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Punter Psychology. Finding the perfect balance of arrogance and humility – politicalbetting.com

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  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Floater said:

    So contract law effectively dead when dealing with the EU
    Something that’s been duly noted by an awful lot of companies, not just in the pharmaceutical industry.
  • Well now.

    Labour MPs Told The Party Will Vote Against Domestic Vaccine Passports

    Exclusive: A briefing sent to Labour MPs confirms the party's opposition to the proposals as they stand.

    https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/coronavirus-vaccine-passports-labour-vote_uk_606c904ec5b68872efebd478?ncid=other_twitter_cooo9wqtham&utm_campaign=share_twitter

    Need to speak to Drakeford who seems to be onside with the concept
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,218
    moonshine said:

    Not a bad back of envelope on my part then! It does mean that the 30s and 40s age groups will be much easier to get done than the pessimists are assuming I think.
    Note that if we take 94% as the ceiling - and the wrinkles numbers have held around there for a while, we have the following number of first jabs to go, as of 28th March.

    Under 50 19,018,567
    50-54 696,822
    55-59 481,350
    60-64 255,465
    65-69 113,234

  • Need to speak to Drakeford who seems to be onside with the concept
    Drakeford has no MPs in the Commons.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Mildly encouraging, but there's still a very long way to go. Besides anything else, there still aren't nearly enough Tory rebels to win a vote, assuming (given that this is, AIUI, an England only measure) that the Northern Irish MPs and the Scots and Welsh Nats sit on their hands.
    Given discussions about this are apparently going on between the UK administrations, i wouldn't be surprised that if the Govt decides to go ahead then they will have SNP support in the Commons. On the grounds that it really needs to be a UK wide scheme to make sense.
  • Sorry, I wasn't setting out to be rude. It's purely envy. I think that most of us who are still waiting are impatient to get our turn before we end up catching this bloody thing, because you just know if it happens to you you're going to end up as one of these wretched Long Covid invalids.

    Once again, I don't know how the Welsh NHS is doing it (perhaps, unbeknown to most of us, the second coming of Christ happened in Llandrindod Wells circa 1990, and he's now going around making all the vials miraculously multiply,) but if it wasn't for the fact that I've recently found I'm entitled to prioritisation I might still be waiting for mine in June. It's very disheartening.
    I appreciate your comments and hope you will be vaccinated asap
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Mildly encouraging, but there's still a very long way to go. Besides anything else, there still aren't nearly enough Tory rebels to win a vote, assuming (given that this is, AIUI, an England only measure) that the Northern Irish MPs and the Scots and Welsh Nats sit on their hands.
    I think though, that Boris will only move forward with an agreed approach with the other nations....??
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    edited April 2021
    Andy_JS said:

    On topic, I've found an easy way to make money as far as football betting is concerned.

    Whenever a goal is scored, sentiment moves far too far in favour of the team that's just scored compared to any rational assessment of the situation. You can take advantage of that to make money, usually by cashing out.

    I shouldn't really be giving my betting strategies away, but since it's PB I don't mind.

    And more generally, bet into - and opposite to - immediate overreactions to "drama".

    Example: Johnson into hozzie with the Covid, went VERY short to "exit" within 2 months. Great lay, until they suspended the market.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Note that if we take 94% as the ceiling - and the wrinkles numbers have held around there for a while, we have the following number of first jabs to go, as of 28th March.

    Under 50 19,018,567
    50-54 696,822
    55-59 481,350
    60-64 255,465
    65-69 113,234

    The hidden discussion in all this is the protection given by having already had the virus - even if the antibody effect has worn off. Something that will only become apparent if we have another wave but few of the unvaccinated fall ill.
  • Drakeford has no MPs in the Commons.
    He has Labour mps in Wales and if true about Labour voting against they are going to be in conflict with their Welsh government going into the Senedd election
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    Note that if we take 94% as the ceiling - and the wrinkles numbers have held around there for a while, we have the following number of first jabs to go, as of 28th March.

    Under 50 19,018,567
    50-54 696,822
    55-59 481,350
    60-64 255,465
    65-69 113,234

    OK.

    Twelve weeks til the end of June, in which about 26m further second doses will have to be provided

    Assume new Cabinet Office estimate is correct and we only manage 2.7m per week. That's 32.4m.

    That means we can only get 6.4 million first doses done in the next three months, of which about 1.6m is mopping up the remaining over 50s. That leaves enough leftover first doses to do about 4.8 million people. If we assume that each year cohort is somewhere around 900,000 people, that means we might be able to get down to 45 year olds, perhaps 44 year olds if we're lucky, by the start of July.

    In short, if supply is as crap as has been forecast, then the wheels are therefore going to fall off. Big time.

    Unless the court case is successful then it looks as if our trips to the pub are going to be outdoors only for a very long time. And we can all forget about holidays.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,029
    edited April 2021
    alex_ said:

    Given discussions about this are apparently going on between the UK administrations, i wouldn't be surprised that if the Govt decides to go ahead then they will have SNP support in the Commons. On the grounds that it really needs to be a UK wide scheme to make sense.
    The Scots and Welsh news both indicate in favour of vaccine passports as a concept, but they all seem to agree the detail needs to be agreed UK wide
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited April 2021
    Leon said:

    Another bit of spice to add to the vaccine vindaloo

    https://twitter.com/MKarnitschnig/status/1379453500086751245?s=20

    Apparently 80 year olds are required to fill in about 10 forms before they are eligible for a jab.

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/world/moderna-germany-covid-coronavirus-b926664.html
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    Leon said:

    Hadn't thought of that. Interesting possibility (albeit depressing).

    It would be nice if the government just told us, to end this speculation. They eventually told us about the Indian shortfall and the bad AZ batch, and tho the news was a bit bleak, it was better than the mad conspiracy theories (which I am happily multiplying, obvs)
    I's not mainly a govt decision.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    TOPPING said:

    You said at first that it was bad practice but now say it's perfect and want to launch it as a product.

    You are confused.

    One of us certainly is!

    But, ok, I'll take that as a no. I'll find another bagman.
  • Scott_xP said:
    All twitter links are now blocked on my politicalbetting feed. Anyone else have this?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Channel 4 News reporting on facial scanning and QR codes.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,317

    Drakeford has no MPs in the Commons.
    I always knew Drakeford was a Tory mole!

    I'm going to whisper this, but I agree with Drakeford and Johnson over this issue.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    kle4 said:

    I think emotional hedge is an excellent term.
    :smile: - Cheers. Chest puffs out - because you are not one to pander.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852
    alex_ said:

    Whilst everyone is panicking about how a shortage of doses might lead to a "third wave" it is surely worth considering that if that third wave is almost entirely concentrated in the U50s then it is quite likely that it will not result in a large number of deaths, and possibly not a too high level of hospitalisations.

    It is worth considering that what we arguably have at the moment is a situation where we could put into practice some of the ideas from the "lockdown sceptics" without the downsides (ie. lock up the old and vulnerable, and let the virus spread through the young). With the bonus that you don't actually have to lock up the old and vulnerable.

    That thought occurred to me too. Lockdown and social distancing measures had the effect of avoiding reaching herd immunity naturally because of the terrible cost it would entail, but if there is no longer a terrible cost...
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    Andy_JS said:

    Apparently 80 year olds are required to fill in about 10 forms before they are eligible for a jab.

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/world/moderna-germany-covid-coronavirus-b926664.html
    Yes. A friend of mine (who as a diabetic has been vaccinated already in Scotland) posted about the trouble she had navigating this process for her elderly parents in Germany. Nightmare and labyrinthine don't do it justice.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786

    Need to speak to Drakeford who seems to be onside with the concept
    Do you think Drakeford will listen to you?
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    OK.

    Twelve weeks til the end of June, in which about 26m further second doses will have to be provided

    Assume new Cabinet Office estimate is correct and we only manage 2.7m per week. That's 32.4m.

    That means we can only get 6.4 million first doses done in the next three months, of which about 1.6m is mopping up the remaining over 50s. That leaves enough leftover first doses to do about 4.8 million people. If we assume that each year cohort is somewhere around 900,000 people, that means we might be able to get down to 45 year olds, perhaps 44 year olds if we're lucky, by the start of July.

    In short, if supply is as crap as has been forecast, then the wheels are therefore going to fall off. Big time.

    Unless the court case is successful then it looks as if our trips to the pub are going to be outdoors only for a very long time. And we can all forget about holidays.
    Relax. Last summer we had much lower acquired immunity and no one vaccinated. And pubs were happily open indoors without it causing much harm until the autumn. We could open up all guns blazing on 21st June with no restrictions and still avoid a public health event, as the vaccination programme slowly but surely does the rest of its work.

    Covid is over in this country as a health event, thankfully. We just have to wait for the government and public to recover from their PTSD.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    alex_ said:

    The hidden discussion in all this is the protection given by having already had the virus - even if the antibody effect has worn off. Something that will only become apparent if we have another wave but few of the unvaccinated fall ill.
    There are reasons why pandemics rarely last more than a year or so, with the consequences of the virus becoming weaker over time. Because more and more of the population build up, if not immunity, then protection against serious illness. Arguably the widespread lockdowns of this pandemic may have lengthened the natural course of the virus, but this is likely countered by the unprecedented speed of the production of the vaccine.

    Which is why i suspect all this stuff from the scientists about some anti Covid measures lasting "years" is just nonsense (excepting some societal change like voluntary wearing of masks on crowded public transport etc). Why should this pandemic be any different those those which have gone before?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806

    OK.

    Twelve weeks til the end of June, in which about 26m further second doses will have to be provided

    Assume new Cabinet Office estimate is correct and we only manage 2.7m per week. That's 32.4m.

    That means we can only get 6.4 million first doses done in the next three months, of which about 1.6m is mopping up the remaining over 50s. That leaves enough leftover first doses to do about 4.8 million people. If we assume that each year cohort is somewhere around 900,000 people, that means we might be able to get down to 45 year olds, perhaps 44 year olds if we're lucky, by the start of July.

    In short, if supply is as crap as has been forecast, then the wheels are therefore going to fall off. Big time.

    Unless the court case is successful then it looks as if our trips to the pub are going to be outdoors only for a very long time. And we can all forget about holidays.
    Yes, you have a point. How does the government's insistence it can do all adults with one dose (at least) by the end of July (repeated again today) square with the new lower vax supply forecasts, which actually go DOWN after July? The two things are not compatible

    Something is not right.

    Also, why does supply actually DECREASE after the end of July, to 2m a week, when until now all the forecasters were predicting an absolute glut by then, as other vaccines come on stream?

    Perplexing
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    edited April 2021
    alex_ said:

    There are reasons why pandemics rarely last more than a year or so, with the consequences of the virus becoming weaker over time. Because more and more of the population build up, if not immunity, then protection against serious illness. Arguably the widespread lockdowns of this pandemic may have lengthened the natural course of the virus, but this is likely countered by the unprecedented speed of the production of the vaccine.

    Which is why i suspect all this stuff from the scientists about some anti Covid measures lasting "years" is just nonsense (excepting some societal change like voluntary wearing of masks on crowded public transport etc). Why should this pandemic be any different those those which have gone before?
    Indeed. I’m mystified by the talk of “living with covid the way we do flu”. It’s bollocks. Vaccine uptake is so high in the UK and the potential mutation pathways for Sars-COV2 sufficiently limited, that covid will prove to be a limited event, rather than a new paradigm.

    It’s a shame so few people realise this because it would a) cheer them up, b) mean the British state would not get to satiate its lust for illiberalism.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359
    edited April 2021
    Leon said:

    Yes, you have a point. How does the government's insistence it can do all adults with one dose (at least) by the end of July (repeated again today) square with the new lower vax supply forecasts, which actually go DOWN after July? The two things are not compatible

    Something is not right.

    Also, why does supply actually DECREASE after the end of July, to 2m a week, when until now all the forecasters were predicting an absolute glut by then, as other vaccines come on stream?

    Perplexing
    Perhaps the forecasts are only with approved vaccines, whereas the pundits are taking those still to be approved into account?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Leon said:

    Yes, you have a point. How does the government's insistence it can do all adults with one dose (at least) by the end of July (repeated again today) square with the new lower vax supply forecasts, which actually go DOWN after July? The two things are not compatible

    Something is not right.

    Also, why does supply actually DECREASE after the end of July, to 2m a week, when until now all the forecasters were predicting an absolute glut by then, as other vaccines come on stream?

    Perplexing
    Moderna. Scotland took delivery of a large batch today, according to Sturgeon's news conference.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    moonshine said:

    Relax. Last summer we had much lower acquired immunity and no one vaccinated. And pubs were happily open indoors without it causing much harm until the autumn. We could open up all guns blazing on 21st June with no restrictions and still avoid a public health event, as the vaccination programme slowly but surely does the rest of its work.

    Covid is over in this country as a health event, thankfully. We just have to wait for the government and public to recover from their PTSD.
    Quite. It defies logic to say that a virus which, largely, does not cause serious illness in health people in younger age groups, should cause a serious health crisis just because those age groups aren't vaccinated (although many will have anyway acquired protection through prior infection). Whilst nobody can say for certainty that things won't change it is reasonable to think that the main limiting factor on widespread opening up will not actually be public health risk, but Government caution. But absent obvious evidence of the former the economic and business pressures on the Government to discard caution will be enormous.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786
    kinabalu said:

    :smile: - Cheers. Chest puffs out - because you are not one to pander.
    But sometimes emotional hedges can win, can't they?

    Take me. As a passionate Leeds United fan, I've been desperate for them to be promoted to the PL. Since 2010, I've bet against them being promoted, despite them being favourites or near favourites most years. So for 10 years I grieved but won. Then in 2020 I lost but was ecstatic. So I've done quite well out of my emotional hedge, haven't I? (I'm not so miserable that I bet on them being relegated this year, thank god).
  • Do you think Drakeford will listen to you?
    As I do not listen to him, then no
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,218
    RobD said:

    Perhaps the forecasts are only with approved vaccines, whereas the pundits are taking those still to be approved into account?
    Another possibility is that a range of supply variations is being modelled of which one study has been published.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    Leon said:

    Yes, you have a point. How does the government's insistence it can do all adults with one dose (at least) by the end of July (repeated again today) square with the new lower vax supply forecasts, which actually go DOWN after July? The two things are not compatible

    Something is not right.

    Also, why does supply actually DECREASE after the end of July, to 2m a week, when until now all the forecasters were predicting an absolute glut by then, as other vaccines come on stream?

    Perplexing
    If, as suggested earlier, it doesn't include the yet-to-be-approved vaccines (Novavax and J&J) then I suppose at some point our order for Pfizer & Moderna doses will be fulfilled and we'd be down to the remaining AZ doses of our 100m dose AZ order.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Andy_JS said:

    On topic, I've identified a way to make money as far as football betting is concerned.

    Whenever a goal is scored, sentiment moves far too far in favour of the team that's just scored compared to any rational assessment of the situation. You can take advantage of that, usually by cashing out (rather than waiting to the end of the game).

    I shouldn't really be giving my betting strategies away, but since it's PB I don't mind.

    Same with cricket when a wkt falls
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    The UK vaccine situation is a gathering storm. The government must clarify.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,674
    Stocky said:

    How have they managed to get onto Cat 6? My wife is 46 and wants her jab!
    I'm 45 and still waiting!

    On the other hand, Mum has had a her second dose (scheduled for later this month) brought forward by a few days.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    As in emotional support hedge?

    "Sir, why are you trying to bring that boxwood onto the airplane?"

    "This is my emotional support hedge, Steward. I'll just keep it on my lap."
    What happens if your hedge overindulges on the little bottles of spirits during the flight and becomes both tired and emotional? This needs more thought...
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852
    Oh dear. Charles Michel and Ursula von der Leyen went to see Erdogan, but Charles Michel didn't offer the main chair to von der Leyen.

    https://twitter.com/SLagodinsky/status/1379483767161622535
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    edited April 2021

    But sometimes emotional hedges can win, can't they?

    Take me. As a passionate Leeds United fan, I've been desperate for them to be promoted to the PL. Since 2010, I've bet against them being promoted, despite them being favourites or near favourites most years. So for 10 years I grieved but won. Then in 2020 I lost but was ecstatic. So I've done quite well out of my emotional hedge, haven't I? (I'm not so miserable that I bet on them being relegated this year, thank god).
    Yes. In this case you've won money to "hedge" your utter 'sick to the stomach' misery at them continually missing out.

    Only you can say if it balanced out. If it didn't you got your stake wrong.

    My Yorkshire team is Owls. Sleeping Giant. With emphasis on the sleeping.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    UK in similar position to Italy/Spain/US - but current trends, possibly better:

    https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1379499695395995649?s=20
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    Leon said:

    Yes, you have a point. How does the government's insistence it can do all adults with one dose (at least) by the end of July (repeated again today) square with the new lower vax supply forecasts, which actually go DOWN after July? The two things are not compatible

    Something is not right.

    Also, why does supply actually DECREASE after the end of July, to 2m a week, when until now all the forecasters were predicting an absolute glut by then, as other vaccines come on stream?

    Perplexing
    It's the 12 week gap -

    We don't need as many doses to do 7 million firsts in July as 1 million firsts this month.
  • Oh dear. Charles Michel and Ursula von der Leyen went to see Erdogan, but Charles Michel didn't offer the main chair to von der Leyen.

    https://twitter.com/SLagodinsky/status/1379483767161622535

    So amusing
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1bKjufyZQcj4bPTnlZDL4iXU83aMBMQWgcEt_WG20GkE/edit?usp=drivesdk

    Here is my model, "England" tab has the 2.7 million a week supply situation modelled
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    The UK vaccine situation is a gathering storm. The government must clarify.

    What do you want clarified?
  • Labour voting against vaccine passports is excellent news
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    Pulpstar said:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1bKjufyZQcj4bPTnlZDL4iXU83aMBMQWgcEt_WG20GkE/edit?usp=drivesdk

    Here is my model, "England" tab has the 2.7 million a week supply situation modelled

    That looks like it needs cleaning up.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,738

    What do you want clarified?
    Why has the expected supply for May and beyond shrunk....
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    edited April 2021

    Anything is better than Shagger, which one poster on PB insists on using. Really annoys me, that one.
    You shouldn't be so intrusive about private grief. Jealousy is ugly in all its forms.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    DougSeal said:

    How does news of an impounding of Australian exports get out but not news of this alleged impounding of exports to the UK? Serious question?
    I don't believe that EU number.

    *If* they have all the the vaccines they have by the end of Q2, it is only 110 million + 360 million. *If* nothing is delayed (past record?). At the end of March they had 110m jabs, but only 76m had been injected.

    For full vaccination of adults they need 700 million. Plus a month to inject and become active.

    IMO this is setting up in-country distribution logistics as the next scapegoat.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    What happens if your hedge overindulges on the little bottles of spirits during the flight and becomes both tired and emotional? This needs more thought...
    Novel take from you earlier!

    So hacked off about the freedom to emit hate speech being trashed that you can't summon a care about ID cards for the pub.

    Or were you just bending over backwards to avoid a tumble with a fellow Conservative?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Oh dear. Charles Michel and Ursula von der Leyen went to see Erdogan, but Charles Michel didn't offer the main chair to von der Leyen.

    https://twitter.com/SLagodinsky/status/1379483767161622535

    I'm not sure what the issue is here? She has a seat, on the couch. They're socially distancing.

    There's one seniority seat by the flag and Michel took that, leaving the couch for VDL. Who is the actual President of the EU - Michel or von der Leyen? The EU don't seem to have actually answered that question or officially confirmed who has seniority have they?

    Though the EU's website does say that Michel represents the EU externally on foreign and security issues so it seems reasonable he's the one by the flag?

    https://europa.eu/european-union/about-eu/presidents_en
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650
    edited April 2021
    Seems to be an over passionate thread to me. We all need to calm down a bit.

    And no one has mentioned that Moderna is nearly here, and Novavax in May now I think.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    UK in similar position to Italy/Spain/US - but current trends, possibly better:

    https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1379499695395995649?s=20

    I thought John Owls had been quiet recently
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    UK in similar position to Italy/Spain/US - but current trends, possibly better:

    https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1379499695395995649?s=20

    The UK is no longer in the Premier League and is only going to fall down the table from now.
  • MattW said:

    Seems to be an over passionate thread to me. We all need to calm down a bit.

    And no one has mentioned that Moderna is nearly here, and Novavax in May now I think.

    Indeed and Labour saying, if they have, they will vote against a vaccine passport before any details are known, the four nations are in joint discussions over them, and the EU is producing its own vaccine passport

    And not to understand that away from twitter, they have considerable support even with the young

    Time for everyone, and especially the idiotic media, to calm down and as Boris has said, they will not be involved before the 17th May decision
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    kinabalu said:

    Novel take from you earlier!

    So hacked off about the freedom to emit hate speech being trashed that you can't summon a care about ID cards for the pub.

    Or were you just bending over backwards to avoid a tumble with a fellow Conservative?
    Nope - as usual, I mean what I say, and you just refuse to believe me. Once we as a nation gave up on the legal protection of the most essential liberties, namely freedom of thought and speech, the subsequent erosion of lesser freedoms has failed to shock me very much.

    But of course there's no chance of ID cards in the pub - a renowned superforecaster has assured me that that won't happen...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650

    OK.

    Twelve weeks til the end of June, in which about 26m further second doses will have to be provided

    Assume new Cabinet Office estimate is correct and we only manage 2.7m per week. That's 32.4m.

    That means we can only get 6.4 million first doses done in the next three months, of which about 1.6m is mopping up the remaining over 50s. That leaves enough leftover first doses to do about 4.8 million people. If we assume that each year cohort is somewhere around 900,000 people, that means we might be able to get down to 45 year olds, perhaps 44 year olds if we're lucky, by the start of July.

    In short, if supply is as crap as has been forecast, then the wheels are therefore going to fall off. Big time.

    Unless the court case is successful then it looks as if our trips to the pub are going to be outdoors only for a very long time. And we can all forget about holidays.
    AIUI the *possible* squeeze is only for April. Moderna and Novavax are coming for two.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    @MaxPB, I was going to say what @Selebian said, but he said it first and better.

    Can I beg you to consider the following piece of meta-advice: it's difficult for any of us to make good predictions when we are angry. Take some time, and come back to it from first principles in a couple of weeks.

    I share some of your concerns about the models but I see this as a reflection of poor rigor (sorry @Selebian!) in epidemiology in general rather than particular defects in this work. I think it's fair to say that the SPI-M process is that the various research groups do the modelling, and then the committee functions as a kind of peer review.

    --AS
    It boils down to trust, AS, I don't trust the government scientists to mark their own homework as you are suggesting the process is. At work I don't mark my own homework, all PRs need to be reviewed before merging.

    For the whole year their agenda has been to lock everyone up. Time and again they have pushed data modelling that doesn't stand up to scrutiny to justify locking everyone up forever.

    The government has linked unlockdown to hospitalisations and suddenly these scientists have a shiny new model that shows that unlockdown will result in some unrealistic number based on data inputs that are simply false.

    Maybe I'm giving them too much credit and it is just basic incompetence, however modelling hospitalisations from the known data on our two main vaccines and mode of dosage is not very difficult because we know what the current rate of hospitalisation is by age group and we know the cumulative reduction on the hospitalisation rate with one or two doses of either vaccine and we know how big the pool of unvaccinated people and by how much it will go down and to what extent rhe cumulative rate of hospitalisation reduction will be based on the vaccine programme. I'm a data person and I do it for a living, I can instantly see that they've produced a GIGO model intended to get headlines.
  • ManchesterKurtManchesterKurt Posts: 928
    edited April 2021
    MaxPB said:

    It boils down to trust, AS, I don't trust the government scientists to mark their own homework as you are suggesting the process is. At work I don't mark my own homework, all PRs need to be reviewed before merging.

    For the whole year their agenda has been to lock everyone up. Time and again they have pushed data modelling that doesn't stand up to scrutiny to justify locking everyone up forever.

    The government has linked unlockdown to hospitalisations and suddenly these scientists have a shiny new model that shows that unlockdown will result in some unrealistic number based on data inputs that are simply false.

    Maybe I'm giving them too much credit and it is just basic incompetence, however modelling hospitalisations from the known data on our two main vaccines and mode of dosage is not very difficult because we know what the current rate of hospitalisation is by age group and we know the cumulative reduction on the hospitalisation rate with one or two doses of either vaccine and we know how big the pool of unvaccinated people and by how much it will go down and to what extent rhe cumulative rate of hospitalisation reduction will be based on the vaccine programme. I'm a data person and I do it for a living, I can instantly see that they've produced a GIGO model intended to get headlines.
    But isn't it the case that there is not one model being used.

    Rather there are numerous, independent groups providing the models and data to SAGE and government which provides the wide range of likely outcomes from the various models.

    The peer review is essentially being done by having so many models and using commonalities in those outcomes.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    Nope - as usual, I mean what I say, and you just refuse to believe me. Once we as a nation gave up on the legal protection of the most essential liberties, namely freedom of thought and speech, the subsequent erosion of lesser freedoms has failed to shock me very much.

    But of course there's no chance of ID cards in the pub - a renowned superforecaster has assured me that that won't happen...
    Yes I stick with that. Be flabbergasted if I'm wrong and it does happen. Also displeased.

    Not "thought". We think what we want. You wouldn't believe some of what transpires in my bonce. It's definitely not all about fighting for social justice.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,029
    edited April 2021
    MattW said:

    AIUI the *possible* squeeze is only for April. Moderna and Novavax are coming for two.
    I just think it is time for everyone to calm down a little and maybe less speculation, especially based on the useless media reporting, will benefit the health of the nation quite considerably
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    But isn't it the case that there is not one model being used.

    Rather there are numerous, independent groups providing the models and data to SAGE and government which provides the wide range of likely outcomes from the various models.

    The peer review is essentially being done by having so many models and using commonalities in those outcomes.
    Not especially good over a year into the pandemic. These shouldn't exactly be secrets.

    The science and models should be put online and people should be able to review it.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    But isn't it the case that there is not one model being used.

    Rather there are numerous, independent groups providing the models and data to SAGE and government which provides the wide range of likely outcomes from the various models.

    The peer review is essentially being done by having so many models and using commonalities in those outcomes.
    That still relies on them essentially marking their own homework. It's not a proper peer review process.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    edited April 2021

    Indeed and Labour saying, if they have, they will vote against a vaccine passport before any details are known, the four nations are in joint discussions over them, and the EU is producing its own vaccine passport

    And not to understand that away from twitter, they have considerable support even with the young

    Time for everyone, and especially the idiotic media, to calm down and as Boris has said, they will not be involved before the 17th May decision
    DELETED
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Endillion said:

    Ah, yes. That thing that everyone (including me) said definitely wasn't going to happen, has happened.

    Again.
    What have the EU got against Australia?
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    kinabalu said:

    Yes I stick with that. Be flabbergasted if I'm wrong and it does happen. Also displeased.

    Not "thought". We think what we want. You wouldn't believe some of what transpires in my bonce. It's definitely not all about fighting for social justice.
    One shudders to imagine... :wink:
  • Well we tried to tell you that the whole nation making enormous sacrifices for your comfort and safety might have implications down the line but you chose not to listen.

    People were promised the return of their freedom if they played ball with the vaccine program. They have overwhelmingly played ball, and they don't have their freedom.

    And when they get their freedom, it won't be the sort they enjoyed before covid struck. It very much looks like that freedom won't ever be coming back.

    The only surprise is they aren't more emotive. Get used to it. Its going to get far, far more intense from here on in.
    The roadmap is on course and until someone says officially it cannot be met then the UK will have done very well compared to others

    And no need to be personal
  • Cyclefree said:

    What have the EU got against Australia?
    The flamin' galahs are part of the Anglosphere.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Quincel said:

    I agree with a lot of this, though I personally think the biggest edge over the markets isn't so much deeper analysis of the polls/numbers but a broadly dispassionate analysis of them. People are just awful at separating what they want and what they expect in elections.
    I don't bet a lot but when I do I tend to vote the opposite of what I actually want or think would be for the best. I am instinctively suspicious of my reasoning if what I want to happen is what I am betting on. So I was much more comfortable betting on Trump in 2016 (and, more sadly, in 2020) than I would have been the opposite.

    The problem with this bias (logic is far too rational a description) is that my wife accuses me of being Eeyore on a particularly difficult day so I am far too inclined to believe the worst. Still, thanks for noticing me.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852

    Get used to it. Its going to get far, far more intense from here on in.

    "I coulda been a contender, but they locked me down in my prime!"
  • Real Madrid currently outplaying Liverpool
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    The roadmap is on course and until someone says officially it cannot be met then the UK will have done very well compared to others

    And no need to be personal
    It isn;t a roadmap to freedom. Its a roadmap from a high security prison to an open prison.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    I can guarantee you that any support for vaccine passports amongst the young is based on the Govt specifically linking them to full reopening of social venues AND the assumption that they will have access to them. If things begin to reopen before the vaccines come online then BOTH those justifications will disappear. There is no way that young people will accept the “alternative” of regular testing.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,329

    Have you thought about analysing why that might be, and as such why it might change over the next few months?
    Cos Sir Keir is rubbish and they might bin him?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited April 2021
    TOPPING said:

    Interesting thought. I'd never considered it. He's not Jewish is he? Or you mean just the implication.

    [pause]

    OK just did a bit of google-fu and thought - oh he's the son of a long line of baronets hence is def not Jewish. Then I read further and see that his mother is Jewish and hence I think that "makes" him Jewish so you could well be right.
    I mean the implication.

    Whether he's Jewish or not is neither here nor there, the name Gideon is a Hebrew, very Jewish, name.

    By calling a Chancellor/political opponent a Hebrew name as an insult . . . its rather creepy and antisemitic. Undercurrents of "can't trust him, he's a Jew" - and whether he is or not is not the point, the very notion that a Hebrew name is being used instead of his given name to insult him is deeply unpleasant.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806

    I just think it is time for everyone to calm down a little and maybe less speculation, especially based on the useless media reporting, will benefit the health of the nation quite considerably
    Asking for "calmness" and "less speculation" as we head to the crucial moment in a terrifying once-in-a-century pandemic that is slaughtering millions and destroying economies is perhaps a tad optimistic, especially on a site explicitly dedicated to over-excited speculation
  • isamisam Posts: 41,329

    Same with cricket when a wkt falls
    and Politics when a poll comes out!
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    It isn;t a roadmap to freedom. Its a roadmap from a high security prison to an open prison.
    Why did you delete your last post, it was rather good?
  • isamisam Posts: 41,329
  • Liverpool 1 down

    City 1 up
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    Is Sir Kir "Royale" Starmer in...... SECOND CLASS?

    https://twitter.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1379515329622245385?s=20

    Admirable if so. However the potentially posh bottle of water might detract
  • Leon said:

    Asking for "calmness" and "less speculation" as we head to the crucial moment in a terrifying once-in-a-century pandemic that is slaughtering millions and destroying economies is perhaps a tad optimistic, especially on a site explicitly dedicated to over-excited speculation
    Fair comment
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806
    Pretty grim stats for the developing world.

    Looking at that FT graph the true horror show is in countries we have not considered. Egypt, Azerbaijan, Peru.....
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    MattW said:

    AIUI the *possible* squeeze is only for April. Moderna and Novavax are coming for two.
    Again, if the Government knows what is coming then why would they not include these in their estimates? New suppliers are coming on line, but it's of little use if we're only getting a trickle out of them, not a flood.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Stocky said:

    Why did you delete your last post, it was rather good?
    Maybe on reflection it was a bit personal.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited April 2021

    UK in similar position to Italy/Spain/US - but current trends, possibly better:

    https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1379499695395995649?s=20

    The UK was probably never in the number one position, but we get punished for having more accurate statistics than most other countries.

    Indeed, according to the Economist, we were the only country to have higher official death figures than the excess death figures when they last updated the figures a few weeks ago.

    https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/coronavirus-excess-deaths-tracker
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Wearing my Eeyore hat that is something I would really like to be true but struggle to believe.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    Considering the amount of Stimulus chucked at it, the USA isn't that impressive.

    Indeed it would be interesting to see how the others are affected by debt driven stimulus too. I wouldn't have thought a lot in the developing countries.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,806

    Fair comment
    This is, after all, a site that can go into total meltdown when it hears of a potential Lib Dem surge into 2nd place in a small unreliable poll of Westmoreland, so news that a global plague may or may not be ending can be expected to induce some agitated commentary
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    edited April 2021
    Andy_JS said:

    The UK was probably never in the number one position, but we get punished for having more accurate statistics than most other countries.

    Indeed, according to the Economist, we were the only country to have higher official death figures than the excess death figures when they last updated the figures a few weeks ago.

    https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/coronavirus-excess-deaths-tracker
    We have established on here before that is not true but there are not many who do so.

    Edit, if you click on show all other examples appear, such as France.
  • Maybe on reflection it was a bit personal.
    I appreciate your comment

    Thank you
  • isamisam Posts: 41,329
    edited April 2021
    Leon said:

    Is Sir Kir "Royale" Starmer in...... SECOND CLASS?

    https://twitter.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1379515329622245385?s=20

    Admirable if so. However the potentially posh bottle of water might detract

    The middle ground betweens EdM's first class and Jezza dossing by the khazi - ever the centrist

    "I MUST NOT REPEAT THE MISTAKES OF MY PREDECESSORS
    I MUST NOT REPEAT THE MISTAKES OF MY PREDECESSORS
    I MUST NOT REPEAT THE MISTAKES OF MY PREDECESSORS..."

    "Plymouth" is on of my favourite bits of rhyming slang - my friend who sadly passed away this year used it a lot
This discussion has been closed.