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Keir Starmer now slumps to Corbyn levels in the latest Ipsos leader ratings – politicalbetting.com

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  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536

    Mr. 86, is that not based on the location of the job, not the home?

    Anyway, I have to be off.

    Well, mine are the same at the moment, but I'm getting London wages...
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,260
    AlistairM said:

    The supply issue is that we don't have enough Pfizer/Moderna to jab the under 30s quickly. The message now through various sources is that if you've had AZ more than 4 weeks ago then you can practically just turn up and get your 2nd jab. I had my first AZ 6 weeks ago, I am booked to have my 2nd in 2 weeks. However, my local main vaccination centre has sent out a message saying that on Friday and Saturday if you had AZ more than 4 weeks ago you can just turn up and get your 2nd jab. I think I might go for it.

    The JCVI needs to re-work its guidance based on the current situation. Right now AZ in the arms of the under 30s is far more beneficial than it sat in a giant fridge. Like Francis says, offer the under 30s to just turn up and get jabbed with AZ. They can make an informed choice. Risks of a blood clot are less than going on a long haul flight.

    Matt Hancock ought to be doing this today instead of sat in front of a select committee talking about what he should have done with the benefit of hindsight over a year ago. I'm still not convinced that we have a big issue but we ought to be jabbing as fast as we can and not be held back by some tiny risks.
    The JCVI guidance is perfectly clear that we should be using AZ more. It is the implementation of that, that is not happening.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,918

    @Nigel_Foremain here you go, serious scientists saying that Britain achieved herd immunity two months ago: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/04/07/exclusive-britain-will-pass-covid-herd-immunity-threshold-monday/

    Not just me. But the Zero Covid Independent SAGE zealots get a lot more media attention than those scientists saying that we have herd immunity, so I'm not surprised at your mistake in thinking it was just me.

    This is Karl Friston, the expert in neurological imaging (but not epidemiology), who produced an "unconventional" model last year and was saying a year ago that test-and-trace could defer a second wave until vaccines were available.

    And in fact he is a member of Independent SAGE.

    But don't let any of that deter you from believing just what you want to believe.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    alex_ said:

    It seems to be that a major part of the problem is the continuing failure to distinguish between vaxxed and non-vaxxed for things like self isolation etc. It means thing like rising cases represent a problem in themselves, regardless of the public health consequences because current policies require people, under criminal penalty from non compliance, to isolate when coming into contact, regardless of their vaccine status. This is bonkers.

    There could be no public health risks at all, and the economy could still be brought to a grinding halt.
    Government don’t want to discriminate based on vaccine status, until everyone’s been offered a vaccine. Can you imagine the headlines about ‘millennials’ and ‘boomers’?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021
    AlistairM said:

    The supply issue is that we don't have enough Pfizer/Moderna to jab the under 30s quickly. The message now through various sources is that if you've had AZ more than 4 weeks ago then you can practically just turn up and get your 2nd jab. I had my first AZ 6 weeks ago, I am booked to have my 2nd in 2 weeks. However, my local main vaccination centre has sent out a message saying that on Friday and Saturday if you had AZ more than 4 weeks ago you can just turn up and get your 2nd jab. I think I might go for it.

    The JCVI needs to re-work its guidance based on the current situation. Right now AZ in the arms of the under 30s is far more beneficial than it sat in a giant fridge. Like Francis says, offer the under 30s to just turn up and get jabbed with AZ. They can make an informed choice. Risks of a blood clot are less than going on a long haul flight.

    Matt Hancock ought to be doing this today instead of sat in front of a select committee talking about what he should have done with the benefit of hindsight over a year ago. I'm still not convinced that we have a big issue but we ought to be jabbing as fast as we can and not be held back by some tiny risks.
    The thing about the blood clot risk is now we know about it. A not insignificant part of the danger is we didn't know and thus people didn't seek medical treatment quickly, as people were told oh you might get a headache etc with this vaccine, don't worry.

    I presume now those getting AZN are told to go straight to hospital should certain symptoms arise.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    IshmaelZ said:

    Naah, the East coast has always looked too boring for circumnavigation to appeal. That's probably rampant prejudice and it's absolutely fascinating out there.
    Ah, hic sunt leones. Or at least Geordes.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    What unity was there when Lisbon was passed without a referendum despite the government's manifesto promising to do otherwise?
    What unity was there when half of Britain's rebate was pissed away on an EU promise to reform CAP, that was then reneged on?
    Did Thatcher seek unity with the miners?

    Did Cameron seek unity with those opposed to gay marriage?
    Did Blair seek unity with those supporting Section 28?

    Politics isn't about unity, its about making decisions and having debates. Those who lose the argument can either accept it and move on, which results in unity, or bitterly oppose it and keep fighting which makes unity impossible. It isn't on the winners to seek unity, though its popular to say that you're trying to.
    Yawn yawn. I see you making the excuses to carry on bleating on your boring old "we won" narrative. Sad, as your US political role model would say.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    The thing about the blood clot risk is now we know about it. A not insignificant part of the danger is we didn't know and thus people didn't seek medical treatment quickly, as people were told oh you might get a headache etc with this vaccine, don't worry.

    I presume now those getting AZN are told to go straight to hospital should certain symptoms arise.
    Yes, I know someone who had it. All fairly scary but on road to recovery now.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,317
    edited June 2021

    Full marks for the data manipulation and bias. Vladimir has a job for you.

    As a counterpoint, here is a bit of bias of my own in the form of a question: What percentage of the total population who could vote voted Leave in the referendum?

    It is a rhetorical question, so you don't need to answer as I already know it.

    Seriously though, people need to move on on the question of Brexit. To those of us that lost the argument, we need to shut up and move on.

    For those of you that "won" you need to shut up as well. You claim to be patriots, but patriots should seek to unite, not to divide.

    I don’t go on about it, I just can’t have people trying to make out it was some electoral system glitch that led to the current situation. Brexit won six times on the trot

    Where the data manipulation and bias? Leave won six times under three different conditions

    And I don’t claim to be a patriot, or anything else

    “ It is a rhetorical question, so you don't need to answer as I already know it.”

    It’s a stupid question, as I could ask what population of the total population who could vote voted remain. And the share is ‘less than who voted leave’
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    TimT said:

    I find, for example, the north coast of Cornwall in a storm every bit as stunning as Venice or the Alps, just in a different way.

    It is funny you should say that Britain has no wow factor. I used to think that. But 1 year living in the general brownness of Yemen, and then to land at Heathrow in early May with everything in full spring green. Now that is a wow factor if you are not used to it.
    For those who don't know it, I love the Beautiful Britain page on Facebook:

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/143520235831162/?multi_permalinks=1791885304327972&notif_id=1622937181815067&notif_t=group_highlights&ref=notif
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    My employer just told everyone to continue to WAH if they want - if they require us back in office they will give us 60 days notice - Realistically then we continue to WAH until September at earliest.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    DougSeal said:

    Ironically the scientist making that claim, Karl Friston, is on Cosplay SAGE.

    https://www.independentsage.org/who-are-independent-sage/
    It should be borne in mind that most other experts dismissed it.
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/covid-uk-herd-immunity-vaccine-latest-b1828491.html

    Kucharski pointed out that Friston's model had predicted that the second wave would peak at no more than 31 deaths per day.

    The fact that covid did not become extinct in this country in the two months since also points towards that (with widespread herd immunity, yet with ongoing restrictions that drove R down still further, it should have collapsed and only exist in one or two isolated areas).
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,260
    Sandpit said:

    Government don’t want to discriminate based on vaccine status, until everyone’s been offered a vaccine. Can you imagine the headlines about ‘millennials’ and ‘boomers’?
    I think that is right both for political and moral reasons.

    If we end up at 80%-90%+ take up as seems very likely not sure we need separate rules anyway.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790
    Chris said:

    This is Karl Friston, the expert in neurological imaging (but not epidemiology), who produced an "unconventional" model last year and was saying a year ago that test-and-trace could defer a second wave until vaccines were available.

    And in fact he is a member of Independent SAGE.

    But don't let any of that deter you from believing just what you want to believe.
    Thanks for looking it up, because I wasn't going to subscribe to check the veracity of the article, but I guessed it was bollox. The DT always was crap on science, even before it became crap on most things.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,114
    isam said:

    Brexit won six times on the trot

    Which makes it all the more remarkable that the Brexiteers are whining so loudly about how shit it all is
  • isamisam Posts: 41,317
    Scott_xP said:

    Which makes it all the more remarkable that the Brexiteers are whining so loudly about how shit it all is
    Don’t let them get to you
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,934
    One big thing in the tax world at the moment is the natural extension of home and flexible working, which is working from a different country. This is significant where multinationals have established a value chain and transfer pricing model based on all their senior people sitting in one (low tax) location. It was already under strain as it was often hard or expensive to hire people in places like Switzerland or Singapore but this is really pushing things harder.

    Coupled with the global minimum tax shaving some edge off the tax benefits of being the SIS countries (Switz, Ireland, Singapore) we're expecting to see HQs sprawl ever further across multiple countries.

    Is keeping me very busy this year.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,114
    isam said:

    Don’t let them get to you

    Illegitimi non carborundum
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,502
    You would have to be quite untravelled to think that the scenery in this country is mediocre

    The Lake District, Peak District, Yorkshire Dales, Antrim Coast, South Devon Coast Isles of Arran and Mull are as beautiful as anywhere.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,257

    @Nigel_Foremain here you go, serious scientists saying that Britain achieved herd immunity two months ago: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/04/07/exclusive-britain-will-pass-covid-herd-immunity-threshold-monday/

    Not just me. But the Zero Covid Independent SAGE zealots get a lot more media attention than those scientists saying that we have herd immunity, so I'm not surprised at your mistake in thinking it was just me.

    It's a tricky thing, herd immunity. If you apply it at the UK level, then it doesn't necessarily mean you can't have a big wave of cases - as that depends on the infection chains. You could probably get to herd immunity percentages by vaccinating everyone in the UK except for those in Scotland, where you vaccinate no-one (gets you somewhere near 90%). You could have a horrific wave of cases in Scotland (crudely, without lockdowns, a big majority would end up getting infected - let's assume 80% for herd immunity, so asymptotically approaching 80%).

    That's clearly not the case, but we have vaccinated the old and vulnerable preferentially (for good reason) and they're probably not the major spreaders. So if your crude calculation for herd immunity is 80% it might be that you actually need a fair bit above 80% to prevent a big wave in the youngsters (how far does the chain of infection go before it gets stopped by someone in the 80%?).

    (All of which is just academic observation that practical herd immunity is not that easy to determine. Not an argument eiter way on 21 June. The above was more of an issue when most mums and dads were not vaccinated at all as there's a clear child - > child -> parent -> child route aross families, schools etc which is even now being shut down. If the hospitalisation ratio is low enough for those who would get infected now then it desn't really matter anyway).
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    alex_ said:

    Change the guidance on AZ and the supply problem disappears.
    Which, as mentioned yesterday, is fine until the media find a photogenic young lady who gets seriously ill - or worse - as a result of her vaccine.

    The clinicians have made the decision, trying to overturn it for political reasons could end very badly.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021
    Kick It Out and Football Supporters' Association urge fans to 'drown out boos'

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/57425746

    There is going to be a competition now who can boo or clap the loudest. Strange how they report the survey on what people think about who the England team is open to, but not the polling on what the public think about the gesture.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Cyclefree said:

    I'd be wary about believing what Stonewall issues these days on this topic since they give out misleading and incorrect advice on what the law on sex-based rights actually is. This ought to be a bigger scandal than it is, especially given that they are paid by a lot of government departments and other big companies to issue advice. Lying about what the law says in order to suit a particular agenda is utterly disgraceful.
    The advice was that “gender identity or trans status” were protected under the Equality Act whereas the actual wording of the Act refers to “gender re-assignment".

    Is that also your understanding of this?
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    edited June 2021

    It should be borne in mind that most other experts dismissed it.
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/covid-uk-herd-immunity-vaccine-latest-b1828491.html

    Kucharski pointed out that Friston's model had predicted that the second wave would peak at no more than 31 deaths per day.

    The fact that covid did not become extinct in this country in the two months since also points towards that (with widespread herd immunity, yet with ongoing restrictions that drove R down still further, it should have collapsed and only exist in one or two isolated areas).
    If R0 of the Indian variant really is in the 5-6 range, then we won't have herd immunity until 80-85% of the (total, not just adult) population have either been fully vaccinated or have acquired natural immunity through exposure. I think we are a ways off that yet.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Gordo's back with another book...all yours for £25.

    Seven Ways to Change the World: How to Fix the Most Pressing Problems We Face by Gordon Brown

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/jun/10/seven-ways-to-change-the-world-by-gordon-brown-review-a-restless-search-for-answers

    And so is Ed...

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jun/10/thinking-big-labour-politics-radical-vision

    Obviously they’ve spent the cash from their last books, and aren’t getting much of a hearing from SKS.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,626

    The JCVI guidance is perfectly clear that we should be using AZ more. It is the implementation of that, that is not happening.
    The question is still about a balance of whether to give AZ to say 20 year old women , in the face of rising cases. What is the risk of Covid to them? Vs the risk of a vanishingly rare blood clot? I still think it is better to use Moderna/Pfizer for the under 40's, because the vast majority of the new cases are in school kids and most of the vulnerable are protected (and all have been offered the protection - with the exception of those who CANNOT have the vaccine).
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790
    isam said:

    I don’t go on about it, I just can’t have people trying to make out it was some electoral system glitch that led to the current situation. Brexit won six times on the trot

    Where the data manipulation and bias? Leave won six times under three different conditions

    And I don’t claim to be a patriot, or anything else

    “ It is a rhetorical question, so you don't need to answer as I already know it.”

    It’s a stupid question, as I could ask what population of the total population who could vote voted remain. And the share is ‘less than who voted leave’
    It was an illustration in bias, ie. some people (I don't share this view) believe that there should be an absolute majority to make major constitutional change. You manipulated data by putting the Labour and Tory vote together which was just plain silly. Just stop bleating. I know most Leave fanatics (as opposed to more reasonable Leave voters) still have massive chips on their shoulders because they were enthusiastically in bed with fascists xenophobes and racists, but get over it. You won. Learn some humility. Move on.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Kick It Out and Football Supporters' Association urge fans to 'drown out boos'

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/57425746

    There is going to be a competition now who can boo or clap the loudest. Strange how they report the survey on what people think about who the England team is open to, but not the polling on what the public think about the gesture.

    Good on Kick It Out.

    Funny how it is Kick It Out behind this and not the Marxist Party of GB as some people would imply.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,607
    Sean_F said:

    One can assume that Akua Reindorf knows her stuff. She is very much a leader in her field, employment and discriminatiion law.

    https://www.cloisters.com/barristers/akua-reindorf/
    Unless the Stonewall document has been updated (which is entirely possible) I /think/ the implication of the High Court judgement on whether AEA vs EHRC can go forward (which was “Nope, get lost.”) implies that the text in Stonewall’s document was a correct interpretation of the law.

    But that text includes some very specific legal language which makes me think they might have changed it, hence my request to Cyclefree for a link to the original text she was complaining about.

    (It wouldn’t surprise me if this is just another soundbite opinion that Cyclefree has picked up from GC social media without actually looking at the source documents. GC social media seems very prone to spreading legal opinions that end up falling apart when they actually get into court & this is exactly the kind of hearsay smear that GC social media loves to spread around.)
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,725
    Very interesting article.

    Molecular evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in New York before the first pandemic wave
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-23688-7.pdf
    Numerous reports document the spread of SARS-CoV-2, but there is limited information on its introduction before the identification of a local case. This may lead to incorrect assumptions when modeling viral origins and transmission. Here, we utilize a sample pooling strategy to screen for previously undetected SARS-CoV-2 in de-identified, respiratory pathogen-negative nasopharyngeal specimens from 3,040 patients across the Mount Sinai Health System in New York. The patients had been previously evaluated for respiratory symptoms or influenza-like illness during the first 10 weeks of 2020. We identify SARS-CoV- 2 RNA from specimens collected as early as 25 January 2020, and complete SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences from multiple pools of samples collected between late February and early March, documenting an increase prior to the later surge. Our results provide evidence of sporadic SARS-CoV-2 infections a full month before both the first officially documented case and emergence of New York as a COVID-19 epicenter in March 2020.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491

    Good on Kick It Out.

    Funny how it is Kick It Out behind this and not the Marxist Party of GB as some people would imply.
    Personally, I thought the cricket got it right this morning, and not a boo to be heard.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,725
    edited June 2021
    One of the authors comments...
    https://twitter.com/florian_krammer/status/1402971799059632131
    Also, because I see many people commenting that they already had SARS-CoV-2 in December. We actually did serology in several cases that seemed plausible (travel to China followed by respiratory disease in December) in NY and California. All negative.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    It was an illustration in bias, ie. some people (I don't share this view) believe that there should be an absolute majority to make major constitutional change. You manipulated data by putting the Labour and Tory vote together which was just plain silly. Just stop bleating. I know most Leave fanatics (as opposed to more reasonable Leave voters) still have massive chips on their shoulders because they were enthusiastically in bed with fascists xenophobes and racists, but get over it. You won. Learn some humility. Move on.
    If people stopped whinging about it, it would be easier to move on.

    I very rarely bring the subject up myself, but I do reply to those like Scott whining about it. Then you call me a keyboard warrior for doing so, but say nothing to him since you agree with him.

    I'm very happy with how things are going. Very, very happy. So when I see people whinging, why shouldn't I reply to them?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    Nigelb said:

    One of the authors comments...
    https://twitter.com/florian_krammer/status/1402971799059632131
    Also, because I see many people commenting that they already had SARS-CoV-2 in December. We actually did serology in several cases that seemed plausible (travel to China followed by respiratory disease in December) in NY and California. All negative.

    Large numbers of people claiming they had in the west prior to Christmas just doesn't stand up to what we know about spread and severity. If they really did have it and not a cold, given zero precautions being taken they would have spread to so many people, we would have had hospitals been inundated with cases....especially say around Christmas, as families get to together, you hug granny etc.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    Sandpit said:

    Government don’t want to discriminate based on vaccine status, until everyone’s been offered a vaccine. Can you imagine the headlines about ‘millennials’ and ‘boomers’?
    Yes, but that's partly because they haven't laid out the sensible case and the criteria. And of course this isn't a choice between good things, it's a choice between alternative evils:

    Evil 1: Let rip, and damn the consequences. Quite apart from the moral and economic impact of rapidly rising cases and hospitalisations, the headlines wouldn't be too good in that scenario, would they?

    Evil 2: Screw down further or for longer, with continued very dire consequences for the economy, especially the hospitality sector, the arts, sport and entertainment, plus other knock-on effects to education and health. The headlines in that scenario? Screaming ones about how Boris broke his promise, about cancelled events, restaurants going bust etc etc.

    Evil 3: Better targeted rules which allow a lot of re-opening to the vaccinated but with some 'unfairness' to those who haven't been vaccinated. Sure, screaming headlines in that case too, but it's actually the least of the three evils (and, especially, the least damaging of the three to exactly those to whom it is 'unfair'). Almost everyone who has argued against this has failed to explain why it's worse that the other two evils.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    If people stopped whinging about it, it would be easier to move on.

    I very rarely bring the subject up myself, but I do reply to those like Scott whining about it. Then you call me a keyboard warrior for doing so, but say nothing to him since you agree with him.

    I'm very happy with how things are going. Very, very happy. So when I see people whinging, why shouldn't I reply to them?
    Because you talk bollox?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Facebook said it will let all employees work remotely even after the pandemic if their jobs can be done out of an office, but may reduce their pay if they move to a less-expensive area

    That will go down like a bucket of cold sick.

    That sort of thing depends very much on the numbers.

    $200k salary in the Bay Area buys you a 1 bed apartment there but a f***ton of property almost anywhere else in the US. Dropping the salary to $180k if you want to live in the Boonies makes little difference to your standard of living. Dropping it to $80k, on the other hand...
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    The thing about the blood clot risk is now we know about it. A not insignificant part of the danger is we didn't know and thus people didn't seek medical treatment quickly, as people were told oh you might get a headache etc with this vaccine, don't worry.

    I presume now those getting AZN are told to go straight to hospital should certain symptoms arise.
    You presume almost correctly. On Tuesday I got my jab, with a lengthy exposition of possible indicators of clotting. Both orally and on 4 sides of an A4 leaflet.
    Was told to call 111 however.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    TimT said:

    I find, for example, the north coast of Cornwall in a storm every bit as stunning as Venice or the Alps, just in a different way.

    It is funny you should say that Britain has no wow factor. I used to think that. But 1 year living in the general brownness of Yemen, and then to land at Heathrow in early May with everything in full spring green. Now that is a wow factor if you are not used to it.
    Hell Yeah! When you come back to the UK after a long time somewhere else, it’s a lovely place to be.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Yes, but that's partly because they haven't laid out the sensible case and the criteria. And of course this isn't a choice between good things, it's a choice between alternative evils:

    Evil 1: Let rip, and damn the consequences. Quite apart from the moral and economic impact of rapidly rising cases and hospitalisations, the headlines wouldn't be too good in that scenario, would they?

    Evil 2: Screw down further or for longer, with continued very dire consequences for the economy, especially the hospitality sector, the arts, sport and entertainment, plus other knock-on effects to education and health. The headlines in that scenario? Screaming ones about how Boris broke his promise, about cancelled events, restaurants going bust etc etc.

    Evil 3: Better targeted rules which allow a lot of re-opening to the vaccinated but with some 'unfairness' to those who haven't been vaccinated. Sure, screaming headlines in that case too, but it's actually the least of the three evils (and, especially, the least damaging of the three to exactly those to whom it is 'unfair'). Almost everyone who has argued against this has failed to explain why it's worse that the other two evils.
    Its far, far worse than Evil 1.

    We locked down the young quite explicitly to protect the elderly, knowing they weren't vulnerable. We've quite explicitly refused to vaccinate the young, because they weren't vulnerable, to protect the vulnerable.

    Now that the vulnerable are protected you want to keep the young locked down. Why? Who are you trying to protect now?

    If its the young themselves, who aren't really at risk, then let them make their own choices and risk assessment. If its the elderly, despite being vaccinated, then tell the elderly who are afraid to stay at home not the young.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    Large numbers of people claiming they had in the west prior to Christmas just doesn't stand up to what we know about spread and severity. If they really did have it and not a cold, given zero precautions being taken they would have spread to so many people, we would have had hospitals been inundated with cases....especially say around Christmas, as families get to together, you hug granny etc.
    I believe I had it in early Feb. All the main symptoms plus a few others (eg. urinary problems) which I have subsequently discovered are also symptoms of Covid. I don't know for certain, and I have a certain degree of doubt because technically that is too early.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232

    Yes, but that's partly because they haven't laid out the sensible case and the criteria. And of course this isn't a choice between good things, it's a choice between alternative evils:

    Evil 1: Let rip, and damn the consequences. Quite apart from the moral and economic impact of rapidly rising cases and hospitalisations, the headlines wouldn't be too good in that scenario, would they?

    Evil 2: Screw down further or for longer, with continued very dire consequences for the economy, especially the hospitality sector, the arts, sport and entertainment, plus other knock-on effects to education and health. The headlines in that scenario? Screaming ones about how Boris broke his promise, about cancelled events, restaurants going bust etc etc.

    Evil 3: Better targeted rules which allow a lot of re-opening to the vaccinated but with some 'unfairness' to those who haven't been vaccinated. Sure, screaming headlines in that case too, but it's actually the least of the three evils (and, especially, the least damaging of the three to exactly those to whom it is 'unfair'). Almost everyone who has argued against this has failed to explain why it's worse that the other two evils.
    If you want an opinion against option 3, Steve Baker and Dawn Butler have co-authored a piece

    https://inews.co.uk/opinion/covid-certificates-inequality-checkpoint-britain-government-1039519
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Because you talk bollox?
    If that was the case you'd be able to rebut my bollox instead of being desperate to just use ad hominems instead.

    You can't, because I was right all along. I called Brexit right and consistently from Chequers onwards - and that gets under your skin.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    Is Ollie Pope the new Vince? Looks good for 20 and then out.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    Supply of Pfizer jabs 'will be particularly tight over the next few weeks', Scotland's health minister @HumzaYousaf has revealed in a letter to Matt Hancock.

    https://twitter.com/HugoGye/status/1402993204983603206?s=20
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Another day on PB, another 24 hours obsessing about positive tests and not the real problem – the pisspoor vaccination rate. Absolutely shite numbers today. No excuses.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021

    I believe I had it in early Feb. All the main symptoms plus a few others (eg. urinary problems) which I have subsequently discovered are also symptoms of Covid. I don't know for certain, and I have a certain degree of doubt because technically that is too early.
    I think it is more plausible there were people getting it in Feb that never got tested so don't know.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021

    Supply of Pfizer jabs 'will be particularly tight over the next few weeks', Scotland's health minister @HumzaYousaf has revealed in a letter to Matt Hancock.

    https://twitter.com/HugoGye/status/1402993204983603206?s=20

    While some bloke called Colin is in a warehouse getting buried under new deliveries of AZN....but boss I don't have anymore room, what another 2 million of them, I don't have space, we are bursting at the seams here.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Another day on PB, another 24 hours obsessing about positive tests and not the real problem – the pisspoor vaccination rate. Absolutely shite numbers today. No excuses.

    Half a million a day is not poor.

    Not when we're finishing this up now, have the over 50s all double jabbed and are down to the under-30s being first jabbed.

    Our cumulative vaccination rate is one of the best in the entire world, past 100 doses per 100 population, better than any other major economy on the planet and catching up now with Israel. Yet you've called it pisspoor since it began.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    If that was the case you'd be able to rebut my bollox instead of being desperate to just use ad hominems instead.

    You can't, because I was right all along. I called Brexit right and consistently from Chequers onwards - and that gets under your skin.
    Dear me, I know you are a lot younger than me, but you do not need to be *so* childish, and for that matter so arrogant. What do you have to be arrogant about Philip? The fact that you guessed a binary question correctly? Silly boy. Get a job and get some experience of the real world.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Dear me, I know you are a lot younger than me, but you do not need to be *so* childish, and for that matter so arrogant. What do you have to be arrogant about Philip? The fact that you guessed a binary question correctly? Silly boy. Get a job and get some experience of the real world.
    More ad hominems. Don't you get tired of it?
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    edited June 2021

    Its far, far worse than Evil 1.

    We locked down the young quite explicitly to protect the elderly, knowing they weren't vulnerable. We've quite explicitly refused to vaccinate the young, because they weren't vulnerable, to protect the vulnerable.

    Now that the vulnerable are protected you want to keep the young locked down. Why? Who are you trying to protect now?

    If its the young themselves, who aren't really at risk, then let them make their own choices and risk assessment. If its the elderly, despite being vaccinated, then tell the elderly who are afraid to stay at home not the young.
    All you are saying there is that you don't believe Evil 1 is bad. Well, it would be nice to be able to believe that, but unfortunately wanting something doesn't make it happen. And, unfortunately, all the indications at the moment are that Evil 1 is going to be really quite bad - and, most especially, bad for the youngish and the young, plus of course for those older people who for medical reasons can't be vaccinated, or for whom the vaccines don't offer full protection.

    I agree that the risks to those who choose not to be vaccinated for non-medical reasons should be left of the calculation. That is their problem.
  • BannedinnParisBannedinnParis Posts: 1,884
    Nigelb said:

    Very interesting article.

    Molecular evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in New York before the first pandemic wave
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-23688-7.pdf
    Numerous reports document the spread of SARS-CoV-2, but there is limited information on its introduction before the identification of a local case. This may lead to incorrect assumptions when modeling viral origins and transmission. Here, we utilize a sample pooling strategy to screen for previously undetected SARS-CoV-2 in de-identified, respiratory pathogen-negative nasopharyngeal specimens from 3,040 patients across the Mount Sinai Health System in New York. The patients had been previously evaluated for respiratory symptoms or influenza-like illness during the first 10 weeks of 2020. We identify SARS-CoV- 2 RNA from specimens collected as early as 25 January 2020, and complete SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences from multiple pools of samples collected between late February and early March, documenting an increase prior to the later surge. Our results provide evidence of sporadic SARS-CoV-2 infections a full month before both the first officially documented case and emergence of New York as a COVID-19 epicenter in March 2020.

    There was an excellent article somewhere, with an interactive timeline, that strongly suggested that the disease was everywhere in the US by 4th March 2020.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Half a million a day is not poor.

    Not when we're finishing this up now, have the over 50s all double jabbed and are down to the under-30s being first jabbed.

    Our cumulative vaccination rate is one of the best in the entire world, past 100 doses per 100 population, better than any other major economy on the planet and catching up now with Israel. Yet you've called it pisspoor since it began.
    Not so.

    I have been a vax hawk – admittedly – but I have also given credit when the numbers have been high.

    Yet this last few days they have not been high, they have been poor.

    No dressing that up.
  • pingping Posts: 3,805

    Good on Kick It Out.

    Funny how it is Kick It Out behind this and not the Marxist Party of GB as some people would imply.
    I’d be the last person to boo those taking the knee. Yet I’d also feel pretty uncomfortable cheering it, too.

    I recon most people are like me, the silent majority.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    All you are saying there is that you don't believe Evil 1 is bad. Well, it would be nice to be able to believe that, but unfortunately wanting something doesn't make it happen. And, unfortunately, all the indications at the moment are that Evil 1 is going to be really quite bad - and, most especially, bad for the youngish and the young.
    Well yes, if Evil 1 is not that bad, then its less bad than Evil 3. That's kind of the point, isn't it?

    Let the youngish and the young make their own choices. If they wish to stay at home and shield let them do so, but we're down to under-30s now and they've never been high risk. What sort of levels of risk are we talking about for the young now in reality and how does it compare to eg the risk they have in being inexperienced drivers going on the road?

    Lockdown was never to protect under-30s from themselves. It shouldn't be about that now.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    TimT said:

    If R0 of the Indian variant really is in the 5-6 range, then we won't have herd immunity until 80-85% of the (total, not just adult) population have either been fully vaccinated or have acquired natural immunity through exposure. I think we are a ways off that yet.
    Unfortunately true.
    However, we must also bear in mind that as it's not a binary on/off, we're still getting considerable benefit on the spread slowing. If we get to around the herd immunity threshold for Alpha (probably 75% or so), we'll slow it by a factor of 4, anyway.
    With vaccination and acquired immunity, I can see us getting to that level by sometime this month, and at least it slows R from 5-6 to 1.25-1.5 or so. Which can help considerably in slowing the spread to buy time for vaccinating yet more.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Not so.

    I have been a vax hawk – admittedly – but I have also given credit when the numbers have been high.

    Yet this last few days they have not been high, they have been poor.

    No dressing that up.
    Why is half a million poor, when we're down to people aged 25 to 29? How do you define poor?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Theresa May went proper anti-lockdown re international travel while I wasn't watching the Commons......
    ....."Last year in 2020 I went to Switzerland in Aug, S Korea in Sep, there was no vaccine, travel was possible; this year there is a vaccine, travel is not possible. I really do not understand the stance the govt is taking"......

    "We will not eradicate Covid-19 in the UK; variants will keep on coming – if the govt's position is that we cannot open up travel until there are no new variants elsewhere in the world then we will never be able to travel abroad ever again".....

    "The 3rd fact that the govt needs to state much more clearly is that sadly people will die from Covid here in the UK, as 10-20k do every year from flu, and we are falling behind the rest of Europe in our decisions to open up"

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/1402992109137784835?s=20

    She is spot on.

    Very well articulated.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Another day on PB, another 24 hours obsessing about positive tests and not the real problem – the pisspoor vaccination rate. Absolutely shite numbers today. No excuses.

    The only important number at this stage, is the number of people in hospital. So long as that doesn’t start growing exponentially, things are fine.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Half a million a day is not poor.

    Not when we're finishing this up now, have the over 50s all double jabbed and are down to the under-30s being first jabbed.

    Our cumulative vaccination rate is one of the best in the entire world, past 100 doses per 100 population, better than any other major economy on the planet and catching up now with Israel. Yet you've called it pisspoor since it began.
    We have all the over 50s double jabbed?
    Not unless we've finished since Tuesday, we don't.
    Cos at least 75% of the people I saw then at the Vax centre were 50+. Some by quite some way.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    Its far, far worse than Evil 1.

    We locked down the young quite explicitly to protect the elderly, knowing they weren't vulnerable. We've quite explicitly refused to vaccinate the young, because they weren't vulnerable, to protect the vulnerable.

    Now that the vulnerable are protected you want to keep the young locked down. Why? Who are you trying to protect now?

    If its the young themselves, who aren't really at risk, then let them make their own choices and risk assessment. If its the elderly, despite being vaccinated, then tell the elderly who are afraid to stay at home not the young.
    NB: That's not quite right.
    The young are not invulnerable; it's not a binary of "vulnerable" and "not vulnerable."

    They are less vulnerable. Considerably so in most cases, but a non-negligible number will still get seriously ill.
    I do worry that the focus on emphasising how vulnerable the old were has led to that binary being implied and many seem to believe that the young are not at all vulnerable, or it is invariably nothing more than a sniffle.

    About one in a hundred will need hospitalisation. If we're talking 10 million or so, that's on the order of a hundred thousand or so.

    Somewhere between 5% and 20% will have long-term symptoms; a hopefully very small proportion of these will have long-lasting organ damage. That's still an unpleasant outcome, even if they're not dead.

    A lot of the time people keep saying they're "not really at risk" and seem to be under the impression that the above risks don't exist. That's a bit worrying.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232

    While some bloke called Colin is in a warehouse getting buried under new deliveries of AZN....but boss I don't have anymore room, what another 2 million of them, I don't have space, we are bursting at the seams here.
    It's very clear the best use of vaccination would be Astra followed by Pfizer, yet noone is on that. Switch the planned doses round !
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    DougSeal said:

    She falls into that rare category of better ex-PM than PM. A sort of British Jimmy Carter.
    "It is incomprehensible that one of the most heavily vaccinated countries in the world is one that is most reluctant to give its citizens the freedoms those vaccinations should support"

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/1402995180509171717?s=20
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    More ad hominems. Don't you get tired of it?
    Philip, without wishing to lower myself to your level of arrogance, I think any impartial observer would notice that when you and I have crossed swords it is rarely, if ever, that you come close to having the upper hand. Particularly on subjects that you have pontificated on such as "herd immunity" and vaccines. Both subjects that I have professional knowledge on and you talk complete nonsense. As for rebutting your bollox, it is hardly necessary. It is clearly bollox to any person reading it excepting yourself. Find a subject you know something about? Take up a hobby perhaps?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    England bowler Ollie Robinson will miss Sussex's first two T20 Blast games as he takes a "short break" from cricket.

    The 27-year-old seamer was suspended from international cricket on Sunday after racist and sexist tweets he posted in 2012 and 2013 were shared online.

    He will miss Sussex's matches against Gloucestershire and Hampshire on Friday and Saturday respectively.

    There is currently no indication when he will play again.

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/57432180
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    Unfortunately true.
    However, we must also bear in mind that as it's not a binary on/off, we're still getting considerable benefit on the spread slowing. If we get to around the herd immunity threshold for Alpha (probably 75% or so), we'll slow it by a factor of 4, anyway.
    With vaccination and acquired immunity, I can see us getting to that level by sometime this month, and at least it slows R from 5-6 to 1.25-1.5 or so. Which can help considerably in slowing the spread to buy time for vaccinating yet more.
    Fully agree.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822


    NB: That's not quite right.
    The young are not invulnerable; it's not a binary of "vulnerable" and "not vulnerable."

    They are less vulnerable. Considerably so in most cases, but a non-negligible number will still get seriously ill.
    I do worry that the focus on emphasising how vulnerable the old were has led to that binary being implied and many seem to believe that the young are not at all vulnerable, or it is invariably nothing more than a sniffle.

    About one in a hundred will need hospitalisation. If we're talking 10 million or so, that's on the order of a hundred thousand or so.

    Somewhere between 5% and 20% will have long-term symptoms; a hopefully very small proportion of these will have long-lasting organ damage. That's still an unpleasant outcome, even if they're not dead.

    A lot of the time people keep saying they're "not really at risk" and seem to be under the impression that the above risks don't exist. That's a bit worrying.

    Yes, exactly. This is a very nasty disease. Even the 'mild' cases can be really quite bad: a relative of mine is a first-year student, and contracted Covid in her first term, last Autumn. Even now, seven months later, she's still not fully recovered. And that's a 'mild' case.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    dixiedean said:

    We have all the over 50s double jabbed?
    Not unless we've finished since Tuesday, we don't.
    Cos at least 75% of the people I saw then at the Vax centre were 50+. Some by quite some way.
    From the ONS antibodies survey, as of the 23rd of May, it was estimated that around 50% of 50-59s and 60% of 60-64s had been double-jabbed (so should now have gained the benefit of that).

    It's around age 65 that it jumps up over 90% by then
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822

    She appears, like Jeremy Hunt and a few others, to be providing more acute Opposition than the Labour Party.
    Not hard, to be fair.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    She appears, like Jeremy Hunt and a few others, to be providing more acute Opposition than the Labour Party.
    Unlike her successor, her experience prior to becoming PM was pretty impressive. I think her problems started when she pivoted to a hard brexit position which appeared to have no credibility to anyone. She then surrounded herself with some very bad advisors. I hope she becomes a continuous thorn in Johnson's side.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    edited June 2021
    Cyclefree said:

    Except that isn't what she said as the judgment makes clear. This is what she said about what to call people in one of the contested tweets -

    "Of course in social situations I would treat any trans-woman as an honorary female, and use whatever pronouns etc... I wouldn’t try to hurt anyone’s feelings" (see page 5 of the judgment).

    The judgment does make a significant difference because it establishes the principle that:-
    - someone stating what is biological fact is a belief worthy of protection under the relevant legislation
    - it is irrelevant what others may think of that belief or indeed how dogmatically or firmly it is held
    - it is not for the court to determine the legitimacy of the belief (one of the errors which the Employment Tribunal made)
    - such protection is not dependant on whether others may be offended by such a belief (another error of the tribunal)
    - the tribunal was wrong to impose a requirement that she must refer to a trans woman as a woman to avoid harassment as this was a blanket restriction and it could not be said that failing to do so would in all circumstances and without knowing the context amount to harassment - see paras.103 and 104. This is a very important wider principle because it effectively states that limits on the expressions of one's belief should be the bare minimum ie that merely avoiding offence is not a sufficient reason for limiting what people can say.

    " the accepted evidence before the Tribunal was that she believed that it is not “incompatible to recognise that human beings cannot change sex whilst also protecting the human rights of people who identify as transgender”: see para 39.2 of the Judgment. That is not, on any view, a statement of a belief that seeks to destroy the rights of trans persons. It is a belief that might in some circumstances cause offence to trans persons, but the potential for offence cannot be a reason to exclude a belief from protection altogether."


    The court went on to say that her belief that sex is immutable and binary is in fact in accordance with the law -

    "Where a belief or a major tenet of it appears to be in accordance with the law of the land, then it is all the more jarring that it should be declared as one not worthy of respect in a democratic society."


    The whole lengthy judgment is worth reading.
    I've read it. It's rigorous and coherent. But not sure it changes much. If you deliberately misgender a transperson - from their viewpoint - it may or may not be a violation of the Equality Act depending on situation and context. No change there.

    What struck me in general was that - contrary to what many believe - there's a high bar for what is deemed illegal speech. There's little you can say that will get you into legal trouble, ie convicted of an offence in a court of law.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,725

    There was an excellent article somewhere, with an interactive timeline, that strongly suggested that the disease was everywhere in the US by 4th March 2020.
    The Nature article is very solid confirmatory evidence that it was, albeit in small numbers, given New York's status as a very large transport hub.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    England bowler Ollie Robinson will miss Sussex's first two T20 Blast games as he takes a "short break" from cricket.

    The 27-year-old seamer was suspended from international cricket on Sunday after racist and sexist tweets he posted in 2012 and 2013 were shared online.

    He will miss Sussex's matches against Gloucestershire and Hampshire on Friday and Saturday respectively.

    There is currently no indication when he will play again.

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/57432180

    Does anyone know what he actually said in these tweets when he was a teenager?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    Scotland players decide they WON'T take the knee at Euro 2020 and will STAND opposite England's kneeling stars in their Auld Enemy clash at Wembley after saying the anti-racism gesture's meaning has been 'diluted'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-9672949/Scotland-confirm-NOT-knee-Euro-2020-manager-Steve-Clarke-held-meeting.html
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232


    A lot of the time people keep saying they're "not really at risk" and seem to be under the impression that the above risks don't exist. That's a bit worrying.

    You can't blame people for this, there's been a huge amount of discourse about "the vulnerable"
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021

    Does anyone know what he actually said in these tweets when he was a teenager?
    You can look them up, they are widely available. From recollection there is one what I would say really bad one, many of the others highlighted are more stupid jokey ones like women can't play video games. 10 years ago, I am pretty certain it was ok to make jokes along the lines of women being poor at driving.

    I caught an old clip from a few years ago of Mock the Week and Russell Howard was doing an African voice, making the insinuation that all Somali's are pirates. Now he is one of the most right on comedians these days. Paul Chowdary still does similar gags about African taxi drivers.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Its far, far worse than Evil 1.

    We locked down the young quite explicitly to protect the elderly, knowing they weren't vulnerable. We've quite explicitly refused to vaccinate the young, because they weren't vulnerable, to protect the vulnerable.

    Now that the vulnerable are protected you want to keep the young locked down. Why? Who are you trying to protect now?

    If its the young themselves, who aren't really at risk, then let them make their own choices and risk assessment. If its the elderly, despite being vaccinated, then tell the elderly who are afraid to stay at home not the young.
    Can I just clarify - I’m not talking about vaccine passports or anything like that here. I’m talking about thing like quarantine when coming into contact with infected cases. To have people self isolating in such circumstances doesn’t make much sense to me.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,649

    I’d love to interrogate those that answered “Ireland”. That can objectively be shown to be wrong. Not because we have any issue with the Irish but because Ireland is objectively too small and too neutral to ever be that useful as an ally.
    That's the Brits with Irish passports :-) .
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    kinabalu said:

    I've read it. It's rigorous and coherent. But not sure it changes much. If you deliberately misgender a transperson - from their viewpoint - it may or may not be a violation of the Equality Act depending on situation and context. No change there.

    What struck me in general was that - contrary to what many believe - there's a high bar for what is deemed illegal speech. There's little you can say that will get you into legal trouble, ie convicted of an offence in a court of law.
    As it should be. The problem is more around workplaces, some of which have installed a very low and continually lowering bar on speech that gets you fired.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232
    edited June 2021

    Yes, exactly. This is a very nasty disease. Even the 'mild' cases can be really quite bad: a relative of mine is a first-year student, and contracted Covid in her first term, last Autumn. Even now, seven months later, she's still not fully recovered. And that's a 'mild' case.
    "Mild" has been misused, but I have known people with genuinely very mild cases. I half wonder if those are described as asymptomatic when in fact they aren't, but they are mild. There's been a failure of language all around.

    Scotland players decide they WON'T take the knee at Euro 2020 and will STAND opposite England's kneeling stars in their Auld Enemy clash at Wembley after saying the anti-racism gesture's meaning has been 'diluted'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-9672949/Scotland-confirm-NOT-knee-Euro-2020-manager-Steve-Clarke-held-meeting.html

    Will Lozza Fox have his Rangers top on
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536

    Scotland players decide they WON'T take the knee at Euro 2020 and will STAND opposite England's kneeling stars in their Auld Enemy clash at Wembley after saying the anti-racism gesture's meaning has been 'diluted'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-9672949/Scotland-confirm-NOT-knee-Euro-2020-manager-Steve-Clarke-held-meeting.html

    Clever - no one will know who's booing/clapping what.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    edited June 2021

    From the ONS antibodies survey, as of the 23rd of May, it was estimated that around 50% of 50-59s and 60% of 60-64s had been double-jabbed (so should now have gained the benefit of that).

    It's around age 65 that it jumps up over 90% by then
    Indeed. I'm 54. I booked my jab for the first available date. And brought forward my second to the earliest date available. That got me done on Tuesday.
    Yet I often see "all the vulnerable have been double jabbed" asserted.
    It simply isn't so.
    Moreover, there were a few there two days ago who couldn't walk unaided, plenty obese, and some who couldn't stand in the queue for 15 minutes.
    So it isn't even that we are down to the otherwise healthy over 50's either.
    So we are looking at June 21 at the earliest for protection.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Phil said:

    So the statement that Stonewall had misrepresented the EHRC advice is the opinion of one barrister & not a court judgement?

    Obviously, a barrister’s opinion of the law carries more weight than the average numpty, but it’s not exactly definitive.

    (NB. “Lesbian and Gay News” appears to be an anti-trans organisation from a quick scan of their Twitter, so I would imagine their reporting carries the same slant.)
    Well this is what Stonewall themselves have said - https://twitter.com/stonewalluk/status/1307598543729852416?s=21. Now, while it is correct that trans people get the benefit of the Equality Act, it is also correct that there are some important exceptions and those are sex-based not gender-based exemptions. Stonewall is campaigning to remove such sex-based rights and exemptions and its statement here is inaccurate. It is describing the law as it wants it to be not as it is.

    The review by Essex University can be read here - https://www.essex.ac.uk/blog/posts/2021/05/17/review-of-two-events-with-external-speakers.

    Stonewall gets money from lots of organisations for advising on their policies etc. The very least it should be expected to do is not misrepresent the law when giving out that advice. It is not, after all, hard to get legal advice on what the current law actually says.

    When called out on these mistakes its reaction is not to apologise and correct them but to accuse those pointing these mistakes out of conducting some bad faith campaign against it. It seems to think that it should be beyond criticism and that to do so is to make one a bigot.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    edited June 2021
    Pulpstar said:


    "Mild" has been misused, but I have known people with genuinely very mild cases.

    Oh, certainly. Most cases, in fact, even in the older groups. But a few percent of a very large number is still a lot of people. And that's the point - it may well drive the government to lock down everyone (including the young that @Philip_Thompson is rightly concerned about) for longer, because of fear of a theoretical and temporary 'unfairness'.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790

    You can look them up, they are widely available. From recollection there is one what I would say really bad one, many of the others highlighted are more stupid jokey ones like women can't play video games.
    OK, seen them, the worst one not nice, but I think he said sorry and seemed to mean it? Is apology and rehabilitation not a thing anymore? If this is a disciplinary matter, which it is fair it should be, there should be an adjudication in short order and punishment of some sort that reflects gravity but also mitigates against the fact he was 18 perhaps? To leave it unresolved will be terrible mentally for him and his family.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,029
    Good afternoon

    Just switched on TV to see Boris and Joe with their wives at Carbis Bay, and to be honest very good media coverage until Boris and Joe sat down in front of their flags

    The media, led by Laura Kuenssberg, went completely out of control, hysterically shouting questions and were an utter embarrassment, so much so Boris shaking his head turned to Joe with a look of utter dismay

    We deserve better, much better, from our media
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021
    Pulpstar said:



    "Mild" has been misused, but I have known people with genuinely very mild cases. I half wonder if those are described as asymptomatic when in fact they aren't, but they are mild. There's been a failure of language all around.

    The original author whose paper so much of the coverage of what percentage get a "mild" case has said he really regrets using that term. He used it to refer to the group, whose reaction was mild enough that they didn't need hospital treatment, he didn't mean that it was mild in the sense of man flu.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Phil said:

    Unless the Stonewall document has been updated (which is entirely possible) I /think/ the implication of the High Court judgement on whether AEA vs EHRC can go forward (which was “Nope, get lost.”) implies that the text in Stonewall’s document was a correct interpretation of the law.

    But that text includes some very specific legal language which makes me think they might have changed it, hence my request to Cyclefree for a link to the original text she was complaining about.

    (It wouldn’t surprise me if this is just another soundbite opinion that Cyclefree has picked up from GC social media without actually looking at the source documents. GC social media seems very prone to spreading legal opinions that end up falling apart when they actually get into court & this is exactly the kind of hearsay smear that GC social media loves to spread around.)
    My understanding of this is the same as yours, ie Stonewall have done nothing scandalous at all here. Indeed the scandal is how they are suddenly being monstered by all and sundry. But I'm open to further info/debate on it.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021

    Good afternoon

    Just switched on TV to see Boris and Joe with their wives at Carbis Bay, and to be honest very good media coverage until Boris and Joe sat down in front of their flags

    The media, led by Laura Kuenssberg, went completely out of control, hysterically shouting questions and were an utter embarrassment, so much so Boris shaking his head turned to Joe with a look of utter dismay

    We deserve better, much better, from our media

    I hate this importation of the American media way of just screaming questions at people.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021

    OK, seen them, the worst one not nice, but I think he said sorry and seemed to mean it? Is apology and rehabilitation not a thing anymore? If this is a disciplinary matter, which it is fair it should be, there should be an adjudication in short order and punishment of some sort that reflects gravity but also mitigates against the fact he was 18 perhaps? To leave it unresolved will be terrible mentally for him and his family.
    The ECB have totally thrown him under the bus. Before the first test, he did media saying well when I was 18/19, I was a total bellend, I was sacked, it was the kick up the arse I needed and I have rebuilt my career. Then these tweets were highlighted, the ECB made him go out and do a hostage style video to apologise.

    One would have thought that would be the end of it.

    Instead, the ECB then said, no, not enough, suspended while we investigate. I mean, surely they could have a) asked him and b) doesn't take more than a few days to check out his past social media and c) rung round some county people and said, is he still a bellend, have you ever heard him make racist comments.

    They could have resolved all this by the end of the first test. Drawn a line under it, with perhaps an interview with a friendly journalist where he again tells his story and apologises.

    And then we move on.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,839
    "I told the prime minister we have something in common - we both married way above our station"

    US President Joe Biden tells Boris Johnson he is "thrilled" to meet his new wife Carrie Johnson


    https://twitter.com/BBCPolitics/status/1403000551105728512
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232

    The original author whose paper so much of the coverage of what percentage get a "mild" case has said he really regrets using that term. He used it to refer to the group, whose reaction was mild enough that they didn't need hospital treatment, he didn't mean that it was mild in the sense of man flu.
    What was his "moderate" meaning - requires oxygen :D ?!
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,188

    Oh, certainly. Most cases, in fact, even in the older groups. But a few percent of a very large number is still a lot of people. And that's the point - it may well drive the government to lock down everyone (including the young that @Philip_Thompson is rightly concerned about) for longer, because of fear of a theoretical and temporary 'unfairness'.
    Politically, I don't think any tightening of restrictions will be stomached. Most definitely not from the backbenches. Gove and Boris are still talking of removal of restrictions. This is the direction of travel.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,790
    MattW said:

    That's the Brits with Irish passports :-) .
    From a historical military perspective it is Canada, Australia and then USA. In terms of useful proximity and relative shared values Ireland has a reasonable claim. Really depends how you define "ally"? France is probably the least reliable.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited June 2021
    TIME TO BREAK UP THE MURDOCH MEDIA EMPIRE

    https://order-order.com/2021/06/10/time-to-break-up-the-murdoch-media-empire/

    Sounds like a good plot for a tv show...it could be called succession or something ;-)
This discussion has been closed.