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Two highlights from this morning – HealthSec Hancock the main target – politicalbetting.com

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  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258
    TOPPING said:

    Thing is, you can't cherry pick the strategy. When does Australia expect to open its borders? According to that Spiked article, not any time soon. It might be a case of the hare and the tortoise.

    They have taken it slowly but for how much longer will the country be closed? Three months? Six months? A couple of years?

    That's no way to run a country.

    I'd take Boris' option any day of the week and trust me I can't f**king believe I am saying that.
    Oh, I agree.

    Australia will suffer if its people can't travel abroad and if people can't visit it.

    But I imagine they'll open up first to "double vaccinated" people who have test negative before departure and on arrival.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,703
    Stocky said:

    Where's @kinabalu ?

    Atop Thorpe Cloud - and puffing hard.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,399
    Circling the wagons doesn't begin to describe it. This site used to be an oasis for Tories but nothing like this.....

    Come on Scotland get your act together. We need a safe space
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,422

    Paul Waugh
    @paulwaugh
    We watched every minute of it, so you didn't have to.

    The 14 Most Explosive Claims From Dominic Cummings’ Covid Evidence

    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/1397585601600311302
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Well yes, that is the issue that got the likes of our Phillip so exercised when I proposed a 'Council of the Isles' to ratify major foreign policy and defence decisions. However, I see no real loss - I suspect it would result in less 'Iraqs' and less expensive defence white elephants. In that sense I see it being very popular with actual English people.
    The notion of Scotland etc. having a veto is also one I don't normally bother airing as I get piled on when I even neutrally mention the A/S Heptarchy as one solution in a purely theoretical discussion of federalism - and in any case it seems so improbable given the Zeitgeist. I'm glad you raised it for me!
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    rcs1000 said:

    According the the Australian government website, you need to fill in this: https://covid19.homeaffairs.gov.au/australia-travel-declaration

    It doesn't look too onerous.
    Tell them:

    One year on since Australia shut its borders, there are still at least 40,000 Australians stranded overseas.

    Many say they've effectively been blocked from returning home.
    One group has lodged a human rights complaint with the United Nations.

    "No other country has impeded the return of their citizens in this way," Sabrina Tiasha, who arrived home from the UK last month, says.


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-55851074
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes, but they're not actually going to sue. Because there is no case.

    This is all political posturing by the EU, to distract from their failings. And now that they've finally gotten their vaccination drive working, it will be quietly dropped.

    Ultimately, there is no case. The contracts are clear, and there is no guarantee and there is certainly no "penalty payment".

    This is like when a celebrity says they're going to sue someone for libel. It's a way of changing the conversation away from the EU's failings.

    In general, I'd reckon the ratio between "I'm going to sue you" and "People actually getting sued" is probably about 10:1.
    But the pharma companies (and no doubt companies in other industries too) are making a note of the attitude.

    Why build that new factory in the EU, when putting it in the U.K. or Switzerland comes with a much more positive attitude from government?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367
    I see Dominic Cummings has been having a series of epic self-awareness fails.

    Does anyone actually believe what he’s saying?
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    TOPPING said:

    Thing is, you can't cherry pick the strategy. When does Australia expect to open its borders? According to that Spiked article, not any time soon. It might be a case of the hare and the tortoise.

    They have taken it slowly but for how much longer will the country be closed? Three months? Six months? A couple of years?

    That's no way to run a country.

    I'd take Boris' option any day of the week and trust me I can't f**king believe I am saying that.
    I've done a quick Google which suggests that international tourism accounts for less than 1% of Australian GDP. If the population really wants to turn the country back into a prison colony again, they can therefore well afford to do so.

    This is, of course, suboptimal if you can never visit any other part of the globe ever again, unless you can afford the very considerable time and expense of hotel quarantine when you get back, but if they want to reorganise themselves into a hermit kingdom then that's their choice.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Re:criticism of Hancock. Given this all seems to revolve around the PPE problems of March/April last year, isn’t it likely to be seen as somewhat moot when pushing future cabinet changes given that most people would I think probably say he has been one of the success stories of the vaccine era? And also was one of the lockdown hawks prior to the second wave?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,422
    So, have I got this right?

    Johnson wanted to let the bodies pile up high and yet there was no plan to bury them?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    kinabalu said:

    Atop Thorpe Cloud - and puffing hard.
    *checks*

    Elevation: 287 m
    Prominence: 79 m

    Don't overdo it - we need you on this board.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    rcs1000 said:

    But that's exactly the same as China, Hong Kong, Singapore, etc (although those countries accept non citizens who go through the quarantine).
    Singapore only admits citizens and permanent residents who have received permission to return.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    edited May 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Atop Thorpe Cloud - and puffing hard.
    Peak kinabalu there :smile:

    They used to talk about piling Pelion on Ossa; now they're piling Kinabalu on Thorpe Cloud...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    edited May 2021

    Seems Rishi is being kept free from all the mud and shit being thrown by the Sage of Barnard.

    I wonder why????

    Because he wants to open up faultlines among the Tories by throwing mud at a few individuals (who some others will be happy to see mud thrown at), not unite them all against him.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258

    Because very few citizens are being admitted:

    You can travel to Australia if you are an Australian citizen, a permanent resident or a New Zealand citizen usually resident in Australia.

    Australia has strict border measures in place to protect the health of the Australian community. Very limited flights are currently available to and from Australia and you may not be able to travel at this time.


    https://covid19.homeaffairs.gov.au/australian-citizen-or-permanent-resident
    Yes I know that.

    The point is that AUSTRALIAN CITIZENS CAN TRAVEL TO AUSTRALIA.

    Limited flights != No flights.

    If I were Australian, I could go on-line now and book my quarantine, and book my ticket to Australia. I'm not saying it's not harder than normal, I am just saying that it is very far from impossible.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,220
    edited May 2021

    Except one of the big plans going forward is to bring NHS England back into government as being directly managed by the Health Sec, whereas at moment it is arms length and Stevens has a lot more control.
    I dont know enough about it to have a strong view of how it is organised in the future to be honest. But in a crisis, why was one man, regarded as incompetent by many of those senior to him, allowed to have perhaps 75% of the govts important responsibilities on his own? Why not share that work out in a manner which would have a greater chance of things being covered properly?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258

    Singapore only admits citizens and permanent residents who have received permission to return.
    You're right: I added Singapore after I'd written the whole comment.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    One of the things I strongly disagreed with about the Thatcher era was the way in which they changed rules in some parts of the public sector

    In 1986 just after leaving Uni I had a summer job at the British Geological Survey. There was a lady there who was a renowned expert on a system of clay analysis known as X-Ray Goniometry - a vitally important technique for analysing clay minerals in North Sea cores - it was used as part of the process of checking oil companies were being honest in their declarations of reserves.

    Anyway, a period of reform swept through many institutions and in the case of the BGS it basically meant that jobs were reclassified with a minimum education level. In the case of her position you had to have a PhD. Which she didn't have. So she had to reapply for her own job and didn't get it because she didn't have the necessary qualifications. Even though there was probably no-one in the country who knew more about the subject than she did.
    LIked, not because the story is a happy one, but because it is so much to the point.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes, but they're not actually going to sue. Because there is no case.

    This is all political posturing by the EU, to distract from their failings. And now that they've finally gotten their vaccination drive working, it will be quietly dropped.

    Ultimately, there is no case. The contracts are clear, and there is no guarantee and there is certainly no "penalty payment".

    This is like when a celebrity says they're going to sue someone for libel. It's a way of changing the conversation away from the EU's failings.

    In general, I'd reckon the ratio between "I'm going to sue you" and "People actually getting sued" is probably about 10:1.
    They actually have raised the action: https://www.euronews.com/2021/04/26/eu-begins-legal-action-against-aztrazeneca-over-breach-of-contract

    I had a case in Belgium once many years ago. I cannot recall if they have rules allowing an application for summary dismissal or strikeout but I would be surprised if they didn't.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258
    edited May 2021

    I've done a quick Google which suggests that international tourism accounts for less than 1% of Australian GDP. If the population really wants to turn the country back into a prison colony again, they can therefore well afford to do so.

    This is, of course, suboptimal if you can never visit any other part of the globe ever again, unless you can afford the very considerable time and expense of hotel quarantine when you get back, but if they want to reorganise themselves into a hermit kingdom then that's their choice.
    The problem for Australia would be their oil & gas industry: they are making massive investments in developing their gas reserves. And that means that skilled people need to travel to Australia.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118

    So what does that come to? €100billion give or take?

    Shame they didn't value the vaccine that much when they ordered it.
    So, Oxford's wine bill. Blimey.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258
    Sandpit said:

    But the pharma companies (and no doubt companies in other industries too) are making a note of the attitude.

    Why build that new factory in the EU, when putting it in the U.K. or Switzerland comes with a much more positive attitude from government?
    Oh, I agree 100%.

    The EU's posturing can do nothing but harm them.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Sandpit said:

    That’s actually the big one.

    Symonds doesn’t have a job in No.10, but has previously worked for the party and knows everyone.

    Presumably she doesn’t hold a security clearance, which would be an interesting line of questioning...
    Does it make any significance on the last point that she is not formally hitched to Mr J (apart from the law of contract)? I don't know if it does ... jut seems a long time to wait ...
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,782
    kinabalu said:

    Atop Thorpe Cloud - and puffing hard.
    Ooh, lovely! Are you on holiday?
    I was there two years ago with a group of friends from school and their families. Now this is the sort of thing my own family and I do, but this isn't common to everyone, particularly not when they grow up in London. It was a joy to see the awe and excitement on a bunch of 7-12 year olds' faces that we would be going up there. They swarmed up it - no messing about with the path; straight up the steepest route possible. An absolute joy to see.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258

    Tell them:

    One year on since Australia shut its borders, there are still at least 40,000 Australians stranded overseas.

    Many say they've effectively been blocked from returning home.
    One group has lodged a human rights complaint with the United Nations.

    "No other country has impeded the return of their citizens in this way," Sabrina Tiasha, who arrived home from the UK last month, says.


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-55851074
    Well yes, it is going to be expensive, and people with children are going to be highly disincentivized from returning. (Who wants two weeks in a two two star hotel room with a nine year old and a seven year old?)

    But that's not the same as being completely banned from returning home.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    Philip Collins
    @PhilipJCollins1
    ·
    1h
    Boris Johnson is both a formidable electoral politician and fundamentally ill-equipped for high office. Lots of senior Tories knew what they were giving us.

    Much like Cummings himself of course.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Carnyx said:

    The notion of Scotland etc. having a veto is also one I don't normally bother airing as I get piled on when I even neutrally mention the A/S Heptarchy as one solution in a purely theoretical discussion of federalism - and in any case it seems so improbable given the Zeitgeist. I'm glad you raised it for me!
    I imagine the Kingdom of Essex would be quite a place. TOWIE as a selection process for the first monarch?

    (I say that as an Essex man born and bred - up to age 18 - so I assume I'm permitted to diss my homeland?)
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    MattW said:

    Mons. Macaron needs to hope that the French all have short memories:
    https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-03-french-covid-jabs-britain-weeks.html


    Such a carmudgeon, Matt. France clearly has overtaken where the UK was in January.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes, but they're not actually going to sue. Because there is no case.

    This is all political posturing by the EU, to distract from their failings. And now that they've finally gotten their vaccination drive working, it will be quietly dropped.

    Ultimately, there is no case. The contracts are clear, and there is no guarantee and there is certainly no "penalty payment".

    This is like when a celebrity says they're going to sue someone for libel. It's a way of changing the conversation away from the EU's failings.

    In general, I'd reckon the ratio between "I'm going to sue you" and "People actually getting sued" is probably about 10:1.
    Yes, but a random rich nutter making the threat as a posturing position is one thing - an organisation/institution doing so, after lengthy consideration, is even less forgivable, since so many people who must know better are on board with the distraction.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes I know that.

    The point is that AUSTRALIAN CITIZENS CAN TRAVEL TO AUSTRALIA.

    Limited flights != No flights.

    If I were Australian, I could go on-line now and book my quarantine, and book my ticket to Australia. I'm not saying it's not harder than normal, I am just saying that it is very far from impossible.
    I was under the impression there was a significant waiting list and/or the price of return is prohibitive, in part because the Aus govt (unlike NZ) hasn’t invested in state run quarantine facilities. Not difficult to find stories of Aussies who were trapped abroad a year ago and are simply unable to return in reality.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes I know that.

    The point is that AUSTRALIAN CITIZENS CAN TRAVEL TO AUSTRALIA.

    Limited flights != No flights.

    If I were Australian, I could go on-line now and book my quarantine, and book my ticket to Australia. I'm not saying it's not harder than normal, I am just saying that it is very far from impossible.
    Arrivals are constrained by quarantine capacity - which is why 40,000 are stuck abroad and can't currently get back in. Given the number of celebs rocking up that's causing a degree of unhappiness....

    And it looks like Melbourne may be heading to another lockdown:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9620023/South-Australia-slams-border-shut-Melbourne-TONIGHT.html
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Arrivals are constrained by quarantine capacity - which is why 40,000 are stuck abroad and can't currently get back in. Given the number of celebs rocking up that's causing a degree of unhappiness....

    And it looks like Melbourne may be heading to another lockdown:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9620023/South-Australia-slams-border-shut-Melbourne-TONIGHT.html
    SNAP!
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited May 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    Also: you can fly TOMORROW on Emirates from Dubai to Melbourne for $1,691.

    That's not $10k.

    ‘Tomorrow’ means it leaves 6 hours from now. You’ll need to have done a test yesterday to book it, and have permission to enter Australia in hand.

    The following day is double that price. Plus the quarantine.

    Plus 30% for the USD/AUD conversion.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh, I agree.

    Australia will suffer if its people can't travel abroad and if people can't visit it.

    But I imagine they'll open up first to "double vaccinated" people who have test negative before departure and on arrival.
    I wonder what the policy will be towards children <18 where it might be a while before they receive their 2x jabs.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    It is hard to think of a political pair who have fallen out more spectacularly than Cummings and Johnson. That made Geoffrey Howe’s resignation speech look like a paean of praise to Thatcher

    https://twitter.com/JGForsyth/status/1397589736898838532?s=20
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,456
    ydoethur said:

    I see Dominic Cummings has been having a series of epic self-awareness fails.

    Does anyone actually believe what he’s saying?

    More importantly - does anybody care?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    ydoethur said:

    Much like Cummings himself of course.
    And many leading politicians. We really have got a poor crop.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    rcs1000 said:

    The problem for Australia would be their oil & gas industry: they are making massive investments in developing their gas reserves. And that means that skilled people need to travel to Australia.
    They are giving limited exemptions for key workers (and media types). Still have to quarantine for a fortnight though.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367
    DavidL said:

    Yes and quite a lot of what he is saying is genuinely interesting and thought provoking. But our press will focus on the political tittle tattle as always.
    That would be a first.

    While I can quite believe Hancock’s a liar, Johnson’s a buffoon and SAGE are a bunch of third rate loons with no common sense whatsoever, much of it seems to be saying how wonderful everything would be if he had been in charge.

    Yet he was, in effect, in charge.

    So why was it not wonderful?

    Because ultimately, he is a rather stupid and dishonest narcissist with a track record of failure and incompetence, that he subsequently retcons to look like genius. His work for IDS, his two days working on the NE Assembly referendum, his time at the DfE, his lies in the EU referendum, his mad plans for civil service reform that missed the point entirely, his breaches of quarantine and crazy lies to cover his tracks - they follow a pattern. And so does this.

    So whatever he’s saying, it’s not worth listening to.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,814
    Roger said:

    Circling the wagons doesn't begin to describe it. This site used to be an oasis for Tories but nothing like this.....

    Come on Scotland get your act together. We need a safe space

    It already is!
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited May 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    Well yes, it is going to be expensive, and people with children are going to be highly disincentivized from returning. (Who wants two weeks in a two two star hotel room with a nine year old and a seven year old?)

    But that's not the same as being completely banned from returning home.
    Having to pay your annual salary for flights and quarantine is a damn effective block on returning for a family of four.

    There’s Aussies in my part of the world sleeping on mates’ sofas becuase they can’t get home.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    The fact cases are still going up shows that the r0 of the India variant is pretty damn high.
    Now we've got plenty more to vaccinate, and boosters to come on top as well but still.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    edited May 2021
    Look at all the actors in today's drama. Senior politicians. Advisors. Civil servants. Commentariat/Media. Other halves.

    You gave up your liberties, and still do, for THEM?

    You continue to play by all the rules that THEY have set?

    You consider that THEY are better judges of what is best for you, your health, and your family than you are?

    Really?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    DavidL said:

    Yes and quite a lot of what he is saying is genuinely interesting and thought provoking. But our press will focus on the political tittle tattle as always.
    Which is why he is so dumb for including it. But he cannot help but love the attention - he always wanted the limelight more than the job allows, and more control.

    I don't think he knows what an adviser does.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    Leon said:
    Or it didn't.

    Going to do a thread with various scientists/experts debunking elements of the coronavirus lab-leak theory. Let’s begin with the argument that zoonotic viruses need time to evolve before becoming highly transmissible among humans:
    https://twitter.com/Michael_Youhana/status/1397177065250689028

    Anyone claiming they know for certain either way is either lying or stupid.
    And it appears to me that the natural origins hypothesis remind the most likely.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    Look at all the actors in today's drama. Senior politicians. Advisors. Civil servants. Commentariat/Media. Other halves.

    You gave up your liberties, and still do, for THEM?

    You continue to play by all the rules that THEY have set?

    You consider that THEY are better judges of what is best for you, your health, and your family than you are?

    Really?

    You clearly do, given by refusing the vaccine you make lockdowns more likely.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,245
    edited May 2021
    ydoethur said:

    That would be a first.

    While I can quite believe Hancock’s a liar, Johnson’s a buffoon and SAGE are a bunch of third rate loons with no common sense whatsoever, much of it seems to be saying how wonderful everything would be if he had been in charge.

    Yet he was, in effect, in charge.

    So why was it not wonderful?

    Because ultimately, he is a rather stupid and dishonest narcissist with a track record of failure and incompetence, that he subsequently retcons to look like genius. His work for IDS, his two days working on the NE Assembly referendum, his time at the DfE, his lies in the EU referendum, his mad plans for civil service reform that missed the point entirely, his breaches of quarantine and crazy lies to cover his tracks - they follow a pattern. And so does this.

    So whatever he’s saying, it’s not worth listening to.
    Bollocks.

    Once again you are letting your own personal bias get in the way of the facts.

    He never said it would have been wonderful if he had been in charge, in fact he said exactly the opposite. He admitted he had made many mistakes and got a lot wrong. He was clear about that and also said he should never have been put in a position where he was advising on those decisions.

    Of course we all know you hate him because of your personal and professional bigotry, but I will remind you that that record of failure included winning the EU referendum and getting Johnson elected - which in retrospect might have been a failure but not in the way you mean.

    You are so blinded by your own hatred that you are also, to quote your own closing dribble, not worth listening to.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Perfect timing! As France announces quarantine for UK arrivals:

    Travel news: From tomorrow there will be 2 trains a day between London and Paris. It's lovely to see the service increase after months of only 1 train.

    https://twitter.com/EurostarJustinp/status/1397514568021258241?s=20
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    edited May 2021


    He never said it would have been wonderful if he had been in charge, in fact he said exactly the opposite. He admitted he had made many mistakes and got a lot wrong. He was clear about that and also said he should never have been put in a position where he was advising on those decisions.

    I don't buy such a claim. You cannot be forced into such a thing, anyone can easily say 'this should not be for me to advise upon'.

    Done.

    Given the disdain he apparently had for the whole business and many of the people involved that would have been very easy as well, since he wouldn't feel a need to coddle people he did not respect, and would not feel concern at telling them he should not be involved.

    It sounds like implausible justification for why he was involved not being at least partly his responsibility. Yes the person who appoints a fool is more to blame than the fool, but Cummings has agency, he wasn't buffeted by the winds of fate.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    You get one guess:

    Brief bit on the Kremlinology of Dom Cummings' select committee appearance, and why the politician who came out of it best was the one he ostentatiously didn't name:

    https://twitter.com/stephenkb/status/1397590698719948801?s=20
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,782

    Look at all the actors in today's drama. Senior politicians. Advisors. Civil servants. Commentariat/Media. Other halves.

    You gave up your liberties, and still do, for THEM?

    You continue to play by all the rules that THEY have set?

    You consider that THEY are better judges of what is best for you, your health, and your family than you are?

    Really?

    You keep making this point, as if we, or even our elected representatives had any fucking choice in the matter.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    To cap an already odd day, I see that Chris Grayling is advocating for hedgehogs.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    edited May 2021
    ydoethur said:

    You clearly do, given by refusing the vaccine you make lockdowns more likely.
    No you made lockdowns more likely by obeying everything the government tells you.

    A democratic government could not impose a lockdown on a population that did not want one. It would be impossible.

    Luckily they have credulous fools like you on hand to obey everything they say, defend them at every single turn, and attack the very people trying to defend your own liberty.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    Cookie said:

    You keep making this point, as if we, or even our elected representatives had any fucking choice in the matter.
    My worry over the Cummings stuff today is it may make Johnson even more frit of media criticism and so threaten our glorious unlocking.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Of course, if you achieved both of those objectives, then you would be boosting the leadership hopes of any politician who could firmly tick two boxes: one seen in Westminster as impeccably pro-lockdown and one not called Matt Hancock. A politician whom Dominic Cummings had worked with, perhaps. Who, despite his responsibilities including the Cabinet Office, about which Cummings had much to say, was not mentioned once in Cummings’ testimony to MPs. Who has run for the top job in the past, perhaps. Whose undoubted ability to actually deliver a project to completion might be a very useful point of contrast among Conservative MPs with the current incumbent. Called ‘Michael Gove’, maybe.

    https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/health/2021/05/why-politician-who-comes-out-best-dom-cummings-testimony-wasnt-mentioned-all
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    Sandpit said:

    But the pharma companies (and no doubt companies in other industries too) are making a note of the attitude.

    Why build that new factory in the EU, when putting it in the U.K. or Switzerland comes with a much more positive attitude from government?
    If the EU wish for their case to be taken seriously, then no pharma will ever sign a contract with them again.
    Except cash on delivery, no warranties, express or implied.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,628

    I thought that, to some degree anyway, Thatcher had done that.

    It's either that they are not, in fact, advertised, or that (perish the thought) no-one applies.
    Under Cameron I think external recruitment was effectively banned (needed v. senior approval, business case etc.) because they wanted to shrink the size of civil service...
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    You get one guess:

    Brief bit on the Kremlinology of Dom Cummings' select committee appearance, and why the politician who came out of it best was the one he ostentatiously didn't name:

    https://twitter.com/stephenkb/status/1397590698719948801?s=20

    Indeed.

    "Of course, if you achieved both of those objectives, then you would be boosting the leadership hopes of any politician who could firmly tick two boxes: one seen in Westminster as impeccably pro-lockdown and one not called Matt Hancock. A politician whom Dominic Cummings had worked with, perhaps."
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Cookie said:

    You keep making this point, as if we, or even our elected representatives had any fucking choice in the matter.
    Sweden, Florida and Texas show us there are choices. These are simply choices our authorities do not wish to make. Because they are too hard.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Reminder. Sanofi, a French company, who singularly failed to deliver a single working dose and were given a stonking non-refundable deposit have not been taken to court. That’s the EU for you.

    https://twitter.com/EuRollout/status/1397594645585137681?s=20
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Stocky said:

    To cap an already odd day, I see that Chris Grayling is advocating for hedgehogs.

    Used to be minister for tyransport, too, didn't he?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    ydoethur said:

    I see Dominic Cummings has been having a series of epic self-awareness fails.

    Does anyone actually believe what he’s saying?

    I find it possible to believe some of what he's saying, despite his complete lack of credibility as a witness.
    The idea that Hancock might have lied on occasion about the discharge policy (for example) does not stretch my credulity in the least.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011

    Of course, if you achieved both of those objectives, then you would be boosting the leadership hopes of any politician who could firmly tick two boxes: one seen in Westminster as impeccably pro-lockdown and one not called Matt Hancock. A politician whom Dominic Cummings had worked with, perhaps. Who, despite his responsibilities including the Cabinet Office, about which Cummings had much to say, was not mentioned once in Cummings’ testimony to MPs. Who has run for the top job in the past, perhaps. Whose undoubted ability to actually deliver a project to completion might be a very useful point of contrast among Conservative MPs with the current incumbent. Called ‘Michael Gove’, maybe.

    https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/health/2021/05/why-politician-who-comes-out-best-dom-cummings-testimony-wasnt-mentioned-all

    Cummings was asked directly by a Labour mp about Gove and he gave him a free pass which adds to the point
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,007
    edited May 2021
    I read the Cummings stuff as.. bitter and twisted shit of a man angry at being booted out, lashes out and sticks the knife in to all and sundry, including himself.( to make it more plausible)

    He lied about his lockdown escape, why believe anything else he says? I wouldn't trust him to get me a cup of tea.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,782

    Peak kinabalu there :smile:

    They used to talk about piling Pelion on Ossa; now they're piling Kinabalu on Thorpe Cloud...
    It was only three days ago I learned* what a Kinabalu is. I wouldn't have got this joke last week.

    *I was wikipediaing what the highest islands in the world were, after learning Taiwan came 4th. Interestingly, although Great Britain is the 8th largest island, it is only the 125th highest.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator for the FT:

    Pretty outrageous by the EU, particularly given AZ are not making a profit on this deal. Were it not for the humanitarian side of things, I think AZ would be justified in stopping producing for the EU

    https://twitter.com/gideonrachman/status/1397554395429154819?s=20
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118
    Stocky said:

    To cap an already odd day, I see that Chris Grayling is advocating for hedgehogs.

    Extinction beckons.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118

    Perfect timing! As France announces quarantine for UK arrivals:

    Travel news: From tomorrow there will be 2 trains a day between London and Paris. It's lovely to see the service increase after months of only 1 train.

    https://twitter.com/EurostarJustinp/status/1397514568021258241?s=20

    At least its no longer packed with gravy.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,310

    Cummings was asked directly by a Labour mp about Gove and he gave him a free pass which adds to the point
    This comment from 2017 never ages:

    And, somehow, when all the bodies are lying on the floor there will still stand: Michael Gove. Keep an eye on that.

    https://twitter.com/miss_mcinerney/status/928175051807043584?s=19
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Pulpstar said:

    The fact cases are still going up shows that the r0 of the India variant is pretty damn high.
    Now we've got plenty more to vaccinate, and boosters to come on top as well but still.

    Really? Sage have been predicting that cases would be certain to rise at each stage of unlockdown long before they even knew of the existence of the India variant. Now unless you just accept that everything they were saying was just nonsense, why does this necessarily say anything about its transmissibility? Noting also that nobody’s really sure of the extent to which vaccines hinder infection spread, as opposed to levels of symptomatic cases or serious illness.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    The 20m extra doses the commission is seeking from the company would make little difference to the EU’s accelerating vaccine rollout. Some countries have restricted the use of AstraZeneca jabs because of rare but potentially fatal side-effects. Denmark has stopped using it altogether.

    https://www.ft.com/content/dd191c42-3509-42c6-8fd2-e617f16935ec
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,964

    Philip Collins
    @PhilipJCollins1
    ·
    1h
    Boris Johnson is both a formidable electoral politician and fundamentally ill-equipped for high office. Lots of senior Tories knew what they were giving us.

    Tories had to choose between the actual alternatives. Once you reject, as inevitably you had to, those who were not clear Brexiteers it is hard to see where else they could go for the particular purpose of delivering Brexit and winning an election.

  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    kle4 said:

    I don't buy such a claim. You cannot be forced into such a thing, anyone can easily say 'this should not be for me to advise upon'.

    Done.

    Given the disdain he apparently had for the whole business and many of the people involved that would have been very easy as well, since he wouldn't feel a need to coddle people he did not respect, and would not feel concern at telling them he should not be involved.

    It sounds like implausible justification for why he was involved not being at least partly his responsibility. Yes the person who appoints a fool is more to blame than the fool, but Cummings has agency, he wasn't buffeted by the winds of fate.
    Didn’t he even say that he wanted to quit last June but decided to stay on because he was needed to help combat the anticipated October surge. If he was so convinced about how unsuited he was to his role, quitting should have been the easiest decision ever.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,585
    Pulpstar said:

    The fact cases are still going up shows that the r0 of the India variant is pretty damn high.
    Now we've got plenty more to vaccinate, and boosters to come on top as well but still.

    I think a lot of the cases are in schools. @Malmesbury data shows this. I have a hunch that Indian travellers have infected multigenerational families and it has then spread into the schools. There is very little sign of a rise outside the main areas. If anything the yellow is spreading across the MSOA data map.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    No you made lockdowns more likely by obeying everything the government tells you.

    A democratic government could not impose a lockdown on a population that did not want one. It would be impossible.

    Luckily they have credulous fools like you on hand to obey everything they say, defend them at every single turn, and attack the very people trying to defend your own liberty.
    You’re not. You’re undermining it.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Nigelb said:

    If the EU wish for their case to be taken seriously, then no pharma will ever sign a contract with them again.
    Except cash on delivery, no warranties, express or implied.
    It’s utterly bonkers. They’re completely trashing their reputation with some huge companies, to try and make political news headlines.

    On the same day they’ve fallen out with Switzerland, and not long after their second largest member withdrew from the organisation and is trying hard to attract business.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367
    edited May 2021

    I think a lot of the cases are in schools. @Malmesbury data shows this. I have a hunch that Indian travellers have infected multigenerational families and it has then spread into the schools. There is very little sign of a rise outside the main areas. If anything the yellow is spreading across the MSOA data map.
    I have to say, I work in a very ethnically diverse school but I haven’t noticed any significant rise in cases there yet.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264
    Nigelb said:

    Or it didn't.

    Going to do a thread with various scientists/experts debunking elements of the coronavirus lab-leak theory. Let’s begin with the argument that zoonotic viruses need time to evolve before becoming highly transmissible among humans:
    https://twitter.com/Michael_Youhana/status/1397177065250689028

    Anyone claiming they know for certain either way is either lying or stupid.
    And it appears to me that the natural origins hypothesis remind the most likely.
    Natural origin is not incompatible with it getting leaked from a lab. There is a suspicious push to equate it accidentally leaking from a lab with poor safety procedures = humans editing it to cause a pandemic.
  • AnExileinD4AnExileinD4 Posts: 337
    edited May 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes I know that.

    The point is that AUSTRALIAN CITIZENS CAN TRAVEL TO AUSTRALIA.

    Limited flights != No flights.

    If I were Australian, I could go on-line now and book my quarantine, and book my ticket to Australia. I'm not saying it's not harder than normal, I am just saying that it is very far from impossible.
    Provided they are very wealthy they can return home. You are clearly very wealthy and assume that everyone else is as well. Have you considered empathy?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,782

    Sweden, Florida and Texas show us there are choices. These are simply choices our authorities do not wish to make. Because they are too hard.
    Indeed. My point is that I personally had no choice in giving up my liberties, and nor did you, Mary Berry or Ainsley Harriott. You keep talking as if we were given a choice and are therefore culpable. We weren't. Representative democracy, freedom of association, freedom of speech - all gone in the stroke of a pen. I find the implication that we were all enthusiastic cheerleaders for this while only wise cranky old contrarian sat alone in his eyrie shaking his head slightly irritating.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    Bollocks.

    Once again you are letting your own personal bias get in the way of the facts.

    He never said it would have been wonderful if he had been in charge, in fact he said exactly the opposite. He admitted he had made many mistakes and got a lot wrong. He was clear about that and also said he should never have been put in a position where he was advising on those decisions.

    Of course we all know you hate him because of your personal and professional bigotry, but I will remind you that that record of failure included winning the EU referendum and getting Johnson elected - which in retrospect might have been a failure but not in the way you mean.

    You are so blinded by your own hatred that you are also, to quote your own closing dribble, not worth listening to.
    I hate him because he’s a bully and liar who has not merely failed but caused catastrophic damage in everything he’s touched - even where reform was badly needed, as in LEAs and the exam system.

    And he’s doing the same thing here.

    You don’t need to overthink it beyond that Richard.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,585
    ydoethur said:

    I have to say, I work in a very ethnically diverse school but I haven’t noticed any significant rise in cases there yet.
    To be more precise, the schools in and around Bolton. I don’t think it is spreading widely, despite being found in many areas.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    edited May 2021
    Good that people are aware the EU did close to the absolute minimum in response to the Belarus highjack. Not even a generalized ban of the Belarus airspace (aircraft crossing Belarus airspace before entering or after leaving EU airspace would be banned)....

    ....I guess it’s the fear of being extraterritorial. A generalized ban would affect Chinese and American companies. They, China and the US, have no such compunction


    https://twitter.com/MacaesBruno/status/1397599338168299523?s=20

    FedEx and Chinese airlines are still overflying Belarus.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    To be more precise, the schools in and around Bolton. I don’t think it is spreading widely, despite being found in many areas.
    And Bedford, where one school has gone back to remote learning.

    It’s a bit strange though as we have had several students back from the subcontinent. Equally, in my experience the school is very alert at enforcing quarantine. I’ve had huge numbers of emails about students and when they should be back, and if they’re back earlier, message the office straightaway and they will be collected.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    edited May 2021
    Chameleon said:

    Natural origin is not incompatible with it getting leaked from a lab. There is a suspicious push to equate it accidentally leaking from a lab with poor safety procedures = humans editing it to cause a pandemic.
    Indeed.
    But either way, natural origin without the involvement of a lab in the process is still the more likely explanation.
    And editing the least likely, I think.

    (And, of course, all explanations remain possible.)
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,245
    kle4 said:

    I don't buy such a claim. You cannot be forced into such a thing, anyone can easily say 'this should not be for me to advise upon'.

    Done.

    Given the disdain he apparently had for the whole business and many of the people involved that would have been very easy as well, since he wouldn't feel a need to coddle people he did not respect, and would not feel concern at telling them he should not be involved.

    It sounds like implausible justification for why he was involved not being at least partly his responsibility. Yes the person who appoints a fool is more to blame than the fool, but Cummings has agency, he wasn't buffeted by the winds of fate.
    Like ydoethur you brazenly ignore the fact that he did take responsibility and did say that some of the failings were his. In fact he repeated it on a number of occasions. He also praised many of those he worked with so again you misrepresent his evidence. I wonder if, like ydoethur you didn't actually see any of the evidence and are just commenting on snippets. Or maybe like ydoethur you just chose to ignore anything that doesn't suit your pre conceived ideas.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,585
    ydoethur said:

    And Bedford, where one school has gone back to remote learning.

    It’s a bit strange though as we have had several students back from the subcontinent. Equally, in my experience the school is very alert at enforcing quarantine. I’ve had huge numbers of emails about students and when they should be back, and if they’re back earlier, message the office straightaway and they will be collected.
    Not everyone who came back from India will have been infected though.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Carnyx said:

    Does it make any significance on the last point that she is not formally hitched to Mr J (apart from the law of contract)? I don't know if it does ... jut seems a long time to wait ...
    My thinking was that she might have been privy to stuff she wasn’t entitled to be, either from her betrothed or from others in the key meetings.

    Being married or not I don’t think makes a difference, but one imagines that a Norma Major or Sarah Brown wasn’t on the messages with everyone in the meetings as a matter of course.

    The long wait, I assume she wants the ‘fairytale’ wedding, which isn’t going to happen this summer as every possible venue was booked solid months ago. I’m surprised if she’s found a decent venue for next summer to be honest, unless they do it in government buildings.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367

    Like ydoethur you brazenly ignore the fact that he did take responsibility and did say that some of the failings were his. In fact he repeated it on a number of occasions. He also praised many of those he worked with so again you misrepresent his evidence. I wonder if, like ydoethur you didn't actually see any of the evidence and are just commenting on snippets. Or maybe like ydoethur you just chose to ignore anything that doesn't suit your pre conceived ideas.
    True. I have only seen summaries, due to having to teach all day and only just having got back in.

    But nothing he’s said so far judging by that is exactly surprising nor at variance with my analysis.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,098
    Nigelb said:

    If the EU wish for their case to be taken seriously, then no pharma will ever sign a contract with them again.
    Except cash on delivery, no warranties, express or implied.
    No. they will do business.

    In the oil business, there are levels of trust between the companies and national governments....

    Norway - their governments handshake is good enough for billions
    Nigeria - to do a contract with them, they used to have to put billions in escrow in a neutral country like Switzerland. If they break any part of the deal, the money goes automatically to the oil company.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,809
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes I know that.

    The point is that AUSTRALIAN CITIZENS CAN TRAVEL TO AUSTRALIA.

    Limited flights != No flights.

    If I were Australian, I could go on-line now and book my quarantine, and book my ticket to Australia. I'm not saying it's not harder than normal, I am just saying that it is very far from impossible.
    The issue aiui is getting a slot in quarantine rather than flights.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,367
    Sandpit said:

    My thinking was that she might have been privy to stuff she wasn’t entitled to be, either from her betrothed or from others in the key meetings.

    Being married or not I don’t think makes a difference, but one imagines that a Norma Major or Sarah Brown wasn’t on the messages with everyone in the meetings as a matter of course.

    The long wait, I assume she wants the ‘fairytale’ wedding, which isn’t going to happen this summer as every possible venue was booked solid months ago. I’m surprised if she’s found a decent venue for next summer to be honest, unless they do it in government buildings.
    It took a while to find somewhere with the right wallpaper.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486

    Like ydoethur you brazenly ignore the fact that he did take responsibility and did say that some of the failings were his. In fact he repeated it on a number of occasions. He also praised many of those he worked with so again you misrepresent his evidence. I wonder if, like ydoethur you didn't actually see any of the evidence and are just commenting on snippets. Or maybe like ydoethur you just chose to ignore anything that doesn't suit your pre conceived ideas.
    It does, though, rather well illustrate the point that even well merited criticisms will be devalued if they come from him.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,220
    Nigelb said:

    It does, though, rather well illustrate the point that even well merited criticisms will be devalued if they come from him.
    I think he is right in about 90% of his criticisms. The problem is I wouldnt trust even 50% of his solutions.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,245
    Nigelb said:

    It does, though, rather well illustrate the point that even well merited criticisms will be devalued if they come from him.
    Yep I accept that. He is a deeply flawed character in many ways. But that doesn't mean a word of what he said today was untrue.
This discussion has been closed.