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

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  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    edited July 2021

    I still haven't had a satisfactory answer my poser yesterday.

    Why would anyone in their right mind retain the app on their phone?

    Because no-one (== hardly anyone) ever (== almost never) uninstalls apps from their phones. They just stop using them, and, sometimes, don't reinstall when they change phones (if it didn't migrate it automatically for them).

    ETA: unless they install it and uninstall it almost immediately
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,088
    Take Back Control

    Who knew Brexit meant relaxing road safety rules for HGV drivers? #takingbackcontrol

    https://twitter.com/Simon_Nixon/status/1412761432765124612

    https://twitter.com/grantshapps/status/1412745388730245120
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,253

    I still haven't had a satisfactory answer my poser yesterday.

    Why would anyone in their right mind retain the app on their phone?

    Laziness? Apathy? Technical inability?* Or an uninspiring job that will support self-isolation on full pay if pinged via the app?

    *My in-laws, for example, will have it until one of their children or me thinks to or is asked to uninstall it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    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.
    In Jasper, for example, I remember observing that 50% were racing snakes just gagging to sprint up the next mountain, and 50% were huge fatties.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Leon said:

    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
    Oh dear, touched a raw nerve. Is the latest poor man's Dan Brown effort not going so well today? Had an unpleasant alien visitation on the khazi this morning, or is it that the realisation that in fact my caricature was in reality close to the bone regarding the company you keep? What a pathetically thin skin you uber-leave obsessives have, but then I guess it goes with the angry nationalist type personality. Keep taking the tablets Sean.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    TOPPING said:

    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.
    It flies by. It’s highly entertaining. Cool ending

    He really is a cracking movie-maker. He suffers (like Orson Welles, another prodigy) from having made his absolute masterpiece at the beginning of his career
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    mwadams said:

    Because no-one (== hardly anyone) ever (== almost never) uninstalls apps from their phones. They just stop using them, and, sometimes, don't reinstall when they change phones (if it didn't migrate it automatically for them).

    ETA: unless they install it and uninstall it almost immediately
    (And for extra nuance - of those that *are* uninstalled after that time, the principal reason given is that the app has been spamming them. So an app that sits quietly in the background and didn't get uninstalled within the first 30 days is likely to stay forever.)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited July 2021
    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.
    Even if you say Canada has the same population density advantage New Zealand does and a natural social distancing, there is no denying that Trudeau has vaccinated more than Ardern.

    69% of Canadians have now had 1 dose and 38% have had both doses, compared to just 16% of New Zealanders who have had 1 dose and a mere 10% who have had both doses
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/world/covid-vaccinations-tracker.html
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    Not out of the woods yet:

    South Korea had its highest number of cases yesterday since the pandemic began (1,212), yet another indicator that it's far from over

    https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1412762028242989057?s=20
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    Leon said:

    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
    Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times.

    How hard is it for people to look in a mirror and then decide to eat less?
  • jonny83jonny83 Posts: 1,273
    Leon said:

    It flies by. It’s highly entertaining. Cool ending

    He really is a cracking movie-maker. He suffers (like Orson Welles, another prodigy) from having made his absolute masterpiece at the beginning of his career
    He was on Joe Rogan recently, extremely interesting guy. I wouldn't advise anyone to listen/or watch the interview as it does touch a bit on the film, so best to avoid spoilers.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Leon said:

    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
    Yes, of the major European nations France and Italy have the slimmest women and the slimmest men. (Yet Frenchwomen and Italian women are notably slimmer than Frenchmen and Italian men).

    Dutchmen are the slimmest men of all Europeans yet still more than half are obese!
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    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.

    There’s nothing to stop TfL insisting on masks on the Tube if they wish, but that’s up to TfL and the Mayor.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793
    mwadams said:

    (And for extra nuance - of those that *are* uninstalled after that time, the principal reason given is that the app has been spamming them. So an app that sits quietly in the background and didn't get uninstalled within the first 30 days is likely to stay forever.)
    I have taken off almost all the apps which came with my phone; the only ones I use are google chrome, Whatsapp (grudgingly) and text/phone. Oh, and clock and camera. I also disable location settings, though I don't know how 'real' that is. Anything which can't get done through Google chrome gets done on my home computer.
    I'm not an expert - I may have left holes open. But I'm frankly astonished at how ready people are to install apps at the drop of a hat that not only have access to your data but that know where you are. I find the concept horrific. But it appears I am in a minority.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    edited July 2021
    Data out soon will give hope that Covid cases fall in AUGUST.
    A real turning point in pandemic.
    It has big political implications. At #PMQs ,
    @Keir_Starmer gambled that Freedom Day is too soon, &
    @BorisJohnson banked on cases peaking.


    https://twitter.com/JoeMurphyLondon/status/1412763582941564932?s=20

    Story:

    “The modelling will give a more accurate indication of when a peak will occur,” said a source. “Mid-August is broadly where we believe it will come. It will run through the unvaccinated and the single-dosed, but because such vast numbers of people now have antibodies and can resist it, it will then start falling off because it will run out of people to infect.” So far Britain has vaccinated 64.3 per cent of over-18s with two doses, which give around 92 per cent protection against serious illness, and delivered at least one dose to a total of 86.2 per cent.

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/boris-johnson-august-covid-virus-fall-exclusive-b944552.html
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,302
    Gnud said:

    "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.

    I don’t think Boris had a good PMQs but I do think there is something in the fact that SKS doesn’t really know who he’s pitching to or what he wants. He seems to agree with unlocking but not with the ending of wearing face masks (and the jury is still out on quite how effective they are), seems to be concerned about the number of people self isolating but not willing to reach for the obvious logical solution to that (decrease transmission rates, I.e continuing restrictions). He makes some good points but there’s no coherent thrust of what he actually wants to achieve.

    This is him trying to go the “I told you so” route again. But that didn’t seem to have tremendous cut-through back last year… I think the narrowing in the polls had much more to do with how mightily the Tories were naffing things up at the time rather than anyone giving any credit to Labour.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Gnud said:

    "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.

    After 18 months of glum certainty, chaos and confusion sounds quite attractive to me.
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited July 2021
    Cookie said:

    I have taken off almost all the apps which came with my phone; the only ones I use are google chrome, Whatsapp (grudgingly) and text/phone. Oh, and clock and camera. I also disable location settings, though I don't know how 'real' that is. Anything which can't get done through Google chrome gets done on my home computer.
    I'm not an expert - I may have left holes open. But I'm frankly astonished at how ready people are to install apps at the drop of a hat that not only have access to your data but that know where you are. I find the concept horrific. But it appears I am in a minority.
    glad to see you dont use the utter misery making NHS test and trace . Does anyone think we would have more cases than we do without it currently? Yet is it causing huge disruption that ranges from irritating to devastating for individuals - for no reason - and the government FFS want to extend its life
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Not out of the woods yet:

    South Korea had its highest number of cases yesterday since the pandemic began (1,212), yet another indicator that it's far from over

    https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1412762028242989057?s=20

    I just don’t understand South Korea (not that I’ve done any investigating). Somehow they have managed to produce consistently 4-700 cases for months, never falling below, but never growing, and deaths consistently less than 5 (but never zero!). It seems to me that something doesn’t compute.

    How can they have that tight control over it over such a long period, without it falling to vanishingly low levels? And the no zero deaths thing is really strange.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    TOPPING said:

    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.
    The 1997 Titanic was marketed as '2 hours 86 minutes"......
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Oh dear, touched a raw nerve. Is the latest poor man's Dan Brown effort not going so well today? Had an unpleasant alien visitation on the khazi this morning, or is it that the realisation that in fact my caricature was in reality close to the bone regarding the company you keep? What a pathetically thin skin you uber-leave obsessives have, but then I guess it goes with the angry nationalist type personality. Keep taking the tablets Sean.
    "Poor man's Dan Brown" strikes me as harsh. I don't think I've ever read a more poorly-written book than the Da Vinci Code (it made Jeffrey Archer look like Dickens). Should PB's resident dildo-botherer ever turn his hands to literature I am sure he would be able to turn in a superior product.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    edited July 2021

    Data out soon will give hope that Covid cases fall in AUGUST.
    A real turning point in pandemic.
    It has big political implications. At #PMQs ,
    @Keir_Starmer gambled that Freedom Day is too soon, &
    @BorisJohnson banked on cases peaking.


    https://twitter.com/JoeMurphyLondon/status/1412763582941564932?s=20

    Story:

    “The modelling will give a more accurate indication of when a peak will occur,” said a source. “Mid-August is broadly where we believe it will come. It will run through the unvaccinated and the single-dosed, but because such vast numbers of people now have antibodies and can resist it, it will then start falling off because it will run out of people to infect.” So far Britain has vaccinated 64.3 per cent of over-18s with two doses, which give around 92 per cent protection against serious illness, and delivered at least one dose to a total of 86.2 per cent.

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/boris-johnson-august-covid-virus-fall-exclusive-b944552.html

    Shocking.....its like having 80-90% of people having antibodies means the virus runs out of people to infect....who could have guessed.

    Not the Times and Guardian journalists who were sticking their rulers through the trendlines of the data yesterday......
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    edited July 2021

    glad to see you dont use the utter misery making NHS test and trace . Does anyone think we would have more cases than we do without it currently? Yet is it causing huge disruption that ranges from irritating to devastating to individuals - for no reason - and the government FFS want to extend its life
    I asked this question earlier but don’t know if I got a response. How does the “check in” feature of the app even work? Some times I check into venues for about 5 minutes (but don’t bother to check out). I barely come into contact with anyone. If I was told, based on an alert alone, that I might have to self isolate, I would feel quite comfortable in ignoring it unless there was a way of finding out a bit more about what triggered it.

    The Bluetooth thing is a bit different.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    TOPPING said:

    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.
    Not great, too long, dubious taste.

    Death of Stalin and No Country for Old Men are on Netflix atm.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Aslan said:

    Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times.

    How hard is it for people to look in a mirror and then decide to eat less?
    There’s a couple right next to me as I write. Both extremely obese. And British, I fear (certainly Northern European)

    They’ve ordered an enormous lunch. Several starters. Huge main courses. And it’s not quality food - its huge plates of burgers and chips. Which don’t seem to satisfy them

    It’s actually quite distressing to see. Like watching a smack addict with a death pallor seeking one last uncollapsed vein to inject. In public
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    "Poor man's Dan Brown" strikes me as harsh. I don't think I've ever read a more poorly-written book than the Da Vinci Code (it made Jeffrey Archer look like Dickens). Should PB's resident dildo-botherer ever turn his hands to literature I am sure he would be able to turn in a superior product.
    OK, it probably was a little harsh. Poor man's Jeffrey Archer perhaps?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,145

    We tend not to understand how people connect and are also not connected. I come to the Uni and interact with the same few people everyday, not the whole University (at least in the sense of being likely to be infected). There are networks of people, some vast, some tiny. An infectious strain like covid will rip through a network, but will then run out of links.
    Wasn't that a plot point in A Very Peculiar Practice? An embarrassing disease spreading through the university; iirc the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies was linking and cross-infecting different networks. Sorry for the spoiler of an iconic 1980s television series but I've probably misremembered anyway.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    moonshine said:

    Perhaps yes. But I am reminded of when Obama was resisting a troop surge in Afghanistan and was criticised for it by the general. Don't remember which one. Obama replied that if all he was focused on achieving was defeating the Taliban, then he'd back the troop surge. But he had a far wider mandate that might be jeopardised by it.

    I always try and remember that when those up the chain at work make what look like perplexing strategic decisions. They probably have more info than I do but they certainly have a wider mandate and set of stakeholders to consider.

    I think the same is true here. Ask people who only have a mandate in public health (indeed one narrow area of public health!) what to do and they will always say it's better to be on the safe side. But there's a broader mandate to be followed than that. Interesting Witty, who oversees all pubic health considerations in his brief, now seems to believe his mandate is best fulfilled by ending mandatory restrictions.
    Indeed. The Economy.

    Do we truly know just how much deep shit UK economy is in? Like you said, we have to presume the people up the chain do, and can’t actually tell us.

    I think it is possible if the inflation rate has a Nigel Lawson blipping session, we will be in a 1977 position, needing IMF to pay key bills. I think people get confused between wealth and cash flow. You are wealthy because you are in big stately home with estate, but you don’t have the income to pay staff and electric bill.

    The inflation rate is key, if it goes up, as you would expect with exciting bounce back growth, then the cost of borrowing goes up hence hit on what is in the housekeeping jug.

    So I agree with you, about steering through the wider remit. But do you agree, in their more narrow remit the scientists are not necessary wrong, so there is too much trashing of them scientifically and personally on PB?
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850

    "Poor man's Dan Brown" strikes me as harsh. I don't think I've ever read a more poorly-written book than the Da Vinci Code (it made Jeffrey Archer look like Dickens). Should PB's resident dildo-botherer ever turn his hands to literature I am sure he would be able to turn in a superior product.
    he has hasn't he ? All ripping yarns imho
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,088
    Despite what the govt (and indeed the ‘system’) is saying, it feels hard to be confident the nhs can deal with what is already being thrown at it, never mind what’s likely to come over the next few weeks. Alarm bells are going off all over the place.
    https://twitter.com/JenWilliamsMEN/status/1412766076073611267

    https://twitter.com/shaunlintern/status/1412742990456659969
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    Leon said:

    There’s a couple right next to me as I write. Both extremely obese. And British, I fear (certainly Northern European)

    They’ve ordered an enormous lunch. Several starters. Huge main courses. And it’s not quality food - its huge plates of burgers and chips. Which don’t seem to satisfy them

    It’s actually quite distressing to see. Like watching a smack addict with a death pallor seeking one last uncollapsed vein to inject. In public
    We need to start teaching Stoic Philosophy in schools.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,360
    alex_ said:

    How can they have that tight control over it over such a long period, without it falling to vanishingly low levels? And the no zero deaths thing is really strange.

    South Korea does contact tracing by data mining private data souces, like the records of mobile carriers, transport records, and payments data. A real Big Brother approach to the problem.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    "Poor man's Dan Brown" strikes me as harsh. I don't think I've ever read a more poorly-written book than the Da Vinci Code (it made Jeffrey Archer look like Dickens). Should PB's resident dildo-botherer ever turn his hands to literature I am sure he would be able to turn in a superior product.
    Indeed.
    Although what Dan Brown could/can do - and millions of writers can't - is come up with an exciting story.
    So much fiction is so very dull/implausible/dull and implausible. Often this is masked by a beautiful turn of phrase. But people who can turn a good phrase - or at least turn a phrase more elegantly than Dan Brown - are ten a penny. There are a fair few on this site. Very, very few people can think up a story worth reading.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    Not out of the woods yet:

    South Korea had its highest number of cases yesterday since the pandemic began (1,212), yet another indicator that it's far from over

    https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1412762028242989057?s=20

    It will never be over, Covid cases will always be with us like flu.

    However once the vast majority of us have been double jabbed we can treat it like flu, especially winter flu, with vastly lower numbers of deaths and hospitalisations than was the case a few months ago
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,658
    I did warn this would turn into a pooh show.

    The British & Irish Lions have been hit by a positive Covid-19 test, throwing Wednesday night’s match against the Sharks into jeopardy and raising even more doubt over the remainder of the tour of South Africa.

    One member of the tourists’ staff has recorded a positive result following a lateral flow test and that they and four others – including two players – have been forced into isolation. The Lions are waiting on the results of further tests before making a call on the match against the Sharks but the kick-off time has already been delayed by one hour to 7pm BST.

    The announcement came shortly after confirmation that South Africa’s match against Georgia on Friday is off after Covid-19 outbreaks in both camps. The Lions match against the Bulls – scheduled to take place on Saturday – has already been postponed and there is now considerable doubt over whether the Test series against the Springboks, due to begin on 24 July, will take place.


    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/jul/07/lions-match-and-tour-in-jeopardy-after-two-players-forced-to-isolate
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    Aslan said:

    We need to start teaching Stoic Philosophy in schools.
    Some great life lessons can be gained from this. Early pandemic I did a fair bit of reading in this field and found it very useful.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    Best wishes to James Brokenshire who has had to step down as security minister because his recovery from lung cancer is taking longer than he'd hoped. I hope to see him back in office once he's fully in shape again.

    https://twitter.com/MichaelLCrick/status/1412766394740088833?s=20
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    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.
    Radio 2 would be The Light Programme I think; Radio 4 is the old Home Service.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    Cookie said:

    I have taken off almost all the apps which came with my phone; the only ones I use are google chrome, Whatsapp (grudgingly) and text/phone. Oh, and clock and camera. I also disable location settings, though I don't know how 'real' that is. Anything which can't get done through Google chrome gets done on my home computer.
    I'm not an expert - I may have left holes open. But I'm frankly astonished at how ready people are to install apps at the drop of a hat that not only have access to your data but that know where you are. I find the concept horrific. But it appears I am in a minority.
    You are absolutely right on all counts.

    The amount of data we send people is horrific.

    All I do is

    a) install apps from reputable sources [that doesn't include the Facebook family of companies so no WhatsApp for me :)] and
    b) manually stop them from running in the background.

    And I feel like I'm abnormally paranoid!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    IshmaelZ said:

    Not great, too long, dubious taste.

    Death of Stalin and No Country for Old Men are on Netflix atm.
    Yes - both very good. I am savouring Black Mirror and rewatching Top Boy atm.

    I think I'm on S4 of five of BM. Probably the best drama of recent times imo.

    And Top Boy to relax. I think they are currently filming S3 (of the new series).
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,658
    edited July 2021
    Sadly I also warned about this, that some nations would take the piss when Boris Johnson surrendered to UEFA over quarantine rules.

    The Danish Football Association has ignored the UK's strict Covid rules by allowing 40 of its fans to travel for tonight’s match against England on the plane carrying its official delegation.

    The DFA announced that the fans had been selected for having the greatest number of loyalty points and will travel on a plane with the partners of the footballers and other officials.

    They are all members of the official Denmark football team supporters’ group and were selected for having the highest number of loyalty points from attending matches at home and abroad.

    Under current rules, Denmark is on the amber list meaning anyone travelling to the UK from the country must quarantine for ten days. This has resulted in no fans officially coming to the England for the match.

    But they are using a loophole that allows VIPs from a national football federation to travel to Wembley from Copenhagen without needing to quarantine.


    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9764527/Danish-swerves-Covid-rules-allowing-40-fans-travel-England-Euros-semi-final.html
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    If you want, you can apparently have a covid anti-bodies test, independent of whether you have either been ill or vaccinated.

    I know someone who had one. Antibodies showed up, even though that person is not vaccinated and has never been ill.

    Or at least, not ill since December 2019/January 2020.......(the person is not me by the way).
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    edited July 2021
    Bukayo Saka is expected to start Wednesday's Euro 2020 semi-final with Denmark in place of Jadon Sancho. It is expected to be the only change in Gareth Southgate's starting line-up
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Cookie said:

    Indeed.
    Although what Dan Brown could/can do - and millions of writers can't - is come up with an exciting story.
    So much fiction is so very dull/implausible/dull and implausible. Often this is masked by a beautiful turn of phrase. But people who can turn a good phrase - or at least turn a phrase more elegantly than Dan Brown - are ten a penny. There are a fair few on this site. Very, very few people can think up a story worth reading.
    Well, you might well be right, though Dan Brown is to the mind what Macdonald's is to one's waistline.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Cookie said:

    Indeed.
    Although what Dan Brown could/can do - and millions of writers can't - is come up with an exciting story.
    So much fiction is so very dull/implausible/dull and implausible. Often this is masked by a beautiful turn of phrase. But people who can turn a good phrase - or at least turn a phrase more elegantly than Dan Brown - are ten a penny. There are a fair few on this site. Very, very few people can think up a story worth reading.
    But the dV Code theory was floating around for yonks before he nicked it. It is not of course plausible, but the san greal/sang real thing is a genius bit of textual criticism because wtf actually is a grail? Did anyone ever drink a grail of beer or wine or tea?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Leon said:

    There’s a couple right next to me as I write. Both extremely obese. And British, I fear (certainly Northern European)

    They’ve ordered an enormous lunch. Several starters. Huge main courses. And it’s not quality food - its huge plates of burgers and chips. Which don’t seem to satisfy them

    It’s actually quite distressing to see. Like watching a smack addict with a death pallor seeking one last uncollapsed vein to inject. In public
    Little wonder that the French, Italians and Spanish continue to believe the complete outdated notion that the food in England is dire.

    They see scenes like the above whenever they go on holiday and conclude that the myth that the English are a nation of gastro-barbarians is entirely true.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    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.
    I’ve recorded my tests with the school, but not on the NHS site. I think most people are not bothering unless it is positive.

    I think the UK figures don’t include most (or perhaps any) LFT tests.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    Yes, of the major European nations France and Italy have the slimmest women and the slimmest men. (Yet Frenchwomen and Italian women are notably slimmer than Frenchmen and Italian men).

    Dutchmen are the slimmest men of all Europeans yet still more than half are obese!
    Wasn't there some fascinating stat that in the west we actually consumer rather fewer calories than we did in the fifties and sixties? What has changed is that we don't burn them. We sit on our arses all day at a computer. Nowadays we don't even have the half hour of getting between home and office to do that.
    From my window I can see three very much non-obese workmen laying a path in my garden. I am making them frequent hot drinks. As always, I get a frisson of middle-class transgression when putting to my tastes improbable amounts of sugar in them. Almost no-one I know who doesn't do a manual job has sugar in their hot drinks. Yet I am by some way the fattest of the four of us.
    (That said, at least two of them do not look pictures of health, frankly.)
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536

    Sadly I also warned about this, that some nations would take the piss when Boris Johnson surrendered to UEFA over quarantine ruls.

    The Danish Football Association has ignored the UK's strict Covid rules by allowing 40 of its fans to travel for tonight’s match against England on the plane carrying its official delegation.

    The DFA announced that the fans had been selected for having the greatest number of loyalty points and will travel on a plane with the partners of the footballers and other officials.

    They are all members of the official Denmark football team supporters’ group and were selected for having the highest number of loyalty points from attending matches at home and abroad.

    Under current rules, Denmark is on the amber list meaning anyone travelling to the UK from the country must quarantine for ten days. This has resulted in no fans officially coming to the England for the match.

    But they are using a loophole that allows VIPs from a national football federation to travel to Wembley from Copenhagen without needing to quarantine.


    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9764527/Danish-swerves-Covid-rules-allowing-40-fans-travel-England-Euros-semi-final.html

    And? Is it that you don't approve of match going supporters being treated as VIPs? Seems reasonable to me.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Well, you might well be right, though Dan Brown is to the mind what Macdonald's is to one's waistline.
    You are not very good at analogies.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Cookie said:

    Indeed.
    Although what Dan Brown could/can do - and millions of writers can't - is come up with an exciting story.
    So much fiction is so very dull/implausible/dull and implausible. Often this is masked by a beautiful turn of phrase. But people who can turn a good phrase - or at least turn a phrase more elegantly than Dan Brown - are ten a penny. There are a fair few on this site. Very, very few people can think up a story worth reading.
    I'm not sure I agree with that. I think a compelling plot is the least of your worries if you're looking to write a decent novel. Writing it so it reads well is harder I think. Conveying character and emotion convincingly is hardest of all. I don't remember the Da Vinci Code having a particularly gripping plot either to be honest, it mostly seemed to consist of people running around. But I tend not to remember much about books, even good ones, after I've read them. They are a transitory pleasure for me. So all I really remember about the Da Vinci code was that it was shit.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    Little wonder that the French, Italians and Spanish continue to believe the complete outdated notion that the food in England is dire.

    They see scenes like the above whenever they go on holiday and conclude that the myth that the English are a nation of gastro-barbarians is entirely true.
    There is a difference between the food in the top English restaurants which can be top quality and the food in the local pub and cafe which can still be basic fare and lots of it
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    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.

    This is a fantastic film. I felt very up as the credit rolled. Very clever denouement.

    Also segment where Len plays bad acting and then good acting shows off his divine talent.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339

    Wasn't that a plot point in A Very Peculiar Practice? An embarrassing disease spreading through the university; iirc the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies was linking and cross-infecting different networks. Sorry for the spoiler of an iconic 1980s television series but I've probably misremembered anyway.
    "Engineers, you'll be interested to know, have a very low rate of sexual activity. Singing about it in the bar would appear to be their only outlet. And Physical Sciences hardly troubled the scorer."
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    Haiti's President has been assassinated

    https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1412723063830024192?s=20
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,507
    Scott_xP said:

    Despite what the govt (and indeed the ‘system’) is saying, it feels hard to be confident the nhs can deal with what is already being thrown at it, never mind what’s likely to come over the next few weeks. Alarm bells are going off all over the place.
    https://twitter.com/JenWilliamsMEN/status/1412766076073611267

    https://twitter.com/shaunlintern/status/1412742990456659969

    5 days to the u-turn.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    tlg86 said:

    And? Is it that you don't approve of match going supporters being treated as VIPs? Seems reasonable to me.
    40 fans is hardly going to break the country! If anything 40is the complete opposite of taking the piss! Hopefully they’ll be far more Danish fans there anyway - via U.K. residency etc. Makes for a better atmosphere.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    edited July 2021
    HYUFD said:

    There is a difference between the food in the top English restaurants which can be top quality and the food in the local pub and cafe which can still be basic fare and lots of it
    What, you telling me that in cafe's of Toulouse, Seville and Florence they don't serve double espressos in Sports Direct Mega Mugs along with full English breakfasts?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Cookie said:

    Indeed.
    Although what Dan Brown could/can do - and millions of writers can't - is come up with an exciting story.
    So much fiction is so very dull/implausible/dull and implausible. Often this is masked by a beautiful turn of phrase. But people who can turn a good phrase - or at least turn a phrase more elegantly than Dan Brown - are ten a penny. There are a fair few on this site. Very, very few people can think up a story worth reading.
    Verily

    It seems to mystify many: why Dan Brown is so rich, when he writes so ‘badly’

    It’s like asking why Lewis Hamilton the sportsman is so well-paid, when there are millions of men who are faster, bigger, stronger, more athletic than him; indeed many on this site (not Nigel Formain, obvs) could probably best Hamilton at arm wrestling

    However, Lewis Hamilton can do one thing exceptionally well: drive a high performance car very fast without crashing. And lots of people will pay to watch that, but they won’t pay to watch arm-wrestling
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850

    I'm not sure I agree with that. I think a compelling plot is the least of your worries if you're looking to write a decent novel. Writing it so it reads well is harder I think. Conveying character and emotion convincingly is hardest of all. I don't remember the Da Vinci Code having a particularly gripping plot either to be honest, it mostly seemed to consist of people running around. But I tend not to remember much about books, even good ones, after I've read them. They are a transitory pleasure for me. So all I really remember about the Da Vinci code was that it was shit.
    The Da Vinci code got millions of people reading and learning about history, geography and art more than they would have done without reading it. Isn't that a good thing ?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Some great life lessons can be gained from this. Early pandemic I did a fair bit of reading in this field and found it very useful.
    I keep trying to get through M Aurelius, but it's a slog.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    OK Jesus I'll watch it. Will everyone please calm down.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I'm not sure I agree with that. I think a compelling plot is the least of your worries if you're looking to write a decent novel. Writing it so it reads well is harder I think. Conveying character and emotion convincingly is hardest of all. I don't remember the Da Vinci Code having a particularly gripping plot either to be honest, it mostly seemed to consist of people running around. But I tend not to remember much about books, even good ones, after I've read them. They are a transitory pleasure for me. So all I really remember about the Da Vinci code was that it was shit.
    You're not the only literary critic with that verdict. I have happy memories of seeing this next to Rosslyn Chapel (one of the key venues in the book, I understand):

    https://www.alamy.com/horse-manure-for-sale-in-farm-beside-rosslyn-chapel-using-da-vinci-image6906998.html
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    glad to see you dont use the utter misery making NHS test and trace . Does anyone think we would have more cases than we do without it currently? Yet is it causing huge disruption that ranges from irritating to devastating for individuals - for no reason - and the government FFS want to extend its life
    I do think it's hard a marginal downward pressure on spread. Whether that justifies the cost to the public purse or the inconvenience to users is another matter entirely.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,790

    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.
    Sort of blokes who say, "She's a damn fine looking woman."
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    The Da Vinci code got millions of people reading and learning about history, geography and art more than they would have done without reading it. Isn't that a good thing ?
    The Enid Blyton defence. And, no, I highly doubt it makes any long term difference to anything other than the number of timewasting wankers in the Louvre.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    I'm not sure I agree with that. I think a compelling plot is the least of your worries if you're looking to write a decent novel. Writing it so it reads well is harder I think. Conveying character and emotion convincingly is hardest of all. I don't remember the Da Vinci Code having a particularly gripping plot either to be honest, it mostly seemed to consist of people running around. But I tend not to remember much about books, even good ones, after I've read them. They are a transitory pleasure for me. So all I really remember about the Da Vinci code was that it was shit.
    The best paid writers are those who can produce good plots. It’s as simple as that. Pure capitalism

    There are ‘writers’ who can ONLY plot, their prose is so bad (beyond Dan brown mediocrity) they are not allowed anywhere near a printer

    However they go on to be script doctors or show runners or producers in Hollywood and they make vast sums of cash
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    Talking of less than gastro level pub grub....

    Wetherspoons today announced it will hike food prices by 40p when lockdown ends as it blasted the Government's 'Monty Python' VAT rule.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9763879/Wetherspoons-slams-Government-Monty-Python-VAT-rules.html
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,790
    TOPPING said:

    Shame. At 2hrs 41mins it's not happening.
    It's a blast of a film. Brad Pitt is great in it. But it is too long.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    TOPPING said:

    OK Jesus I'll watch it. Will everyone please calm down.

    Don’t forget to let us know what you made of it. 🙂

    It’s like watching a slice of true history built from a thousand anecdotes.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    The Da Vinci code got millions of people reading and learning about history, geography and art more than they would have done without reading it. Isn't that a good thing ?
    World War Two provided millions with the opportunity for foreign travel and an exciting change of career, but that doesn't make it a good thing.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    Netherlands reports 3,688 new coronavirus cases, an increase of 482% compared to last week. Government seeking advice to determine if measures are needed
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,790
    edited July 2021
    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.
    According to my files Ian is in the 55/58 space.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346
    Carnyx said:

    You're not the only literary critic with that verdict. I have happy memories of seeing this next to Rosslyn Chapel (one of the key venues in the book, I understand):

    https://www.alamy.com/horse-manure-for-sale-in-farm-beside-rosslyn-chapel-using-da-vinci-image6906998.html
    People should give Dan Brown a break.

    Fifteen or so years ago, I stayed at a North Yorkshire B&B. I hadn't read the Da Vinci Code, and was very sniffy about it (*). They had a late-teenage daughter who, at breakfast, had her nose deep in the book. As we chatted, she said it was the first book she had ever read, she was gripped, and she wanted to read more books.

    Yes, it is crummy. Yes, it is poorly written. But if it acts as a gateway to literature for people put off from reading at school, then it's brilliant.

    (*) In fact, the first time I ever read a Dan Brown book was when I picked up a copy at a remote bothy; I read it, and left it at another bothy a few days later.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    I'm not sure I agree with that. I think a compelling plot is the least of your worries if you're looking to write a decent novel. Writing it so it reads well is harder I think. Conveying character and emotion convincingly is hardest of all. I don't remember the Da Vinci Code having a particularly gripping plot either to be honest, it mostly seemed to consist of people running around. But I tend not to remember much about books, even good ones, after I've read them. They are a transitory pleasure for me. So all I really remember about the Da Vinci code was that it was shit.
    If you want to sell a lot of books, a convincing plot should be your #1 objective; possibly even your #2, #3 and #4 objectives. The critics will love you if you can use words that make them feel clever. Readers will love you if you entertain them.
    Though in all honesty I haven't read more than 10 chapters of a Dan Brown book. It wasn't the Da Vinci code. It was one set in the Arctic. I got frustrated that the plot (or at least the first ten chapters of it) seemed to match exactly Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow. And I had already read that.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    238,937 vaccinations in Flag of United Kingdom yesterday

    Flag of England 71,524 1st doses / 109,148 2nd doses
    Flag of Scotland 10,718 / 17,831
    Flag of Wales 1,584 / 18,504
    NI 1,985 / 7,643
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    This afternoon, @PHE_uk has announced that Brazil, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and Pakistan will be the first countries to receive genomic sequencing support through its New Variant Assessment Platform (NVAP).

    https://twitter.com/fact_covid/status/1412771118658772997?s=20
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    IshmaelZ said:

    The Enid Blyton defence. And, no, I highly doubt it makes any long term difference to anything other than the number of timewasting wankers in the Louvre.
    “Time-wasting wankers”??

    So, you go to the Louvre to expand your elevated mind in a noble pursuit of enlightenment, people who are a bit poorer than you, or less well-educated, they go to the Louvre because they are “time-wasting wankers”. Right?

    That’s quite a classic of the genre. Worthy of the great A C Grayling
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited July 2021

    People should give Dan Brown a break.

    Fifteen or so years ago, I stayed at a North Yorkshire B&B. I hadn't read the Da Vinci Code, and was very sniffy about it (*). They had a late-teenage daughter who, at breakfast, had her nose deep in the book. As we chatted, she said it was the first book she had ever read, she was gripped, and she wanted to read more books.

    Yes, it is crummy. Yes, it is poorly written. But if it acts as a gateway to literature for people put off from reading at school, then it's brilliant.

    (*) In fact, the first time I ever read a Dan Brown book was when I picked up a copy at a remote bothy; I read it, and left it at another bothy a few days later.
    In fairness that is also true.

    I can't bear Harry Potter - there is something that creeps me out utterly about it (perhaps more to do with me tbf). I bought the first book by mistake, so to speak (trying out a new local writer back in 1995 or so), and dumped it on a friend. Who was absolutely delighted with me for giving her little girl so much enjoyment. More generally I've been told by other friends it has helped encourage childrten to read.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    MaxPB said:

    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.
    OK if the 8 million per day you've heard suggested is right I guess that is more than in Germany per capita.
    But as I understand the figures there about 1 million tests registered done each day average, and about 600,000 LFT, which would be about 6.5 million a day if 10% is about right (which might fit with 8 million on a weekday if less is happening at the weekends), call it around 46 million a week

    There are apparently 12 million children in schools and kindergartens in Germany, and over a million staff so that would get to maybe 26 million tests a week (before the school holidays), plus my guess 15 million Bürgertests, at least a million routine LFTs of hospital and care home staff, a million PCR tests. And an unknown number of routine workplace LFTs - judging by the number of people I know who have to go into work in a few different kinds of workplaces it could be quite a lot a few million, you probably get to about the same number. Which would make the UK number higher per capita, but nowhere near the 14 times as many or 5 times as many or whatever silly number Philip_Thompson for some reason wants to believe.

    Anyway, the UK and Germany have followed a bit different testing strategies, although in some ways similar, so a comparison could be interesting, but it's difficult to do make any useful comparisons if people repeatedly make silly claims like "we're doing 14 times as many tests", or "no wonder numbers are so low in Germany because they aren't doing any testing"
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    Leon said:

    “Time-wasting wankers”??

    So, you go to the Louvre to expand your elevated mind in a noble pursuit of enlightenment, people who are a bit poorer than you, or less well-educated, they go to the Louvre because they are “time-wasting wankers”. Right?

    That’s quite a classic of the genre. Worthy of the great A C Grayling
    Unlike you to come over all man of the people.

    How are those ghastly northern european burger-munching fatties doing?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited July 2021
    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.

    Even if you say Canada has the same population density advantage New Zealand does and a natural social distancing, there is no denying that Trudeau has vaccinated more than Ardern.

    69% of Canadians have now had 1 dose and 38% have had both doses, compared to just 16% of New Zealanders who have had 1 dose and a mere 10% who have had both doses
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/world/covid-vaccinations-tracker.html

    My son and daughter in law in Vancouver have their second doses tomorrow
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    People should give Dan Brown a break.

    Fifteen or so years ago, I stayed at a North Yorkshire B&B. I hadn't read the Da Vinci Code, and was very sniffy about it (*). They had a late-teenage daughter who, at breakfast, had her nose deep in the book. As we chatted, she said it was the first book she had ever read, she was gripped, and she wanted to read more books.

    Yes, it is crummy. Yes, it is poorly written. But if it acts as a gateway to literature for people put off from reading at school, then it's brilliant.

    (*) In fact, the first time I ever read a Dan Brown book was when I picked up a copy at a remote bothy; I read it, and left it at another bothy a few days later.
    PS What really annoyed me about Mr Brown was making Rosslyn Chapel into a mass tourist flypaper - when I had loved taking visiting friends to it when it was nice and quiet beside the river valley.

    but in fairness that got it a lot of money for some serious refurb of late.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    edited July 2021
    Scott_xP said:

    Despite what the govt (and indeed the ‘system’) is saying, it feels hard to be confident the nhs can deal with what is already being thrown at it, never mind what’s likely to come over the next few weeks. Alarm bells are going off all over the place.
    https://twitter.com/JenWilliamsMEN/status/1412766076073611267

    https://twitter.com/shaunlintern/status/1412742990456659969

    One wonders where that hospital in Scotland that's already at capacity will be in a few weeks time, with numbers (at least) doubling every fortnight.

    But it will be all be fine, because vaccines.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936

    People should give Dan Brown a break.

    Fifteen or so years ago, I stayed at a North Yorkshire B&B. I hadn't read the Da Vinci Code, and was very sniffy about it (*). They had a late-teenage daughter who, at breakfast, had her nose deep in the book. As we chatted, she said it was the first book she had ever read, she was gripped, and she wanted to read more books.

    Yes, it is crummy. Yes, it is poorly written. But if it acts as a gateway to literature for people put off from reading at school, then it's brilliant.

    (*) In fact, the first time I ever read a Dan Brown book was when I picked up a copy at a remote bothy; I read it, and left it at another bothy a few days later.
    Harry Potter probably put a dent in that particular teenage type.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492
    IshmaelZ said:

    The Enid Blyton defence. And, no, I highly doubt it makes any long term difference to anything other than the number of timewasting wankers in the Louvre.
    Well, I think reading is better than not reading.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Leon said:

    “Time-wasting wankers”??

    So, you go to the Louvre to expand your elevated mind in a noble pursuit of enlightenment, people who are a bit poorer than you, or less well-educated, they go to the Louvre because they are “time-wasting wankers”. Right?

    That’s quite a classic of the genre. Worthy of the great A C Grayling
    No, you can tell them because they go into the Louvre, queue up to take selfies with one small, dingy and overrated oil painting, and fuck off again. Anyone who looks at anything else while they are there is exempt from the criticism.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    No grievance too trivial:

    TESCO has been accused of pouring “salt in the wounds” of Scottish football fans after playing an English supporters’ anthem from the store tannoy.

    https://www.thenational.scot/news/19424576.tesco-rubs-salt-wounds-scotland-football-fans-english-anthem/
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346
    Large swathes of our adult population is functionally illiterate and/or innumerate.

    1 in 5 adults struggle to read and write, missing out on the wonders of literature. Shakespeare, Dickens, Austen, Dahl, Eliot, Bronte, Knox go unknown to them.

    Anything that can get them reading is brilliant.

    (BTW, I still think the levels of innumeracy and illiteracy in this country are a national shame, and on that is not talked about enough.)
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    Chris said:

    One wonders where that hospital in Scotland that's already at capacity will be in a few weeks time, with numbers (at least) doubling every fortnight.

    But it will be all be fine, because vaccines.
    You do know that Raigmore Hospital is in Inverness and under Sturgeon not Boris
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    Aslan said:

    Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times.

    How hard is it for people to look in a mirror and then decide to eat less?
    Obviously pretty damn hard or we wouldn't have this problem.

    Duh.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    *** Betting Post ***

    The odds on Ivana Bacik (Labour) in tomorrow's Dublin Bay South by-election (1.33/1.4 Betfair Sports/PP or Ladbrokes) look too short to me. The value IMO is James Geoghegan (Fine Gael) at around 3.0.

    Always hard to assess Irish elections with their five or six rounds of counting of transfers, but the market seems to have over-reacted to the one poll which has been conducted, and even that had Geoghegan in the lead.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dublin_Bay_South_(Dáil_constituency)#2021_by-election
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Dublin_Bay_South_by-election
    https://www.irishexaminer.com/opinion/commentanalysis/arid-40330868.html

    Usual disclaimers!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    TOPPING said:

    Unlike you to come over all man of the people.

    How are those ghastly northern european burger-munching fatties doing?
    I’ve just checked A C Grayling’s Twitter-feed for the first time in many months

    Jesus. He’s as bad as ever. He tweets something histrionic and furious every hour or two, 24/7 (does he sleep?!) - all the tweets are bitterly anti-Boris and he tries to shoe-horn Brexit into as many as possible. When he’s not doing his own manic tweets he retweets all the usuals, james O’Brien, david Schneider, Mike Galsworthy, the FBPE weirdos.

    What’s the point? He’s not persuading anyone any more. He is literally ranting at clouds.

    I met him before Brexit and he was wry, cultured and witty, nothing like this. It is rather sad
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,915
    edited July 2021

    People should give Dan Brown a break.

    Fifteen or so years ago, I stayed at a North Yorkshire B&B. I hadn't read the Da Vinci Code, and was very sniffy about it (*). They had a late-teenage daughter who, at breakfast, had her nose deep in the book. As we chatted, she said it was the first book she had ever read, she was gripped, and she wanted to read more books.

    Yes, it is crummy. Yes, it is poorly written. But if it acts as a gateway to literature for people put off from reading at school, then it's brilliant.

    (*) In fact, the first time I ever read a Dan Brown book was when I picked up a copy at a remote bothy; I read it, and left it at another bothy a few days later.
    I've read the Da Vinci Code (OK, yes, it is not great) but couldn't get through much in the way of Thomas Hardy, despite encouragement from the spouse. Does that make me a bad person?

    I'm intrigued as to which bothy now. I don't have it as a book for Bob Scott's or the Tarf Hotel. Definitely Sourlies in the rain or perhaps even Kervaig.

  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Carnyx said:

    In fairness that is also true.

    I can't bear Harry Potter - there is something that creeps me out utterly about it (perhaps more to do with me tbf). I bought the first book by mistake, so to speak (trying out a new local writer back in 1995 or so), and dumped it on a friend. Who was absolutely delighted with me for giving her little girl so much enjoyment. More generally I've been told by other friends it has helped encourage childrten to read.
    It's much better than Blyton or Brown. I read it to my sons as it came out, but disjointedly (because other people were reading it to them) so as with the film Dr Zhivago I've probably seen the whole thing, but never in sequence.

    I am astonished at its success, I thought the market for drivel about fantasy boarding school life was dead as a dodo by the time orwell wrote about it.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    Carnyx said:

    In fairness that is also true.

    I can't bear Harry Potter - there is something that creeps me out utterly about it (perhaps more to do with me tbf). I bought the first book by mistake, so to speak (trying out a new local writer back in 1995 or so), and dumped it on a friend. Who was absolutely delighted with me for giving her little girl so much enjoyment. More generally I've been told by other friends it has helped encourage childrten to read.
    Supply teaching at a particularly rough Manchester comp c, 2001.
    Year 7 English.30 kids reading Harry Potter, as assigned. No talking, or pissing about winding up the supply. There was an audible groan when the bell went too.
    I could not believe it. Until I had my own kids.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,793

    What, you telling me that in cafe's of Toulouse, Seville and Florence they don't serve double espressos in Sports Direct Mega Mugs along with full English breakfasts?
    As well as the continentals may do food - and, for example, I don't think I have ever eaten badly in Italy after 11am - they just refuse to even try with breakfast. It is baffling. A tiny mug of strong coffee, some dry bread and maybe a slice of continental ham or cheese - and perhaps a yoghurt - does not cut it.

  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    edited July 2021

    Large swathes of our adult population is functionally illiterate and/or innumerate.

    1 in 5 adults struggle to read and write, missing out on the wonders of literature. Shakespeare, Dickens, Austen, Dahl, Eliot, Bronte, Knox go unknown to them.

    Anything that can get them reading is brilliant.

    (BTW, I still think the levels of innumeracy and illiteracy in this country are a national shame, and on that is not talked about enough.)

    Not a problem, as all the classics are getting cancelled anyway....

    Top school will stop teaching To Kill A Mockingbird and Of Mice and Men in a bid to 'decolonise' the curriculum

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9757805/Top-school-stop-teaching-Kill-Mockingbird-Mice-Men.html
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    dixiedean said:

    Supply teaching at a particularly rough Manchester comp c, 2001.
    Year 7 English.30 kids reading Harry Potter, as assigned. No talking, or pissing about winding up the supply. There was an audible groan when the bell went too.
    I could not believe it. Until I had my own kids.
    Our kids are very meh about Harry Potter. I've never read them so don't care either way.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    edited July 2021

    No grievance too trivial:

    TESCO has been accused of pouring “salt in the wounds” of Scottish football fans after playing an English supporters’ anthem from the store tannoy.

    https://www.thenational.scot/news/19424576.tesco-rubs-salt-wounds-scotland-football-fans-english-anthem/

    I notice nobody is playing the official England Euro 2020 anthem....that contains the N word....
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