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Former Welsh Secretary, Cheryl Gillam, dies after long illness – politicalbetting.com

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  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    rcs1000 said:

    We do know the answer to many of those questions, though.

    For a start, the people on the clinical trials are still being studied, and there doesn't seem to be any let up in protection for people on the Pfizer jab. (Bear in mind some of these people had their first shot 10 or 11 months ago now) If protection was going to fade quickly, we'd see it in the numbers from the trials

    Secondly, we know that the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine is not dented by either Kent or Saffer Covid. There is some diminution in efficacy for AZ for the SA variant (although that is likely overstated by the very limited trial), but the other vaccines seem to also be pretty good against it.

    Thirdly, we can look at Israel, They're a little ahead of us (and the AZ vaccine takes longer to cash its protective halo), but they are now essentially fully open to travel and their nightclubs are now booming. If there is a variant that can completely evade the vaccines, we'll see it soon enough there.
    Glad we're on the same page.
  • Okay, I’ve had a look at the SPI-M-O paper here (https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/975909/S1182_SPI-M-O_Summary_of_modelling_of_easing_roadmap_step_2_restrictions.pdf ) and I’m deeply unconvinced of some of their core assumptions.

    I get that I’m just some guy on the internet and they do this professionally, but their assumptions on vaccine efficacy against infection and against hospitalisation look rather divergent to what we already know or rather bewildering.
    As well as being massively variable between their three groups)

    I can’t see the second dose of the AZ vaccine having zero effect as most of them seem to assume. I don’t see two doses only reducing infection by 31% or even 63%.
    That vaccination rates will only average a total of 2.7 million doses per week between now and June and then drop to 2 million a week seems incredibly pessimistic.

    And yes, once again, I’m just some guy on the Internet, but I had very similar issues with their January modelling, which indeed proved to be based on incorrect and hugely overpessimistic assumptions.
    I don't have time to read this in detail, but at least they are asking some of the right questions, in particular how sensitive their analyses are to key variables, and checking whether the subsequent steps of the unlocking could be skipped.

    On vaccine effectiveness, their numbers aren't ridiculous, but the effect of 2nd doses is going to be important. The scant data from the SIREN student didn't see any additional effect from the 2nd dose, but it was very noisy. I can understand why they modelled it, though. The 31% number only refers to infection rates, and it's really open as to how much the various vaccines prevent asymptomatic infection and transmission.

    On vaccination rates, the dose rates (2.7m/2m per week) are what they were asked to model by the cabinet office. I hope this proves incorrect, but you can't fault them for modelling what they were asked.

    --AS
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,012
    The key question is how will voting intention change after normality is resumed....
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    ydoethur said:

    Not really. They said they wouldn’t oppose it but they weren’t very clear about what they would have done instead, beyond some waffle about an implausible bail in by other banks.

    But that didn’t matter. Because the problem was Labour’s all the way, so the fact the Tories would have done even worse was irrelevant.

    Just as had Smith and Brown been in charge on Black Wednesday things would have been a hundred times worse given they supported the government and were beyond furious when Britain withdrew from the ERM. Did that matter? No. And still doesn’t. Because they weren’t in charge.

    People don’t remember such things. They remember government cockups. The reason Labour did OK last year is because the government was cocking up more often than Boris Johnson in an editorial meeting of young female journalists. With the vaccine rollout, that’s changed. But given we’ve still got a government ultimately of third rate intellects, many of whom are actual criminals as well, you’d be brave to bet on that remaining the same way for three years.

    Starmer is probably doing as well as could be expected, right now. For a number of reasons, that is not ‘well.’ But much water will flow under many bridges before we make a final judgement.
    Starmer has positioned Labour to the cautious side of the government with respect to COVID. Very much the right place to be. He needs to switch sides now. Doesn't need to get too specific, but does need to realise that things have changed.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    felix said:

    Get over yourself. The situation is much improved and restrictions are and will continue to be lifted and lightened. We are though in the midst of a massive trial wrt to vaccine efficacy. We do not yet know how long the vaccine works for, the potential impact of new variants from a world largely unvaccinated and a disease still fairly rampant within 20 miles of Uk shores. Give the government a chance to get many more people jabbed.
    Living in Maryland, I can attest to the setbacks a too-rapid relaxation of social controls can have. As a state, the infection and hospitalization rates are creeping back up, despite 30%+ having already received one shot or more. The only two counties where this is not the case are Montgomery and Prince Georges', where the county executives overruled some of the statewide relaxations (e.g. for restaurants and gyms).

    I am with the liberals in being against ID papers and vaxports, and for unnecessary prolongation of social measures. But I really do think we need to be patient and cautious. I, for one, won't be getting antsy about some measures remaining in place until we've got close to herd immunity levels of vaccination+exposed, and have shown that incremental relaxations thus far are not reversing the direction of travel on hospitalizations.

    But I would like the government to make a strong statement now that it will remove all the control measures imposed to combat COVID once we are confident that we have reached normal flu levels of risk. There absolutely should be no surviving COVID curbs on our freedoms once COVID as a pandemic (not as a seasonal disease) is in the rear view mirror.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232
    I wonder if AZ will be either implicitly or explicitly reduced or cut out for females in G12/13
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    Maybe they thought they would be in a position to offer something early, and for some reason they're not and sticking to the original timetable. Could be anything from how other countries' stats are going to how discussions with other countries about vaccine passports are going. It might be down to just a few countries - I imagine we would want to be able to include countries such as Greece, Spain and Portugal, Turkey and France. Malta might be looking to be fully vaxxed but we can't all go there on holiday, it's smaller than the Isle of Wight. So I imagine this time last week the Travel Task Force's work was looking more advanced than it does today.
    The overriding problem with the sunshine holiday destinations is the accumulation of cases taking off again *AND* grindingly slow vaccination programs. France, Turkey, Croatia and Cyprus all look awful. Italy is just starting to turn the corner, but only because of lockdown. Cases in Greece have taken off again, and Spain is beginning to follow. Really the only two from the obvious suspects that are doing relatively well are Malta (too tiny, as you point out, to provide many getaways for anyone,) and Portugal, where cases are low and currently flatlining.

    Chances are an air bridge with Portugal would be eminently doable this Summer if only they could get a lot of people vaccinated very, very quickly but, alas, Portugal's vaccine stats are crawling along only slightly above the EU average. How long it will take until the other destinations are in any fit state to receive visitors, Lord alone knows.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392

    Ben Franklin's comments about liberty and safety are echoing down the centuries. Echoing. They are the first, last and final epitaph for what is being done and they should be carved on the walls of every public building in existence.

    Its surely becoming clear there were extremely good reasons why no government in history ever locked its citizens down no matter what befell them, one being those citizens would not bloody stand for it.

    Life without liberty is not life at all. It is merely existence. And now we are forced to queue up for dollops of what is our birthright that has been bought in blood, in return for all sorts of indignities and insults from those we have ceded power to.
    "Its surely becoming clear there were extremely good reasons why no government in history ever locked its citizens down no matter what befell them, one being those citizens would not bloody stand for it."

    I don't think that's true at all: there have been lots of lockdowns associated with outbreaks of infectious diseases in the past, including quite extensive ones around the Spanish flu.

    What is different is both the breadth (as in the number of places locking down) and the length (time-wise) of the restrictions.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    edited April 2021
    Wrong quote
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    edited April 2021
    Pulpstar said:

    I wonder if AZ will be either implicitly or explicitly reduced or cut out for females in G12/13

    I suspect it might be, particularly if the flow of J&J and Novavax is strong by then.

    In any case, once we get to oversupply status, I think everyone should be offered the choice of which vaccine they wish to receive.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786
    edited April 2021
    kinabalu said:

    On April 12th - that's next week - you can have a haircut and 6 pints down the pub. In either order. Just think about that for a second.
    I don't agree. Not in either order. If I had 6 pints down the pub first, the haircut would never happen. It would have to be the haircut first.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    They admitted: “There isn’t really a consensus yet” within the party, though they predicted Labour would probably end up supporting the certificates “but probably not make much of a song and dance about it”.

    To be fair to Starmer, the Telegraph has grossly maligned him by implying that he might have a firm view about anything. His verbatim quote was as follows:

    'Is that a fence I see over there? Quick, I must kneel on it!'
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    ydoethur said:

    Anyone who takes these tests is a masochist and/or a fool.

    But not nearly as big a fool as someone who refuses the vaccine for spurious reasons to fulfil their own conspiracy theories on the subject.
    I have no conspiracy theories and have been consistent in saying vaccines work. Check my posts.Take them if you want.

    I simply don't want to play Johnson's game, I don't want to play SAGE's game, and its quite clear today that there is a game and that game is control.

    I would far rather be an outcast than sign up to what is morphing slowly but recognisably into a Chinese style social credit system.

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108

    May does not mean will.

    Do you have a Number Ten press release that says Monday's conference "will" include an announcement on travel?

    5 April arrives and the conference is exactly as had been said. It "may" have contained an announcement, but that also means it "may not". In this instance the latter was correct, exactly as was said.

    There was no advance trailing other than it "may" have announcement. May doesn't mean "will". Reports in the press are not "will" either. The press will happily take a "may" and turn it into a "will" but unless the statement was "will" that's just the press playing silly buggers as they have a tendency to do. They will always report things in the most dramatic way possible, the press never lead with "it all depends, wait and see" because that doesn't generate clicks.
    You are really beyond all hope if you think the PM expected to get away with not saying anything, after so much pre-trailing, on the basis of may versus will.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    TimT said:

    I suspect it might be, particularly if the flow of J&J and Novavax is strong by then.

    In any case, once we get to oversupply status, I think everyone should be offered the choice of which vaccine they wish to receive.
    J&J might have the same issue, a case has already been noted in the US aiui. Novavax is the UK's best way out of this. It's our highest efficacy vaccine and has little to no dilution against any variant for serious disease and only very slight dilution against mild symptoms.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    rcs1000 said:

    "Its surely becoming clear there were extremely good reasons why no government in history ever locked its citizens down no matter what befell them, one being those citizens would not bloody stand for it."

    I don't think that's true at all: there have been lots of lockdowns associated with outbreaks of infectious diseases in the past, including quite extensive ones around the Spanish flu.

    What is different is both the breadth (as in the number of places locking down) and the length (time-wise) of the restrictions.
    Of course sick people have been quarantined. But people who aren;t sick? never. To my knowledge.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    I don't agree. Not in either order. If I had 6 pints down the pub first, the haircut would never happen. It would have to be the haircut first.
    Indeed, hence the haircut booked for 9am!
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    rcs1000 said:

    We do know the answer to many of those questions, though.

    For a start, the people on the clinical trials are still being studied, and there doesn't seem to be any let up in protection for people on the Pfizer jab. (Bear in mind some of these people had their first shot 10 or 11 months ago now) If protection was going to fade quickly, we'd see it in the numbers from the trials

    Secondly, we know that the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine is not dented by either Kent or Saffer Covid. There is some diminution in efficacy for AZ for the SA variant (although that is likely overstated by the very limited trial), but the other vaccines seem to also be pretty good against it.

    Thirdly, we can look at Israel, They're a little ahead of us (and the AZ vaccine takes longer to cash its protective halo), but they are now essentially fully open to travel and their nightclubs are now booming. If there is a variant that can completely evade the vaccines, we'll see it soon enough there.
    While I agree with everything, it is worth remembering with Israel comparisons that their booming nightclubs (and bars etc) are with a compulsory vaxport scheme.

    Since I won't support a compulsory vaxport scheme we need to do better even than Israel.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Cyclefree said:

    If vaccines work - and the evidence is that they do - we do not need existing restrictions replaced by new ones. If they don't work, vaccine ID cards are pointless. The government is not going to increase the uptake of vaccinations if it still means restrictions at the end of it. If anything they are undermining it.

    Whitty and co said right at the start that vaccines are our way out of this. We now have them. We have a good vaccination programme. Once vaccinated there really is no basis for continuing restrictions. And it not libertarian or selfish to say so. The whole point of vaccination is to return to normality because Covid is not going to be eliminated.

    The government, as another poster said a few days ago, is trying to hold us hostage to enforce compliance with yet more restrictions imposed for no very good reason.
    And what does that say about them? what does that say about the people they are? When was the last British government to ever do something like that to its citizens? Or even contemplate doing it?

    And yet still they are defended on here. Foursquare and by many people.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    While I agree with everything, it is worth remembering with Israel comparisons that their booming nightclubs (and bars etc) are with a compulsory vaxport scheme.

    Since I won't support a compulsory vaxport scheme we need to do better even than Israel.
    We will, Israel is stuck at about 80% of the adult population, the UK will easily get past that.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    TimT said:

    Living in Maryland, I can attest to the setbacks a too-rapid relaxation of social controls can have. As a state, the infection and hospitalization rates are creeping back up, despite 30%+ having already received one shot or more. The only two counties where this is not the case are Montgomery and Prince Georges', where the county executives overruled some of the statewide relaxations (e.g. for restaurants and gyms).

    I am with the liberals in being against ID papers and vaxports, and for unnecessary prolongation of social measures. But I really do think we need to be patient and cautious. I, for one, won't be getting antsy about some measures remaining in place until we've got close to herd immunity levels of vaccination+exposed, and have shown that incremental relaxations thus far are not reversing the direction of travel on hospitalizations.

    But I would like the government to make a strong statement now that it will remove all the control measures imposed to combat COVID once we are confident that we have reached normal flu levels of risk. There absolutely should be no surviving COVID curbs on our freedoms once COVID as a pandemic (not as a seasonal disease) is in the rear view mirror.
    In Seattle WA, county seat of Martin Luther King County (it's official, look it up!) we've been in Phase 3 for a few weeks, allow restaurants, gyms & similar to open at about half-capacity, and public schools to begin resuming some in-person classes for lower grades.

    However, due to recent rise in COVID cases, it's possible even likely that King Co will go back to Phase 2 which means no sit-down restaurant service or gyms, and very limited in coffeehouses (big deal in Seattle!) and probably no or very few students in classrooms.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    kinabalu said:

    On April 12th - that's next week - you can have a haircut and 6 pints down the pub. In either order. Just think about that for a second.
    Where are these pubs offering haircuts ?
    @Cyclfree ?
  • IanB2 said:

    You are really beyond all hope if you think the PM expected to get away with not saying anything, after so much pre-trailing, on the basis of may versus will.
    When are you expecting a downturn in the polls and his ratings
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    Pulpstar said:

    I wonder if AZ will be either implicitly or explicitly reduced or cut out for females in G12/13

    I was rather assuming that, on the assumption Moderna and Novavax are available from May, AZ would be aimed at solely second doses for the first doses already given from late April onwards (which would naturally exclude younger demographics).

    Solely on the logistics efficiency: do as many as possible of the Phase 2 lot with the shorter-interval vaccines when supply is plentiful and the double-doses complete far faster. AZ works best with a minimum 8 week interval; Moderna and Novavax do very well with 3-4 weeks.

    Should supply ramp up as we hope, you’d want to shift to the short-interval vaccines ASAP.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    They admitted: “There isn’t really a consensus yet” within the party, though they predicted Labour would probably end up supporting the certificates “but probably not make much of a song and dance about it”.

    To be fair to Starmer, the Telegraph has grossly maligned him by implying that he might have a firm view about anything. His verbatim quote was as follows:

    'Is that a fence I see over there? Quick, I must kneel on it!'
    He took over from Jeremy Corbyn.

    I know it's almost unbelievable, but it's true. Nothing Starmer might do makes him anything other than a huge upgrade.

    I'm not suggesting he deserves any votes of course. On the other hand a great number of people either were having an obscure joke, or found themselves genuinely bewildered at the last GE. When you've woken up in the morning and realised that you voted for Corbyn, then surely it's easy steps back to reality. Perhaps Starmer can offer that.

    Barbs aside he's clearly one of the few capable people Labour have. I'm sure he fears the internal fights much more than the external ones.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786
    MaxPB said:

    Indeed, hence the haircut booked for 9am!
    Good stuff; you'll be queuing for the pub garden before it opens then.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559

    Of course sick people have been quarantined. But people who aren;t sick? never. To my knowledge.
    Ever hear of Mary Mallon aka "Typhoid Mary"?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Mallon
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729

    And what does that say about them? what does that say about the people they are? When was the last British government to ever do something like that to its citizens? Or even contemplate doing it?

    And yet still they are defended on here. Foursquare and by many people.
    Some posters, not many. And even fewer ‘foursquare’.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508
    tlg86 said:

    Thanks for looking at this, PB benefits from people prepared to take time to actually look at the detail (I'm too lazy most of the time!).
    A very wise economist once said years ago that the more significant an economic theory, the more unrealistic the assumptions usually are.

    That's a very good rule for spreadsheet models too.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    In Seattle WA, county seat of Martin Luther King County (it's official, look it up!) we've been in Phase 3 for a few weeks, allow restaurants, gyms & similar to open at about half-capacity, and public schools to begin resuming some in-person classes for lower grades.

    However, due to recent rise in COVID cases, it's possible even likely that King Co will go back to Phase 2 which means no sit-down restaurant service or gyms, and very limited in coffeehouses (big deal in Seattle!) and probably no or very few students in classrooms.
    Hogan removed all COVID-related restrictions on in-restaurant capacity but imposed a new rule on social distancing inside. I think the effect is essentially a 50% rule. Schools have been back, but I do not know at what capacity. Starbucks is sticking with its corporate decision for MD to remain drive through and pick up only, no in-house.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    edited April 2021

    Ben Franklin's comments about liberty and safety are echoing down the centuries. Echoing. They are the first, last and final epitaph for what is being done and they should be carved on the walls of every public building in existence.

    Its surely becoming clear there were extremely good reasons why no government in history ever locked its citizens down no matter what befell them, one being those citizens would not bloody stand for it.

    Life without liberty is not life at all. It is merely existence. And now we are forced to queue up for dollops of what is our birthright that has been bought in blood, in return for all sorts of indignities and insults from those we have ceded power to.
    You're absolutely right - no Founding Father of the United States of America would ever quarantine healthy people to keep them safe from infectious disease. Only a freedom-hating fascist would do that. Except, of course, for... a little-known fellow called George Washington:

    In the aftermath of the battles of Lexington and Concord, Washington’s Continental Army had set up camp across the Charles River from the stricken city. To the dismay of many patriots seeking refuge from the British, the general prohibited anyone from Boston from entering the military zone. “Every precaution must be used to prevent its spreading,” he sternly warned one of his subordinates about the virus. To John Hancock, the president of the Continental Congress, Washington vowed to “continue the utmost Vigilance against this most dangerous enemy.”

    By immediately isolating anyone suspected of infection and limiting outside contact, Washington “prevented a disastrous epidemic among the Continental troops,” historian Ann Becker says. In March 1776, when the British withdrew from Boston, Washington even specified that only soldiers who had suffered from smallpox be allowed into the city and its surroundings.

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/george-washington-beat-smallpox-epidemic-with-controversial-inoculations
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    edited April 2021

    I have no conspiracy theories and have been consistent in saying vaccines work. Check my posts.Take them if you want.

    I simply don't want to play Johnson's game, I don't want to play SAGE's game, and its quite clear today that there is a game and that game is control.

    I would far rather be an outcast than sign up to what is morphing slowly but recognisably into a Chinese style social credit system.

    If there is a conspiracy to keep us locked up (which by the way apart from certain nutters, there isn’t) you are absolutely playing their game by refusing to do the one thing that would kneecap that conspiracy and make it impossible.

    And that makes you a fool, as well as on your own admission, an outcast.

    Edit - incidentally, I didn’t accuse you of saying vaccines don’t work. I said you’re not taking it for spurious reasons, which remark your own post reveals to be amply justified.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,604
    justin124 said:

    But he is already an MP!
    Oops! 🥺
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    TimT said:

    I accuse you of a hate thought crime against us A-ves
    Fuckin' A(ers)!
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    I was rather assuming that, on the assumption Moderna and Novavax are available from May, AZ would be aimed at solely second doses for the first doses already given from late April onwards (which would naturally exclude younger demographics).

    Solely on the logistics efficiency: do as many as possible of the Phase 2 lot with the shorter-interval vaccines when supply is plentiful and the double-doses complete far faster. AZ works best with a minimum 8 week interval; Moderna and Novavax do very well with 3-4 weeks.

    Should supply ramp up as we hope, you’d want to shift to the short-interval vaccines ASAP.
    I think that's what we're aiming to do, the strategy makes sense and the deliveries for Moderna and Novavax will match up for it too. It doesn't make sense to do any new AZ doses from May onwards as the necessary gap is too long.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    Good stuff; you'll be queuing for the pub garden before it opens then.
    A day of work for me first, though I may tale the laptop down to there after lunch if the weather is any good.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    edited April 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    "Its surely becoming clear there were extremely good reasons why no government in history ever locked its citizens down no matter what befell them, one being those citizens would not bloody stand for it."

    I don't think that's true at all: there have been lots of lockdowns associated with outbreaks of infectious diseases in the past, including quite extensive ones around the Spanish flu.

    What is different is both the breadth (as in the number of places locking down) and the length (time-wise) of the restrictions.
    The first thing that happened when plague broke out in Tudor England was that taverns and theatres were shut and anyone displaying symptoms was locked in their own house. That held good until the last plague outbreak, which I think was in 1688 (although the last widespread outbreak was 1664-66).
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    Fishing said:

    A very wise economist once said years ago that the more significant an economic theory, the more unrealistic the assumptions usually are.

    That's a very good rule for spreadsheet models too.
    I'd rather like to return to education and study economics. Unfortunately the subject is just nonsense really. It's like alchemy.

    If anyone knows of any non-insane institutions economically then I'm all ears.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392
    MaxPB said:

    J&J might have the same issue, a case has already been noted in the US aiui. Novavax is the UK's best way out of this. It's our highest efficacy vaccine and has little to no dilution against any variant for serious disease and only very slight dilution against mild symptoms.
    Is it higher efficacy than Pfizer? The long-term data on PFE including the SA variant that came out last week was very encouraging.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508
    Omnium said:

    I'd rather like to return to education and study economics. Unfortunately the subject is just nonsense really. It's like alchemy.

    If anyone knows of any non-insane institutions economically then I'm all ears.
    I think that's a bit of a sweeping statement. Some parts of economics are nonsense, but some are fairly rigorous and robust. It just depends which particular part you're interested in.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    edited April 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    We do know the answer to many of those questions, though.

    For a start, the people on the clinical trials are still being studied, and there doesn't seem to be any let up in protection for people on the Pfizer jab. (Bear in mind some of these people had their first shot 10 or 11 months ago now) If protection was going to fade quickly, we'd see it in the numbers from the trials

    Secondly, we know that the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine is not dented by either Kent or Saffer Covid. There is some diminution in efficacy for AZ for the SA variant (although that is likely overstated by the very limited trial), but the other vaccines seem to also be pretty good against it.

    Thirdly, we can look at Israel, They're a little ahead of us (and the AZ vaccine takes longer to cash its protective halo), but they are now essentially fully open to travel and their nightclubs are now booming. If there is a variant that can completely evade the vaccines, we'll see it soon enough there.
    *** ALERT. The following rambling post contains doomporn

    I don’t think anyone can know what is going to happen.

    Why was the cautious Downing Street briefing predicting a third wave to hit UK? And why is that even deemed controversial? I haven’t come here to knock them, because we can’t just nod when we agree with what they say, sit on our nodding when we don’t, unless Unless Science itself does help with problems but not with 100% record to make us know for sure what happens. I’m not as convinced as I had become the vaccines are going to bring this to an end anytime soon and the roadmap is leading to any end to COVID spikes and lockdowns. It all died back last year without vaccines.

    The problems on the next phase I think is, 2nd and 3rd time of getting covid, where you can feel more sick than the other time and maybe even more chance of long covid the second and third time of getting sick with it, which, crucially, brings with it the issue of work age population not being able to work. The economic disaster bit of the pandemic could be yet to come.

    My guess now is we are going into a lull between lockdown, also pandemic enters new phase where we try to live with it as normal as possible, yet the long covid casualties start mounting up into economic damage so all the countries go broke.
  • GideonWiseGideonWise Posts: 1,123
    Cyclefree said:

    If vaccines work - and the evidence is that they do - we do not need existing restrictions replaced by new ones. If they don't work, vaccine ID cards are pointless. The government is not going to increase the uptake of vaccinations if it still means restrictions at the end of it. If anything they are undermining it.

    Whitty and co said right at the start that vaccines are our way out of this. We now have them. We have a good vaccination programme. Once vaccinated there really is no basis for continuing restrictions. And it not libertarian or selfish to say so. The whole point of vaccination is to return to normality because Covid is not going to be eliminated.

    The government, as another poster said a few days ago, is trying to hold us hostage to enforce compliance with yet more restrictions imposed for no very good reason.
    Vaccines work for some but not all. More importantly, a huge block of the population has yet to be vaccinated including pregnant women (effectively untreatable if they fall ill) and those who are immunosuppresed. Oh and the younger cohorts. A 25 year old with long Covid, with prognosis currently unknown, is a huge loss to society. Hundreds of thousands of them is a disaster. But I guess once the older groups have been vaccinated then it's time to pick up the baton for liberty again.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    rcs1000 said:

    Is it higher efficacy than Pfizer? The long-term data on PFE including the SA variant that came out last week was very encouraging.
    The same, 97% for Novavax and 95% for Pfizer against original COVID

    Novavax makes sense for the UK as it has a domestic manufacturing and supply chain. We're not beholden to any country for it which is hugely important as vaccine wars rage all over the world.

    Novavax has proven 65% efficacy against mild symptoms for the SA variant in a large trial and 100% against severe symptoms and hospitalisation.

    Once again, we've got all of the doom mongers putting the emphasis on case numbers and trying to shove those into hospitalisations despite all of the evidence that our vaccines are all very efficacious wrt hospitalisation.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Nigelb said:

    Some posters, not many. And even fewer ‘foursquare’.
    Your kidding. On PB. Right up until people's own red lines were in danger there was near universal approval of every govt measure restricting freedoms.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    Omnium said:

    I'd rather like to return to education and study economics. Unfortunately the subject is just nonsense really. It's like alchemy.

    If anyone knows of any non-insane institutions economically then I'm all ears.
    Through my employer I recently did a course on economic regulation, which was quite interesting (setting optimum prices in monopoly industries etc.), which was quite interesting. But I still found myself wanting to know more about the politics of it all!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Do we have solid data on "long Covid"?
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,928
    ydoethur said:

    The first thing that happened when plague broke out in Tudor England was that taverns and theatres were shut and anyone displaying symptoms was locked in their own house. That held good until the last plague outbreak, which I think was in 1688 (although the last widespread outbreak was 1664-66).
    One can only wonder what the Government response to plague today would be.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546

    One can only wonder what the Government response to plague today would be.
    Interesting to note I was very wrong on the date of the last outbreak of plague. There was a minor outbreak in Suffolk between 1906 and 1918.

    http://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC1034015&blobtype=pdf

    The measures taken were basically similar, although there was an energetic pest control programme as part of it.
  • GideonWiseGideonWise Posts: 1,123
    TOPPING said:

    Do we have solid data on "long Covid"?

    What do you mean by 'solid data'?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    gealbhan said:

    *** ALERT. The following rambling post contains doomporn

    I don’t think anyone can know what is going to happen.

    Why was the cautious Downing Street briefing predicting a third wave to hit UK? And why is that even deemed controversial? I haven’t come here to knock them, because we can’t just nod when we agree with what they say, sit on our nodding when we don’t, unless Unless Science itself does help with problems but not with 100% record to make us know for sure what happens. I’m not as convinced as I had become the vaccines are going to bring this to an end anytime soon and the roadmap is leading to any end to COVID spikes and lockdowns. It all died back last year without vaccines.

    The problems on the next phase I think is, 2nd and 3rd time of getting covid, where you can feel more sick than the other time and maybe even more chance of long covid the second and third time of getting sick with it, which, crucially, brings with it the issue of work age population not being able to work. The economic disaster bit of the pandemic could be yet to come.

    My guess now is we are going into a lull between lockdown, also pandemic enters new phase where we try to live with it as normal as possible, yet the long covid casualties start mounting up into economic damage so all the countries go broke.
    You forgot to mention the asteroid.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    TOPPING said:

    Do we have solid data on "long Covid"?

    I think there is a lot still unknown about long COVID. Personally, I am always suspicious of broad spectrum syndromes being a real thing, rather than a collection of things. That said, long COVID is real enough for NIH to have launched a major study:

    https://www.nih.gov/about-nih/who-we-are/nih-director/statements/nih-launches-new-initiative-study-long-covid

    It's scope is indicative of what is not currently known:

    "Some of the initial underlying questions that this initiative hopes to answer are:

    - What does the spectrum of recovery from SARS-CoV-2 infection look like across the population?
    - How many people continue to have symptoms of COVID-19, or even develop new symptoms, after acute SARS-CoV-2 infection?
    - What is the underlying biological cause of these prolonged symptoms?
    - What makes some people vulnerable to this but not others?
    - Does SARS-CoV-2 infection trigger changes in the body that increase the risk of other conditions, such as chronic heart or brain disorders?"
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546

    What do you mean by 'solid data'?
    On that subject, I hope you and Mrs Wise are improving. I haven’t crossed paths with you for a while but I seem to remember it was a slow process.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508
    edited April 2021
    tlg86 said:

    Through my employer I recently did a course on economic regulation, which was quite interesting (setting optimum prices in monopoly industries etc.), which was quite interesting. But I still found myself wanting to know more about the politics of it all!
    That's one of the more robust areas of microeconomics. Some of it is pretty mind-bending unless you have a lot of good maths though - check out the optimal methodology for pricing in an electricity or telecoms network if you want to see what I mean.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    TOPPING said:

    Do we have solid data on "long Covid"?

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/bulletins/prevalenceofongoingsymptomsfollowingcoronaviruscovid19infectionintheuk/1april2021

    I haven't mentioned this before, but I might be a sufferer. The reason is that I've been suffering from some nasty eczema and tinnitus for about four months. It might be that these are related to stress.

    What makes me think that it could be COVID is that my sister has also developed tinnitus and is suffering from alopecia. Neither of us have tested positive for COVID - indeed, I've never been tested as I've never had the regular symptoms - but it is interesting that we've both developed these conditions around the same time.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    ydoethur said:

    Interesting to note I was very wrong on the date of the last outbreak of plague. There was a minor outbreak in Suffolk between 1906 and 1918.

    http://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC1034015&blobtype=pdf

    The measures taken were basically similar, although there was an energetic pest control programme as part of it.
    There are cases of plague every year in the US.

    https://www.cdc.gov/plague/maps/index.html
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    TimT said:

    I think there is a lot still unknown about long COVID. Personally, I am always suspicious of broad spectrum syndromes being a real thing, rather than a collection of things. That said, long COVID is real enough for NIH to have launched a major study:

    https://www.nih.gov/about-nih/who-we-are/nih-director/statements/nih-launches-new-initiative-study-long-covid

    It's scope is indicative of what is not currently known:

    "Some of the initial underlying questions that this initiative hopes to answer are:

    - What does the spectrum of recovery from SARS-CoV-2 infection look like across the population?
    - How many people continue to have symptoms of COVID-19, or even develop new symptoms, after acute SARS-CoV-2 infection?
    - What is the underlying biological cause of these prolonged symptoms?
    - What makes some people vulnerable to this but not others?
    - Does SARS-CoV-2 infection trigger changes in the body that increase the risk of other conditions, such as chronic heart or brain disorders?"
    Thanks. Will be interesting to see what the conclusions are.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    tlg86 said:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/bulletins/prevalenceofongoingsymptomsfollowingcoronaviruscovid19infectionintheuk/1april2021

    I haven't mentioned this before, but I might be a sufferer. The reason is that I've been suffering from some nasty eczema and tinnitus for about four months. It might be that these are related to stress.

    What makes me think that it could be COVID is that my sister has also developed tinnitus and is suffering from alopecia. Neither of us have tested positive for COVID - indeed, I've never been tested as I've never had the regular symptoms - but it is interesting that we've both developed these conditions around the same time.
    Thanks and wow hope things clear up for you both.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    TimT said:

    There are cases of plague every year in the US.

    https://www.cdc.gov/plague/maps/index.html
    About 14% CFR IIRC.

    But again, with modern hygiene, modern housing and modern antibiotics, it’s a minor issue, even though it’s clearly still endemic in American wildlife.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    TOPPING said:

    Thanks and wow hope things clear up for you both.
    Cheers, slowly but surely my eczema is receding, just must not itch. Tinnitus comes and goes, but doesn't annoy me.

    My sister is taking the Bobby Charlton approach to the alopecia!
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    tlg86 said:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/bulletins/prevalenceofongoingsymptomsfollowingcoronaviruscovid19infectionintheuk/1april2021

    I haven't mentioned this before, but I might be a sufferer. The reason is that I've been suffering from some nasty eczema and tinnitus for about four months. It might be that these are related to stress.

    What makes me think that it could be COVID is that my sister has also developed tinnitus and is suffering from alopecia. Neither of us have tested positive for COVID - indeed, I've never been tested as I've never had the regular symptoms - but it is interesting that we've both developed these conditions around the same time.
    Sorry to hear that. Can you not be tested for covid antibodies to at least see if you have had covid?
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536

    Sorry to hear that. Can you not be tested for covid antibodies to at least see if you have had covid?
    My sister's now had her first jab because of her diabetes. I could I suppose, but I don't really care to be honest.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,311
    Omnium said:

    He took over from Jeremy Corbyn.

    I know it's almost unbelievable, but it's true. Nothing Starmer might do makes him anything other than a huge upgrade.

    I'm not suggesting he deserves any votes of course. On the other hand a great number of people either were having an obscure joke, or found themselves genuinely bewildered at the last GE. When you've woken up in the morning and realised that you voted for Corbyn, then surely it's easy steps back to reality. Perhaps Starmer can offer that.

    Barbs aside he's clearly one of the few capable people Labour have. I'm sure he fears the internal fights much more than the external ones.
    I have no idea whether Starmer can ever surpass mediocrity.

    Many on this site laugh hysterically at Starmer's pathetic ineptitude compared to their hero Boris Johnson, and his unassailable popularity amongst the great unwashed. They may be more astute than I am, because Johnson comes across to me as being incredibly casual and wholly unsuited to high office (lucky yes, but serious, absolutely not).

    Now since the vaccination came on stream, the only issue of any interest to the national mainstream media has been vaccination progress statistics (no other metrics - or news- matters). On listening to the BBC R2 news broadcasts. I now try to pre-empt the presenter by beating him or her to the first words of the bulletin. So I start with a, "Boris Johnson..." I am correct around 50% of the time.

    Starmer may be dreadful, that remains to be seen, but he hardly gets a word in. During my almost 60 years, I have not come across a politician that dominates the media narrative like Johnson. It is predominantly positive too, and even when he gets it wrong, his errors are hoovered up (the Cenotaph effect). Not even Mrs Thatch. could manage that.
  • GideonWiseGideonWise Posts: 1,123
    edited April 2021
    ydoethur said:

    On that subject, I hope you and Mrs Wise are improving. I haven’t crossed paths with you for a while but I seem to remember it was a slow process.
    My wife, I don't think has fully recovered yet but is probably 90% there. I am 100% and it took me about 6 months to get over it physically. Longer mentally.

    I think you are a teacher? My wife resigned from her teaching career of 10+ years last June. After the acute phase of the illness, she went back for a few keeping in touch days and observed her school's Covid-safe plan in action. Needless to say they had a major outbreak in September and the school closed for a few weeks.



  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    tlg86 said:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/bulletins/prevalenceofongoingsymptomsfollowingcoronaviruscovid19infectionintheuk/1april2021

    I haven't mentioned this before, but I might be a sufferer. The reason is that I've been suffering from some nasty eczema and tinnitus for about four months. It might be that these are related to stress.

    What makes me think that it could be COVID is that my sister has also developed tinnitus and is suffering from alopecia. Neither of us have tested positive for COVID - indeed, I've never been tested as I've never had the regular symptoms - but it is interesting that we've both developed these conditions around the same time.
    Both can also be related to regular high alcohol consumption, tbf
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    ydoethur said:

    The first thing that happened when plague broke out in Tudor England was that taverns and theatres were shut and anyone displaying symptoms was locked in their own house. That held good until the last plague outbreak, which I think was in 1688 (although the last widespread outbreak was 1664-66).
    That’s a long time to be locked in your house, to be sure.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546

    My wife, I don't think has fully recovered yet but is probably 90% there. I am 100% and it took me about 6 months to get over it physically. Longer mentally.

    I think you are a teacher? My wife resigned from her teaching career of 10+ years last June. After the acute phase of the illness, she went back for a few keeping in touch days and observed her school's Covid-safe plan in action. Needless to say they had a major outbreak in September and the school closed for a few weeks.
    Glad to hear you’re recovered, hope Mrs Wise continues to make progress.

    I am a teacher, and your wife is well out of education at the moment, it’s a total shitshow.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    IanB2 said:

    Both can also be related to regular high alcohol consumption, tbf
    Definitely not the case with me! I reckon I last drank alcohol on 24 December 2019. My sister, to be fair, is another matter!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    IanB2 said:

    That’s a long time to be locked in your house, to be sure.
    Although if it was Gavin Williamson it would still be too short a time.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    IanB2 said:

    You are really beyond all hope if you think the PM expected to get away with not saying anything, after so much pre-trailing, on the basis of may versus will.
    May does not mean will and you are really beyond all hope if you take what the press reports as the gospel truth.

    The press being inaccurate is not novel.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    Of course sick people have been quarantined. But people who aren;t sick? never. To my knowledge.
    The origin of the term “quarantine” was from ships that came from infected ports being required to sit at anchor for forty days regardless of whether anyone appeared sick.

    It’s literally from the origin of the term.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Nigelb said:

    Where are these pubs offering haircuts ?
    @Cyclfree ?

    Vaccines work for some but not all. More importantly, a huge block of the population has yet to be vaccinated including pregnant women (effectively untreatable if they fall ill) and those who are immunosuppresed. Oh and the younger cohorts. A 25 year old with long Covid, with prognosis currently unknown, is a huge loss to society. Hundreds of thousands of them is a disaster. But I guess once the older groups have been vaccinated then it's time to pick up the baton for liberty again.
    I am in the side of the young in this debate. The vaccination programme needs to be ramped up so that they are all vaccinated ASAP. But these vaccination passports discriminate against the young. All my children are very against them. They also discriminate against those who cannot have vaccines - another reason why they are a bad idea.

    The only way out is to vaccinate all the population that can be so as to protect those who cannot be.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    Floater said:
    Never mind Paris, what an utter mess that Daily Mail website is!
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108

    May does not mean will and you are really beyond all hope if you take what the press reports as the gospel truth.

    The press being inaccurate is not novel.
    The irony is that your defence rests upon the assumption that he is a political imbecile.

    Anyone with experience of high office would understand the consequences of announcing weeks in advance that on April 5 you may be able to say more about travel restrictions (or permissions) and then briefing the press a day or two beforehand that this is what you intend to do.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    Cyclefree said:

    I am in the side of the young in this debate. The vaccination programme needs to be ramped up so that they are all vaccinated ASAP. But these vaccination passports discriminate against the young. All my children are very against them. They also discriminate against those who cannot have vaccines - another reason why they are a bad idea.

    The only way out is to vaccinate all the population that can be so as to protect those who cannot be.

    The problem is that if they are honest and say "We want the ability to monitor whoever we like at any time" then it is not exactly a vote-winning policy.

    I would not be surprised if many of the public said "Oh that's a great idea" expecting such a policy would only be applied to those that they themselves do not like...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    Cyclefree said:

    I am in the side of the young in this debate. The vaccination programme needs to be ramped up so that they are all vaccinated ASAP. But these vaccination passports discriminate against the young. All my children are very against them. They also discriminate against those who cannot have vaccines - another reason why they are a bad idea.

    The only way out is to vaccinate all the population that can be so as to protect those who cannot be.
    Happily, outside of a few naysayers and religious nutcases, we're heading in that direction. Hence my own switch of position from being agnostic on vaccine passports to being against. I could just about understand the nudge of a time limited scheme if we were heading for 70-80% as we first thought or even 60% in the worst case scenario. We're looking at 95% of adults by the end of June with a first dose and 95% with both doses by the end of August.

    In September AZ are set to deliver the variant buster as are Novavax. Both of those will be made in the UK.

    Vaccines, not restrictions on freedom, are the way out of this. There are too many politicians and officials who realise that once the vaccines have reached 80%+ of the population they will lose all of their COVID powers and people will no longer be as compliant with these rules as they are now. That's why they are pushing these new dodgy models and talking about the vaccine passport. It's Gove and Hancock that are behind all of this.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,604
    ydoethur said:

    Interesting to note I was very wrong on the date of the last outbreak of plague. There was a minor outbreak in Suffolk between 1906 and 1918.

    http://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC1034015&blobtype=pdf

    The measures taken were basically similar, although there was an energetic pest control programme as part of it.
    My grandmother, Edith Godward, was the sister of Annie Goodall, and is listed in the sources. I remember her telling me about it, and that the outbreak was caused by black rats infecting the pond that was their water supply. She also told me that her mother and sister were the last people in England killed by the plague, which, having read the article, was not strictly true.
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,596
    IanB2 said:

    The irony is that your defence rests upon the assumption that he is a political imbecile.

    Anyone with experience of high office would understand the consequences of announcing weeks in advance that on April 5 you may be able to say more about travel restrictions (or permissions) and then briefing the press a day or two beforehand that this is what you intend to do.
    The consequence being mainly that IanB, who hates him anyway, has simply found another reason to hate him.
  • GideonWiseGideonWise Posts: 1,123
    Cyclefree said:

    I am in the side of the young in this debate. The vaccination programme needs to be ramped up so that they are all vaccinated ASAP. But these vaccination passports discriminate against the young. All my children are very against them. They also discriminate against those who cannot have vaccines - another reason why they are a bad idea.

    The only way out is to vaccinate all the population that can be so as to protect those who cannot be.
    Great we agree. So let's be patient until everyone who can has been vaccinated.

    You're a legal mind I believe? What does the law say or typically do, about what an economist might call a 'negative externality'? I.e. something that you do that has a negative effect on someone else, effectively making you overconsume it because it's not part of your (self-interested) utility function.

    An economist might suggest a 'Pigovian tax' which effectively internalises the negative outcome within your utility function, altering consumption.

    So, what's the intersection, if there is one, between a market correction such as a Pigovian tax, liberty, the law and an infectious disease such as Covid-19?

  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    The consequence being mainly that IanB, who hates him anyway, has simply found another reason to hate him.
    Now, now, be fair - Ian would never have done something like that during his time as Prime Minister.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,215
    MaxPB said:

    Happily, outside of a few naysayers and religious nutcases, we're heading in that direction. Hence my own switch of position from being agnostic on vaccine passports to being against. I could just about understand the nudge of a time limited scheme if we were heading for 70-80% as we first thought or even 60% in the worst case scenario. We're looking at 95% of adults by the end of June with a first dose and 95% with both doses by the end of August.

    In September AZ are set to deliver the variant buster as are Novavax. Both of those will be made in the UK.

    Vaccines, not restrictions on freedom, are the way out of this. There are too many politicians and officials who realise that once the vaccines have reached 80%+ of the population they will lose all of their COVID powers and people will no longer be as compliant with these rules as they are now. That's why they are pushing these new dodgy models and talking about the vaccine passport. It's Gove and Hancock that are behind all of this.
    A thought occurs....

    If we go for just the vaccines and no restrictions in June, within a short time, COVID will pass through the unvaccinated groups like a chainsaw through cheese.

    Given what we know about the virus, and who the unvaccinated groups are currently, this will mean that the resulting damage, while limited, will be very largely among particular groups....

    Which according to our old friend "institutional racism" - defined as policies whose outcome is racially differential, no matter what the intent - will make such a policy... institutionally racist.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    kinabalu said:

    But if you're saying Sturgeon is not keen for a quick referendum because she knows it will be another No - which kills Sindy for the foreseeable future - this would be by your own logic the correct approach for someone truly committed to the cause.

    You are trying to have your cake and eat it, argumentally.

    I continue to wait for actual evidence that she cares far more about being FM than about achieving an independent Scotland.
    No, I think we are agreed about Nicola Sturgeon. She does want independence, and isn't going to go for it until she can get it. As it happens I don't think that time can be foreseen. The difference I suspect is only that we are on different sides about the outcome we would like and the strength of the case once the gloves were off and campaigning mode began.

    Nicola Sturgeon is one of the two outstandingly able politicians in the UK. My admiration for her is almost limitless. I just think she is wrong. So do most people who, like me, live in close to the border of England and Scotland.

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    A thought occurs....

    If we go for just the vaccines and no restrictions in June, within a short time, COVID will pass through the unvaccinated groups like a chainsaw through cheese.

    Given what we know about the virus, and who the unvaccinated groups are currently, this will mean that the resulting damage, while limited, will be very largely among particular groups....

    Which according to our old friend "institutional racism" - defined as policies whose outcome is racially differential, no matter what the intent - will make such a policy... institutionally racist.
    We can call that The Guardian editor's dream scenario.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    MaxPB said:


    We can call that The Guardian editor's dream scenario.

    But we shouldn’t make policy based on what Katherine Viner fantasises over,
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,215
    MaxPB said:

    We can call that The Guardian editor's dream scenario.
    Maybe it is because I am an evil barsteward. Maybe it is because I am tired of people with their "I have a *right* to my own, post imperialist truth".

    But my attitude is this - if you want to set yourself on fire, fine. But I won't feel bad about it. Especially when the government and the country has spent billions on making sure that you can avoid it.

    And I can say, without absolute certainty that all my relatives in Peru will not be so polite. They would love a vaccine and regard the refusnik types as stupid assholes. They've buried too many people to give a shit about being nice.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    algarkirk said:

    Nicola Sturgeon is one of the two outstandingly able politicians in the UK.

    Oh lor, another Drakeford fan :trollface:
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    Maybe it is because I am an evil barsteward. Maybe it is because I am tired of people with their "I have a *right* to my own, post imperialist truth".

    But my attitude is this - if you want to set yourself on fire, fine. But I won't feel bad about it. Especially when the government and the country has spent billions on making sure that you can avoid it.

    And I can say, without absolute certainty that all my relatives in Peru will not be so polite. They would love a vaccine and regard the refusnik types as stupid assholes. They've buried too many people to give a shit about being nice.
    Yes, I absolutely agree. People are more than welcome to set themselves on fire.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    @GideonWise

    I also did economics as my main degree. I will have to think about your question, once I understand it!
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,534
    We had enough questions asked about vaccine passports today to know that the PM cannot, or will not, answer them. Given the ferocity of the debate ahead — and the depth of concern in his party — this bodes ill.

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/johnson-is-in-trouble-over-vaccine-passports-and-it-s-showing
  • QuincelQuincel Posts: 4,042
    Looks like we are finally getting a poll of Hartlepool. Going to be very interesting to see how close it is to the MRP projection from a bunch of Red Wall seats.

    I suspect there will be a Tory lead. Far from certain, but the two former Labour MPs standing are an issue for them and it feels like former RefUK voters should be pretty willing to vote Tory this time given the buoyant general mood towards the government on vaccines. We'll see.

    https://twitter.com/DaveWardGS/status/1379161288052518914
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,534
    The one positive I think of for the covid id app passport is that Johnson will finally run out of excuses why he can't face a room full of face-to-face journalists who can ask a follow up.

    Today's presser was a disgrace.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,534
    We are being roadmapped to a national id and health status app that tracks your movements.

    And Johnson can't bring himself to even talk properly about. Just bluster about we wont need it to go to the pub next Monday.

    Jeh, thanks.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,570
    edited April 2021
    Quincel said:

    Looks like we are finally getting a poll of Hartlepool. Going to be very interesting to see how close it is to the MRP projection from a bunch of Red Wall seats.

    I suspect there will be a Tory lead. Far from certain, but the two former Labour MPs standing are an issue for them and it feels like former RefUK voters should be pretty willing to vote Tory this time given the buoyant general mood towards the government on vaccines. We'll see.

    https://twitter.com/DaveWardGS/status/1379161288052518914

    How does he know people want 'radical change' before we see the outcome of the poll that has been commissioned to see if they want it? And if it does show a Tory lead, in what universe would that mean people actually want radical change from their opposition parties (including the one currently holding the seat), rather than showing they, for whatever reason, want what the Tories are offering?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    We are being roadmapped to a national id and health status app that tracks your movements.

    And Johnson can't bring himself to even talk properly about. Just bluster about we wont need it to go to the pub next Monday.

    Jeh, thanks.

    Yup, it's so obvious that Hancock and Gove are pushing this now. Look at the new bullshit model that's been briefed out tonight. They're simply trying to scare people into accepting that this is the price of a "free" society. Look at how so many usually well informed people on here have accepted that business will not be able to operate as normal without them when there is no scientific basis for that to be true.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    " ... which I was not aware of before my visit."

    Can someone show Sir Keir how to use google ?
This discussion has been closed.