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This is going to disappoint millions of families – politicalbetting.com

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  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    edited June 2021

    Stuff happens.

    You know what ?

    Sometimes the world isn't fair.

    And instead you have to make the best of a bad deal.

    Which is why the endless "I want a foreign holiday" whine needs to be converted into people spending some money in this countries hotels and restaurants and theatres.
    I'm not arguing that we should be encouraging Brits to go on holiday to Italy or the Costa del Sol (although the reality is that the risk for the double vaccinated is close to zero, and we want to incentivize people to get vaccinated).

    I'm arguing that discouraging vaccinated tourists from visiting the UK is a self defeating strategy that has no long term positive consequences.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359
    rcs1000 said:

    It doesn't.

    And not only that, but the story is utter tosh. The Telegraph either (a) should know better, or (b) is being deliberately misleading because its customer base laps it up.

    Under moronic EU rules, streaming services could be required to have 25% of catalogs made in the EU. Therefore, under one circumstance, Netflix might decide to get rid of The Crown.

    But they wouldn't, because they're not morons. And because they paid about £140m for four seasons of the Crown.

    Instead, all they need to do is to have a massive amount of old EU made content sitting (unwatched) in their catalogs. Costs to Netflix or Amazon? Almost nothing. Frankly, they could find EU based YouTubers, and put them n the platform, and therefore fulfil their requirements. It's a typically stupid EU regulation.

    But it's also one that has essentially zero real world consequences. One junior employee at Netflix (who will also have about a dozen other responsibilities) will have the job of making sure that all five seasons of Le Grand Raid Le Cap Terre de Feu will be on the channel, as will the TWELVE THOUSAND episodes of Des chiffres et des lettres.
    I thought it was content made in "Europe", which the UK is part of, and not the EU?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited June 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    That's not what I'm saying.

    Imagine demand for performing arts in the UK today is 100 (and - of course - let's not forget that many theatrical performances tour, so it's not really like Norwich doesn't get its fair sure of decent performances).

    Of that 100, say 60 is foreign tourists.

    If they go away, then overall demand would drop - absent price changes - to 40. Of course, theatres will react with price reductions: actors will accept less, etc. And maybe total UK demand increases by 50%.

    In this circumstance, we're still talking about UK performing arts having overall revenue now of 60. That's down 40%.

    That's not a wealth transfer from London to the provinces, that's an absolute reduction in demand.

    The world also doesn't stay still. Some of those performances might go to New York or to Dublin. Somewhere else might become the centre where new plays and musicals are performed. In which case, you will have British tourists in 2024 travelling abroad to see them, not staying in the UK.
    You're forgetting about the substitution effect.

    Britons spend more abroad than vice-versa. Its not just a case of discounted tickets, but in the event that the border were closed (but the economy were fully open) then a lot of destinations people are used to travelling to will be closed off - but the theatres etc would be open.

    How many people will think "instead of going to Madrid this year, lets go to London and see a show"? It won't be zero which is what you've assigned it in your base calculations.

    (EDIT: I wish to re-emphasise that I do not want to see this happen, but if it did [and we're likely too late for it to be meaningful anyway] then it wouldn't be an economic catastrophe)
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    edited June 2021

    You're forgetting about the substitution effect.

    Britons spend more abroad than vice-versa. Its not just a case of discounted tickets, but in the event that the border were closed (but the economy were fully open) then a lot of destinations people are used to travelling to will be closed off - but the theatres etc would be open.

    How many people will think "instead of going to Madrid this year, lets go to London and see a show"? It won't be zero which is what you've assigned it in your base calculations.

    (EDIT: I wish to re-emphasise that I do not want to see this happen, but if it did [and we're likely too late for it to be meaningful anyway] then it wouldn't be an economic catastrophe)
    I'm not: I'm assuming a FIFTY PERCENT increase in demand for theatre from Brits.

    Which is a pretty big jump.

    The reality is that the major market for Les Miserables is not Brits. Over the course of 40 years in the West End, a lot of Brits will have seen it of course (including OGH). But at any given performance, perhaps four out of ten people will be Brits.

    The United Kingdom is a world leader in a reasonably small number of things. It seems odd that we'd choose to handicap a world leading British industry by discouraging vaccinated tourists from coming to the UK, especially given that Israel seems to have had exactly zero negative consequences from allowing tourism to reopen.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    RobD said:

    I thought it was content made in "Europe", which the UK is part of, and not the EU?
    The EU has a lazy (or cynical or sinister, depending on your point of view) habit of conflating to the two.

    Given the Telegraph "story" is about The Crown, I'm assuming it means EU (or EEA).
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    Cuba says its 3-dose Abdala vaccine against COVID-19 has an efficacy rate of 92.28%
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411

    Cuba says its 3-dose Abdala vaccine against COVID-19 has an efficacy rate of 92.28%

    Good for them.

    Of course, the reality is that a three dose vaccine from a Cuban supplier is going to get exactly 0.01% global market share. And that 0.01% is Venezuela. And they aren't paying.
  • swing_voterswing_voter Posts: 1,466
    rcs1000 said:

    Good for them.

    Of course, the reality is that a three dose vaccine from a Cuban supplier is going to get exactly 0.01% global market share. And that 0.01% is Venezuela. And they aren't paying.
    Many countries cannot get hold of vaccines.... whilst in London folk may scoff, in parts of Asia, Africa and South America a readily available (and affordable) vaccine is a lifesaver.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    "Data Supports Use of Anti-Parasitic Drug Ivermectin in COVID-19 Patients, Study Shows"

    https://www.biospace.com/article/data-supports-use-of-anti-parasitic-drug-ivermectin-in-covid-19-patients-study-shows/
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411

    Many countries cannot get hold of vaccines.... whilst in London folk may scoff, in parts of Asia, Africa and South America a readily available (and affordable) vaccine is a lifesaver.
    I'd be very surprised if the Cubans can possibly make their vaccine anywhere near as cheaply as Pfizer.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    Andy_JS said:

    "Data Supports Use of Anti-Parasitic Drug Ivermectin in COVID-19 Patients, Study Shows"

    https://www.biospace.com/article/data-supports-use-of-anti-parasitic-drug-ivermectin-in-covid-19-patients-study-shows/

    That's excellent news, but it is worth remembering that some other clinical trials (and there have been quite a few) have been rather more equivocal.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    rcs1000 said:

    That's excellent news, but it is worth remembering that some other clinical trials (and there have been quite a few) have been rather more equivocal.
    We have buckets of the stuff for use on the horses. It is also the active ingredient in the latest rosacea cream treatments.

    Some of the wording seems a bit odd to me. Reducing deaths in those with mild-moderate cases of the disease seems a little oxymoronic. {PS I know what they mean, but that is really odd wording].
  • I am very tired of this Government.

    Its covid policies are illogical, ill-conceived and statist. Johnson is no libertarian. He's a big state interventionist, on all things from grand vanity projects to taxation to civil liberties.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    As shown in yesterday's opinion polls...not.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    TimT said:

    We have buckets of the stuff for use on the horses. It is also the active ingredient in the latest rosacea cream treatments.

    Some of the wording seems a bit odd to me. Reducing deaths in those with mild-moderate cases of the disease seems a little oxymoronic. {PS I know what they mean, but that is really odd wording].
    I've been involved in enough corporate presentation preparation to have heard discussions like "so, on which metric do we look best? sales? hmmm... not good... what about earnings per share? not that... ahhh... if we take earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation and include that one-off gain from the sale of that processing plant in adalucia, but exclude the write down of that inventory then we can say that profits are up 12% this quarter. great... run with that."

    I think we can be reasonably sure - given how specific they are about the metric - that something slightly similar is going on here.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    We don’t need to put scientists on trial, but we do need to hold them to account. How many people know about the big bust on the Warwick forecasts that were used to justify the unlock delay? Why isn’t the press all over it?

    Blame squarely at the media for that one. They don’t want the pandemic to end, as it’s selling lots of subscriptions, and generating millions of clicks and likes.

    When it’s over, they’ll have no pandemic, and no Trump, and news media sales will fall off the proverbial cliff.

    They also have jobs now, and fear losing them at the end of the pandemic, when the public stop caring about the news for a few years.
  • felix said:

    As shown in yesterday's opinion polls...not.
    Crowing of that nature suggests to me an insecurity (which would be fitting for Johnson).

    I didn't see any opinion polling. I don't tend to loiter on here during the daytime but I see only one poll listed - a no change one by Redfield & Wilton?

    There is a small but general uptick trend for Labour at the moment: https://www.politico.eu/europe-poll-of-polls/united-kingdom/

    But all of this is straw in the wind. Opinion polls are like giant oil tankers. You don't see the turn in direction until a long time after the rudder is moved.
  • And I'm quite long in the tooth. Many many times that kind of Felix message has been made. I saw it with Thatcher and Blair - diehard loyalists refusing to acknowledge the signs that all the rest of us could spot. The first inklings of the long, slow, demise.

    We passed peak Boris on May 25th. Whether he does indeed slide slowly, or tumbles fast, who knows. But what is certain is that the love affair with Boris Johnson has passed its zenith.
  • Sandpit said:

    Blame squarely at the media for that one. They don’t want the pandemic to end, as it’s selling lots of subscriptions, and generating millions of clicks and likes.

    When it’s over, they’ll have no pandemic, and no Trump, and news media sales will fall off the proverbial cliff.

    They also have jobs now, and fear losing them at the end of the pandemic, when the public stop caring about the news for a few years.
    So true
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    So true
    The scientists are not the ones to be held accountable. The buck stops with those who make the decisions ... Ministers, Cabinet, the PM. Scientists do not make policy or take decisions, they advise. If their advice is bad, those who should be held accountable are those who first appointed, and then kept them in place. That includes the media, other scientists who are able to critique their bad advice, and us. But, again, primarily Ministers, Cabinet and PM.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559
    Sandpit said:

    Blame squarely at the media for that one. They don’t want the pandemic to end, as it’s selling lots of subscriptions, and generating millions of clicks and likes.

    When it’s over, they’ll have no pandemic, and no Trump, and news media sales will fall off the proverbial cliff.

    They also have jobs now, and fear losing them at the end of the pandemic, when the public stop caring about the news for a few years.
    Fear not. Confirming intelligent life in the Universe will come to their rescue....
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    Sandpit said:

    Blame squarely at the media for that one. They don’t want the pandemic to end, as it’s selling lots of subscriptions, and generating millions of clicks and likes.

    When it’s over, they’ll have no pandemic, and no Trump, and news media sales will fall off the proverbial cliff.

    They also have jobs now, and fear losing them at the end of the pandemic, when the public stop caring about the news for a few years.
    The media exists to sell advertising.

    Take the Warwick guys. Their model was wrong. But you know what, if you go to their website, you can read and understand their model, and you see that they include lots of disclaimers - our assumption for x is y, this is a worse case scenario based on z, etc.

    But the media takes the most extreme scenario, and makes that the baseline.

    Which is - to be generous - enormously misleading. And it leads to everyone's confidence in models and research collapsing, because they don't read the report or download the model or even read the frickin' summary; instead they see the headline on Twitter which is from a single line in a Telegraph article that was based off one scenario.

    And the more extreme the scenario on Twitter, the more reactions it gets. And therefore the algorithms surface it. And then suddenly, it's the prediction.

    Which, surprise surprise, doesn't come to fruition.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    TimT said:

    The scientists are not the ones to be held accountable. The buck stops with those who make the decisions ... Ministers, Cabinet, the PM. Scientists do not make policy or take decisions, they advise. If their advice is bad, those who should be held accountable are those who first appointed, and then kept them in place. That includes the media, other scientists who are able to critique their bad advice, and us. But, again, primarily Ministers, Cabinet and PM.
    The thing that annoys me is that person A sees a headline on Twitter, and then accuses the scientists of being either evil (i.e. their forecasts are tainted because they are zero Covid fanatics) or stupid ("how can they possibly have forecast 100k cases by now..."), when the reality is they are just describing scenarios.

    All models rest on assumptions: will the weather be good? will people change their behaviour? etc.

    If you don't like the output, then explain why the assumptions are wrong, don't rubbish the motivation of others.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    Crowing of that nature suggests to me an insecurity (which would be fitting for Johnson).

    I didn't see any opinion polling. I don't tend to loiter on here during the daytime but I see only one poll listed - a no change one by Redfield & Wilton?

    There is a small but general uptick trend for Labour at the moment: https://www.politico.eu/europe-poll-of-polls/united-kingdom/

    But all of this is straw in the wind. Opinion polls are like giant oil tankers. You don't see the turn in direction until a long time after the rudder is moved.
    The Redfield Wilton poll saw Labour down one and there was a YG with a 14 or 15 point lead.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Cyclefree said:

    Re the Royal Academy, currently giving us a masterclass in how to turn a mistake into a crisis

    "8 complaints....cancelled.

    Jess de Wahls: Artist wants apology from Royal Academy over transphobia row

    https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-57552016"

    You may be interested in my letter to them. See here - https://twitter.com/cyclefree2/status/1406932018928173057?s=21.

    So far only the Charity Commission - currently with an Interim Chair while a permanent head is found, in case anyone is interested - has replied.

    You can certainly write a very good letter!
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131
    The thought exercise PB Tories should try is to imagine what they’d be saying if Corbyn had won and was taking precisely the same approach….
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    Sandpit said:

    You can certainly write a very good letter!
    She does.

    That's a great piece.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,205
    felix said:

    As shown in yesterday's opinion polls...not.
    The column's thesis is that the levelling up agenda will fail, and also that the government will be forced into massive tax rises. Since neither of these things has happened yet, why do you think they would be reflected in the polls?

    Of course, it is a legitimate view that neither the political nor fiscal chaos envisaged by the Telegraph will come to pass. Or Boris might prefer the realpolitik: these things might not happen but in any case, he will have retired already, although in that case, even good opinion polls are unimportant.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    edited June 2021
    My MP replied to me. He’s a famous one. Has made a song and dance about the models being wrong.

    “My personal view is that we are proceeding very cautiously and that we could release the restrictions sooner.”

    And yet he voted for continued restrictions. Just what are these people for!!
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    Leon said:

    Why exculpate the scientists? They are on TV daily telling us "masks are forever". Fuck them. If they want this kind of media and political power, then they must shoulder the culpability that comes with it. Otherwise we have created a new kind of Catholic priesthood, pre-Reformation, laying down mores and laws yet enjoying total immunity from any problems they create

    Let us have an inquiry into the science AND the politics. The two are inextricably linked, anyhow
    If you are a member of Sage then frankly you should lose your media pass.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Personally I find it strange how anyone might have wanted or expected a foreign trip this year. Travel is far from an entitlement to me, it’s a luxury and it seems eminently sensible not to move around too much at the moment. Others clearly take a different view.

    I wonder if social media and EasyJet had existed 80 years ago there would have been people complaining that they couldn’t go on holiday to Europe.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131
    Pulpstar said:

    Red list is to keep variants out.
    There is nothing special about travel, or in being abroad, that creates a variant. Yet time and again people seem to conflate the two.

    So long as we have high case rates - as we do now amongst the unvaccinated young - a variant is just as likely to arise in the UK.

    The point is that if there is a known geographically-based variant (with negative consequences like transmissibility) then we should have restrictions to and from that particular location. As we should have done straight away with India, had Boris not been so dozy.

    Too many people leap straight to ‘stop travel’ as if somehow that is the antidote to new variants.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    moonshine said:

    My MP replied to me. He’s a famous one. Has made a song and dance about the models being wrong.

    “My personal view is that we are proceeding very cautiously and that we could release the restrictions sooner.”

    And yet he voted for continued restrictions. Just what are these people for!!

    Sadly most people, including many on here, believe MPs should vote according to either their constituents wishes or party demands well ahead of what they believe is the correct call.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    IanB2 said:

    There is nothing special about travel, or in being abroad, that creates a variant. Yet time and again people seem to conflate the two.

    So long as we have high case rates - as we do now amongst the unvaccinated young - a variant is just as likely to arise in the UK.

    The point is that if there is a known geographically-based variant (with negative consequences like transmissibility) then we should have restrictions to and from that particular location. As we should have done straight away with India, had Boris not been so dozy.

    Too many people leap straight to ‘stop travel’ as if somehow that is the antidote to new variants.
    Except that the Indian Delta variant wasn't known to be a concern until after India was put on the red list, not before it. 🤦‍♂️

    Yes if you want to stop variants, halting travel is the antidote. Because by the time you know that a variant is concerning, its far, far, far too late. Your proposal would have meant not adding India to the red list for even longer.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    On topic, I suspect the vast majority of families will live with the disappointment of not being able to go abroad on holiday for one more year. This is a chance for the UK hospitality industry to persuade people that staying at home is actually a pretty decent choice for future years, too. Will the chance be taken?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    A party that can move from Cameron to May to Johnson in the space of three years is not one that actually stands for anything. What makes the Tories incredibly successful is that they will pivot to whatever positions are necessary to stop other parties from winning. That is their genius. What do Tories believe in? The monarchy and maintaining entrenched privilege. Beyond that, everything is negotiable.

    You are HYUFD and I claim my £5.

    What's so special about the monarchy that they must be believed in. Quite a few republican Tories (or former Tories) on this site, TSE and myself included.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    Jonathan said:

    Personally I find it strange how anyone might have wanted or expected a foreign trip this year. Travel is far from an entitlement to me, it’s a luxury and it seems eminently sensible not to move around too much at the moment. Others clearly take a different view.

    I wonder if social media and EasyJet had existed 80 years ago there would have been people complaining that they couldn’t go on holiday to Europe.

    Why is empathy with others declining so much in lockdown? It is easy to see why many people want a foreign trip and those with close family abroad or who suffer from seasonal affective disorder wont consider it a luxury.

    At times during a pandemic we still have to say no to them, or impose extra safety checks through quarantine and testing, but there is no harm in showing a bit of basic human understanding and sympathy when we do so.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,272
    edited June 2021
    Jonathan said:

    Personally I find it strange how anyone might have wanted or expected a foreign trip this year. Travel is far from an entitlement to me, it’s a luxury and it seems eminently sensible not to move around too much at the moment. Others clearly take a different view.

    I wonder if social media and EasyJet had existed 80 years ago there would have been people complaining that they couldn’t go on holiday to Europe.

    My EU and other overseas colleagues and staff have not seen their ageing parents for over a year, and sometimes much closer family than that. It is visibly taking its toll on them. Foreign travel is not just about holidays.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    IanB2 said:

    There is nothing special about travel, or in being abroad, that creates a variant. Yet time and again people seem to conflate the two.

    So long as we have high case rates - as we do now amongst the unvaccinated young - a variant is just as likely to arise in the UK.

    The point is that if there is a known geographically-based variant (with negative consequences like transmissibility) then we should have restrictions to and from that particular location. As we should have done straight away with India, had Boris not been so dozy.

    Too many people leap straight to ‘stop travel’ as if somehow that is the antidote to new variants.
    Hang on.

    I think the government (and this board) is now over cautious.

    But new variants are most likely to appear in large populations of unvaccinated people. Because it is in the mass of the infected where mutations are most common.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Jonathan said:

    Personally I find it strange how anyone might have wanted or expected a foreign trip this year. Travel is far from an entitlement to me, it’s a luxury and it seems eminently sensible not to move around too much at the moment. Others clearly take a different view.

    I wonder if social media and EasyJet had existed 80 years ago there would have been people complaining that they couldn’t go on holiday to Europe.

    The constant emphasis on foreign holidays is really annoying, when there’s millions of people who really need to travel on business, or who haven’t seen their family in two years.

    There’s way more to travel than a week on a beach, and relaxing restrictions on those who really need to travel should be the priority.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    ydoethur said:

    Incorrect. They believe in one thing. Getting and keeping power.

    Beyond that, everything else is definitely negotiable.

    The Tories would sacrifice the Union to retain power. They would not sacrifice the monarchy or the rights of property owners.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Oh my.

    Start of July I have to partake in some annual equalities and sexual harassment awareness seminars.

    Reading up for this it turns out telling rude jokes at work is a no no.
    Your self restraint is legendary though TSE…
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,567
    edited June 2021

    The Tories would sacrifice the Union to retain power. They would not sacrifice the monarchy or the rights of property owners.

    Really? New planning laws wave hello. As does King Charles III.

    As for ‘would’ sacrifice, the DUP are loud in their grumbling that they already have.

    Heart of stone, given the circumstances...
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,012
    edited June 2021

    You are HYUFD and I claim my £5.

    What's so special about the monarchy that they must be believed in. Quite a few republican Tories (or former Tories) on this site, TSE and myself included.
    Yes there are those on either side of the party who barely speak...

    On todays news I see Bercow went on his knees and begged for a Peerage from Corbyn even writing his own cv and including his prowess as a tennis coach.. Spitting Image would have a field day with this odious man.

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/366b433a-d2d0-11eb-bd02-4c692e62e3fd?shareToken=115045450ba434700d70437ab3648cff
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131
    rcs1000 said:

    Hang on.

    I think the government (and this board) is now over cautious.

    But new variants are most likely to appear in large populations of unvaccinated people. Because it is in the mass of the infected where mutations are most common.
    The chance of a variant is directly related to the number of new cases.

    Go look at our current rates and compare with those of popular holiday destinations….
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,567
    Charles said:

    Your self restraint is legendary though TSE…
    Legendary: something much talked about that doesn’t actually exist, or only on a basic level quite different from the popular perception.

    Is that what you meant?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411

    Except that the Indian Delta variant wasn't known to be a concern until after India was put on the red list, not before it. 🤦‍♂️

    Yes if you want to stop variants, halting travel is the antidote. Because by the time you know that a variant is concerning, its far, far, far too late. Your proposal would have meant not adding India to the red list for even longer.
    The Indian case rate started to go crazy at the beginning of March, and their positivity rate went completely ballistic.

    We didn't have to know about Delta to know that there was a problem there.

    By mid-March, the positivity rates in India exceeded pretty much every country on the UK's Red List. And at that time India had vaccinated basically no one.

    We should have, but didn't, imposed travel bans on India.

    If you look at the chances a double vaccinated US citizen will bring covid to the UK (perhaps 0.001%) and the chance an Indian in mid March might do so (probably well in excess if 1%), we're talking at least three orders of magnitude difference.

    Even without Delta.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,189
    Sandpit said:

    The constant emphasis on foreign holidays is really annoying, when there’s millions of people who really need to travel on business, or who haven’t seen their family in two years.

    There’s way more to travel than a week on a beach, and relaxing restrictions on those who really need to travel should be the priority.
    I remain bewildered that the government ran so scared and so quickly from the idea of vaccine passports. A few whinges about alleged civil liberties had them back off and in doing so they massively undermined the progress that was available through vaccination.

    Vaccination was supposed to be our way out of this but it can only be so if there is evidence which allows the vaccinated and the unvaccinated to be differentiated. Doing so is not only sensible but an incentive to the laggards to get their vaccinations done. Its about as win win as we can get.

    The result of failing to proceed down this path is excessive restrictions on the vaccinated to protect the idiots who choose not to be. This is, in a word, crazy. Those who are double vaccinated are at absolutely minimal risk when travelling anywhere and are extremely unlikely to bring back a variant in a viable form. They should not be restricted in their movements. Similarly, as @rcs1000 was pointing out overnight, those from other countries who are double vaccinated are no risk to us and should be welcomed.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131

    You are HYUFD and I claim my £5.

    What's so special about the monarchy that they must be believed in. Quite a few republican Tories (or former Tories) on this site, TSE and myself included.
    Southam was referring to proper Tories, of course.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    You are HYUFD and I claim my £5.

    What's so special about the monarchy that they must be believed in. Quite a few republican Tories (or former Tories) on this site, TSE and myself included.

    Individual Tories may be republicans. The Conservative party never will be under any circumstances.

  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    edited June 2021
    ydoethur said:

    Really? New planning laws wave hello. As does King Charles III.

    As for ‘would’ sacrifice, the DUP are loud in their grumbling that they already have.

    Heart of stone, given the circumstances...
    The planning law kerfuffle is a dispute between the wealthiest existing property owners in the shires - and slightly less wealthy future property owners in the shires.

    SO’s point stands.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    ydoethur said:

    Really? New planning laws wave hello. As does King Charles III.

    As for ‘would’ sacrifice, the DUP are loud in their grumbling that they already have.

    Heart of stone, given the circumstances...

    Those new planning laws aren't laws yet. Let's see where we end up with them before jumping to any conclusions. Yep, the DUP are discovering that the Tories will happily sacrifice the Union to retain power.

  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Foxy said:

    My EU and other overseas colleagues and staff have not seen their ageing parents for over a year, and sometimes much closer family than that. It is visibly taking its toll on them. Foreign travel is not just about holidays.
    The article was about holidays. Travel for other purposes is a different kettle of fish. Restrictions on seeing family is not not limited to the those abroad.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    It weird how some want closed borders and foreign holidays.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Individual Tories may be republicans. The Conservative party never will be under any circumstances.

    So if the majority of the electorate were republicans, considered that issue to be the defining issue of the day, so only a republican party could win an election - and perhaps if a referendum had determined that the monarchy should be abolished although that hadn't happened yet, then do you think under those circumstances the Tories could never be a republican party?
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    O/T and this may have been covered yesterday but for @RochdalePioneers and others who thinks it is all the fault of the WWC that their lives are crap:

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/terms-like-white-privilege-may-contribute-to-neglect-of-disadvantaged-white-pupils-report-finds/ar-AALhv8s?ocid=msedgntp
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Jonathan said:

    Personally I find it strange how anyone might have wanted or expected a foreign trip this year. Travel is far from an entitlement to me, it’s a luxury and it seems eminently sensible not to move around too much at the moment. Others clearly take a different view.

    I wonder if social media and EasyJet had existed 80 years ago there would have been people complaining that they couldn’t go on holiday to Europe.

    We always take our summer holidays in the UK anyway, there are plenty of beautiful places to stay and the weather is usually decent enough in August. Foreign trips should be an occasional luxury, not the norm, if you ask me. For people with family overseas it's different, obviously, as anyone who has lived far from loved ones will know.
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    Those new planning laws aren't laws yet. Let's see where we end up with them before jumping to any conclusions. Yep, the DUP are discovering that the Tories will happily sacrifice the Union to retain power.

    Not sure why that is a surprise. Successive British Governments over the past 100 years have tried to get rid of Northern Ireland.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    So if the majority of the electorate were republicans, considered that issue to be the defining issue of the day, so only a republican party could win an election - and perhaps if a referendum had determined that the monarchy should be abolished although that hadn't happened yet, then do you think under those circumstances the Tories could never be a republican party?

    The Tories would have ceased to exist long before that happens as they would have failed totally.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Pulpstar said:

    Red list is to keep variants out.
    How do you know which countries the variants are in?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131
    Sandpit said:

    You can certainly write a very good letter!
    She does, although she has asked a lot of questions and with a lot of contextual detail that I would wager she’ll get some sort of generalised reply. An alternative approach would have been to identify the three killer questions and ask these directly, making it more difficult for them not to have to address them head on.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,189
    rcs1000 said:

    The Indian case rate started to go crazy at the beginning of March, and their positivity rate went completely ballistic.

    We didn't have to know about Delta to know that there was a problem there.

    By mid-March, the positivity rates in India exceeded pretty much every country on the UK's Red List. And at that time India had vaccinated basically no one.

    We should have, but didn't, imposed travel bans on India.

    If you look at the chances a double vaccinated US citizen will bring covid to the UK (perhaps 0.001%) and the chance an Indian in mid March might do so (probably well in excess if 1%), we're talking at least three orders of magnitude difference.

    Even without Delta.
    Whilst all of this is self evident it is a bizarre logical leap by some that in doing this we could have somehow avoided the Delta variant. It now seems to be more than 90% of cases everywhere sequencing is done around the world. At worst we accelerated its dominance here by a couple of weeks by having additional seeding but its genetic advantages were such that it was inevitably have become dominant here as well.

    What we do need to think about is what if a variant arises that is (a) much, much more deadly or (b) beyond the protection offered by current vaccines. What lessons can we learn from this fiasco which would give us additional time to address such a threat? Once again there seems a deep reluctance on the part of government or even the science community to learn from past mistakes.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    DavidL said:

    I remain bewildered that the government ran so scared and so quickly from the idea of vaccine passports. A few whinges about alleged civil liberties had them back off and in doing so they massively undermined the progress that was available through vaccination.

    Vaccination was supposed to be our way out of this but it can only be so if there is evidence which allows the vaccinated and the unvaccinated to be differentiated. Doing so is not only sensible but an incentive to the laggards to get their vaccinations done. Its about as win win as we can get.

    The result of failing to proceed down this path is excessive restrictions on the vaccinated to protect the idiots who choose not to be. This is, in a word, crazy. Those who are double vaccinated are at absolutely minimal risk when travelling anywhere and are extremely unlikely to bring back a variant in a viable form. They should not be restricted in their movements. Similarly, as @rcs1000 was pointing out overnight, those from other countries who are double vaccinated are no risk to us and should be welcomed.
    I think it’s coming, and quickly. The issue being that the U.K. government doesn’t want to discriminate until everyone has been offered a vaccine, as in the US.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131
    May’s government borrowing figure was the second highest on record. April’s having been the highest.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,189
    Sandpit said:

    I think it’s coming, and quickly. The issue being that the U.K. government doesn’t want to discriminate until everyone has been offered a vaccine, as in the US.
    We can't wait for that, especially at our currently oh so slow rate of vaccination. We need the systems in place now and those who get vaccinated subsequently can join as soon as they can.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    edited June 2021

    We always take our summer holidays in the UK anyway, there are plenty of beautiful places to stay and the weather is usually decent enough in August. Foreign trips should be an occasional luxury, not the norm, if you ask me. For people with family overseas it's different, obviously, as anyone who has lived far from loved ones will know.
    I have family, friends and colleagues that have not been able to see seriously ill and dying relatives. This is a very different thing and in a whole different league to those complaining about the injustice that they do not get their week in the Algave.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    Some journalists are projecting their wish to go on a foreign holiday to millions of British people. It's exactly the same as the Telegraph calling the removal of charitable status for private schools an attack on the middle classes.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    ping said:

    The planning law kerfuffle is a dispute between the wealthiest existing property owners in the shires - and slightly less wealthy future property owners in the shires.

    SO’s point stands.
    That letter to the Times yesterday, from a C&A Lib Dem, was hillarious in its utter lack of self-awareness.

    Worthy of Polly Filler from Private Eye.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,567
    ping said:

    The planning law kerfuffle is a dispute between the wealthiest existing property owners in the shires - and slightly less wealthy future property owners in the shires.

    SO’s point stands.
    So it’s an attack on entrenched privilege because the Tories need to expand their voter base?

    Think it over.

    Have a good morning.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,538

    The Tories would sacrifice the Union to retain power. They would not sacrifice the monarchy or the rights of property owners.

    Actually, I'm not sure they would sacrifice the Union to retain power. It's probably the biggest disconnect between the party and their voters at the moment.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    rcs1000 said:

    The Indian case rate started to go crazy at the beginning of March, and their positivity rate went completely ballistic.

    We didn't have to know about Delta to know that there was a problem there.

    By mid-March, the positivity rates in India exceeded pretty much every country on the UK's Red List. And at that time India had vaccinated basically no one.

    We should have, but didn't, imposed travel bans on India.

    If you look at the chances a double vaccinated US citizen will bring covid to the UK (perhaps 0.001%) and the chance an Indian in mid March might do so (probably well in excess if 1%), we're talking at least three orders of magnitude difference.

    Even without Delta.
    What data are you using for that claim?

    Data on the Ides of March:
    France 7.0% test positivity rate, 356.77 cases per million
    United States 4.3% test positivity rate, 167.19 cases per million
    South Africa 4.2% test positivity rate, 20.06 cases per million
    India 3.0% test positivity rate, 17.09 cases per million
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    Charles said:

    How do you know which countries the variants are in?
    Massively increasing cases is a good hint. India was obviously a problem before the delta variant got labelled up as of concern.
    Countries with little to no testing also need to be on, much of Africa is for this reason I think.
    You can have the list quite slim once you start binning off the old amber and green for the double vaxxed.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,272
    Jonathan said:

    The article was about holidays. Travel for other purposes is a different kettle of fish. Restrictions on seeing family is not not limited to the those abroad.
    It is now. I can see my parents in Hampshire whenever I feel like it, inside or out.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    DavidL said:

    Whilst all of this is self evident it is a bizarre logical leap by some that in doing this we could have somehow avoided the Delta variant. It now seems to be more than 90% of cases everywhere sequencing is done around the world. At worst we accelerated its dominance here by a couple of weeks by having additional seeding but its genetic advantages were such that it was inevitably have become dominant here as well.

    What we do need to think about is what if a variant arises that is (a) much, much more deadly or (b) beyond the protection offered by current vaccines. What lessons can we learn from this fiasco which would give us additional time to address such a threat? Once again there seems a deep reluctance on the part of government or even the science community to learn from past mistakes.
    That slowing down was precisely what was needed for our vaccination program to stay ahead though ><
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Foxy said:

    It is now. I can see my parents in Hampshire whenever I feel like it, inside or out.
    Sadly care home residents still de facto under lock and key regardless of govt policy. Managed to break my father out Sunday, but had to take tests and sign papers to do it. Visiting on site still limited to 30min/fortnight behind PPE. I suspect some of the CV restrictions will stay in care home policies.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Pulpstar said:

    Massively increasing cases is a good hint. India was obviously a problem before the delta variant got labelled up as of concern.
    Countries with little to no testing also need to be on, much of Africa is for this reason I think.
    You can have the list quite slim once you start binning off the old amber and green for the double vaxxed.
    Some good news out of Africa this morning. Covax to set up a centre in SA, with several industry partners, for technology transfer of mRNA knowledge and production facilities.

    This will lead to several factories producing Pfizer and Moderna under licence, for the Covax efforts.

    https://www.who.int/news/item/21-06-2021-WHO-supporting-South-African-consortium-to-establish-first-COVID-mRNA-vaccine-technology-transfer-hub
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Pulpstar said:

    Massively increasing cases is a good hint. India was obviously a problem before the delta variant got labelled up as of concern.
    Countries with little to no testing also need to be on, much of Africa is for this reason I think.
    You can have the list quite slim once you start binning off the old amber and green for the double vaxxed.
    But India wasn't obviously a problem in March, quite the opposite we were playing Test cricket then with crowds.

    People have rewritten history in their memory, because it was obvious for a few days in April after Bangladesh and Pakistan had been added that India should have been too. But that was not true in March. Waiting until the data shows there's a problem is inevitably always going to be a case of closing the door after the horse has bolted.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131
    IanB2 said:

    May’s government borrowing figure was the second highest on record. April’s having been the highest.

    Oops - correction needed. Second highest ever May figure, May 2020 being the highest.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,576
    tlg86 said:

    Actually, I'm not sure they would sacrifice the Union to retain power. It's probably the biggest disconnect between the party and their voters at the moment.
    Northern Ireland yes, Scotland probably not.

    Morning, everyone. Better today.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,131

    Except that the Indian Delta variant wasn't known to be a concern until after India was put on the red list, not before it. 🤦‍♂️

    Yes if you want to stop variants, halting travel is the antidote. Because by the time you know that a variant is concerning, its far, far, far too late. Your proposal would have meant not adding India to the red list for even longer.
    That's simply illogical.

    The risk of spreading a variant is correlated with the number of potentially infected people you mix with, not your geographical location.

    I'd wager that, with the possible exception of party travellers, most holidaymakers have fewer close personal contacts away on holiday than they would during 'normal' life in the UK.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    It is fascinating how the BBC's reporting about the select committee report on the WWC confuses and conflates 'working class' with poor, disadvantaged, free school meals and deprived.

    It is just like putting all ethnic minority groups in the same box.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited June 2021
    IanB2 said:

    That's simply illogical.

    The risk of spreading a variant is correlated with the number of potentially infected people you mix with, not your geographical location.

    I'd wager that, with the possible exception of party travellers, most holidaymakers have fewer close personal contacts away on holiday than they would during 'normal' life in the UK.
    Its not remotely illogical.

    If travel is unrestricted in the UK but controlled at the border then there's 67 million people with unlimited personal contact but if none of them have the variant then it doesn't matter how often they contact each other. If travel is unrestricted at the border then there's over 7 billion people who could get a variant, then being potentially 7 or maybe a few more degrees of separation from it being back in the UK.

    PS I'd wager that going through Manchester Airport in normal life, would put me in close contact than any typical day of normal life except maybe going to the Trafford Centre.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    DavidL said:

    Would I be allowed to come back to Scotland though?
    Just as long as you go to Dundee....
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    John Bercow lobbied Jeremy Corbyn to secure a peerage and wrote his own reference for his nomination, leaked emails have revealed.

    The former Speaker secretly met the then Labour leader’s team in the week after the 2019 general election to discuss his nomination to the House of Lords after being snubbed by Downing Street.

    He then wrote to Corbyn’s office with a reference in which he boasted of his four honorary degrees, “no fewer than five shadow ministerial roles”, a stint as deputy leader of the Tory group on Lambeth council, and experience as a tennis coach.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/366b433a-d2d0-11eb-bd02-4c692e62e3fd?shareToken=8ca0e7069a4b7b977dca8859d4da39f5
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Jonathan said:

    Sadly care home residents still de facto under lock and key regardless of govt policy. Managed to break my father out Sunday, but had to take tests and sign papers to do it. Visiting on site still limited to 30min/fortnight behind PPE. I suspect some of the CV restrictions will stay in care home policies.
    30 min/fortnight?

    I think that's the homes policy not government policy.

    Horrible that.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,189
    But the delta variant wasn't in reality a big threat. It seems marginally more transmissible but no more deadly than what we had already. This is consistent with the general trend in viruses to become both more transmissible and less lethal to their hosts as time goes by since that maximises their spread.

    We are now probably overdue the next variant, which I presume that we will call epsilon. Once that appears on the scene delta will go the way of Kent. That is the nature of the beast we are dealing with. The risks, as I see them, is that we find a variant beyond the protection provided by vaccines or which proves far more lethal. A tendency in the benign direction is no guarantee.

    Should such a scenario arise what do we do? What can we learn from this abject failure to delay delta which might actually matter the next time around? That is what the government should be addressing. I see no sign of it. There is a smug complacency which is deeply troubling. This virus isn't finished yet. We need to prepare for the time when we really need that extra time.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235

    But India wasn't obviously a problem in March, quite the opposite we were playing Test cricket then with crowds.

    People have rewritten history in their memory, because it was obvious for a few days in April after Bangladesh and Pakistan had been added that India should have been too. But that was not true in March. Waiting until the data shows there's a problem is inevitably always going to be a case of closing the door after the horse has bolted.
    I don't expect the systems to be perfect but India should have been added at the same point as Pakistan and Bangladesh; and when added added immediately instead of giving people that ridiculous period to return and escape hotel quarantine. The state can pay for a couple of weeks if yr country is added in an emergency, cheaper than letting the delta run riot
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    The Tories would sacrifice the Union to retain power. They would not sacrifice the monarchy or the rights of property owners.

    Then why don't they? Johnson is insistent on refusing another referendum in Scotland, but if it went it would kick Labour's Zimmer frame away.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,670

    I was in London for a couple of days last week, for the first time in 15 months. I walked round extensively, as advised on here. There were more people than I was expecting, but it was still lacking.

    But what struck me as lacking was retail. London is now catering for the uber-rich - and the tat-mongering hordes. Who just aren't there.

    What London has lost is a vast swathe of off-beat, interesting stuff to shop for. The retail experience is incredibly dull. I think that if London doesn't properly recover, it won't be Covid that is responsible. It will be the online retail offering.

    How was your restaurant?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    IanB2 said:

    That's simply illogical.

    The risk of spreading a variant is correlated with the number of potentially infected people you mix with, not your geographical location.

    I'd wager that, with the possible exception of party travellers, most holidaymakers have fewer close personal contacts away on holiday than they would during 'normal' life in the UK.
    The problem is the party travellers. The big resorts of Southern Europe and the Med are desparate for visitors, and are opening up at a time when almost none of their young clientele have been vaccinated - including all the nightclubs that closed last year.

    The Balearics and Greek resorts, are going to be absolute carnage about a month from now.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,189

    Just as long as you go to Dundee....
    It really is absurd, isn't it? A clear mis-step by Nicola.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    IanB2 said:

    She does, although she has asked a lot of questions and with a lot of contextual detail that I would wager she’ll get some sort of generalised reply. An alternative approach would have been to identify the three killer questions and ask these directly, making it more difficult for them not to have to address them head on.
    I am not expecting a reply really. And even 3 killer questions will generate a generalised reply since there is no reason for them to reply to a member of the public. Were I in-house or a a regulator, the first set of questions about what investigation was done, who took the decision and who approved it would be where my focus would be because I am sure that is where the difficulty will lie.

    But the letter is there really to set up the questions and issues which other bodies with the power to do so can look at, if they choose to. Also if the artist wants to pursue this.

    A lot of the commentary was around cancellation because of views whereas I wanted to point out that the RA seems to have ignored its legal obligations.

    We'll see what happens. My guess, FWIW, is that the RA is both panicking and arrogantly saying nothing in the hope that this will all pass. Pretty shabby behaviour by them frankly and indicative of the sort of muddled thinking a lot of organisations have over "diversity" etc.
  • AnExileinD4AnExileinD4 Posts: 337
    Foxy said:

    My EU and other overseas colleagues and staff have not seen their ageing parents for over a year, and sometimes much closer family than that. It is visibly taking its toll on them. Foreign travel is not just about holidays.
    Doesn’t matter, they’re apparently human vermin as they might bring “variants” into the country [where “variants” frequently appears to be little more than a new way of demonising foreigners for the ex-Farage fellaters].
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    A big advantage of insisting on double vax and a neg test as say Israel do is your planes immediately have herd immunity.
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,609

    We always take our summer holidays in the UK anyway, there are plenty of beautiful places to stay and the weather is usually decent enough in August. Foreign trips should be an occasional luxury, not the norm, if you ask me. For people with family overseas it's different, obviously, as anyone who has lived far from loved ones will know.
    Foreign holidays in the UK are bloody expensive though, so a luxury in themselves. Even Germany seems cheaper. I could easily have a couple of weeks in my usual haunts in Eastern Europe for one week in the UK. After last year I have money in the bank of course, but it's instructive how a week on the piss in the UK eats through the travel fund.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    John Bercow lobbied Jeremy Corbyn to secure a peerage and wrote his own reference for his nomination, leaked emails have revealed.

    The former Speaker secretly met the then Labour leader’s team in the week after the 2019 general election to discuss his nomination to the House of Lords after being snubbed by Downing Street.

    He then wrote to Corbyn’s office with a reference in which he boasted of his four honorary degrees, “no fewer than five shadow ministerial roles”, a stint as deputy leader of the Tory group on Lambeth council, and experience as a tennis coach.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/366b433a-d2d0-11eb-bd02-4c692e62e3fd?shareToken=8ca0e7069a4b7b977dca8859d4da39f5

    Now he’s making a point of very publicly joining the Labour Party as a member, in the vain hope that Starmer will nominate him for the Peerage he believes to be his entitlement.
This discussion has been closed.