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Welcome to the next stage of COVID – The Government versus the Scientists – politicalbetting.com

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  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    Jonathan said:

    I am not sure the government is dealing with perverse incentives here.

    I for one would feel more confident to commute and travel about in London if masks were compulsory on the tube. The free for all make me more inclined to stay put. The tube is nasty at the best of times, but with CV19, nah no thanks.

    A continuation of the incremental approach may have been wiser and helped the economy and society more.

    i am exactly the opposite - will not go on public transport unless I can do so without a mask
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    Cookie said:

    Not until mid-August at the earliest, is my understanding.
    DONG! The penny finally drops on PB, the government have delayed Freedom Day by stealth.

    DONG!
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    HYUFD said:

    New Zealand has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the developed world now, not only lower than England, Wales and Scotland, NI and Ireland but lower than Germany, France, the Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Canada, the US, Israel, Australia and Japan and even lower than Brazil.

    Ardern does not look as good as she did a few months ago on Covid
    New Zealand started very well, but they are now in the position of having a still mostly vulnerable population with the virus much more transmissible and somewhat more harmful. They actually needed the vaccines at least as much as anyone else, as they have essentially shifted their potential first wave to a more perilous point in time.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,454
    TOPPING said:

    Although presumably vaxxed people can still test positive although the symptoms will or should be minimal for the vast majority.

    Hence why hospitalisations remain the critical indicator.
    Covid has lost the potency that caused us to close down the economy and borrow like we were at war.

    It is a disease that will still cause death and misery, but not on a scale that required that war footing.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    Cookie said:

    I think what Roger means is 'we did worse than Germany'.
    Because surely he can't be expecting that Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Poland, Hungary, Czechia and so forth had more deaths than us in absolute terms. No-one who has even an ounce of maths in their body would expect that.

    So, fair point Roger - the UK has had more covid than Germany.
    I've been around these 'ere parts a few years now, and I have yet to see evidence that Roger has an ounce of maths in his body.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,686
    TOPPING said:

    Yes that is true. But as I also said just now, Boris, amazingly, managed to distil the essence of SKS' argument which was should face masks be mandatory on public transport. It was to hide that modest point that he started contradicting himself by saying we shouldn't open up now and we must stay locked down (was the clear implication) otherwise people will be forced to lock down.
    Ok noted. Still, my suspicion now - because of your comment today and particularly its rather forceful and sweary tone - is that when you've been lambasting SKS for not opposing things it's had a lot to do with the fact that what he's not been opposing are things that YOU have been opposed to (eg instrusive lockdown restrictions).

    It's only a suspicion, though, and it doesn't detract from the validity of the general point that he's been too much of a pussycat up to now. 100% agree with this and I'm glad it's changing. Gloves off, game on.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    Alistair said:

    NZ (and Aus) utterly fucked up vaccines.

    Imagine if they were only a month behind the UK in vaccine rollout (a perfectly feasible figure).

    They would have been the perfect zero covid poster child: open clubs, packed stadiums and full unlocking just around the corner.

    Instead they've got themselves at the back of the queue and it will be months and months before they are vaccinated.
    Lol at this. All those clowns proclaiming Ardens brilliance when most of what she could achieve was based on simple geography.

    It’s always been a marathon and not a sprint.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,454
    BTW, if anybody is looking for a post-Covid chateau in Normandy for a wedding or some other special gathering, my friend has now got the website up and running:

    https://www.chateautercey.com/
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,297
    kinabalu said:

    Flag on house is a whole different order of things to flag on car.

    Neither for me but what there is (for me) is an England shirt worn for every game with no post-modern irony whatsoever. I'm right behind this team. I would be anyway and it's made all the easier because of the vibe they emit. No egos, unshowy, organized and methodical, focused but not selfish or obsessed. Labour values, in other words. Not woke, mind, just bread and butter Labour values. The sort of team Keir Starmer would be sending out if he were in the dugout.
    My neighbour (works in science, wife is a teacher) have an England flag hanging out of their window. It doesn't bother me one bit, but neither do I particularly want to copy them. Saw one other in Orchard Park during my run this morning (the much more interesting three-lions-on-red-background). There aren't many about.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    Taz said:

    Lol at this. All those clowns proclaiming Ardens brilliance when most of what she could achieve was based on simple geography.

    It’s always been a marathon and not a sprint.

    It's not even a marathon, short of something miraculous happening we will have to keep running indefinitely. So countries shouldn't only be thinking how do they get the vaccine now, but how do they ensure they get updated vaccines in volume everytime a new variant of concern emerges. That probably means make it yourselves or partner with countries that you can really trust. Every wealthy country should be investing in vaccine research and production for the long term.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,804


    New Zealand?
    Yeah that was one of the examples, he also specifically talked about how politicians and scientists have fallen into the habit of treating lockdown like a bank balance and using terms such as "hard won gains" wrt infection rates. It was a really good concept. He basically said countries will save up "future freedom credits" with lockdowns or other measures and be afraid to ever spend them because they fear it will run out. Look at what the scientists are saying this morning about having to possibly lockdown again in the autumn winter because our freedom credits will have been used up by then and we'll need to start saving more.

    It was actually one of the best ways of looking at this I've come across in terms of human behavioural psychology.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,232
    Covers most of it I feel


  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    kinabalu said:

    Flag on house is a whole different order of things to flag on car.

    Neither for me but what there is (for me) is an England shirt worn for every game with no post-modern irony whatsoever. I'm right behind this team. I would be anyway and it's made all the easier because of the vibe they emit. No egos, unshowy, organized and methodical, focused but not selfish or obsessed. Labour values, in other words. Not woke, mind, just bread and butter Labour values. The sort of team Keir Starmer would be sending out if he were in the dugout.
    Agree with you on the team, they're a great advert for the country. I've put up some England bunting on our house (our friend who lives over the road has accused me of lowering local house prices). Any other PB'ers got any flags up?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,686
    TOPPING said:

    Who says PB isn't the home of incisive political analysis?

    :smile:
    Well it's sometimes good to pare back to the very essence of things. Keep people honest.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,397
    Leon said:

    Which would also have been laughably wrong. We’re not in the EU. Perhaps you missed that evolution, as you fumbled with your Blackberry under your tartan blanket, trying to tune into the Home Service
    That's why in my original post I changed "EU" for the more generic "Europe". Had I said 'FIRST in the EU....' some pedant would say 'we're not in the EU'.

    If you're suggesting my post is invalid because it's using statistics selectively I'd suggest reading the small print on your mothballed Red Bus.

    (or not so small print)

  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,781
    edited July 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Flag on house is a whole different order of things to flag on car.

    Neither for me but what there is (for me) is an England shirt worn for every game with no post-modern irony whatsoever. I'm right behind this team. I would be anyway and it's made all the easier because of the vibe they emit. No egos, unshowy, organized and methodical, focused but not selfish or obsessed. Labour values, in other words. Not woke, mind, just bread and butter Labour values. The sort of team Keir Starmer would be sending out if he were in the dugout.
    Mm.
    Certainly less obviously full of absolute bellends than in the Sven era.

    I take your political angle with the appropriate pinch of salt - but I also take the 'no egos' with a pinch of salt. There are some colossal egos in there, just perhaps not quite the size of the previous generation.

    I was talking to my wife about this last night:
    - first, why do footballers - or indeed any famous person who doesn't need to - have a Twitter account? The downside is far, far greater than the upside. Her view - which I liked - was that it's all about the sort of person who becomes famous. A famous footballers (or in most cases famous anything) has a self-belief you could cut diamond with. It doesn't cross their minds for a minute that people wouldn't want to know what they think about everything, all the time.
    (Actually, I always liked Paul Scholes' approach. Never gave interviews. Doesn't, as far as I can see, have a twitter account, or at least not one which looks either a) used and b) genuine. He may, who knows, be a contemptible nobend in private. But at least he didn't feel the need to open up to the world remove any doubt.)
    - second, footballers whose instinct on scoring is to find the nearest television camera and preen into it are contemptible, and, I suspect, not exactly human. Given a stadium-full of people cheering for something you've achieved, seeking out the virtual ones would not be an instinctive choice.

    On the broader point - I'm quite comfortable with displays of patriotism, and indeed I'm pretty patriotic myself, but what I feel about this England team is - nothing. Doesn't move me at all. Nor, as it happens, does rugby or cricket, any more. Whereas covid has left some people without tastes of smell or taste, the last year has left without an ability to connect emotionally with sport. I feel a bit sad about this. I used to love international tournaments - at previous tournaments I would have been delighted to see England winning. Now, nothing. A nod that Harry Kane has indeed extended his large triangular head and nodded the ball into the net.
    I'm happy for my friends and family, who still do set great store by seeing England win. And indeed I'm happy that complete strangers are happy. But the match itself leaves me unmoved. I'm interested, but not happy or sad at the result, apart from a numb sadness that it no longer makes me happy.

    I'm actually going to an England T20 game in two weeks' time. I'm hoping this will rekindle my enthusiasm, but I'm fearful that it won't.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    Jonathan said:

    I am not sure the government is dealing with perverse incentives here.

    I for one would feel more confident to commute and travel about in London if masks were compulsory on the tube. The free for all make me more inclined to stay put. The tube is nasty at the best of times, but with CV19, nah no thanks.

    A continuation of the incremental approach may have been wiser and helped the economy and society more.

    I feel the same about the train - I have no wish to get on a train for an hour twice a day at the moment - especially the ones where you cant even open windows

  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Cookie said:

    Not until mid-August at the earliest, is my understanding.
    I get less exercised on this point as you basically have to actively participate in their games to get caught up in it.

    Not entirely sure how it would even work anyway as people talk about getting phone call check ups but I certainly don't have a home phone in action anymore.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    edited July 2021
    Roger said:

    That's why in my original post I changed "EU" for the more generic "Europe". Had I said 'FIRST in the EU....' some pedant would say 'we're not in the EU'.

    If you're suggesting my post is invalid because it's using statistics selectively I'd suggest reading the small print on your mothballed Red Bus.

    (or not so small print)

    It's already been pointed out many times that it's invalid, even when restricting it to the EU.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Sir Graham Brady has just been re-elected chair of the 1922 Committee. Has defeated a challenge from Heather Wheeler, widely seen as No10's candidate to oust him.

    https://twitter.com/tnewtondunn/status/1412749068909035520?s=20
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited July 2021
    Roger said:

    That's why in my original post I changed "EU" for the more generic "Europe". Had I said 'FIRST in the EU....' some pedant would say 'we're not in the EU'.

    If you're suggesting my post is invalid because it's using statistics selectively I'd suggest reading the small print on your mothballed Red Bus.

    (or not so small print)

    Your claim is a lie though, no ifs or buts.

    image

    New deaths in the UK are nothing like they are in the EU and haven't been for months. Thank goodness for them the EU are belatedly catching up with the UK in vaccinations and halting deaths as a result. Plus they've adopted our first dose first strategy which is working.

    As for the Red Bus it has been honoured in full. The NHS has got the £350mn per week promised and then some!
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,781
    maaarsh said:

    I get less exercised on this point as you basically have to actively participate in their games to get caught up in it.

    Not entirely sure how it would even work anyway as people talk about getting phone call check ups but I certainly don't have a home phone in action anymore.
    Yes, I'm not sure either. I'm already wary of answering any phone calls from numbers I don't know.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Alistair said:

    NZ (and Aus) utterly fucked up vaccines.

    Imagine if they were only a month behind the UK in vaccine rollout (a perfectly feasible figure).

    They would have been the perfect zero covid poster child: open clubs, packed stadiums and full unlocking just around the corner.

    Instead they've got themselves at the back of the queue and it will be months and months before they are vaccinated.
    It is beyond bizarre. The only thing I can ascribe it to is complacency. But Jacinda doesn’t seem the type.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    Cookie said:

    I think what Roger means is 'we did worse than Germany'.
    Because surely he can't be expecting that Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Poland, Hungary, Czechia and so forth had more deaths than us in absolute terms. No-one who has even an ounce of maths in their body would expect that.

    So, fair point Roger - the UK has had more covid than Germany.
    Downthread someone suggested ‘Germany’ as an example of a country that handled the pandemic (so far) “really well”

    Wtf?

    Germany is the 19th largest country in the world by population

    Going by Worldometer (flawed but indicative) Germany is 12th in the world for total cases and also 12th for total deaths. Bad.

    Their economy in 2020 shrank by 5%. Also bad. And they still have Delta to come

    Germany did better than some European countries (the UK for one) but worse than others. Globally it is nowhere near the top rank and is no kind of model

    South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore are models. Perhaps oz and nz (but they have new issues now)

    In Europe maybe Denmark? You soon run out of exemplars
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Cookie said:

    Yes, I'm not sure either. I'm already wary of answering any phone calls from numbers I don't know.
    I appreciate it's different for people with school age kids, but otherwise within my own sphere + 1 degree of separation the only stories I hear of people self isolating are people talking about work colleagues with questionable reputations as to work ethic.

    Unless you're genuinely living in fear and looking for a warning, or quite keen on some paid leave, I don't see how track and trace impacts people.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    Leon said:

    Downthread someone suggested ‘Germany’ as an example of a country that handled the pandemic (so far) “really well”

    Wtf?

    Germany is the 19th largest country in the world by population

    Going by Worldometer (flawed but indicative) Germany is 12th in the world for total cases and also 12th for total deaths. Bad.

    Their economy in 2020 shrank by 5%. Also bad. And they still have Delta to come

    Germany did better than some European countries (the UK for one) but worse than others. Globally it is nowhere near the top rank and is no kind of model

    South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore are models. Perhaps oz and nz (but they have new issues now)

    In Europe maybe Denmark? You soon run out of exemplars
    Singapore can act in ways our lockdown fetishers can only dream of
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,686
    Cookie said:

    Mm.
    Certainly less obviously full of absolute bellends than in the Sven era.

    I take your political angle with the appropriate pinch of salt - but I also take the 'no egos' with a pinch of salt. There are some colossal egos in there, just perhaps not quite the size of the previous generation.

    I was talking to my wife about this last night:
    - first, why do footballers - or indeed any famous person who doesn't need to - have a Twitter account? The downside is far, far greater than the upside. Her view - which I liked - was that it's all about the sort of person who becomes famous. A famous footballers (or in most cases famous anything) has a self-belief you could cut diamond with. It doesn't cross their minds for a minute that people wouldn't want to know what they think about everything, all the time.
    (Actually, I always liked Paul Scholes' approach. Never gave interviews. Doesn't, as far as I can see, have a twitter account, or at least not one which looks either a) used and b) genuine. He may, who knows, be a contemptible nobend in private. But at least he didn't feel the need to open up to the world remove any doubt.)
    - second, footballers whose instinct on scoring is to find the nearest television camera and preen into it are contemptible, and, I suspect, not exactly human. Given a stadium-full of people cheering for something you've achieved, seeking out the virtual ones would not be an instinctive choice.

    On the broader point - I'm quite comfortable with displays of patriotism, and indeed I'm pretty patriotic myself, but what I feel about this England team is - nothing. Doesn't move me at all. Nor, as it happens, does rugby or cricket, any more. Whereas covid has left some people without tastes of smell or taste, the last year has left without an ability to connect emotionally with sport. I feel a bit sad about this. I used to love international tournaments - at previous tournaments I would have been delighted to see England winning. Now, nothing. A nod that Harry Kane has indeed extended his large triangular head and nodded the ball into the net.
    I'm happy for my friends and family, who still do set great store by seeing England win. And indeed I'm happy that complete strangers are happy. But the match itself leaves me unmoved. I'm interested, but not happy or sad at the result, apart from a numb sadness that it no longer makes me happy.

    I'm actually going to an England T20 game in two weeks' time. I'm hoping this will rekindle my enthusiasm, but I'm fearful that it won't.
    Sorry to hear this. I had lost interest in sport but it's coming back now. Football, tennis, golf, racing, F1, all of these.

    As for this England team, I like them a lot. Footballwise and their spirit/aura.

    So much better than the days of the WAGS, and 'what the fuck's wrong with Rooney?' and 'Gerrard and Lampard can't play together' and John Terry giving it the big I am and parking his monstrosity in disabled spots.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,781
    moonshine said:

    Unless there are horrible drop offs in immunity and a balls up on booster vaccines, it's hard to see how this winter will be too scary from a covid-19 perspective. One assumes that most of the vaccine refuseniks will be self immunised by the end of the summer and the kids by Halloween.

    Influenza has the capacity to be nasty though doesn't it. To what extent will the lessons learned on staying at home when ill, hand washing, persistent work from home etc... blunt what is likely to be a roll of the dice on the flu vaccine front?
    My understanding is that we have a big problem ahead of us, in that everyone normally involved in working on next year's flu virus has been working on coronavirus.
    (For some reason I can't understand, flu viruses appear to start in Asia each year and work their way west. Thus, we can see what they're like in the east before they get to us.)
  • GnudGnud Posts: 298
    edited July 2021
    "Surrender Bill"..."Freedom Day"...you gotta wonder whether Johnsonism might be vulnerable to an opposition that appeals to intellect, or just to the post-infant mind. Or perhaps this is wishful thinking.

    Starmer has to build a rainbow coalition of angry people ranging from zerocovidians on the one hand to loony libertarians on the other with a few soothing words for antivaxxers into the bargain. How else to win power?
    Are you saying he can't win power then? Because doing it like that seems a bit of a tall order. Perhaps he just has to wait, while building up an attack capability. When the enemy thinks you are near, be far away. When the enemy thinks you are far away, be near.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    Gnud said:

    "Surrender Bill"..."Freedom Day"...you gotta wonder whether Johnsonism might be vulnerable to an opposition that appeals to intellect, or just to the post-infant mind. Or perhaps this is wishful thinking.

    Was it the government that dubbed it Freedom day? I thought it was the press.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Leon said:

    Which would also have been laughably wrong. We’re not in the EU. Perhaps you missed that evolution, as you fumbled with your Blackberry under your tartan blanket, trying to tune into the Home Service
    I am surprised that Brexiteers haven't insisted we go back to calling Radio 2 "The Home Service", which they can listen to on their new fangled "wireless", particularly enjoying the sublime commentary of John Arlott. When the odd run is scored they will applaud politely and mutter "hear hear" with their pipe of baccy clenched between their teeth, whilst thinking it is all jolly good that we are back in the 1950s with ration books and good old navy blue passports.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    Roger said:

    That's why in my original post I changed "EU" for the more generic "Europe". Had I said 'FIRST in the EU....' some pedant would say 'we're not in the EU'.

    If you're suggesting my post is invalid because it's using statistics selectively I'd suggest reading the small print on your mothballed Red Bus.

    (or not so small print)

    “I first intended to say something stupidly wrong, but luckily I realised my mistake and changed it to something else that is just as wrong. Now people are laughing at me. Hello I’m Roger. Yes. Tampons. I want to go home now please, I’m confused.”
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,031
    DavidL said:

    I am having real trouble reconciling 100k infections a day with even our current rate of vaccination for exactly that reason. I think that will prove highly pessimistic. I will be surprised if we get to 50k.
    50K and 100K are only one doubling interval away - what is that? 10 days?
  • AnExileinD4AnExileinD4 Posts: 337

    It is beyond bizarre. The only thing I can ascribe it to is complacency. But Jacinda doesn’t seem the type.
    If only a small minority wish to travel outside their borders (and for many in Australia that do, it was only as far as Bali), are happy with the status quo and believe that foreign = covid = death, then it is hard to see how change will happen. Opening borders will lead to Covid deaths and accepting that will happen requires a mental change which seems unlikely at this point. Trashing vaccines has also become a national sport in Australia and unwillingness to be vaccinated means that the critical mass of immunity will not be there.

    Hong Kong is in a similar position. But with the government pushing the near worthless Chinese vaccines.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,884
    Leon said:

    Downthread someone suggested ‘Germany’ as an example of a country that handled the pandemic (so far) “really well”

    Wtf?

    Germany is the 19th largest country in the world by population

    Going by Worldometer (flawed but indicative) Germany is 12th in the world for total cases and also 12th for total deaths. Bad.

    Their economy in 2020 shrank by 5%. Also bad. And they still have Delta to come

    Germany did better than some European countries (the UK for one) but worse than others. Globally it is nowhere near the top rank and is no kind of model

    South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore are models. Perhaps oz and nz (but they have new issues now)

    In Europe maybe Denmark? You soon run out of exemplars
    Of the G7 nations Germany and Japan did the best, Germany locked down relatively early, certainly compared to the USA and us, had an effective track and trace and has a far better vaccination rate now than say New Zealand, Australia and France.

    Though globally Singapore is probably the best example, amongst the top nations in terms of vaccination rate and has had just 6 Covid deaths per million, compared to a global rate of 514
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,673

    Of course low density nations like Denmark should not be contrasted with incredibly high density England.

    The Netherlands are a high density but small country which is an interesting comparator, though Belgium next door while equally small have death rates comparable to the UKs.
    Denmark, like Britain, is a country with large concentrations of people in a few cities, and thinly-populated rural areas in between. The difference isn't as stark as you imply.
  • AnExileinD4AnExileinD4 Posts: 337

    I am surprised that Brexiteers haven't insisted we go back to calling Radio 2 "The Home Service", which they can listen to on their new fangled "wireless", particularly enjoying the sublime commentary of John Arlott. When the odd run is scored they will applaud politely and mutter "hear hear" with their pipe of baccy clenched between their teeth, whilst thinking it is all jolly good that we are back in the 1950s with ration books and good old navy blue passports.
    It must be hard when the enemy doesn't conform to the stereotypes that you wish to ascribe to them.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,397
    edited July 2021

    Your claim is a lie though, no ifs or buts.

    image

    New deaths in the UK are nothing like they are in the EU and haven't been for months. Thank goodness for them the EU are belatedly catching up with the UK in vaccinations and halting deaths as a result. Plus they've adopted our first dose first strategy which is working.

    As for the Red Bus it has been honoured in full. The NHS has got the £350mn per week promised and then some!
    'Yesterday' is the last day with complete figures. Click it at your convenience and then a brief apology addressed to Carter Ruck. Most statistics are selective as Dominic Cummings will tell you

    https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    If only a small minority wish to travel outside their borders (and for many in Australia that do, it was only as far as Bali), are happy with the status quo and believe that foreign = covid = death, then it is hard to see how change will happen. Opening borders will lead to Covid deaths and accepting that will happen requires a mental change which seems unlikely at this point. Trashing vaccines has also become a national sport in Australia and unwillingness to be vaccinated means that the critical mass of immunity will not be there.

    Hong Kong is in a similar position. But with the government pushing the near worthless Chinese vaccines.
    They are similar to western ones at preventing serious illness and death. Less effective at preventing transmission though. To call them near worthless is absurd.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Covers most of it I feel


    No, it didn't mention that Scotland are out, or that they are ranked 44th in the world.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,288

    Any other PB'ers got any flags up?

    Yes.


  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    edited July 2021
    Leon said:

    “I first intended to say something stupidly wrong, but luckily I realised my mistake and changed it to something else that is just as wrong. Now people are laughing at me. Hello I’m Roger. Yes. Tampons. I want to go home now please, I’m confused.”
    Come on, help him out. There's got to be a way of cherry picking the data so Britain is worst at everything. I'm sure if we all put our heads together, we can find it.

    I'll start. Most COVID deaths per gallons of tea drunk daily per head of population. In European countries with first letters in the second half of the alphabet.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    edited July 2021
    Roger said:

    'Yesterday' is the last day with complete figures. Click it at your convenience and then a brief apology addressed to Carter Ruck. Most statistics are selective. You're obviously not familiar with advertising.

    https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
    The seven-day average, and per capita, is a far better way of looking at it. Less sensitive to incomplete data and reporting variations. Click "2 Days ago" if you don't believe me.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    HYUFD said:

    Of the G7 nations Germany and Japan did the best, Germany locked down relatively early, certainly compared to the USA and us, had an effective track and trace and has a far better vaccination rate now than say New Zealand, Australia and France.

    Though globally Singapore is probably the best example, amongst the top nations in terms of vaccination rate and has had just 6 Covid deaths per million, compared to a global rate of 514
    Japan did waaaaay better than Germany healthwise. 15,000 deaths compared to 90,000 and with a bigger, older population

    Not so good on vaccines tho. We’ve yet to see if that bites them
  • AnExileinD4AnExileinD4 Posts: 337
    RobD said:

    They are similar to western ones at preventing serious illness and death. Less effective at preventing transmission though. To call them near worthless is absurd.
    https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/singapore-not-counting-sinovac-shots-covid-19-vaccination-tally-2021-07-07/

    Have a nice day.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    Dura_Ace said:

    Yes.


    Ah yes. ‘A’ for ANTIVAXXERS
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/singapore-not-counting-sinovac-shots-covid-19-vaccination-tally-2021-07-07/

    Have a nice day.
    Look at the efficacy data at where it is being used.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,552

    Why the Japanese changed sides is also fascinating. According to an Australian expert (at least, that was how he was introduced) at the River Kwai in Thailand post WWI the USA didn't want the British 'interfering' in North Pacific affairs.
    Late 19C is an equally interesting period of history in the Pacific.

    The USA did not have a serious navy until the very late Victorian period, and were actually outmatched by South American countries for a good time before that due to an arms race funded by guano. There was no need, and Congress kept having high ambitions then refusing the necessary budget.

    And Japan got into bed with the UK for naval technology, as the RN was still the hegemonic power, and the US was predicted as their main Pacific rival. Good way to avoid a war with the USA at a time the USA had just knocked the Spanish over.

    So a number of the Japanese ships that wiped out the Russian fleet in 1905 were UK built, much of the key Japanese Naval Staff were UK trained or RN-inpired, and there were a number of UK observers present at the battle of Tsushima.

    I think that's all about right.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,552

    I'm personally guessing 30-40%, but that's also wet finger in the air.
    (Based on the 16-24s with antibodies at the start of March, which was prior to most of them having any chance for a jab).
    Of course, some will have had antibody levels decay, but they will still have T-cell protection and can generate tailored antibodies quickly on exposure, so while they'd be infected, the viral load would be hopefully very low and far more likely to be asymptomatic or very mildly symptomatic, and their rate of passing it one would be much curtailed.
    I thought we had data on that.

    Didn't we have an animation of it the other day?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,804
    Leon said:

    Japan did waaaaay better than Germany healthwise. 15,000 deaths compared to 90,000 and with a bigger, older population

    Not so good on vaccines tho. We’ve yet to see if that bites them
    Think they're getting their vaccine act together.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Roger said:

    'Yesterday' is the last day with complete figures. Click it at your convenience and then a brief apology addressed to Carter Ruck. Most statistics are selective as Dominic Cummings will tell you

    https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
    You can Carter Ruck off.

    Your "statistics" are a lie plain and simple. And a 7-day average for figures is used for good reason given the way different countries report different statistics on different days.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    Leon said:

    “I first intended to say something stupidly wrong, but luckily I realised my mistake and changed it to something else that is just as wrong. Now people are laughing at me. Hello I’m Roger. Yes. Tampons. I want to go home now please, I’m confused.”
    Next time Roger takes the piss out of thick northerners....
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    It must be hard when the enemy doesn't conform to the stereotypes that you wish to ascribe to them.
    Well, I don't regard my fellow Britons as enemies, even the gullible ones that thought Brexit worthwhile or anything more than pointless, or even the WW2 obsessives who see everything through the prism of "friends and enemies" lol!. As for my description, you shouldn't take offence so easily; it was a caricature that I thought @Leon would find amusing, or possibly irritating, depending on which persona he is today.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319

    Schools in England are testing pupils and teachers twice a week: that is roughly 7 million being tested twice a week, or two million a day.

    Might be a million or three fewer pupils around at the moment, but it’s the same ballpark as you are claiming for Germany.

    Interesting, does that mean the tests done in schools are not counted in these official figures?

    https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/testing

    which shows a 7 day average of about a million tests a day in recent weeks


    It may be similar numbers of tests overall per capita are happening, but my ballpark figure for Germany would only include the so-called Bürgertests, and not the twice-weekly tests that have also been happening in schools and kindergartens here (which are mostly on summer holiday now, though large numbers continue to go to the holiday Betreuung and so are still tested), nor the widespread workplace testing.

    So I would still guess more testing here, but with no national figures for Germany and it seems like partial figures for the UK, it's impossible to be sure.
    But it's sure that the UK isn't doing 12 times or 5 times as many tests.

    You can find some local numbers in local news. Eg locally just over a fifth of the population had a Bürgertest last week. Scaled up that would be well over 2 million a day nationally, BEFORE you start counting testing done in schools (which were open til Friday), workplaces, hospitals etc.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599

    I am surprised that Brexiteers haven't insisted we go back to calling Radio 2 "The Home Service", which they can listen to on their new fangled "wireless", particularly enjoying the sublime commentary of John Arlott. When the odd run is scored they will applaud politely and mutter "hear hear" with their pipe of baccy clenched between their teeth, whilst thinking it is all jolly good that we are back in the 1950s with ration books and good old navy blue passports.
    I’ve met millions of Brexiteers of all stripes. From lunatic eco-Leavers to stereotypical chav Leavers to super-posh ducal Leavers. I’ve never met the archetype you describe here. Not once. I’m sure they exist outside your head, but they are rare

    The stereotype you do constantly encounter is the middle class, BBC watching, London based, Tuscany-going Remoaner who has been slightly unhinged by Brexit. You encounter them constantly and you can spot them a mile off. However they may be so conspicuous just because they are so hysterical on Twitter
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,804
    kamski said:

    Interesting, does that mean the tests done in schools are not counted in these official figures?

    https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/testing

    which shows a 7 day average of about a million tests a day in recent weeks


    It may be similar numbers of tests overall per capita are happening, but my ballpark figure for Germany would only include the so-called Bürgertests, and not the twice-weekly tests that have also been happening in schools and kindergartens here (which are mostly on summer holiday now, though large numbers continue to go to the holiday Betreuung and so are still tested), nor the widespread workplace testing.

    So I would still guess more testing here, but with no national figures for Germany and it seems like partial figures for the UK, it's impossible to be sure.
    But it's sure that the UK isn't doing 12 times or 5 times as many tests.

    You can find some local numbers in local news. Eg locally just over a fifth of the population had a Bürgertest last week. Scaled up that would be well over 2 million a day nationally, BEFORE you start counting testing done in schools (which were open til Friday), workplaces, hospitals etc.
    Aiui, the DoH thinks that only around 10% of LFTs are currently being registered based on the number they're sending out on a weekly basis. I've heard it suggested that the UK is doing something ridiculous like 8m tests per day at the moment.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited July 2021
    Starmer seems as confused as Rog...

    Boris is reckless as we are opening up too fast, but also too slow because isolation rules will mean people lose their summer and business struggle for staff....if we just opened some windows for better ventilation and paid some of the 80% wagging off isolation, that would sort it.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    MattW said:

    Late 19C is an equally interesting period of history in the Pacific.

    The USA did not have a serious navy until the very late Victorian period, and were actually outmatched by South American countries for a good time before that due to an arms race funded by guano. There was no need, and Congress kept having high ambitions then refusing the necessary budget.

    And Japan got into bed with the UK for naval technology, as the RN was still the hegemonic power, and the US was predicted as their main Pacific rival. Good way to avoid a war with the USA at a time the USA had just knocked the Spanish over.

    So a number of the Japanese ships that wiped out the Russian fleet in 1905 were UK built, much of the key Japanese Naval Staff were UK trained or RN-inpired, and there were a number of UK observers present at the battle of Tsushima.

    I think that's all about right.
    Oh yes, the cooperation extended into and beyond WW1 etc. Supply of post-Dreadnought ships and designs. Like those new-fangled aircraft carrier things. And, unofficially on the part of one or two folk who, er, didn't quite keep up with changing times, into WW2 ...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Forbes-Sempill,_19th_Lord_Sempill
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Rutland
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,884
    Leon said:

    Japan did waaaaay better than Germany healthwise. 15,000 deaths compared to 90,000 and with a bigger, older population

    Not so good on vaccines tho. We’ve yet to see if that bites them
    Canada to be fair to Trudeau has also done relatively well, a lower death rate than the US, us and most of Europe and a vaccination rate now ahead of the US and most of Europe too and only slightly behind the UK
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,765
    edited July 2021
    Leon said:

    I’ve met millions of Brexiteers of all stripes. From lunatic eco-Leavers to stereotypical chav Leavers to super-posh ducal Leavers. I’ve never met the archetype you describe here. Not once. I’m sure they exist outside your head, but they are rare

    The stereotype you do constantly encounter is the middle class, BBC watching, London based, Tuscany-going Remoaner who has been slightly unhinged by Brexit. You encounter them constantly and you can spot them a mile off. However they may be so conspicuous just because they are so hysterical on Twitter
    Is a Tuscany-going Remoaner any worse than a Mallorca-going global-travelling Leaver?
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    IanB2 said:

    Such ignorance is shocking.

    Radio Four was the Home Service.

    Radio Two was the Light Programme.
    Damn, damn, damn. I was just about to post that. Might as well point out although far too late that Radio 3 was the Third Programme.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    MaxPB said:

    Think they're getting their vaccine act together.
    Japan’s superior performance on deaths might just be a function of their very low obesity rates. It is likely that is a factor around the world - see the horrors in fairly-obese Latin America

    Incidentally, I’m sitting in a beach bar in Majorca watching Europe waddle past. All nations. It is clear lots of people have put on lots of weight. Brits among the worst, and we were already fat

    God knows what the USA is like
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,298
    edited July 2021
    I strongly suspect that a lot of people only have the app for checking in to venues, and long have had the contract tracing turned off. Once there is no requirement to check in (which I believe is the case after July 19th), I suspect the number having the app will probably decrease further.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Aslan said:

    Nonsense. If Wales or Scotland had reached the semi-finals he would definitely have been photoed with their flag and tweeted congratulations.
    And been roundly criticised by the Nationalists for doing it!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    I've just been pinged.

    By Netflix. Telling me there is a film I might like - Once upon a Time in Hollywood.

    I think it is a rule that any film with "Hollywood" in its name, or which is for the film industry self-referential (eg. Mank) is just rubbish.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    kjh said:

    Damn, damn, damn. I was just about to post that. Might as well point out although far too late that Radio 3 was the Third Programme.
    I thought that was ITV? Although my mother always called it the third channel, so maybe not.
  • GnudGnud Posts: 298
    edited July 2021
    How is Britain's connectedness with the EU's Digital Covid Certificate coming along? Liechtenstein, Iceland, and Norway are already connected. San Marino and the Vatican are "technically ready to connect" and "pending".
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    HYUFD said:

    Canada to be fair to Trudeau has also done relatively well, a lower death rate than the US, us and most of Europe and a vaccination rate now ahead of the US and most of Europe too and only slightly behind the UK
    Canada another country where social distancing is a way of life not just for Coronavirus.

    Canada's population density is less than 1% of England's.

    The distancing even in cities like Edmonton is nothing like anything you'd see anywhere in England.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    Leon said:

    Japan’s superior performance on deaths might just be a function of their very low obesity rates. It is likely that is a factor around the world - see the horrors in fairly-obese Latin America

    Incidentally, I’m sitting in a beach bar in Majorca watching Europe waddle past. All nations. It is clear lots of people have put on lots of weight. Brits among the worst, and we were already fat

    God knows what the USA is like
    In my long trip around the States a couple of years back I was surprised not to see more of the obese people for which it is renowned. But I concluded they weren’t likely to be out as much, and insofar as they did venture out probably frequented mostly places that I was unlikely to be visiting.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited July 2021
    Leon said:

    Japan’s superior performance on deaths might just be a function of their very low obesity rates. It is likely that is a factor around the world - see the horrors in fairly-obese Latin America

    Incidentally, I’m sitting in a beach bar in Majorca watching Europe waddle past. All nations. It is clear lots of people have put on lots of weight. Brits among the worst, and we were already fat

    God knows what the USA is like
    Things like losing weight, good diet, vitamin D, all seem to have really gone from government messaging. Being a big fatty with poor diet leading to things like diabetes and also general vitamin d deficieny are all bad things if you are struck down by covid.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    TOPPING said:

    I've just been pinged.

    By Netflix. Telling me there is a film I might like - Once upon a Time in Hollywood.

    I think it is a rule that any film with "Hollywood" in its name, or which is for the film industry self-referential (eg. Mank) is just rubbish.

    It’s really rather good. One of tarantino’s best
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    Stammer did bring up a good point re the potential isolation of hundreds and thousands, if not millions of people at the same time as test and trace continues. It cropped up as an issue on Radio 4 just about simultaneously. Not sure that has been thought out. It will be chaos or it will be ignored. I didn't realise that was continuing until I heard Starmer and the radio.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Leon said:

    I’ve met millions of Brexiteers of all stripes. From lunatic eco-Leavers to stereotypical chav Leavers to super-posh ducal Leavers. I’ve never met the archetype you describe here. Not once. I’m sure they exist outside your head, but they are rare

    The stereotype you do constantly encounter is the middle class, BBC watching, London based, Tuscany-going Remoaner who has been slightly unhinged by Brexit. You encounter them constantly and you can spot them a mile off. However they may be so conspicuous just because they are so hysterical on Twitter
    Clearly left your sense of humour by the pool today. I expected a wittier repost than that. Disappointing.

    Your somewhat desperate attempt to disassociate yourself from the BNP gorilla type leaver is understandable. What you can't get away from is that Farage (the person that convinced so many of you that we were being overrun by a tidal wave of immigrants - remember him?), fits that stereotype perfectly. You have probably overlooked that I used to be a Tory activist. I have met masses of them and there are sadly even more of them in the Tory party now as entryists from UKIP. Reactionary old farts who would love the UK to go back to the 1950s of their parents' youth. The obsession with navy blue passports was only one example of their stupidity. You are simply in denial. You know I am right. Perhaps you have a tweed jacket and a pipe yourself that you only use at weekends.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,094
    Carnyx said:

    Oh yes, the cooperation extended into and beyond WW1 etc. Supply of post-Dreadnought ships and designs. Like those new-fangled aircraft carrier things. And, unofficially on the part of one or two folk who, er, didn't quite keep up with changing times, into WW2 ...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Forbes-Sempill,_19th_Lord_Sempill
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Rutland
    Not to mention the idea of oxygen-enriched torpedoes....

    At Tsushima, the Japanese were impressed with Pakenham (one of the observers). While pacing the deck, he got spatted when a Japanese sailors was blown to bits next to him. He retired below, to return a short time later, in a fresh, gleaming white uniform. And resumed his pacing and note taking.

    Among his comments - "When 12 inch guns are firing, shots from 10 inch guns pass unnoticed, while for all the respect they instil, 6 and 8 inch guns might as well be peashooters".
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    I strongly suspect that a lot of people only have the app for checking in to venues, and long have had the contract tracing turned off. Once there is no requirement to check in (which I believe is the case after July 19th), I suspect the number having the app will probably decrease further.
    I know people who when asked to check put the phone on camera mode and take a picture of the QR Code rather than using the app to check in.

    All the staff do is see you waving your phone in front of the QR Code, they don't check you've actually checked in.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited July 2021
    IanB2 said:

    In my long trip around the States a couple of years back I was surprised not to see more of the obese people for which it is renowned. But I concluded they weren’t likely to be out as much, and insofar as they did venture out probably frequented mostly places that I was unlikely to be visiting.
    I spent a lot of time in the US and they are definitely there! And as with so much about the US, its the extremes. The fit and healthy are super fit and healthy, the same the other way.

    It is also something i really notice when i go and visit my home town of Stoke, people are noticeably much fatter than the affluent part of the country I live in. You can't miss it, and again so often it isn't a bit of dad bod, it is really obese.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    It is beyond bizarre. The only thing I can ascribe it to is complacency. But Jacinda doesn’t seem the type.
    Wasn’t the problem that they basically put their money on AZ, but when a few studies came out suggesting it wasn’t as good as Pfizer (this was before all the blood clot stuff) she basically announced that “New Zealand must have the best, and because of our success in keeping Covid out we can afford to wait for it”. So they abandoned their planned AZ rollout and put in a belated order for Pfizer but were at the back of the queue...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599

    Clearly left your sense of humour by the pool today. I expected a wittier repost than that. Disappointing.

    Your somewhat desperate attempt to disassociate yourself from the BNP gorilla type leaver is understandable. What you can't get away from is that Farage (the person that convinced so many of you that we were being overrun by a tidal wave of immigrants - remember him?), fits that stereotype perfectly. You have probably overlooked that I used to be a Tory activist. I have met masses of them and there are sadly even more of them in the Tory party now as entryists from UKIP. Reactionary old farts who would love the UK to go back to the 1950s of their parents' youth. The obsession with navy blue passports was only one example of their stupidity. You are simply in denial. You know I am right. Perhaps you have a tweed jacket and a pipe yourself that you only use at weekends.
    Oh. You were trying to be FUNNY. Sorry

    Because it wasn’t remotely funny, as you have no sense of humour, it’s quite difficult to respond correctly, in these circumstances. Sorry

    In future perhaps you could start your ‘funny’ comments with some kind of clown face emoji, so I know to read your ‘funny’ remarks with a rictus grin of embarrassment on your behalf, before coughing up a tiny, forced little laugh like a lizard boaking a boll-weevil
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    TOPPING said:

    I've just been pinged.

    By Netflix. Telling me there is a film I might like - Once upon a Time in Hollywood.

    I think it is a rule that any film with "Hollywood" in its name, or which is for the film industry self-referential (eg. Mank) is just rubbish.

    It's quite good fun - and knowing the horrific true story I enjoyed the "Hollywood ending"!
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Not surprised to be honest, people making their own calls on risk (as they have done throughout in lockdown observance etc, ignoring some of the more bizarre rules such as I can go for a walk with my father in law while my wife goes for a walk with her mum, but we can't al walk together, after first lockdown). People were up for this when unvaccinated as they saw the clear risk and didn't want to pass on Covid to particularly vulnerable family. Now those vulnerable people are double vaccinated, the rationale on a personal/near family basis is far far weaker.

    I've still got the app. Recently went on holiday and stayed in a cottage which was owned by a caravan park. Welcome documents asked us to scan in at the venue. We didn't, as it was patently absurd - we had no close contact with anyone else on site, spoke only briefly to a few people outdoors. If someone on the site had Covid it would have pretty much zero relevance to us.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    IanB2 said:

    I thought that was ITV? Although my mother always called it the third channel, so maybe not.
    So you are not really an oldie then?

    Why would she call it the 3rd channel when there were only 2? Ian I'm starting to think you must be a real whipper snapper if your mum is so young she is post BBC2 when the 3rd channel came along.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    IanB2 said:

    Such ignorance is shocking.

    Radio Four was the Home Service.

    Radio Two was the Light Programme.
    As Captain Mainwaring would have said " I was wondering who would spot that first"
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,884

    Canada another country where social distancing is a way of life not just for Coronavirus.

    Canada's population density is less than 1% of England's.

    The distancing even in cities like Edmonton is nothing like anything you'd see anywhere in England.
    Yes but the majority of Canada's population lives in just 2 of its 10 provinces (and 3 territories), Ontario and Quebec.

    Toronto alone has a population of 5 million which is 14% of the entire Canadian population, even London has only 12% of the UK population
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Leon said:

    Japan’s superior performance on deaths might just be a function of their very low obesity rates. It is likely that is a factor around the world - see the horrors in fairly-obese Latin America

    Incidentally, I’m sitting in a beach bar in Majorca watching Europe waddle past. All nations. It is clear lots of people have put on lots of weight. Brits among the worst, and we were already fat

    God knows what the USA is like
    It's hard to imagine the French and Italians being fat. Both are very obviously slimmer than the average here. Has your trip to Majorca revealed some Gallic guts and Tuscan tummies?

    https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Overweight_and_obesity_-_BMI_statistics
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487

    As Captain Mainwaring would have said " I was wondering who would spot that first"
    I did he just typed faster than me.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599
    IanB2 said:

    In my long trip around the States a couple of years back I was surprised not to see more of the obese people for which it is renowned. But I concluded they weren’t likely to be out as much, and insofar as they did venture out probably frequented mostly places that I was unlikely to be visiting.
    A visit to a Wal Mart in Mississippi or a Dairy Queen in the less pricey bits of Chicago or Texas would set you right. But as you say, you didn’t go there
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082

    I spent a lot of time in the US and they are definitely there! And as with so much about the US, its the extremes. The fit and healthy are super fit and healthy, the same the other way.

    It is also something i really notice when i go and visit my home town of Stoke, people are noticeably much fatter than the affluent part of the country I live in. You can't miss it, and again so often it isn't a bit of dad bod, it is really obese.
    I remember I was on a popular four hour hike up Black Elk peak with the dog when the thought that the Americans I was passing didn’t seem to conform with the overweight stereotype. It only took a few seconds to realise that I’d have had better luck spotting them if I’d spent the afternoon down the mall.
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673

    Clearly left your sense of humour by the pool today. I expected a wittier repost than that. Disappointing.

    Your somewhat desperate attempt to disassociate yourself from the BNP gorilla type leaver is understandable. What you can't get away from is that Farage (the person that convinced so many of you that we were being overrun by a tidal wave of immigrants - remember him?), fits that stereotype perfectly. You have probably overlooked that I used to be a Tory activist. I have met masses of them and there are sadly even more of them in the Tory party now as entryists from UKIP. Reactionary old farts who would love the UK to go back to the 1950s of their parents' youth. The obsession with navy blue passports was only one example of their stupidity. You are simply in denial. You know I am right. Perhaps you have a tweed jacket and a pipe yourself that you only use at weekends.
    Hang on a minute. A BNP gorilla type Leaver is clearly a completely different stereotype to tweed blazer, cricket watching, Radio 4 listener Leaver. The only thing consistent in your comments is the familiar rabid hatred of Leavers from people overly attached to a supranational bureaucracy.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,781
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but the majority of Canada's population lives in just 2 of its 10 provinces (and 3 territories), Ontario and Quebec.

    Toronto alone has a population of 5 million which is 14% of the entire Canadian population, even London has only 12% of the UK population
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but the majority of Canada's population lives in just 2 of its 10 provinces (and 3 territories), Ontario and Quebec.

    Toronto alone has a population of 5 million which is 14% of the entire Canadian population, even London has only 12% of the UK population
    That's relevant. But also relevant is that Canadians just don't get that close to one another. In my limited experience, conversation with Canadians tends to be shouted from several feet away. While Italians get slightly closer than is comfortable for a Brit.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    I still haven't had a satisfactory answer my poser yesterday.

    Why would anyone in their right mind retain the app on their phone?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Leon said:

    It’s really rather good. One of tarantino’s best
    Shame. At 2hrs 41mins it's not happening.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Cookie said:

    That's relevant. But also relevant is that Canadians just don't get that close to one another. In my limited experience, conversation with Canadians tends to be shouted from several feet away. While Italians get slightly closer than is comfortable for a Brit.
    'Slightly' working quite hard in your final sentence.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    Gnud said:

    How is Britain's connectedness with the EU's Digital Covid Certificate coming along? Liechtenstein, Iceland, and Norway are already connected. San Marino and the Vatican are "technically ready to connect" and "pending".

    From what I've understood the UK (well England at least) is going to use the international IATA Travel Pass in the NHS App.
  • GnudGnud Posts: 298
    edited July 2021
    "Heading for a summer of chaos and confusion" is remarkably mild language from SKS. Is he still thinking he's in court? Judges prefer not to accept proposals that lead to chaos and confusion. Many tabloid readers just want to go down the pub and breathe all over each other at the bar. SKS is Neil Kinnock maybe - greatest achievement in domestic politics being the party's survival in some kind of shape.

    There seems to be some kind of parallel between 2020 and 2021 even despite the difference with regard to vaccination.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,599

    It's hard to imagine the French and Italians being fat. Both are very obviously slimmer than the average here. Has your trip to Majorca revealed some Gallic guts and Tuscan tummies?

    https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Overweight_and_obesity_-_BMI_statistics
    They remain slimmer. Narcissism ensures it

    Those are quite amazing stats, in a bad way. I had no idea so much of Europe was so podgy

    Countries I assume are all bicycling and healthy are not. Eg the Netherlands, more than half of men are overweight

    Striking
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited July 2021

    It's quite good fun - and knowing the horrific true story I enjoyed the "Hollywood ending"!
    Hmmm maybe I will have to watch it. Perhaps I could pretend it is a box set of five 30min episodes and then I would binge watch all of them in one sitting to fool my brain I'm not sitting down for a 2hr 40mins film.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    alex_ said:

    Wasn’t the problem that they basically put their money on AZ, but when a few studies came out suggesting it wasn’t as good as Pfizer (this was before all the blood clot stuff) she basically announced that “New Zealand must have the best, and because of our success in keeping Covid out we can afford to wait for it”. So they abandoned their planned AZ rollout and put in a belated order for Pfizer but were at the back of the queue...
    Oh that might be it – I didn't realise that.

    Thanks for the reply.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    kjh said:

    So you are not really an oldie then?

    Why would she call it the 3rd channel when there were only 2? Ian I'm starting to think you must be a real whipper snapper if your mum is so young she is post BBC2 when the 3rd channel came along.
    I just remembered on pre programmed TVs post BBC2 ITV was always the 3rd button. Sorry ignore me I'm having a conversation with myself.
This discussion has been closed.