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Could Britain’s COVID rate be impacted by the actual jab that was used? – politicalbetting.com

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  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390

    To be fair, if you are not on the "right" tube lines for your destination, travel across London can be a pain.

    For example, commuting into Paddington station.....
    Ha ha I live in South East London so you don't need to tell me about the deficiencies of the tube network.
  • To be fair, if you are not on the "right" tube lines for your destination, travel across London can be a pain.

    For example, commuting into Paddington station.....
    And driving in London is always an absolute pleasure with no pain whatsoever......
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,959
    eek said:

    Anyone seen the FT's error page

    https://www.ft.com/3lJQa6w

    worth a quick giggle.

    And effortlessly informative.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    edited October 2021
    TOPPING said:

    And I am one of those who has now become infected.

    Tested positive. Double jabbed.

    I have been banging on for so long about how for double jabbed people Covid is just like the flu that it is about time I was able to put my money where my mouth is.

    Day 2 update: it's just like the flu.
    Indeed, but plus the metallic taste in the mouth, which I don't recall having before.
  • Charles said:

    The government insisting you take a personal medical treatment is not something I am comfortable with. It up ends the power relationship between the state and the citizen
    I am instinctively liberal, but emergency powers are sometimes necessary. So long as they have a sunset clause, I think vaccine passports for people to access non essential services are definitely what should be introduced.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    edited October 2021

    If its still the NHS pass we are talking about, we can take a free LFT test. No medical treatment is required whatsoever, although vaccination does save time, and also saves lives.

    Against it being mandatory but a lot of venues are already using it and it is fine.
    Looking at definitions of "medical treatment," LFTs arguably fall under it.

    " “Medical treatment” means all procedures for diagnosing, or treating any physical or mental illness, infirmity or defect"

    (From HMRC's Employment Income Manual)

    Actually, seeing that vaccinations are preventative rather than treatment, it could even be argued by a lawyer that LFTs are "medical treatment" whilst vaccinations are not.
  • Charles said:

    The government insisting you take a personal medical treatment is not something I am comfortable with. It up ends the power relationship between the state and the citizen
    I completely agree with that.

    But the government insisting you stay at home, schools are closed, businesses are closed etc is something I am not comfortable with either.

    If the choice is Vaxxports or No Restrictions then I choose No Restrictions.
    If the choice is Vaxxports or Lockdown then I choose Vaxxports.

    Anyone who wishes to remain at home instead of having the vaccine has the right to do that, and is no worse off than if we had a lockdown.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    kjh said:

    Yes very clever. Accurate but dancing on a pin head I feel.

    Now using your phrasing how about this:

    It does however mean we CAN do x (which we shouldn't)
    And we COULD ALWAYS do y but by say we CAN NOW (as Gove said) rather than just saying we CAN (as you post) implies that we COULDN'T before (which is a lie)

    “Can now” doesn’t IMPLY “couldn’t before”. You are INFERRING that.

    But it’s all dancing
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,547
    edited October 2021
    Selebian said:

    Hmm, I got taken out at traffic lights in Trafalgar Square by someone next to me who forgot to unclip. Was it you? :angry:

    This is three or four years back - I was on a Sadiq cycle so not clipped in. Didn't actually go right over, myself, happily.
    No.

    The only thing I landed on was the pavement.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091

    And driving in London is always an absolute pleasure with no pain whatsoever......
    If you drive out of rush hour, it can be surprisingly easy to get around.
  • Charles said:

    “Can now” doesn’t IMPLY “couldn’t before”. You are INFERRING that.

    But it’s all dancing
    Dancing on a hypodermic might be more apt!
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    MattW said:

    No.

    The only thing I landed on was the pavement.
    Ah. I'll let you off then :smile:

    And aplogies that I wasn't there to break your fall :wink:
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Its not insisting that you take the treatment, but it is making it harder for you to have fun etc if you don't...
    And the state shouldn’t have that right (as opposed to having the power, which it clearly does, subject to parliamentary approval).

    That’s the issue. Government is (indirectly) elected by the people and its authority is derived from the people.

    The ability to exclude from society (prison or exile) is the ultimate sanction the state can apply and only for a breach of the criminal law.

    Extending that to include “not doing something I think you should do” is a massive extension of state power
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,547
    kamski said:

    I have an e-cargo bike, which is fantastic, and I have sometimes taken 4 (small) children in it. I use it for at least 15km every day, it's generally quicker and a lot more fun than a car getting around the city. The cars give me more respect too. It's pretty flat around here, and the bike lanes are ok-ish, so might not work quite as well in London...
    Hmmm.


  • Looking at definitions of "medical treatment," LFTs arguably fall under it.

    " “Medical treatment” means all procedures for diagnosing, or treating any physical or mental illness, infirmity or defect"

    (From HMRC's Employment Income Manual)

    Actually, seeing that vaccinations are preventative rather than treatment, it could even be argued by a lawyer that LFTs are "medical treatment" whilst vaccinations are not.
    OK, whatever the legal definitions, someone taking an LFT test, if they want to go to a major event or nightclub is not a big civil liberties restriction. Indeed the biggest regular events, PL football, already use the NHS pass as do many nightclubs and events. Some go further and demand a recent test regardless of vaccination, or even both test and vaccination. I must have used the NHS app for this purpose at least ten times and it takes about 10-15 seconds to process at most venues.

    So whilst I am against the policy, it really is not a substantial change to the current situation or a burden on people. The bigger impact might be on businesses, some of which are surviving at the margins at the moment and hoping to get through to better times.

    If it were expanded to pubs and restaurants that would be a bigger hit, and I would be even more against that, but other countries are coping with it and not turning into North Korea.

  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,454
    Mr. Foremain, I fear that's complacent. Once we have the beginnings of ID cards or social credit, they'll be here to stay, for authoritarian reasons claiming to be for our own good.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    One loophole to the ULEZ rules, is to get a classic car. Cars over 40 years old are exempt from the emissions-based charge.

    Which of course inspires fun ways to travel in style, without giving the Mayor the pleasure of taking money from you, such as a restomod 1970s Range Rover:
    https://www.pistonheads.com/news/ph-britishcars/ulez-reborn-range-rover-classic-launched/44843
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    Charles said:

    And the state shouldn’t have that right (as opposed to having the power, which it clearly does, subject to parliamentary approval).

    That’s the issue. Government is (indirectly) elected by the people and its authority is derived from the people.

    The ability to exclude from society (prison or exile) is the ultimate sanction the state can apply and only for a breach of the criminal law.

    Extending that to include “not doing something I think you should do” is a massive extension of state power
    Shamima Begum (exiled by the Home Secretary after no court of law has adjudicated on any breach of the criminal law) says hi. Governments do this kind of thing all the time (I am not saying they should).
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    I completely agree with that.

    But the government insisting you stay at home, schools are closed, businesses are closed etc is something I am not comfortable with either.

    If the choice is Vaxxports or No Restrictions then I choose No Restrictions.
    If the choice is Vaxxports or Lockdown then I choose Vaxxports.

    Anyone who wishes to remain at home instead of having the vaccine has the right to do that, and is no worse off than if we had a lockdown.
    Lockdown is being pushed by obsessives at the moment, not the government

    Additionally the principle on lockdown has already been conceded. There is downside to conceding a new power to the government. Powers, once given, are very hard to roll back
  • If you drive out of rush hour, it can be surprisingly easy to get around.
    I drive in zone 1-2 in the evenings a couple of times a week and average 10-15mph. That is with being liberal with speed limits and driving positively. The first mile out is rarely less than 10 mins, I am a slow runner but can still run faster than that!
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,585
    Charles said:

    And the state shouldn’t have that right (as opposed to having the power, which it clearly does, subject to parliamentary approval).

    That’s the issue. Government is (indirectly) elected by the people and its authority is derived from the people.

    The ability to exclude from society (prison or exile) is the ultimate sanction the state can apply and only for a breach of the criminal law.

    Extending that to include “not doing something I think you should do” is a massive extension of state power
    In a health emergency? I think the pandemic applies. its been like a war. Some of the stories of people's mental health (a teacher on the radio this morning) are quite difficult to listen to. I suspect a lot of people are not coping well.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    Charles said:

    “Can now” doesn’t IMPLY “couldn’t before”. You are INFERRING that.

    But it’s all dancing
    What do you think the word 'NOW' infers then if it doesn't infer you couldn't before? I mean why say it otherwise. It has a clear meaning.
  • Charles said:

    Lockdown is being pushed by obsessives at the moment, not the government

    Additionally the principle on lockdown has already been conceded. There is downside to conceding a new power to the government. Powers, once given, are very hard to roll back
    I agree on the first statement which is why I oppose even mask mandates, let alone vaxxports or lockdowns.

    But if a lockdown is on the cards, then the Overton Window has shifted so far that a vaxxport is a lesser power than a full lockdown.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    edited October 2021
    TOPPING said:

    You are being too literal, Charles.

    The message was unambiguously that once free of the EU shackles the UK could finally introduce higher standards.
    And the people saying this were part of a government that had just overseen a bonfire of environmental regulations, the limits they ran in to being the pesky EU regulations that they have no control over.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091
    MattW said:

    Hmmm.


    I was rather amused to find that there is a Christiania brand of Danish Bikes.....

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Shamima Begum (exiled by the Home Secretary after no court of law has adjudicated on any breach of the criminal law) says hi. Governments do this kind of thing all the time (I am not saying they should).
    She had the opportunity to appeal in a UK court (albeit not in person) AIUI
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    In a health emergency? I think the pandemic applies. its been like a war. Some of the stories of people's mental health (a teacher on the radio this morning) are quite difficult to listen to. I suspect a lot of people are not coping well.
    That is true. Mental health has been the biggest cost of lockdown.

  • Shamima Begum (exiled by the Home Secretary after no court of law has adjudicated on any breach of the criminal law) says hi. Governments do this kind of thing all the time (I am not saying they should).
    She exiled herself when she left the country to fight for ISIS. The Home Secretary just closed the gate after she left.

    And she's had the chance to have her case go before courts.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,284
    Sandpit said:

    One loophole to the ULEZ rules, is to get a classic car. Cars over 40 years old are exempt from the emissions-based charge.

    Which of course inspires fun ways to travel in style, without giving the Mayor the pleasure of taking money from you, such as a restomod 1970s Range Rover:
    https://www.pistonheads.com/news/ph-britishcars/ulez-reborn-range-rover-classic-launched/44843

    If you can afford 125 grand for something with bendy pushrods and an utterly miserably 150cfm flow from the antique head design you can probably afford the ULEZ charge on something not shit.

    I've just bought a barn find 28,000 mile 1977 E21 323i. It's amazing how slow 40+ year old fast cars are.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319
    MattW said:

    Hmmm.


    Don't know what's up with child on the left there, in my experience children love it. But not quite sure what the point of this picture is?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091

    She exiled herself when she left the country to fight for ISIS. The Home Secretary just closed the gate after she left.

    And she's had the chance to have her case go before courts.
    She should be tried for the war crimes that she committed.
  • She should be tried for the war crimes that she committed.
    Indeed. In the country she committed those crimes, not in the UK.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091

    Indeed. In the country she committed those crimes, not in the UK.
    Why? War crimes are considered to be prosecutable by any involved party. For quite a broad definition of "involved party"

    I know that there is an interesting reluctance for state prosecutions of non-state actors for war crimes.... Which is another story.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    .
    Charles said:

    Lockdown is being pushed by obsessives at the moment, not the government

    Additionally the principle on lockdown has already been conceded. There is downside to conceding a new power to the government. Powers, once given, are very hard to roll back
    Lockdown as a legal instruction was wrong. It would have been better if it had been voluntarily complied with. The same is true of vaccinations, however frustrating it is.
  • Off topic: has anyone seen this? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-58967630

    TL;DR version: Wales is proposing to abolish separate sciences as a GCSE option.

    I’m very glad I’m not teaching in Wales…
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    Charles said:

    She had the opportunity to appeal in a UK court (albeit not in person) AIUI
    AIUI it failed because the law gives the power to the Home Secretary to deprive people of their rights without them being convicted of breaking any laws by a court. Which is the point I am making. It is not without precedent for the government to give itself this kind of power over us. Perhaps you just didn't expect it to apply to someone like you.
    This is why it is dangerous to start disapplying universal rights when the person in question is someone we don't like. One day the person being deprived of their liberty might be you.
  • Why? War crimes are considered to be prosecutable by any involved party. For quite a broad definition of "involved party"

    I know that there is an interesting reluctance for state prosecutions of non-state actors for war crimes.... Which is another story.
    Let the country that she committed the crimes in bring her to justice.

    If we bring her back to try her for her crimes then we won't be able to deport her after her sentence. Allowing her back is rewarding her, why should she benefit from her crimes?
  • David Frum's rules for twitter.


  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Off topic: has anyone seen this? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-58967630

    TL;DR version: Wales is proposing to abolish separate sciences as a GCSE option.

    I’m very glad I’m not teaching in Wales…

    Combined sciences has been a disaster in the US
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091

    Let the country that she committed the crimes in bring her to justice.

    If we bring her back to try her for her crimes then we won't be able to deport her after her sentence. Allowing her back is rewarding her, why should she benefit from her crimes?
    She can go where she likes, after serving the first 199 years of her sentence.
  • Farooq said:

    Is there a realistic prospect of prosecution where she is? Surely it's more important that justice is done rather than worrying so much about who does it?
    Stripping her of her citizenship so she can't go out, commit war crimes, then return back to the UK is a greater justice being done.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    AIUI it failed because the law gives the power to the Home Secretary to deprive people of their rights without them being convicted of breaking any laws by a court. Which is the point I am making. It is not without precedent for the government to give itself this kind of power over us. Perhaps you just didn't expect it to apply to someone like you.
    This is why it is dangerous to start disapplying universal rights when the person in question is someone we don't like. One day the person being deprived of their liberty might be you.
    I don’t know the technicalities of the case. But all governments have the right to exile undesirables providing they don’t leave people stateless.
  • She can go where she likes, after serving the first 199 years of her sentence.
    As if the courts in this country would see her serve 199 years.
  • Off topic: has anyone seen this? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-58967630

    TL;DR version: Wales is proposing to abolish separate sciences as a GCSE option.

    I’m very glad I’m not teaching in Wales…

    The sheep botherers are always wrong and stupid.

    It help explains their rugby union fans.
  • Farooq said:

    So you aren't really interested in seeing her prosecuted for her alleged crimes?
    Not if the price of seeing her prosecuted is allowing her back into this country, no.
  • rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038
    Charles said:

    Lockdown is being pushed by obsessives at the moment, not the government

    Additionally the principle on lockdown has already been conceded. There is downside to conceding a new power to the government. Powers, once given, are very hard to roll back
    Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Florida, Texas are back to fairly normal life. Florida and Sweden were there by 2020.

    Large parts of the 'third world' used the drugs whose names get you cancelled or expelled from social media because they're out of patent and cheap.

    Ask the BBC and Guardian - the most biased news coverage since Mar 2020 - why they're not publishing fear stories about India daily, as in May 2021.

    Because the problem's mostly gone away, although not in Kerala which followed the UK policy and banned cheap generic drugs, just like the NHS.

    Sites for further information ... https://globalcovidsummit.org/ ad nauseam but there are 100s.

    Anyone not jabbed and not with prior T cell immunity from a previous coronavirus, including some common colds, is likely to have had Delta. If so they have protection for decades, maybe life.

    Since the jabbed spread the infection as much as the unjabbed, quite apart from the civil liberties problem please tell me why embryonic social credit passes - so sorry, 'vaxports' - work?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,694

    Stripping her of her citizenship so she can't go out, commit war crimes, then return back to the UK is a greater justice being done.
    Nope, she was brought up in the UK so we shouldn't be trying to pass her on to another country to deal with a problem created in this country.
  • eek said:

    Nope, she was brought up in the UK so we shouldn't be trying to pass her on to another country to deal with a problem created in this country.
    We're not "passing" her onto anyone else. She voluntarily left, we're just not taking her back and we're not obligated to do so.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    The sheep botherers are always wrong and stupid.

    It help explains their rugby union fans.
    So you disapprove of their contribution to Crecy, Agincourt and Poitiers? Not to mention founding the C of E.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    Off topic: has anyone seen this? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-58967630

    TL;DR version: Wales is proposing to abolish separate sciences as a GCSE option.

    I’m very glad I’m not teaching in Wales…

    Wales is a Banana Republic ... without bananas. It has got poorer and poorer since devolution. It suits Llafur to keep Wales poor.

    Most decisions in Wales are taken behind the scenes by influencing Llafur in Corruption Bay, Cardiff.

    There is no-one in Llafur who understands even very basic science. There is no Minister for Science. There are two Ministers for Climate Change. They studied law and politics at University.

    Llafur are under pressure to improve Welsh standings in International League Tables (the worst out of the 4 countries in the UK).

    The easiest way to do that is to remove anything remotely difficult.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Florida, Texas are back to fairly normal life. Florida and Sweden were there by 2020.

    Large parts of the 'third world' used the drugs whose names get you cancelled or expelled from social media because they're out of patent and cheap.

    Ask the BBC and Guardian - the most biased news coverage since Mar 2020 - why they're not publishing fear stories about India daily, as in May 2021.

    Because the problem's mostly gone away, although not in Kerala which followed the UK policy and banned cheap generic drugs, just like the NHS.

    Sites for further information ... https://globalcovidsummit.org/ ad nauseam but there are 100s.

    Anyone not jabbed and not with prior T cell immunity from a previous coronavirus, including some common colds, is likely to have had Delta. If so they have protection for decades, maybe life.

    Since the jabbed spread the infection as much as the unjabbed, quite apart from the civil liberties problem please tell me why embryonic social credit passes - so sorry, 'vaxports' - work?
    I don’t respond to people who advocate ivermectin
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091
    Carnyx said:

    So you disapprove of their contribution to Crecy, Agincourt and Poitiers? Not to mention founding the C of E.
    Plus they gave us antidisestablishmentarianism

    Which is an awesome word.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    Sandpit said:

    One loophole to the ULEZ rules, is to get a classic car. Cars over 40 years old are exempt from the emissions-based charge.

    Which of course inspires fun ways to travel in style, without giving the Mayor the pleasure of taking money from you, such as a restomod 1970s Range Rover:
    https://www.pistonheads.com/news/ph-britishcars/ulez-reborn-range-rover-classic-launched/44843

    My 19 year old petrol Ford Focus seems to be exempt from ULEZ unlike many much newer cars.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,694

    Not if the price of seeing her prosecuted is allowing her back into this country, no.
    She is our fault so she is our problem to deal with.

    The home secretary may not like it but she should be here and should be charged with whatever crimes she committed that we can charge her with.

    What she isn't is a problem for Bangladesh.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    Farooq said:

    Why does it "suit Llafur to keep Wales poor"?
    One obvious way to suppress separatism is to keep a country poor .... and therefore dependent.
  • eek said:

    She is our fault so she is our problem to deal with.

    The home secretary may not like it but she should be here and should be charged with whatever crimes she committed that we can charge her with.

    What she isn't is a problem for Bangladesh.
    If she was our problem we'd be dealing with her.

    We're not, so not our problem.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    Virus anecdote.

    My 85yo father-in-law got Covid a few weeks ago. He lost his smell and had a runny nose and that was about it. Yesterday he got what we believe is Norovirus (vomiting bug) and spent most of yesterday being sick. He couldn't even sit up in bed without help then but is more mobile today and able to get himself to the loo and back. So from his experience, double-jabbed Covid is much milder than Norovirus.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Wales is a Banana Republic ... without bananas. It has got poorer and poorer since devolution. It suits Llafur to keep Wales poor.

    Most decisions in Wales are taken behind the scenes by influencing Llafur in Corruption Bay, Cardiff.

    There is no-one in Llafur who understands even very basic science. There is no Minister for Science. There are two Ministers for Climate Change. They studied law and politics at University.

    Llafur are under pressure to improve Welsh standings in International League Tables (the worst out of the 4 countries in the UK).

    The easiest way to do that is to remove anything remotely difficult.
    Why do you keep referring to Llafur? Aren’t they the Welsh People’s Historical Society?

    (My google skills may have let me down)
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    AlistairM said:

    My 19 year old petrol Ford Focus seems to be exempt from ULEZ unlike many much newer cars.
    Petrol cars are okay if they comply with the Euro 4 standard, but diesels have to meet the Euro 6 standard. There’s plenty of 2015 diesels that have to pay the charge, but as you say a lot of older petrol cars are alright.
  • Wales is a Banana Republic ... without bananas. It has got poorer and poorer since devolution. It suits Llafur to keep Wales poor.

    Most decisions in Wales are taken behind the scenes by influencing Llafur in Corruption Bay, Cardiff.

    There is no-one in Llafur who understands even very basic science. There is no Minister for Science. There are two Ministers for Climate Change. They studied law and politics at University.

    Llafur are under pressure to improve Welsh standings in International League Tables (the worst out of the 4 countries in the UK).

    The easiest way to do that is to remove anything remotely difficult.
    There are a large number of pupils for whom the sciences are the easy subjects, and it the arts subjects, with all their ambiguity and subjectivity, which are hard. Having said that, they are also merging English Language with English Literature.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,483
    Charles said:

    I don’t respond to people who advocate ivermectin
    I gave you a like - even though you just did.
  • UnpopularUnpopular Posts: 913
    eek said:

    She is our fault so she is our problem to deal with.

    The home secretary may not like it but she should be here and should be charged with whatever crimes she committed that we can charge her with.

    What she isn't is a problem for Bangladesh.
    I was just typing out something to that effect. She's our problem and responsibility. As an aside, surely we don't want to start a kind of game of musical chairs in regards to criminal acts committed by dual nationals?

    Having to stay in some dusty hell hole for the rest of her days might be regarded as a kind of natural justice by some, but I would prefer a more lawful kind.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513

    There are a large number of pupils for whom the sciences are the easy subjects, and it the arts subjects, with all their ambiguity and subjectivity, which are hard. Having said that, they are also merging English Language with English Literature.
    I always thought it was a bit of a joke that you got two English GCSEs for around the same amount of learning as for maths, so I don't have a problem with that change (though, arguably, extra English should be an option like triple award science should be).
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,632
    I notice that the NHS website has been updated to say that you can only book your booster after 6 months and 1 week.

    According to the same website, the nearest walk-in vaccination centre to me in London is in Camden. But in the Lake District it is Blackpool. Which is ridiculous.

    Maybe there will be places closer by for vaccinations done by appointment. I do hope so. Because if people have to travel such distances for booster shots no wonder the uptake of them is not happening fast enough.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450

    I recall Abraham Lincoln - "Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally."
    Strange but true. On social media you can find a fair number of people from the Americas who will argue that slavery was a more or less benign institution.
  • Plus they gave us antidisestablishmentarianism

    Which is an awesome word.
    I have always wondered why antidisestablishmentarianism is considered the longest word, because there must have been folk that opposed the antidisestablishmentarianism movement and hence there must have been an antiantidisestablishmentarianism
  • eekeek Posts: 29,694
    Cyclefree said:

    I notice that the NHS website has been updated to say that you can only book your booster after 6 months and 1 week.

    According to the same website, the nearest walk-in vaccination centre to me in London is in Camden. But in the Lake District it is Blackpool. Which is ridiculous.

    Maybe there will be places closer by for vaccinations done by appointment. I do hope so. Because if people have to travel such distances for booster shots no wonder the uptake of them is not happening fast enough.

    Would have thought Kendal was open and on both times I took the twins there they were doing walk-ins albeit on the QT.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    I have always wondered why antidisestablishmentarianism is considered the longest word, because there must have been folk that opposed the antidisestablishmentarianism movement and hence there must have been an antiantidisestablishmentarianism
    Isn't that just disestablishmentarianism? ;)
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    We're not "passing" her onto anyone else. She voluntarily left, we're just not taking her back and we're not obligated to do so.
    The implication of what you are saying here is that anyone who leaves the country can be denied entry upon return, if 'we' don't think it is a good idea. Not a particularly brilliant scenario, for a number of reasons; but most significantly because it turns citizenship in to a privilege that exists at the whims of the government.

  • tlg86 said:

    I always thought it was a bit of a joke that you got two English GCSEs for around the same amount of learning as for maths, so I don't have a problem with that change (though, arguably, extra English should be an option like triple award science should be).
    As a timetabler I see how much time each subject gets; at my school English is the one with the least time per GCSE and Maths has the most (though about half of them do a further qualification). I suspect the reason for combining the two GCSEs will be to free up more time for something else rather than to equalise the time with Maths.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091

    Don't suppose I'll get a reply to this but if you've got a better way to keep the parasites out of my goats then I'd like to hear it.
    Keep your goats away from the Rentier Class, according to Marxists anyway?
  • darkage said:

    The implication of what you are saying here is that anyone who leaves the country can be denied entry upon return, if 'we' don't think it is a good idea. Not a particularly brilliant scenario, for a number of reasons; but most significantly because it turns citizenship in to a privilege that exists at the whims of the government.

    Its not the implication, its the reality.

    But only if they're a danger to this country and only if closing the gate doesn't leave them stateless.

    If such people choose to leave the country why should they be allowed back? They made their choice. Actions have consequences.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091
    Sean_F said:

    Strange but true. On social media you can find a fair number of people from the Americas who will argue that slavery was a more or less benign institution.
    Nothing changes - Lincoln was thinking of the people in his day who advocated slavery as a positive good. For the slaves......
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,290
    edited October 2021
    RobD said:

    Isn't that just disestablishmentarianism? ;)
    Perhaps there were centre-grounders, who believed that antidisestablishmentarianists were going a little too far, and that compromise was possible. Hence semiantidisestablishmentarianism.

    (Though that would probably be just semidisestablishmentarianism)
  • UnpopularUnpopular Posts: 913

    If she was our problem we'd be dealing with her.

    We're not, so not our problem.
    Only because the Home Secretary, rather dubiously in my opinion, deprived her of her citizenship which allowed the Government to claim she isn't our problem.
  • Unpopular said:

    Only because the Home Secretary, rather dubiously in my opinion, deprived her of her citizenship which allowed the Government to claim she isn't our problem.
    Not dubiously. In accordance with national and international law.

    The country that chose to let her in can now deal with her. Or the other country she has citizenship from.
  • I have always wondered why antidisestablishmentarianism is considered the longest word, because there must have been folk that opposed the antidisestablishmentarianism movement and hence there must have been an antiantidisestablishmentarianism
    If you can find examples of it being used then it would count. I don’t think antidisestablishmentarianism is the longest word in English though: floccinaucinihilipilification has that honour.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited October 2021

    I have always wondered why antidisestablishmentarianism is considered the longest word, because there must have been folk that opposed the antidisestablishmentarianism movement and hence there must have been an antiantidisestablishmentarianism
    Surely a number of such movements are collectively antidisestablishmentarianisms?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091

    Perhaps there wee centre-grounders, who believed that antidisestablishmentarianists were going a little too far, and that compromise was possible. Hence semiantidisestablishmentarianism.

    (Though that would probably be just semidisestablishmentarianism)
    I declare antieuropeaneuionreestablishmentarianism (TM) open for business....

    Also europeaneuionreestablishmentarianism (TM).....
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,547
    Dura_Ace said:

    If you can afford 125 grand for something with bendy pushrods and an utterly miserably 150cfm flow from the antique head design you can probably afford the ULEZ charge on something not shit.

    I've just bought a barn find 28,000 mile 1977 E21 323i. It's amazing how slow 40+ year old fast cars are.
    Isn't that the one with 5 reverse gears when cornering?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Boris denies that getting his MP's to vote to allow sewage to be pumped into our rivers and waterways is part of a new policy.

    Build Back Shitter.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    edited October 2021

    I declare antieuropeaneuionreestablishmentarianism (TM) open for business....

    Also europeaneuionreestablishmentarianism (TM).....
    Are we going to have europeaneuionreestablishmentarianism-oaners (and antieuropeaneuionreestablishmentarianism-eers), too?
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,628

    Its not the implication, its the reality.

    But only if they're a danger to this country and only if closing the gate doesn't leave them stateless.

    If such people choose to leave the country why should they be allowed back? They made their choice. Actions have consequences.
    We are much safer if we have terrorists in jail, not free in another country where they can plot whatever attacks they want against the UK.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    Farooq said:

    Yes and no. You're barking up the right tree, but it's not purely on the whim of government. Government is still subject to the law.
    At the moment, although Patel and Raab seem to think it shouldn't be.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,483

    I have always wondered why antidisestablishmentarianism is considered the longest word, because there must have been folk that opposed the antidisestablishmentarianism movement and hence there must have been an antiantidisestablishmentarianism
    And before you thought of that, it was a time of preantiantidisestablishmentarianism...
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,910

    Not dubiously. In accordance with national and international law.

    The country that chose to let her in can now deal with her. Or the other country she has citizenship from.
    Chose is a bit of a stretch.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091
    MattW said:

    Isn't that the one with 5 reverse gears when cornering?
    Curiously, I have driven a vehicle where 6th gear, in reverse, is completely reasonable.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    Farooq said:

    Yes and no. You're barking up the right tree, but it's not purely on the whim of government. Government is still subject to the law.
    That is kind of true, but the Blair era laws we have are deeply problematic. As I understand them, they give the government a discretionary power to strip people of citizenship if they deem it to be conducive to the public good. This is subject to the caveat that people cannot be made stateless, meaning that in practice they can only be enforced where someone has citizenship rights elsewhere.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,091
    RobD said:

    Are we going to have europeaneuionreestablishmentarianism-oaners (and antieuropeaneuionreestablishmentarianism-eers), too?
    Yes.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,483
    On Indian vaccination progress...

    https://www.medpagetoday.com/opinion/second-opinions/95203
    ...While full vaccination may seem like a lofty goal, it is not completely out of reach. The Indian district of Raigarh, which has a population of approximately 1.6 million (in the state of Chhattisgarh, where mean per capita income is $1,400 per year), was able to achieve 100% first-dose vaccination of all eligible, adult citizens without financial incentives or a governmental mandate. This made national headline news across India. Raigarh achieved this success despite severe resource limitations (including the sharp vaccine shortages throughout India in early 2021), and heterogeneity in geographical, ethnic, linguistic, social, and religious attributes, which added to the mission's complexity.

    Below, we share five actionable strategies learned from the Raigarh case study, which can help bolster vaccination rates in both resource-poor and well-resourced settings....
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Curiously, I have driven a vehicle where 6th gear, in reverse, is completely reasonable.
    A diesel on the Snowdon railway?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    Nigelb said:

    And before you thought of that, it was a time of preantiantidisestablishmentarianism...
    Antidisestablishmentarianism used to be given to us as a spelling challenge when I was at primary school in the 40's.
  • Farooq said:

    I'm not sure you're right about international law there. Correct me if I'm wrong though.
    What issue is there in international law?

    International law gives countries the right to strip citizenship of dual nationals. As a nation we did that in accordance with the law.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,694

    Not dubiously. In accordance with national and international law.

    The country that chose to let her in can now deal with her. Or the other country she has citizenship from.
    Slight problem there - she doesn't have citizenship anywhere else - at best she has a vague claim to get Bangladesh citizenship - which Bangladesh have stated she doesn't qualify for.

  • eek said:

    Slight problem there - she doesn't have citizenship anywhere else - at best she has a vague claim to get Bangladesh citizenship - which Bangladesh have stated she doesn't qualify for.

    Then the country that chose to let her in can deal with her.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    edited October 2021

    What issue is there in international law?

    International law gives countries the right to strip citizenship of dual nationals. As a nation we did that in accordance with the law.
    If this is the Begum woman I don't think she has dual nationality, does she? We say we think she also has Bangladeshi citizenship, but the Bangladeshi's say she doesn't.
    AIUI, anyway.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,483
    Japan fully contained after its worst surge related to Delta, Syringe quickly rose to now 78% of total population w/ ≥ 1 dose, test positivity went from 25% to 1%, cases >23,000 to <400.
    Everything is open, no restrictions except use of masks. The mood is celebratory
    It can be done.</i>
    https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1452308678430924812
This discussion has been closed.