Trump at a 25% chance looks value for the WH2024 GOP nomination – politicalbetting.com
Comments
-
I hope that happens before Dido Harding takes over as head of the NHS. Someone with her record at TalkTalk should never have been allowed anywhere near public office. But no. A case of "Great CV you've got there, Dido". Hello to the Track and Trace fiasco... and now CEO of the NHS? Putin would blush!rottenborough said:
I do wonder whether this "government by contracts to mates from uni" will finally do for this shower?LostPassword said:
The food situation in the quarantine hotels does seem to be awful. I heard from my colleague who went through it that they would hear people in other rooms shouting out at midnight that they still hadn't received any food for the evening.FrancisUrquhart said:God we are a country of lily-livered aren't we...its 10 sodding days, watch sodding Netflix, piss about on the internet. It hardly like you are in solitary Steve McQueen stylee.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9724613/Couple-forced-eat-cold-wet-difficult-digest-food-stuck-stuffy-room.html
There's no excuse for not being able to run the places properly, but some mate of the government has the contract and their determined to wring as much money from it as possible.2 -
Followed by half an hour of questions on summer holidays?Scott_xP said:Contemptuous lobby briefing in which No 10 refuses to answer qs on whether Hancock broke the law or ministerial code. Says the PM has accepted his apology and 'considers the matter closed' followed by half an hour of epic stonewalling
https://twitter.com/JasonGroves1/status/14084022738442690572 -
Great news. All the best for a full and swift recovery. Are you in Ninewells? (apologies if I've misremembered, I have you down as our Tayside correspondent). If so, at least you'll have a nice view.DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.0 -
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.1 -
A small note - I keep a battery charger bank charged and to hand, so if I have to take any of the family to hospital, I can ensure staying in touch. It can recharge a mobile about 5 times. It has been very useful in the past.TOPPING said:
And his phone battery ran out. Not that updating PB would be, I hope, among his top 100 priorities.dixiedean said:
We must hope. He went to hospital. Had some tests. And is having a good, long kip under supervision, after a late, frantic night.Leon said:
We are friends, let's face it. We're a bunch of old gits, gathering every day in a rickety pub to exchange village gossip and well-known opinions. We have in-jokes and backstory, we have feuds and alliances, we are a weird community of characters. Virtual, but realTOPPING said:
I'm assuming OGH and Robert do as a requirement to sign up.Philip_Thompson said:
It's bonkers. We don't know each other on here, we all might have walked past each other a thousand times on the high street, and what is PB, it is an internet chat room, an anonymous one at that and yet this is extremely worrying and I feel the situation as though it was a friend.
If a PB-er gets ill I feel it
I was genuinely sad to hear about Plato, yet I never met her
That is what I am praying for anyway.1 -
What evidence do you have that he got off on that?contrarian said:
It isn;t just possible, it is probable he thought that.TOPPING said:
It's more than that. If he really, really thought that people should remain socially distanced, even loved ones, parents, children, grandparents, he would not have done that because he would, in so doing, have been instrumental in spreading the virus that he told us could devastate the country.Philip_Thompson said:
I think everyone agrees the hypocrisy and breaking his own rules is a serious problem.TOPPING said:
I think @contrarian's is a good point. Like we have all discussed about the fire and brimstone preachers who preach fervently against homosexuality only to find out that they themselves are homosexual.Philip_Thompson said:
Very seriously probably.contrarian said:
Well if he was f8cking his mistress while telling you you that you could not hug your granny, or a dying relative, or someone you loved in a care home how seriously do you think he believed in his advice? How seriously did he believed in a policy he imposed without recourse to parliament or an election?RobD said:
Yeah, it's all so he can keep having affairs, or something.contrarian said:
At the beginning, COVID. MaybeRobD said:
Yes, nothing at all to do with Covid.contrarian said:
Now when we get to the nub of the matter, the central office shills appear. Ask Hancock what his motivation for imposing, maintaining and above all extending lockdown was.RobD said:
Ah, so lockdowns are nothing to do with Covid? Absurd.contrarian said:
No, the issue is his motivation for appropriating his extraordinary power, wielding it, and most importantly of all, withholding its return.Philip_Thompson said:
Who cares?justin124 said:
Ok - but that still begs the question as to what is meant by 'having an affair'? If it went no further than a good snog, has he committed adultery?Big_G_NorthWales said:
The proof he broke his own covid rules is in the public domainjustin124 said:
Where is the proof that Hancock is actually bonking this lady? Many will get involved to the extent of a good snog - which is all this CCTV shows - without taking things so far as a full physical relationship. At what point does it become adultery? Before or after the people concerned have slept together? Until the mid-1960s many couples engaged in 'courtship' for years and managed to abstain from full sex until the wedding night.ping said:I genuinely feel sorry for Hancock’s family.
Wiki says he has 3 kids, I assume are school age. That’s gonna be nasty for them.
And he has admitted the affair
The issue is he broke his own distancing rules.
Whether he did that with his tongue or his penis isn't relevant at all.
It has emerged there are powerful reasons why Matt Hancock might not want to give British people their freedoms back, over and above any issues with regard to disease.
That is the issue.
It was the preservation of his extraordinary power. Power he manifestly got off on.
But now......FFS grow up.
People are able to compartmentalise their own mistakes quite easily without it affecting their general views or principles.
You've still not given a reason you think as to why he wanted lockdown to be extended.
Take a moment to ponder. He was responsible for a policy which we were told was vital to save lives and the country's assets (NHS, etc). I mean does it get more important than that?
And he ignored it. He is a person of super discipline otherwise he wouldn't be in the position he is in today (for the moment) and yet those huge concerns of national importance were, in the end, not that important for him. Should they be for us, in which case?
But to pretend this shows that he doesn't actually have any reason to implement these rules? As opposed to just being a hypocrite which is bad enough?
That's conspiracy theory nonsense. The truth is bad enough.
So it is possible he thought that social distancing rules weren't absolutely vital to prevent devastation of the country.
He got off on making people do what he wanted. In bending them to his will. Obviously. Manifestly.0 -
One law for us. One for 'them'TheScreamingEagles said:
It's the hypocrisy and the fact we paid for her to work for him, that will errr finish Matt Hancock off.Scott_xP said:Labour: “This matter is definitely not closed, despite the Government’s attempts to cover it up.
“Matt Hancock appears to have been caught breaking the laws he created while having a secret relationship with an aide he appointed to a taxpayer-funded job."
https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/14084084404693483560 -
That is very much worth reading as it highlights Boris's real issue here. Hancock's screw up in being caught means he can't be promoted to solve a different problem Boris is going to have.Scott_xP said:Matt Hancock's survival still changes Conservative party politics in a couple of ways, which I blog about here: https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/staggers/2021/06/matt-hancock-will-survive-tory-politics-will-change-big-way
0 -
Not sure about “will”TheScreamingEagles said:
It's the hypocrisy and the fact we paid for her to work for him, that will errr finish Matt Hancock off.Scott_xP said:Labour: “This matter is definitely not closed, despite the Government’s attempts to cover it up.
“Matt Hancock appears to have been caught breaking the laws he created while having a secret relationship with an aide he appointed to a taxpayer-funded job."
https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/1408408440469348356
“Should”1 -
TSE, I know its a bit old fashioned, but you could Text him, and phone if he does not reply? if he is not on here it may be he is not looking at computer today?TheScreamingEagles said:I've dropped DavidL an email asking how he is.
I also have his mobile number and will buzz that later if he doesn't reply to the email.
And please whish he all the best for us.1 -
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.6 -
DavidL has posted - he isn't 100% but he is alive.BigRich said:
TSE, I know its a bit old fashioned, but you could Text him, and phone if he does not reply? if he is not on here it may be he is not looking at computer today?TheScreamingEagles said:I've dropped DavidL an email asking how he is.
I also have his mobile number and will buzz that later if he doesn't reply to the email.
And please whish he all the best for us.2 -
Just rejoice at that news.TheScreamingEagles said:
Have done so.Leon said:
Yes, why wait? The worst it can do is interrupt him in a meeting or somethingisam said:
I’d say buzz it nowTheScreamingEagles said:I've dropped DavidL an email asking how he is.
I also have his mobile number and will buzz that later if he doesn't reply to the email.
At best, we will know he is OK, or not. I am sure he is fine but it is unsettling
On WhatsApp he was active a few minutes ago.3 -
Possibly the same one? After you Matt? No after you Prime Minister.SirNorfolkPassmore said:
The decision not to sack Hancock begs the question of which mistress Johnson was shagging in early May?Scott_xP said:No10 confirm @BorisJohnson is not sacking @MattHancock
0 -
Sorry that was meant to say ‘someone’kinabalu said:
What are you meant to do with 'skneknd'?isam said:
Not at all, because the problem here is not morality but the touchy feeliness with skneknd outside his immediate household during the ‘ don’t hug granny’ erakinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
Having first told me who or what it is.1 -
My primary piece of evidence is that it isn't his final decision.contrarian said:
You are arguing this is absurd with no evidence though. That's because there isn't any. The case against Hancock is overwhelming.RobD said:
And I'm arguing that is absurd. Since it isn't his final decision anyway.contrarian said:
No I am arguing that his main motivation for continuing lockdown, against mounting evidence the pandemic is over, is his exalted position. A position that would be significantly denuded were the extraordinary powers to end.RobD said:
Again, absurd. You are arguing his sole motivation for continuing the lockdown (which isn't his final decision anyway) is to have an affair.contrarian said:
Maybe in the beginning it wasn't his motivation.RobD said:
Yes, that's hypocrisy, but to argue that it was his motivation for the restrictions in the first place is quite frankly absurd.contrarian said:
Well if he was f8cking his mistress while telling you you that you could not hug your granny, or a dying relative, or someone you loved in a care home how seriously do you think he believed in his advice? How seriously did he believed in a policy he imposed without recourse to parliament or an election?RobD said:
Yeah, it's all so he can keep having affairs, or something.contrarian said:
At the beginning, COVID. MaybeRobD said:
Yes, nothing at all to do with Covid.contrarian said:
Now when we get to the nub of the matter, the central office shills appear. Ask Hancock what his motivation for imposing, maintaining and above all extending lockdown was.RobD said:
Ah, so lockdowns are nothing to do with Covid? Absurd.contrarian said:
No, the issue is his motivation for appropriating his extraordinary power, wielding it, and most importantly of all, withholding its return.Philip_Thompson said:
Who cares?justin124 said:
Ok - but that still begs the question as to what is meant by 'having an affair'? If it went no further than a good snog, has he committed adultery?Big_G_NorthWales said:
The proof he broke his own covid rules is in the public domainjustin124 said:
Where is the proof that Hancock is actually bonking this lady? Many will get involved to the extent of a good snog - which is all this CCTV shows - without taking things so far as a full physical relationship. At what point does it become adultery? Before or after the people concerned have slept together? Until the mid-1960s many couples engaged in 'courtship' for years and managed to abstain from full sex until the wedding night.ping said:I genuinely feel sorry for Hancock’s family.
Wiki says he has 3 kids, I assume are school age. That’s gonna be nasty for them.
And he has admitted the affair
The issue is he broke his own distancing rules.
Whether he did that with his tongue or his penis isn't relevant at all.
It has emerged there are powerful reasons why Matt Hancock might not want to give British people their freedoms back, over and above any issues with regard to disease.
That is the issue.
It was the preservation of his extraordinary power. Power he manifestly got off on.
But now......FFS grow up.
Now, it undoubtedly is. He is hanging on because he loves the power paradise we have given him.
I know this because we know that whilst people were suffering under the rules he imposed, Hancock was f8cking his mistress.0 -
Labour not beating about the bush today… https://twitter.com/angelarayner/status/14084091946219765760
-
Excellent news - take care of yourselfDavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.0 -
I am in the Royal in Edinburgh as I was there for work.OnlyLivingBoy said:
Great news. All the best for a full and swift recovery. Are you in Ninewells? (apologies if I've misremembered, I have you down as our Tayside correspondent). If so, at least you'll have a nice view.DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Hopefully home tomorrow4 -
Labour adds: The Prime Minister recently described Matt Hancock as “useless” - the fact that even now he still can’t sack him shows how spineless he is.”
https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/14084097409930403860 -
You admitting to fantasising about an affair with Hancock? Each to their own mate.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.1 -
Unlike Hancock.......Scott_xP said:Labour not beating about the bush today… https://twitter.com/angelarayner/status/1408409194621976576
4 -
It is certainly plausible. No one has evidence for anything but the hypothesis has merit.Philip_Thompson said:
What evidence do you have that he got off on that?contrarian said:
It isn;t just possible, it is probable he thought that.TOPPING said:
It's more than that. If he really, really thought that people should remain socially distanced, even loved ones, parents, children, grandparents, he would not have done that because he would, in so doing, have been instrumental in spreading the virus that he told us could devastate the country.Philip_Thompson said:
I think everyone agrees the hypocrisy and breaking his own rules is a serious problem.TOPPING said:
I think @contrarian's is a good point. Like we have all discussed about the fire and brimstone preachers who preach fervently against homosexuality only to find out that they themselves are homosexual.Philip_Thompson said:
Very seriously probably.contrarian said:
Well if he was f8cking his mistress while telling you you that you could not hug your granny, or a dying relative, or someone you loved in a care home how seriously do you think he believed in his advice? How seriously did he believed in a policy he imposed without recourse to parliament or an election?RobD said:
Yeah, it's all so he can keep having affairs, or something.contrarian said:
At the beginning, COVID. MaybeRobD said:
Yes, nothing at all to do with Covid.contrarian said:
Now when we get to the nub of the matter, the central office shills appear. Ask Hancock what his motivation for imposing, maintaining and above all extending lockdown was.RobD said:
Ah, so lockdowns are nothing to do with Covid? Absurd.contrarian said:
No, the issue is his motivation for appropriating his extraordinary power, wielding it, and most importantly of all, withholding its return.Philip_Thompson said:
Who cares?justin124 said:
Ok - but that still begs the question as to what is meant by 'having an affair'? If it went no further than a good snog, has he committed adultery?Big_G_NorthWales said:
The proof he broke his own covid rules is in the public domainjustin124 said:
Where is the proof that Hancock is actually bonking this lady? Many will get involved to the extent of a good snog - which is all this CCTV shows - without taking things so far as a full physical relationship. At what point does it become adultery? Before or after the people concerned have slept together? Until the mid-1960s many couples engaged in 'courtship' for years and managed to abstain from full sex until the wedding night.ping said:I genuinely feel sorry for Hancock’s family.
Wiki says he has 3 kids, I assume are school age. That’s gonna be nasty for them.
And he has admitted the affair
The issue is he broke his own distancing rules.
Whether he did that with his tongue or his penis isn't relevant at all.
It has emerged there are powerful reasons why Matt Hancock might not want to give British people their freedoms back, over and above any issues with regard to disease.
That is the issue.
It was the preservation of his extraordinary power. Power he manifestly got off on.
But now......FFS grow up.
People are able to compartmentalise their own mistakes quite easily without it affecting their general views or principles.
You've still not given a reason you think as to why he wanted lockdown to be extended.
Take a moment to ponder. He was responsible for a policy which we were told was vital to save lives and the country's assets (NHS, etc). I mean does it get more important than that?
And he ignored it. He is a person of super discipline otherwise he wouldn't be in the position he is in today (for the moment) and yet those huge concerns of national importance were, in the end, not that important for him. Should they be for us, in which case?
But to pretend this shows that he doesn't actually have any reason to implement these rules? As opposed to just being a hypocrite which is bad enough?
That's conspiracy theory nonsense. The truth is bad enough.
So it is possible he thought that social distancing rules weren't absolutely vital to prevent devastation of the country.
He got off on making people do what he wanted. In bending them to his will. Obviously. Manifestly.
He liked and likes being the person that waves his hand and the country falls to its knees.
That would only be human. Look at the extraordinary, unprecedented power he has wielded these past 15 months. Is it his final decision? Just about - what would a PM do if his health secretary during a health scare disagreed with him?0 -
Your advice was appreciated and acted upon. I hate to be a bother but the unanimous views on here persuaded me this was a time to be a nuisance.TOPPING said:
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.6 -
The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.2
-
I didn't realize it had a name. For me, a knee trembler is a short putt for par. So called because your knees tremble as you attempt it and this can easily cause you to miss the hole.Leon said:
The knee trembler. It isn't easy. Better if you are drunkkinabalu said:
Sorry in advance but I was wondering if the same camera 2 minutes later captured him nailing her in that 'up against the wall' configuration that's far more common in steamy dramas than it is in real life.Theuniondivvie said:Fervently hope there isn't footage to verify the 'eat out' component
I did it once with a sweet Scottish girl in the corridor of an empty train back from Lewes to London: the last train on a hot summer's night
At least, we thought it was empty. But a middle-aged Indian gentleman came down the corridor, caught us at it, and politely said "Good evening" and then he walked on, entirely unfazed. Very dudely behaviour0 -
Point of order: he didn't recently say it.Scott_xP said:Labour adds: The Prime Minister recently described Matt Hancock as “useless” - the fact that even now he still can’t sack him shows how spineless he is.”
https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/1408409740993040386
He said it apparently while frustrated more than a year ago. Which feels like a lifetime ago.0 -
Have we considered the possibility that this is a dead cat thingy?Scott_xP said:Labour adds: The Prime Minister recently described Matt Hancock as “useless” - the fact that even now he still can’t sack him shows how spineless he is.”
https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/14084097409930403860 -
That’s fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
I guess you might be able to identify yourself on the “Yellow card list” (or whatever it’s called), now?0 -
Wait 'til we tell you who to bet on in the "next out of the cabinet" market.DavidL said:
Your advice was appreciated and acted upon. I hate to be a bother but the unanimous views on here persuaded me this was a time to be a nuisance.TOPPING said:
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.2 -
I'm not sure how much it will resonate. It was 6 May this year I think so 11 days before restrictions were lifted. At that point I think most people offered a leg over would have happily obliged.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.1 -
Errr, no. Any more than you would admit to fantasising about an affair with Keir Starmer.Nigel_Foremain said:
You admitting to fantasising about an affair with Hancock? Each to their own mate.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.0 -
So we've had the now familiar Governmental two-step:
1. One rule for us, one rule for you; and
2. We command you to stop objecting to our behaviour (aka "the matter is now closed").
https://twitter.com/seanjonesqc/status/14084116012003655680 -
Yes it's a good point. I have one or two of those. Of course I'm sure when I need it it will be somewhere else...Malmesbury said:
A small note - I keep a battery charger bank charged and to hand, so if I have to take any of the family to hospital, I can ensure staying in touch. It can recharge a mobile about 5 times. It has been very useful in the past.TOPPING said:
And his phone battery ran out. Not that updating PB would be, I hope, among his top 100 priorities.dixiedean said:
We must hope. He went to hospital. Had some tests. And is having a good, long kip under supervision, after a late, frantic night.Leon said:
We are friends, let's face it. We're a bunch of old gits, gathering every day in a rickety pub to exchange village gossip and well-known opinions. We have in-jokes and backstory, we have feuds and alliances, we are a weird community of characters. Virtual, but realTOPPING said:
I'm assuming OGH and Robert do as a requirement to sign up.Philip_Thompson said:
It's bonkers. We don't know each other on here, we all might have walked past each other a thousand times on the high street, and what is PB, it is an internet chat room, an anonymous one at that and yet this is extremely worrying and I feel the situation as though it was a friend.
If a PB-er gets ill I feel it
I was genuinely sad to hear about Plato, yet I never met her
That is what I am praying for anyway.0 -
I bet he had a good old look first.Leon said:
The knee trembler. It isn't easy. Better if you are drunkkinabalu said:
Sorry in advance but I was wondering if the same camera 2 minutes later captured him nailing her in that 'up against the wall' configuration that's far more common in steamy dramas than it is in real life.Theuniondivvie said:Fervently hope there isn't footage to verify the 'eat out' component
I did it once with a sweet Scottish girl in the corridor of an empty train back from Lewes to London: the last train on a hot summer's night
At least, we thought it was empty. But a middle-aged Indian gentleman came down the corridor, caught us at it, and politely said "Good evening" and then he walked on, entirely unfazed. Very dudely behaviour0 -
Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/14084111917650534441 -
Talking of Matt his cartoon in the Telegraph this morning is inspired.Nigel_Foremain said:
Possibly the same one? After you Matt? No after you Prime Minister.SirNorfolkPassmore said:
The decision not to sack Hancock begs the question of which mistress Johnson was shagging in early May?Scott_xP said:No10 confirm @BorisJohnson is not sacking @MattHancock
Can’t upload the image but under a headline of govt scientists warning they report
“Based on the data, we expect Germany to score between 500 and 700 goals against England on Tuesday. “
Following the science becomes more problematic when the science becomes a laughing stock.4 -
☺☺DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
But for blood clot 😩😩
Away you blood clot, away.0 -
That might be correct, but the % of cases only really matters if there are also lots of cases,Malmesbury said:
It's also a moot point. The Delta variant is at 15% of cases in Germany. Which means it will be 90% of cases in a matter of weeks.Roger said:
A typically enlightened post from the provisional wing of the two world wars and one world cup gangLeon said:
Germany tried to bully the Club Med countries into quarantining the UK. Portugal made meek and compliant noises, but the Spanish told the Germans to fuck off, they want UK tourists and UK moneyJohnLilburne said:
Germany doesn't let us in anyway. So they must have got Delta some other way.Floater said:
At a wild guess - us still......MarqueeMark said:
So who are they going to blame when it demonstrably can't be our fault?Floater said:
But hey - lets quarantine the Brits.......Sandpit said:
Crowding the unvaccinated youth of Europe in the 10,000 capacity nightclubs of Ibiza, definitely isn’t going to result in a massive new wave of infection all over the continent.FrancisUrquhart said:German health minister: 'Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer'
The more infectious Delta coronavirus variant will become dominant in Germany over the summer, health minister Jens Spahn said this morning.
“The Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer, it’s more a matter of weeks than months,” Spahn told a news conference, adding the variant currently makes up more than 15% of coronavirus cases reported in Germany.
---
But its ok, everybody to the beaches and nightclubs of Southern Europe to intermingle.....
Y Viva Espana
I suggest all PB-ers get out to Spain ASAP as a mark of respect, and to show camaraderie against the Hun. Also, the Balearics are Going Green
Germany had 654 cases yesterday, if 15% are Delta, then that's 100 ish 'cases, if we assume, that Delter cases hear are rising at 30% WoW, |Germany with les vaccination might get 50% week on week, then they have 14 weeks before they get to UK level, by which time, they will have given both the first and second does to almost all who wish to have it.
Finland, Spain and Portugal, are different, but Germany and France I think will be fine0 -
Is this the new Albanian taxi drivers?Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
But like Big Dom they are going to go big on this, unlike the PC Constable Moron in charge of the MET.0 -
By Tuesday people will be singing Three Lions and cheering on England Vs Germany.contrarian said:The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.
The proportion of people who care about politics in this country like we do is miniscule.3 -
A convoluted way to get 26 "likes".DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.10 -
I am terribly messy by nature. So I spend quite a bit of time in organising. In this case, I keep a bunch of items in a cupboard in the hall, ready to be grabbed on the way out, when in a hurry.TOPPING said:
Yes it's a good point. I have one or two of those. Of course I'm sure when I need it it will be somewhere else...Malmesbury said:
A small note - I keep a battery charger bank charged and to hand, so if I have to take any of the family to hospital, I can ensure staying in touch. It can recharge a mobile about 5 times. It has been very useful in the past.TOPPING said:
And his phone battery ran out. Not that updating PB would be, I hope, among his top 100 priorities.dixiedean said:
We must hope. He went to hospital. Had some tests. And is having a good, long kip under supervision, after a late, frantic night.Leon said:
We are friends, let's face it. We're a bunch of old gits, gathering every day in a rickety pub to exchange village gossip and well-known opinions. We have in-jokes and backstory, we have feuds and alliances, we are a weird community of characters. Virtual, but realTOPPING said:
I'm assuming OGH and Robert do as a requirement to sign up.Philip_Thompson said:
It's bonkers. We don't know each other on here, we all might have walked past each other a thousand times on the high street, and what is PB, it is an internet chat room, an anonymous one at that and yet this is extremely worrying and I feel the situation as though it was a friend.
If a PB-er gets ill I feel it
I was genuinely sad to hear about Plato, yet I never met her
That is what I am praying for anyway.
0 -
DavidL said:
Talking of Matt his cartoon in the Telegraph this morning is inspired.
Can’t upload the image but under a headline of govt scientists warning they report
“Based on the data, we expect Germany to score between 500 and 700 goals against England on Tuesday. “
Following the science becomes more problematic when the science becomes a laughing stock....
7 -
Glad you are feeling betterDavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.1 -
The thing that gets me is in the films when a couple are having a passionate embrace and then, with nary a thought for their sciatica, and in one sweeping movement, the bloke hoists the girl up onto the kitchen worktop where they continue the activity.Leon said:
The knee trembler. It isn't easy. Better if you are drunkkinabalu said:
Sorry in advance but I was wondering if the same camera 2 minutes later captured him nailing her in that 'up against the wall' configuration that's far more common in steamy dramas than it is in real life.Theuniondivvie said:Fervently hope there isn't footage to verify the 'eat out' component
I did it once with a sweet Scottish girl in the corridor of an empty train back from Lewes to London: the last train on a hot summer's night
At least, we thought it was empty. But a middle-aged Indian gentleman came down the corridor, caught us at it, and politely said "Good evening" and then he walked on, entirely unfazed. Very dudely behaviour
It is not at all easy to dead lift 7-9 stone up on a worktop like that I can assure you.0 -
He'd be a classic 'nice but dim' sort if he was nice.TOPPING said:
Your graciousness knows no bounds.Leon said:
HahaTOPPING said:
No you fuck off.Leon said:
We are friends, let's face it. We're a bunch of old gits, gathering every day in a rickety pub to exchange village gossip and well-known opinions. We have in-jokes and backstory, we have feuds and alliances, we are a weird community of characters. Virtual, but realTOPPING said:
I'm assuming OGH and Robert do as a requirement to sign up.Philip_Thompson said:
It's bonkers. We don't know each other on here, we all might have walked past each other a thousand times on the high street, and what is PB, it is an internet chat room, an anonymous one at that and yet this is extremely worrying and I feel the situation as though it was a friend.
If a PB-er gets ill I feel it
I was genuinely sad to hear about Plato, yet I never met her
Yes I was tempted to exclude you from the bonhomie, but no, I'd even be upset if something bad happened to a typical south Londoner like you0 -
I don't think I have ever shagged anyone who is a Labour member before, let alone the LoTO, so I think if he did offer, it'd be a bit rude to say no....MrEd said:
Errr, no. Any more than you would admit to fantasising about an affair with Keir Starmer.Nigel_Foremain said:
You admitting to fantasising about an affair with Hancock? Each to their own mate.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.1 -
If it switches over to Delta, expect that low number of cases to increase.BigRich said:
That might be correct, but the % of cases only really matters if there are also lots of cases,Malmesbury said:
It's also a moot point. The Delta variant is at 15% of cases in Germany. Which means it will be 90% of cases in a matter of weeks.Roger said:
A typically enlightened post from the provisional wing of the two world wars and one world cup gangLeon said:
Germany tried to bully the Club Med countries into quarantining the UK. Portugal made meek and compliant noises, but the Spanish told the Germans to fuck off, they want UK tourists and UK moneyJohnLilburne said:
Germany doesn't let us in anyway. So they must have got Delta some other way.Floater said:
At a wild guess - us still......MarqueeMark said:
So who are they going to blame when it demonstrably can't be our fault?Floater said:
But hey - lets quarantine the Brits.......Sandpit said:
Crowding the unvaccinated youth of Europe in the 10,000 capacity nightclubs of Ibiza, definitely isn’t going to result in a massive new wave of infection all over the continent.FrancisUrquhart said:German health minister: 'Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer'
The more infectious Delta coronavirus variant will become dominant in Germany over the summer, health minister Jens Spahn said this morning.
“The Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer, it’s more a matter of weeks than months,” Spahn told a news conference, adding the variant currently makes up more than 15% of coronavirus cases reported in Germany.
---
But its ok, everybody to the beaches and nightclubs of Southern Europe to intermingle.....
Y Viva Espana
I suggest all PB-ers get out to Spain ASAP as a mark of respect, and to show camaraderie against the Hun. Also, the Balearics are Going Green
Germany had 654 cases yesterday, if 15% are Delta, then that's 100 ish 'cases, if we assume, that Delter cases hear are rising at 30% WoW, |Germany with les vaccination might get 50% week on week, then they have 14 weeks before they get to UK level, by which time, they will have given both the first and second does to almost all who wish to have it.
Finland, Spain and Portugal, are different, but Germany and France I think will be fine0 -
I think that I am very old fashioned about this. To me, it is a moral question. If you have an affair you risk causing great hurt to another to whom you made serious promises. You do so for your own selfish desires. It’s wrong and I think less of those that do.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.
If a marriage is at an end end it. This happens and we are human. But cheating is a character flaw and really not great for someone Cumming’s has claimed is an inveterate liar.
But Boris’s greenhouse barely has a pane left in this regard.1 -
Never give up trying, that's what I say.TOPPING said:
The thing that gets me is in the films when a couple are having a passionate embrace and then, with nary a thought for their sciatica, and in one sweeping movement, the bloke hoists the girl up onto the kitchen worktop where they continue the activity.Leon said:
The knee trembler. It isn't easy. Better if you are drunkkinabalu said:
Sorry in advance but I was wondering if the same camera 2 minutes later captured him nailing her in that 'up against the wall' configuration that's far more common in steamy dramas than it is in real life.Theuniondivvie said:Fervently hope there isn't footage to verify the 'eat out' component
I did it once with a sweet Scottish girl in the corridor of an empty train back from Lewes to London: the last train on a hot summer's night
At least, we thought it was empty. But a middle-aged Indian gentleman came down the corridor, caught us at it, and politely said "Good evening" and then he walked on, entirely unfazed. Very dudely behaviour
It is not at all easy to dead lift 7-9 stone up on a worktop like that I can assure you.1 -
Why the row about Matt Hancock isn’t going to go away just because No. 10 ‘considers the matter closed’ https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/three-questions-boris-must-answer-over-the-matt-hancock-affair0
-
Well the New Statesman says that this all but ends any chances restrictions continue post July 19.Philip_Thompson said:
By Tuesday people will be singing Three Lions and cheering on England Vs Germany.contrarian said:The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.
The proportion of people who care about politics in this country like we do is miniscule.
If so, at least that is something.2 -
Wales passes 70% partially vaccinated.0
-
That's why the dead lift at the gym is so important. Practise and good technique to avoid damaging your back.Stocky said:
Never give up trying, that's what I say.TOPPING said:
The thing that gets me is in the films when a couple are having a passionate embrace and then, with nary a thought for their sciatica, and in one sweeping movement, the bloke hoists the girl up onto the kitchen worktop where they continue the activity.Leon said:
The knee trembler. It isn't easy. Better if you are drunkkinabalu said:
Sorry in advance but I was wondering if the same camera 2 minutes later captured him nailing her in that 'up against the wall' configuration that's far more common in steamy dramas than it is in real life.Theuniondivvie said:Fervently hope there isn't footage to verify the 'eat out' component
I did it once with a sweet Scottish girl in the corridor of an empty train back from Lewes to London: the last train on a hot summer's night
At least, we thought it was empty. But a middle-aged Indian gentleman came down the corridor, caught us at it, and politely said "Good evening" and then he walked on, entirely unfazed. Very dudely behaviour
It is not at all easy to dead lift 7-9 stone up on a worktop like that I can assure you.3 -
There again, what is truth? He's admitted the affair, but what's an "affair"?justin124 said:
Where is the proof that Hancock is actually bonking this lady? Many will get involved to the extent of a good snog - which is all this CCTV shows - without taking things so far as a full physical relationship. At what point does it become adultery? Before or after the people concerned have slept together? Until the mid-1960s many couples engaged in 'courtship' for years and managed to abstain from full sex until the wedding night.ping said:I genuinely feel sorry for Hancock’s family.
Wiki says he has 3 kids, I assume are school age. That’s gonna be nasty for them.
I'm new here - is this what a "Central Office troll" looks like? "At what point does it become adultery?" is a remarkable question to ask in the circumstances.
Back in the day, Environment Secretary Nicholas Ridley chucked a fag packet over his shoulder onto the street when he was out walking for a breather during a break at a conference on the environment. Of course Hancock should be out on his ear. In his personal behaviour he has shown utter contempt for the rules he and his colleagues have imposed on the other 60 million of us.
0 -
Are those wanting his head also arguing that the woman be sacked? Just asking.Scott_xP said:Why the row about Matt Hancock isn’t going to go away just because No. 10 ‘considers the matter closed’ https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/three-questions-boris-must-answer-over-the-matt-hancock-affair
0 -
Yeah I can't see Hancock standing at the lectern ever again telling us about restrictions.
It's going to be Zahawi I suppose or Boris obvs when it is the good news and release.0 -
Good stuff. It's obviously good to hear that this wasn't anything disastrous.DavidL said:
Your advice was appreciated and acted upon. I hate to be a bother but the unanimous views on here persuaded me this was a time to be a nuisance.TOPPING said:
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.
The broader take home message from this story is to always make a nuisance of yourself when you think you *might* have a serious medical problem. Too many people in general, and men in particular, have a tendency not to want to, and some of them end up avoidably deceased as a result.2 -
The Ibizan nightclubs will do the job just fine.Malmesbury said:
If it switches over to Delta, expect that low number of cases to increase.BigRich said:
That might be correct, but the % of cases only really matters if there are also lots of cases,Malmesbury said:
It's also a moot point. The Delta variant is at 15% of cases in Germany. Which means it will be 90% of cases in a matter of weeks.Roger said:
A typically enlightened post from the provisional wing of the two world wars and one world cup gangLeon said:
Germany tried to bully the Club Med countries into quarantining the UK. Portugal made meek and compliant noises, but the Spanish told the Germans to fuck off, they want UK tourists and UK moneyJohnLilburne said:
Germany doesn't let us in anyway. So they must have got Delta some other way.Floater said:
At a wild guess - us still......MarqueeMark said:
So who are they going to blame when it demonstrably can't be our fault?Floater said:
But hey - lets quarantine the Brits.......Sandpit said:
Crowding the unvaccinated youth of Europe in the 10,000 capacity nightclubs of Ibiza, definitely isn’t going to result in a massive new wave of infection all over the continent.FrancisUrquhart said:German health minister: 'Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer'
The more infectious Delta coronavirus variant will become dominant in Germany over the summer, health minister Jens Spahn said this morning.
“The Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer, it’s more a matter of weeks than months,” Spahn told a news conference, adding the variant currently makes up more than 15% of coronavirus cases reported in Germany.
---
But its ok, everybody to the beaches and nightclubs of Southern Europe to intermingle.....
Y Viva Espana
I suggest all PB-ers get out to Spain ASAP as a mark of respect, and to show camaraderie against the Hun. Also, the Balearics are Going Green
Germany had 654 cases yesterday, if 15% are Delta, then that's 100 ish 'cases, if we assume, that Delter cases hear are rising at 30% WoW, |Germany with les vaccination might get 50% week on week, then they have 14 weeks before they get to UK level, by which time, they will have given both the first and second does to almost all who wish to have it.
Finland, Spain and Portugal, are different, but Germany and France I think will be fine0 -
Yep. I post therefore I am.eek said:
DavidL has posted - he isn't 100% but he is alive.BigRich said:
TSE, I know its a bit old fashioned, but you could Text him, and phone if he does not reply? if he is not on here it may be he is not looking at computer today?TheScreamingEagles said:I've dropped DavidL an email asking how he is.
I also have his mobile number and will buzz that later if he doesn't reply to the email.
And please whish he all the best for us.1 -
Anybody at the lecturn is going to be a tough sell, now.TOPPING said:Yeah I can't see Hancock standing at the lectern ever again telling us about restrictions.
It's going to be Zahawi I suppose or Boris obvs when it is the good news and release.0 -
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.3 -
that will be an interesting angle. She resigns but Handycock doesn't.Stocky said:
Are those wanting his head also arguing that the woman be sacked? Just asking.Scott_xP said:Why the row about Matt Hancock isn’t going to go away just because No. 10 ‘considers the matter closed’ https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/three-questions-boris-must-answer-over-the-matt-hancock-affair
1 -
A word of caution. We aren't privy to the secrets of Matt Hancock's marriage. Perhaps it is an open marriage. Perhaps they like consensual polyamory. Perhaps she also takes lovers.DavidL said:
I think that I am very old fashioned about this. To me, it is a moral question. If you have an affair you risk causing great hurt to another to whom you made serious promises. You do so for your own selfish desires. It’s wrong and I think less of those that do.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.
If a marriage is at an end end it. This happens and we are human. But cheating is a character flaw and really not great for someone Cumming’s has claimed is an inveterate liar.
But Boris’s greenhouse barely has a pane left in this regard.
We don't know it's "cheating". It is definitely embarrassing, and he should probably resign for the flagrant breaking of lockdown rules - but he should not resign for having sex
BTW well done in not being dead, get better soon1 -
That is very strange.Richard_Nabavi said:
One very puzzling thing, which @BristOliver pointed out on Twitter, is that the ONS figures show infections at a level a bit below those of April, whereas the dashboard positive tests figures are around four times higher than they were in April. Something a bit strange is happening with the sampling - maybe we're getting better at targeted testing, and that is making the figures look worse than they are?Ratters said:More seriously, good to see in the ONS infection survey that the increase in cases has been driven primarily by the Year 12 (age 16-17) to age 24 cohort that will have not been vaccinated at the time of the study.
In contrast, cases within ages 25-34 have stated to drop back down slightly from their peak. Infection rates for older age groups remain low.
The rate at which young adults are getting Covid will surely burn out in a few weeks through a combination of vaccines and infections.
I'd expect it to be the other way round - infections mainly in the young, so less likely to be symptomatic, and those vaccinated also less likely to have symptoms if infected. So you'd think the ONS survey would pick up a greater proportion of people carrying it who don't have symptoms.
Could there be problems with the ONS survey?0 -
One of the best pieces of advice I was ever given was by a doctor friend many moons ago and it was, simply: "don't wait".Black_Rook said:
Good stuff. It's obviously good to hear that this wasn't anything disastrous.DavidL said:
Your advice was appreciated and acted upon. I hate to be a bother but the unanimous views on here persuaded me this was a time to be a nuisance.TOPPING said:
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.
The broader take home message from this story is to always make a nuisance of yourself when you think you *might* have a serious medical problem. Too many people in general, and men in particular, have a tendency not to want to, and some of them end up avoidably deceased as a result.
For every 10 it could have waiteds there may be one absolutely vital thank goodness we caught it/you came in now.
0 -
I guess no worse than Robin Cook or John Prescott. Power, or at least the impression of it, seems to be a powerful aphrodisiac to some.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.0 -
Very pleased to hear that you are still with us!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Now just watch out for those pesky hospital acquired infections!
Stay safe, and take it easy for a while.0 -
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?
0 -
Yes, that what I sead, it will increse. it will increases at a comparable but slightly faster rat than in the UK because its the same virus, but with a less vaccinated population. perhaps around 50% a week, compared to the 30% a week in the UK. if that is the case, a quick use of excel, indicates that they have 14 weeks till they have the same number of cases as the UK has at the moment. its just that 14 weeks is a long time. time for Germany to fully vaccinate, and give second jabs.Malmesbury said:
If it switches over to Delta, expect that low number of cases to increase.BigRich said:
That might be correct, but the % of cases only really matters if there are also lots of cases,Malmesbury said:
It's also a moot point. The Delta variant is at 15% of cases in Germany. Which means it will be 90% of cases in a matter of weeks.Roger said:
A typically enlightened post from the provisional wing of the two world wars and one world cup gangLeon said:
Germany tried to bully the Club Med countries into quarantining the UK. Portugal made meek and compliant noises, but the Spanish told the Germans to fuck off, they want UK tourists and UK moneyJohnLilburne said:
Germany doesn't let us in anyway. So they must have got Delta some other way.Floater said:
At a wild guess - us still......MarqueeMark said:
So who are they going to blame when it demonstrably can't be our fault?Floater said:
But hey - lets quarantine the Brits.......Sandpit said:
Crowding the unvaccinated youth of Europe in the 10,000 capacity nightclubs of Ibiza, definitely isn’t going to result in a massive new wave of infection all over the continent.FrancisUrquhart said:German health minister: 'Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer'
The more infectious Delta coronavirus variant will become dominant in Germany over the summer, health minister Jens Spahn said this morning.
“The Delta variant will have the upper hand over the summer, it’s more a matter of weeks than months,” Spahn told a news conference, adding the variant currently makes up more than 15% of coronavirus cases reported in Germany.
---
But its ok, everybody to the beaches and nightclubs of Southern Europe to intermingle.....
Y Viva Espana
I suggest all PB-ers get out to Spain ASAP as a mark of respect, and to show camaraderie against the Hun. Also, the Balearics are Going Green
Germany had 654 cases yesterday, if 15% are Delta, then that's 100 ish 'cases, if we assume, that Delter cases hear are rising at 30% WoW, |Germany with les vaccination might get 50% week on week, then they have 14 weeks before they get to UK level, by which time, they will have given both the first and second does to almost all who wish to have it.
Finland, Spain and Portugal, are different, but Germany and France I think will be fine0 -
Northern Ireland is definitely falling behind in the vaccine rollout, bit less than 80% of adults there - England and Scotland up to over 83%.0
-
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?2 -
Except Cook and Prescott never seized the power to ban British people from intimacy, wholesale, for months on end, at penalty of fines or police interference.Nigel_Foremain said:
I guess no worse than Robin Cook or John Prescott. Power, or at least the impression of it, seems to be a powerful aphrodisiac to some.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
None of them did.0 -
Good to see you posting again!!!DavidL said:
I think that I am very old fashioned about this. To me, it is a moral question. If you have an affair you risk causing great hurt to another to whom you made serious promises. You do so for your own selfish desires. It’s wrong and I think less of those that do.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.
If a marriage is at an end end it. This happens and we are human. But cheating is a character flaw and really not great for someone Cumming’s has claimed is an inveterate liar.
But Boris’s greenhouse barely has a pane left in this regard.1 -
Nearly 40k items of wit and wisdom, occasionally even correct and I get the most likes ever for being alive.Leon said:
A word of caution. We aren't privy to the secrets of Matt Hancock's marriage. Perhaps it is an open marriage. Perhaps they like consensual polyamory. Perhaps she also takes lovers.DavidL said:
I think that I am very old fashioned about this. To me, it is a moral question. If you have an affair you risk causing great hurt to another to whom you made serious promises. You do so for your own selfish desires. It’s wrong and I think less of those that do.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.
If a marriage is at an end end it. This happens and we are human. But cheating is a character flaw and really not great for someone Cumming’s has claimed is an inveterate liar.
But Boris’s greenhouse barely has a pane left in this regard.
We don't know it's "cheating". It is definitely embarrassing, and he should probably resign for the flagrant breaking of lockdown rules - but he should not resign for having sex
BTW well done in not being dead, get better soon
Hmmm8 -
That's brilliant. He has a definite gift, Charlie BrookerStocky said:
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?2 -
My doctor used to go on about how, going to hospital/the doctor at the early signs of a problem saves you risk and money *and* saves the country money. It takes alot of unnecessary visits to A&E to add up to the cost of treating a major issue....Black_Rook said:
Good stuff. It's obviously good to hear that this wasn't anything disastrous.DavidL said:
Your advice was appreciated and acted upon. I hate to be a bother but the unanimous views on here persuaded me this was a time to be a nuisance.TOPPING said:
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.
The broader take home message from this story is to always make a nuisance of yourself when you think you *might* have a serious medical problem. Too many people in general, and men in particular, have a tendency not to want to, and some of them end up avoidably deceased as a result.2 -
As I say, Hancock has an extremely strong vested interest in lobbying to postpone the end of lockdown, completely independent of covid.Stocky said:
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?
Some would argue the most powerful form of vested interest.0 -
…
He reminds me of David Schneider playing a Tory in Knowing Me Knowing YouYBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
https://youtu.be/zTXxjQpEYqM0 -
An extraordinary state of affairs that the Prime Minister’s spokesperson, when asked, does not categorically confirm that the PM believes that his own Health Secretary has obeyed the law. https://twitter.com/lewis_goodall/status/14084171234545541160
-
Maybe all those rules escalated as a result of his pillow talk. Instead of him talking dirty to her, he talked restrictions.contrarian said:
Except Cook and Prescott never seized the power to ban British people from intimacy, wholesale, for months on end, at penalty of fines or police interference.Nigel_Foremain said:
I guess no worse than Robin Cook or John Prescott. Power, or at least the impression of it, seems to be a powerful aphrodisiac to some.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
None of them did.0 -
Hope you feel better and are back to normal very quickly.DavidL said:
I am in the Royal in Edinburgh as I was there for work.OnlyLivingBoy said:
Great news. All the best for a full and swift recovery. Are you in Ninewells? (apologies if I've misremembered, I have you down as our Tayside correspondent). If so, at least you'll have a nice view.DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Hopefully home tomorrow0 -
This is flawed analysis. I know of two life long Tory voters who are appalled at this scandal and have said today they will not vote for this government unless he is sacked. My conclusion is that Boris is beginning to lose his political antenna.Philip_Thompson said:
By Tuesday people will be singing Three Lions and cheering on England Vs Germany.contrarian said:The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.
The proportion of people who care about politics in this country like we do is miniscule.1 -
Well, they do have a special on religious nutters there. Presumably some of that comes with a side order of anti-vax....Pulpstar said:Northern Ireland is definitely falling behind in the vaccine rollout, bit less than 80% of adults there - England and Scotland up to over 83%.
And being anti-government is a bit of a er.... tradition as well.0 -
I think my favourite is after showing a rap video with cash in the air and the usual sexualisation of semi-naked gyrating women, Brooker said:Leon said:
That's brilliant. He has a definite gift, Charlie BrookerStocky said:
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?
"I haven't seen that much money being mindlessly thrown at a shuddering arse since CNN hired Piers Morgan"5 -
Yeah I think this is a big deal if he doesn’t get rid of him. No one will take Hancock seriously on Covid nowmoonshine said:
This is flawed analysis. I know of two life long Tory voters who are appalled at this scandal and have said today they will not vote for this government unless he is sacked. My conclusion is that Boris is beginning to lose his political antenna.Philip_Thompson said:
By Tuesday people will be singing Three Lions and cheering on England Vs Germany.contrarian said:The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.
The proportion of people who care about politics in this country like we do is miniscule.0 -
Black Mirror ranks amongst the very best drama ever, imo. It is magnificent, if not perhaps lockdown-friendly.Leon said:
That's brilliant. He has a definite gift, Charlie BrookerStocky said:
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?1 -
Does anyone take the PM seriously? What is the difference. The debasing of the Tory Party continues at pace.isam said:
Yeah I think this is a big deal if he doesn’t get rid of him. No one will take Hancock seriously on Covid nowmoonshine said:
This is flawed analysis. I know of two life long Tory voters who are appalled at this scandal and have said today they will not vote for this government unless he is sacked. My conclusion is that Boris is beginning to lose his political antenna.Philip_Thompson said:
By Tuesday people will be singing Three Lions and cheering on England Vs Germany.contrarian said:The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.
The proportion of people who care about politics in this country like we do is miniscule.3 -
The only way Johnson can sack Hancock is for breaching social distancing rules. He can hardly chuck him under the bus for any alleged infidelity, can he?isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
0 -
Well, this is the Age of Plague. Not having died is something of an achievement to be celebrated for all of us right now.DavidL said:
Nearly 40k items of wit and wisdom, occasionally even correct and I get the most likes ever for being alive.Leon said:
A word of caution. We aren't privy to the secrets of Matt Hancock's marriage. Perhaps it is an open marriage. Perhaps they like consensual polyamory. Perhaps she also takes lovers.DavidL said:
I think that I am very old fashioned about this. To me, it is a moral question. If you have an affair you risk causing great hurt to another to whom you made serious promises. You do so for your own selfish desires. It’s wrong and I think less of those that do.MrEd said:
That is a good point. We are all hypocrites in one form or another. Part of me wonders how much of the outrage comes from those who are going "I wish I could have an affair" *kinabalu said:
I must be unusual then. For me, cheating on his wife marks him down far more than this 'hypocrisy' bollox. Hypocrisy has to be the most overattacked vice there is. We're all hypocrites. We don't all cheat on our partners.FrancisUrquhart said:
I don't think the shagging around is really the problem. I think in general the public don't actually care that much about people having affairs anymore (Justin124 aside).kinabalu said:
Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
I think it is more who is shagging around with in office hours (in the office) in the middle of a pandemic.
* mind you, it's not a flattering photo on the BBC website.
If a marriage is at an end end it. This happens and we are human. But cheating is a character flaw and really not great for someone Cumming’s has claimed is an inveterate liar.
But Boris’s greenhouse barely has a pane left in this regard.
We don't know it's "cheating". It is definitely embarrassing, and he should probably resign for the flagrant breaking of lockdown rules - but he should not resign for having sex
BTW well done in not being dead, get better soon
Hmmm4 -
When did a double standard ever get in his way?Mexicanpete said:
The only way Johnson can sack Hancock is for breaching social distancing rules. He can hardly chuck him under the bus for any alleged infidelity, can he?isam said:Boris will probably be seen as strong and decisive and get a poll boost if he sacks Hancock for this - but if he doesn’t it could be the end of him
1 -
... but Johnson...Scott_xP said:
Can't sack him for shagging.kinabalu said:Johnson sacking somebody for philandering would lay him wide open to the charge of being a rank hypocrite.
Could sack him for Covid rules, but Cummings...
Could sack him for ministerial code, but Priti...
Could sack him for being totally fucking useless maybe...1 -
Agreed.moonshine said:
This is flawed analysis. I know of two life long Tory voters who are appalled at this scandal and have said today they will not vote for this government unless he is sacked. My conclusion is that Boris is beginning to lose his political antenna.Philip_Thompson said:
By Tuesday people will be singing Three Lions and cheering on England Vs Germany.contrarian said:The deputy political editor of the Sun, Kate Ferguson, has just accused No. 10 of 'massive contempt' for the public. This is not going away. Not by a long chalk.
The proportion of people who care about politics in this country like we do is miniscule.
I might have a few quid on Galloway now...0 -
TV Go Home, wot Brooker wrote, is very good. Originally a website, long gone, the book is worth a fiver of anyone’s money:TOPPING said:
Black Mirror ranks amongst the very best drama ever, imo. It is magnificent, if not perhaps lockdown-friendly.Leon said:
That's brilliant. He has a definite gift, Charlie BrookerStocky said:
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1841156752/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_api_glt_fabc_X9FRYJHCXX7DATE9M82K
Edit: you can only bloody well read it online still. Rejoice!
https://web.archive.org/web/20030408060057/http://www.tvgohome.com/
1 -
As someone who thinks a great many people at A&E are malingerers who shouldn't be there and should see their GP instead at best ... That gives some food for thought.Malmesbury said:
My doctor used to go on about how, going to hospital/the doctor at the early signs of a problem saves you risk and money *and* saves the country money. It takes alot of unnecessary visits to A&E to add up to the cost of treating a major issue....Black_Rook said:
Good stuff. It's obviously good to hear that this wasn't anything disastrous.DavidL said:
Your advice was appreciated and acted upon. I hate to be a bother but the unanimous views on here persuaded me this was a time to be a nuisance.TOPPING said:
Fantastic!DavidL said:
I am pleased to report that tales of my demise are somewhat exaggerated.Leon said:
I took the advice on here last night and called 999. I spent a somewhat uncomfortable night but feel somewhat better today. Still waiting for a scan but it looks like a blood clot.
Thanks very much for the concern, it was much appreciated.
Don't *ever* do that to us again. Or it's grounded for you young lad.
The broader take home message from this story is to always make a nuisance of yourself when you think you *might* have a serious medical problem. Too many people in general, and men in particular, have a tendency not to want to, and some of them end up avoidably deceased as a result.0 -
Dom sticking the boot in: https://dominiccummings.substack.com/p/more-evidence-on-how-the-pms-and1
-
TV go home is a work of utter genius. A few residents of Daily Mail Island post here I think.northern_monkey said:
TV Go Home, wot Brooker wrote, is very good. Originally a website, long gone, the book is worth a fiver of anyone’s money:TOPPING said:
Black Mirror ranks amongst the very best drama ever, imo. It is magnificent, if not perhaps lockdown-friendly.Leon said:
That's brilliant. He has a definite gift, Charlie BrookerStocky said:
Charlie Brooker described Hancock as "your sister's first boyfriend with a car".contrarian said:
That's why pipsqueaks like Hancock want power. Power is an aphrodisiac, when they have little else to offer.YBarddCwsc said:
I think most people are just astonished that Hancock is getting so much sex.Scott_xP said:Just went to get my second vaccine dose and the first thing the nurse raised in small talk was Hancock’s alleged affair violating Covid rules. Given this story seems to have the same cut through as Dominic Cummings’ trip to Barnard Castle it’ll be a tall order for him to survive.
https://twitter.com/PaulBrandITV/status/1408411191765053444
He looks like a clapped out, pipsqueak circus pony.
So, it just takes a while to adjust mentally to the idea of Hancock, the Mighty Stallion.
And it also why they are desperate to hang on to power. Without power, who the f8ck wants a man like Hancock? who would betray their family for him?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1841156752/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_api_glt_fabc_X9FRYJHCXX7DATE9M82K1