespoke flint accessories beckons.
    There was never a deep and lasting love for the EU in the UK.
  • RobD said:

    Yeah, but I don't think anyone would claim that PB is a representative cross-section of society. We are all politics nerds.
    And, apparently, cricket fans too. It takes all sorts.
    Anyway, I'll be happy to carefully read the official list of Things We May Talk About Without Big G Getting Irate, if the list is forthcoming.
  • eek said:

    Have we seen this yet

    https://twitter.com/fishingforleave/status/1347450935472254977

    Yes we voted for leave and granted you are not involved in fishing but it's remain's fault that we have problem exporting fish.

    I presume these are the wrong sort of fishermen so we shouldn't listen to them.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    And, apparently, cricket fans too. It takes all sorts.
    Anyway, I'll be happy to carefully read the official list of Things We May Talk About Without Big G Getting Irate, if the list is forthcoming.
    He wasn't saying what we can and cannot talk about here. He is saying that Brexit has very little cut-through in the wider world.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,452

    Fled to Italy....interesting choice...

    The Harry Potter said that while she was currently isolating at her home in Italy, she'd only return to the UK when it's safe to get the jab.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-9146637/Miriam-Margolyes-slams-clown-Boris-Johnson-handling-COVID-19-pandemic.html

    Bloody health tourists....
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Yet you don't mention that belief in response to people talking about impeachment, cricket, honorifics, or lunchtime bike rides.

    I wonder what it is about other people having that conversation that makes you uncomfortable.
    That's exactly the nub. "Bored to death" says, for example, @RobD. Rather, it seems very much to me as a disinclination to accept the reality of Brexit as causing increasing problems which are a direct result of our own decisions.

    Nothing too dramatic - a fish guy can't export, a poster guy finds his EU customers dry up, some other person finds this or that more cumbersome so either pays to do it or stops doing it.

    But hardly the sunlit uplands and I fail to see any benefit whatsoever in return.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913
    edited January 2021
    Dura_Ace said:

    You need these on your 'snow' bike - I use a BMC URS 01.

    https://www.universalcycles.com/shopping/product_details.php?id=31425

    Riding in snow is magnificent. You can pretend to be Hinault in the '81 Liège - Bastogne - Liège.
    A fat bike might be more fun, but definitely not rules compliant...
  • I am not uncomfortable with anything on here

    It is a political forum with lots of views and to be honest at my age I am just grateful for all the blessing my wife and I have and to be able to isolate thanks to Asda and Amazon delivering to our door

    And on Asda another biggish order for us today and nothing missing at all.

    I do believe if food shortages start showing then that could be a problem for HMG
    I don't think your Asda deliveries will have much cut-through with public opinion. Not whilst there are updates about snow in Lincolnshire.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,733

    I think you miss the point

    We are politically engaged on here but the public are only interested in one subject and that is covid, hence why EU issues only resonate with the political elite, not the public at large
    The Daily Mail seems to think its readers are interested in it.

    https://twitter.com/mrjamesob/status/1349648641666019328
  • Bloody health tourists....
    Probably one of those paying for a grey-market jab coming to London shortly, in the Albanian taxi drivers are correct.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    dixiedean said:

    This is the second one we've had postponed due to the other team. We've not had a single positive.
    Play youth team as in FA Cup. Or forfeit.
    There seems to be no punishment or sanction.
    Meanwhile, we've got a fixture pile up.
    Unfair!
    The problem of footballers misbehaving isn’t going to go away, unless there’s a sporting sanction that wakes up the club chairmen.

    Play the youth team or forfeit the match.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Some might say it was an arranged marriage.

    Or perhaps an Orthodox Jewish marrige, where the system makes it very difficult where one party refuses to accept that the other wants a divorce.
    Ah now that was a good series. Unorthodox.
  • And, apparently, cricket fans too. It takes all sorts.
    Anyway, I'll be happy to carefully read the official list of Things We May Talk About Without Big G Getting Irate, if the list is forthcoming.
    I am not irate

    You are misinterpreting my views but you are very new here so maybe in time you will adjust
  • Friend of mine on WhatsApp - she tested positive for Covid a few days ago. Isn't ill.

    "On the phone to T&T. Had 3 different dates when I come out of isolation. Asked the guy which was correct as its important"
    "I don't know. I see your point, but this is my script"
    "He's gone to ask his manager"
    "His manager doesn't know what date to use"
    "The manager has asked I end the call as they can't find anyone who knows when I should come out of isolation"
    "£12bn for this"
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,681
    Leon said:

    As predicted by me, and others. Even if there is no official ‘vaccine visa’ there will be unofficial requirements for one, everywhere - work, travel, play

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/jan/14/pimlico-plumbers-to-introduce-no-jab-no-job-work-contracts-covid?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

    Ok, but that was easy to predict. The thing eye am classing as a Not Happening Event - and thus putting my 100% record on the line with - is that people who have been vaccinated will get an Immunity Card which unlocks for them the sort of normal life that remains out of reach for others.
  • RobD said:

    There was never a deep and lasting love for the EU in the UK.
    Neither was there a deep and lasting hatred for it outside Farageland and the readership of certain newspapers.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,417

    The Daily Mail seems to think its readers are interested in it.

    https://twitter.com/mrjamesob/status/1349648641666019328
    That Single Market thing looks a good idea. Maybe we should join it?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    I am not irate

    You are misinterpreting my views but you are very new here so maybe in time you will adjust
    Adjust to what?
  • HYUFD said:

    Katie Hopkins joins UKIP
    twitter.com/UKIP/status/1349665432412807168?s=20

    I presumed she was already a member.
  • I presume these are the wrong sort of fishermen so we shouldn't listen to them.
    Have you read the article?
    1. The "SNP hindering fishing" accusation is from the Tories
    2. The fisherman quoted in the article says "“I’m questioning whether to carry on”
    3. The CEO of Seafood Scotland is quoted saying "“The last 48 hours has really delivered what was expected – new bureaucratic non-tariff barriers, and no one body with the tools to be able to fix the situation."
    4. The CEO of Scotland Food and Drink is quoted saying "“We have warned for months about the lack of preparation time for everyone involved and these problems sadly come as little surprise"

    Your "wrong sort of fishermen" comment implies the article has fishing folk attacking the Scottish government. They are not. Thats the Tories. The industry is saying "we warned for months. This was expected. Is it worth carrying on"

    You were saying...?
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Yep....it's gone.....

    https://twitter.com/GlennBBC/status/1349697232019271681?s=20

    Were they too busy omitting "Oxford" that they left in stuff they shouldn't have?
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    "and they're better and happier fish for it" - nice - he`s a card isn`t he?
  • Yep....it's gone.....

    https://twitter.com/GlennBBC/status/1349697232019271681?s=20

    Were they too busy omitting "Oxford" that they left in stuff they shouldn't have?

    Bit late....everybody has now seen the numbers and the media have run the stories.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,583

    I would say it was more like one of those marriages where you were never a perfect fit but over time you could have come to a deep and lasting love. But you had this stupid pisshead mate, let's call him Nigel, who kept telling you that she was a fucking bitch, pointing out all her small flaws, and telling you you'd be better off without her. Since the divorce Nigel doesn't seem to want to meet up anymore. Someone even told you he'd started dating your ex. Why did I ever listen to Nigel, you think, as another evening of debasing, joyless solo sex with your bespoke flint accessories beckons.
    That one wasn’t as good as it is so clearly untrue. A ‘deep and lasting love’, for the EU???

    As spouses go the EU was a manipulative liar, but he earned decent money, even if he spent too much of it on booze. His conversation was boring, the sex was awful, yet his cash provided a big shiny house. He kept promising to mend his ways, the drinking and the lies, yet never did.

    We tolerated all of this - a sterile marriage to a feckless boor - because divorce seemed so daunting. And that new bathroom was so big.

    But then he started making demands on us, ordering us to stay home and cook, or to do all the housework in the nude while he languidly masturbated on the sofa we both paid for. Then he said, during yet another awful boozy dinner, that he wanted a threesome with the neighbour’s uncle.

    That’s when we left.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,452

    Friend of mine on WhatsApp - she tested positive for Covid a few days ago. Isn't ill.

    "On the phone to T&T. Had 3 different dates when I come out of isolation. Asked the guy which was correct as its important"
    "I don't know. I see your point, but this is my script"
    "He's gone to ask his manager"
    "His manager doesn't know what date to use"
    "The manager has asked I end the call as they can't find anyone who knows when I should come out of isolation"
    "£12bn for this"

    Adopt the safety first approach - take the latest date.
  • London appears to be lagging behind in England's vaccine race, the latest data has revealed.

    According to new regional data released today by the NHS, the Midlands, North East and Yorkshire and the South East have seen the highest numbers of vaccinations between December 8 and January 10.

    More than 447,329 doses (including first and second jabs) have been administered in the Midlands while the North East and Yorkshire has seen 433,045 doses and the South East has seen 411,257.

    In contrast the fewest (236,023) have been handed out in the East of England, while London has seen 237,524 doses. The South West has seen 285,332 doses.
  • Adopt the safety first approach - take the latest date.
    She is. Its that they haven't a clue what they're doing that winds her up.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913

    Friend of mine on WhatsApp - she tested positive for Covid a few days ago. Isn't ill.

    "On the phone to T&T. Had 3 different dates when I come out of isolation. Asked the guy which was correct as its important"
    "I don't know. I see your point, but this is my script"
    "He's gone to ask his manager"
    "His manager doesn't know what date to use"
    "The manager has asked I end the call as they can't find anyone who knows when I should come out of isolation"
    "£12bn for this"

    It isn't difficult to find the information though.

    10 days full days after the day you had the test unless any symptoms persist:
    https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/coronavirus-covid-19/self-isolation-and-treatment/how-long-to-self-isolate/
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    Adopt the safety first approach - take the latest date.
    latest date as in most recent (so the first one) or the last one.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    Leon said:

    It gets WORSE in episode 2. That’s where I gave up
    It was a bit dark and horrible for me to be honest. Won't be watching the rest. The idea that he apparently got away with this is quite disturbing.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Bit late....everybody has now seen the numbers and the media have run the stories.
    Was this the numbers, or the addresses of the facilities in England that the Scottish government published?
  • TOPPING said:

    Adjust to what?
    My posts
  • London only received tenth of vaccine doses supplied across England
    London Mayor Sadiq Khan has claimed the capital was not getting its fair share of vaccine doses.

    While London makes up about 15% of population of England, isn't the population much younger?
  • Sandpit said:

    The problem of footballers misbehaving isn’t going to go away, unless there’s a sporting sanction that wakes up the club chairmen.

    Play the youth team or forfeit the match.
    Just vaccinate all the sodding footballers.
  • Sandpit said:

    Was this the numbers, or the addresses of the facilities in England that the Scottish government published?
    The plan had the numbers of vaccines to be delivered every week, from which you could easily extrapolate UK wide amounts (which is commercially sensitive).

    The location was blurted out in parliament, but I believe the media didn't report it for obvious reasons.
  • Just vaccinate all the sodding footballers.
    And make them pay for it.....£10k / player....to NHS.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,681
    Well speaking personally, the EU was - is - exactly my type. So score at least one for that view. It might be niche but it certainly exists.
  • Or people are spreading this asymptomatically and presymptomatically.

    If everyone is on average spreading it to one person, then if someone perfectly isolates after getting a positive test but they've already spread it to someone else before they tested positive then that meets the average.
    Only wimps self-isolate: wimps and malingerers. That was the message last spring. Tube drivers and teachers were swinging the lead; schoolchildren were taking a fortnight off for a cold. Even on this very pb.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307
    Mark Drakeford pushes for more powers.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-55649017

    Would West, Mid, and North Wales welcome more responsibilities passed to Cardiff?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,583
    DavidL said:

    It was a bit dark and horrible for me to be honest. Won't be watching the rest. The idea that he apparently got away with this is quite disturbing.
    It felt like a mediocre European co-production. The accents, the script, the lot. Big budget but weirdly dull.

    I was surprised to see it was made by Netflix/BBC

    BTW Covid is now impacting TV and movie quality, methinks. Another victim of the virus?
  • The plan had the numbers of vaccines to be delivered every week, from which you could easily extrapolate UK wide amounts (which is commercially sensitive).

    The location was blurted out in parliament, but I believe the media didn't report it for obvious reasons.
    Why is commercial sensitivity a concern here? There seems to be a public interest, in both senses, in knowing how many vaccines are to be available each week. Do we voters not want to make judgements about governments' handling of this by knowing what's available to them?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087

    And make them pay for it.....£10k / player....to NHS.
    £1 million per player.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,360
    edited January 2021

    Why is commercial sensitivity a concern here? There seems to be a public interest, in both senses, in knowing how many vaccines are to be available each week. Do we voters not want to make judgements about governments' handling of this by knowing what's available to them?
    I think the vaccine companies might have something to say about that. They are doing different deals with different countries. I am fairly sure there is some sort of conditions on specifics.

    Also, the public really don't need to know there are 3 million arriving on the 25th Feb. It is irrelevant. What is relevant is how many are they doing now, next week. As long as there aren't millions of doses sitting in warehouses, that is all that matters...and that will come out fairly quickly if that is the case.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,583
    kinabalu said:

    Well speaking personally, the EU was - is - exactly my type. So score at least one for that view. It might be niche but it certainly exists.

    Submissives who like degradation are not THAT uncommon. Check FetLife.com. You might find someone else to call you names
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    HYUFD said:
    Does anyone care what this moron does?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690
    edited January 2021
    Going back to Trump - one reason why he is attacking Rudy https://twitter.com/davepell/status/1349603201087991809

    How much of the blame for the speech last Wednesday can he spread elsewhere.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Sandpit said:

    The problem of footballers misbehaving isn’t going to go away, unless there’s a sporting sanction that wakes up the club chairmen.

    Play the youth team or forfeit the match.
    Wouldn't a vaccination programme be more effective than yet more moralising?
  • Leon said:

    It felt like a mediocre European co-production. The accents, the script, the lot. Big budget but weirdly dull.

    I was surprised to see it was made by Netflix/BBC

    BTW Covid is now impacting TV and movie quality, methinks. Another victim of the virus?
    Worse telly and films might be partly due to the virus (even absent studio audiences can make a difference) but perhaps also to the likes of Netflix and Amazon taking talent from Hollywood and the BBC.
  • Mary_BattyMary_Batty Posts: 630
    edited January 2021

    I think the vaccine companies might have something to say about that. They are doing different deals with different countries. I am fairly sure there is some sort of conditions on specifics.

    Also, the public really don't need to know there are 3 million arriving on the 25th Feb. It is irrelevant. What is relevant is how many are they doing now, next week.
    ok, sure, but is that right? I get the fact that commerical sensitivity is a thing, but so is political openness. If we reach a point where availability becomes a limiting factor, won't the public have a right to know why things cannot be accelerated further?

    EDIT: your second paragraph appeared after I read your post so I didn't see it until after I sent my reply
  • Because it's worth it.
    Until it's not worth it.

    https://twitter.com/BrexileInBerlin/status/1349644530031714309?s=20
  • dr_spyn said:

    Mark Drakeford pushes for more powers.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-55649017

    Would West, Mid, and North Wales welcome more responsibilities passed to Cardiff?

    NO
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,780
    edited January 2021
    There seems to be a balance of opinion here along the lines that Trump has revealed himself as practising a modern variant of fascism, an opinion which I have long agreed with. Here's one of my comments reposted from a thread back in August 2020:

    "In terms of drawing parallels with Trump, you have to go back to 20th century politicians before you get even close. Mussolini seems to me to represent the closest parallel. Trump has absolutely no respect for democratic norms, and would clearly stop at absolutely nothing to remain in power given the opportunity. Economic nationalism, contempt for democracy, disrespect even for human life, creation of a parallel universe of political untruths, cult of the individual, it's all there. You're seeing 21st century Fascism unfold before your eyes in all but name."

    However, the parallels are even clearer now. To the above charge sheet you could add: the specific use of the big lie to actively undermine democratic norms (i.e. going a step beyond mere contempt for democracy), the creation of a theme of betrayal amongst his followers (i.e. the myth of the big steal, similar to the myth of politicians betrayal of Germany post WW1) the focused use of violence to try and overthrow legislative institutions (i.e. the storming of the Capitol to prevent a confirmatory vote, rather than just general violence cf. Charlottesville), and the tacit encouragement of physical violence against politicians who failed to do his bidding (resulting in "Hang Mike Pence".)

    To be honest though, I never thought that he would go as far as using political violence to try and overthrow the operation of the state, if only because it never seemed remotely possible that he would get away with it, so he wouldn't try.

    Even now, there seem to be a handful here who act as Trump's cheerleaders. That's appalling. They don't even have the excuse of those Republican politicians who still go along with Trump for the sake of their political careers.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,913
    edited January 2021

    Why is commercial sensitivity a concern here? There seems to be a public interest, in both senses, in knowing how many vaccines are to be available each week. Do we voters not want to make judgements about governments' handling of this by knowing what's available to them?
    AZN and Pfizer are providing vaccines to many countries. There may be competition for supplies. There's probably a clause in the contract that asks the government not to bleat out exactly how many they are getting and when.

    Anyway, these are probably only estimates, and they shouldn't be written in stone.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,360
    edited January 2021

    ok, sure, but is that right? I get the fact that commerical sensitivity is a thing, but so is political openness. If we reach a point where availability becomes a limiting factor, won't the public have a right to know why things cannot be accelerated further?
    Well it is more than a thing if your contract with Pfizer says you aren't allowed to make public the exact numbers for future deliveries, and if you break the T&Cs they have the rights to not deliver.

    The government have made it known there are 20 odd million doses on British soil that need Q&A and bottling. If vaccinations rates fail to speed up in the next couple of weeks, then there will be questions asked, have they been Q&A'ed (and if not, why not), have they been bottled (and if not, who not), and if they have been Q&A / bottled, why aren't they reaching vaccinations centres.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,681
    TOPPING said:

    That's exactly the nub. "Bored to death" says, for example, @RobD. Rather, it seems very much to me as a disinclination to accept the reality of Brexit as causing increasing problems which are a direct result of our own decisions.

    Nothing too dramatic - a fish guy can't export, a poster guy finds his EU customers dry up, some other person finds this or that more cumbersome so either pays to do it or stops doing it.

    But hardly the sunlit uplands and I fail to see any benefit whatsoever in return.
    Tampons? No gamechanger, sure, but not to be sniffed at.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I presumed she was already a member.

    She is certainly a member.
  • It isn't difficult to find the information though.

    10 days full days after the day you had the test unless any symptoms persist:
    https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/coronavirus-covid-19/self-isolation-and-treatment/how-long-to-self-isolate/
    It is not hard to find, however, it is a world where 40% of Americans cant find the correct election result. It would be better if the people at test and trace could communicate it!
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    Because it's worth it.
    Until it's not worth it.

    https://twitter.com/BrexileInBerlin/status/1349644530031714309?s=20

    The tears are contained in an onion that should water this sorrow.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Well it is more than a thing if your contract with Pfizer says you aren't allowed to make public the exact numbers for future deliveries, and if you break the T&Cs they have the rights to not deliver.

    The government have made it known there are 20 odd million doses on British soil that need Q&A and bottling. If vaccinations rates fail to speed up in the next couple of weeks, then there will be questions asked, have they been Q&A'ed (and if not, why not), have they been bottled (and if not, who not), and if they have been Q&A / bottled, why aren't they reaching vaccinations centres.
    We need a big number today Francis, 270k+ ––– or I will be back with my cricket analogies!
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    dr_spyn said:

    Mark Drakeford pushes for more powers.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-55649017

    Would West, Mid, and North Wales welcome more responsibilities passed to Cardiff?

    Labour have noticed that there is a culling of their Welsh MPs.

    Their plan is to increase the Senedd size by 20-30 pols.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-54089835

    It is much easier to argue for more jobs for the Bruvvers if more responsibilities.
This discussion has been closed.