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Eyes on the Blue Wall: Raab is in danger – politicalbetting.com

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  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    Sure. But we're being offered a choice between the experts who may have bits of it wrong or MPs with no training who may be lucky to guess a fraction of it right.

    So I back the experts. Their wrong is worth more than a gobshite ideologue MP's right.
    Look, I did modelling (the Excel kind) for 20 years as a professional career. I can tell you this now that this idea that the ‘model is right’ or ‘follow the numbers / science’ is bollocks. Models are not neutral beings, they reflect the biases of their creators. Which is why you take 20 financial analysts’ models of the same company and they will have 20 different outcomes.

    If you blindly trust the experts, you are as much of an idiot as those who blindly trust politicians.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    Aslan said:

    But it won't just be the unvaccinated. If the NHS is overwhelmed, cancer treatments are delayed, A&E incidents take days to get to, more people die.
    They whole point is that if you let the fools who rejected the vaccine die at home the NHS doesn't get overwhelmed. Simply refuse them treatment.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    Aslan said:

    Because it was better than German domination.
    But a truce, if called in Christmas 1914, would have saved millions of lives and billions of pounds/marks on both sides (and might have prevented the rise of communism and Nazism)

    And yet, on and on it went. An all-embracing disaster
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232
    MrEd said:

    Yes. If you say anti-vaxxers should be penalised, why not fat people for example (I’ll exclude smokers - given the tax on cigarettes, it can be argued they already are being penalised).
    There's VAT on junk food

    Food and drink for human consumption is usually zero-rated but some items are always standard-rated. These include catering, alcoholic drinks, confectionery, crisps and savoury snacks, hot food, sports drinks, hot takeaways, ice cream, soft drinks and mineral water.

    What is there for antivaxxers ?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    MrEd said:

    Yes. If you say anti-vaxxers should be penalised, why not fat people for example (I’ll exclude smokers - given the tax on cigarettes, it can be argued they already are being penalised).
    There's a sugar tax on sugary drinks already. VAT is charged on confectionary but not most other foodstuffs. So I'd argue that already happens to an extent, and the extent might easily be extended in years to come with relatively little protest.
  • Covid app now at 113k daily cases.
  • [Google Translate]

    A hard lockdown will apply in the Netherlands from 5 a.m. tomorrow morning. Sources in The Hague confirm that the cabinet is adopting the advice of the Outbreak Management Team to close as many sectors as possible. In any case, the new measures will remain in force until January 14.

    It was already clear that the OMT and the cabinet are very concerned about the rapid spread of the omikron variant of the coronavirus.

    The experts advise closing almost everything: only essential shops such as supermarkets and pharmacies should remain open, sources in The Hague confirmed yesterday. The cabinet held emergency consultations this afternoon and has reportedly adopted the advice for the hard lockdown.

    This means that the catering industry, non-essential shops and the sports and culture sector will have to close again. Pickup at shops and catering would remain possible. As far as the experts are concerned, all secondary schools and other educational institutions must also close. Primary schools have already closed early for the Christmas holidays.

    'Four people at Christmas'
    The group size outside is reduced to a maximum of 2 people. A maximum of 2 visitors should also be allowed inside. Reportedly there will be an exception for Christmas: then 4 visitors are welcome. This exception would not apply to New Year's Eve.

    The new measures will be explained in a press conference at 7 pm.


    https://nos.nl/artikel/2410002-vanaf-morgen-vrijwel-alles-dicht-harde-lockdown-zeker-tot-14-januari
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    Foxy said:

    No, it was part of our leave negotiations so some colleagues could visit family overseas that they couldn't get to last Christmas. In return I got the pick of summer leave. I am not working on Christmas day nor the 26th, just the week after.

    I don't particularly mind.
    Fair enough, I'd have happily settled for that. And, of course, when running a community pharmacy, long years ago, often did. In those days New Years Day was an ordinary working day, too.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Leon said:

    But a truce, if called in Christmas 1914, would have saved millions of lives and billions of pounds/marks on both sides (and might have prevented the rise of communism and Nazism)

    And yet, on and on it went. An all-embracing disaster
    Such a pessimist. Look at the bright side of the war. It (eventually) broke down the entire social system in the UK that kept all but a few trapped in their class.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    edited December 2021
    Leon said:

    You're either delusionally optimistic, or you have such a strict definition of lockdown it doesn't include "shutting all indoor hospitality, imposing the rule of 6, everyone work from home"

    Which is it? I would genuinely like to know, because from my perspective we are certainly going to get a Plan C, very soon, and it's beginning to look a lot like Lockdown
    I'm certainly not a kooky optimist. I have a pretty good record on 'govt covid action' prediction.

    But ok, there is definition leeway here. Let's firm up. I don't think there'll be rule of 6, nor the closing down of hospitality. WFH is a certainty imo but guidance not law.

    I'm not quite as confident as I've been before though, this is true. And it looks like bad times coming for the NHS, regardless of govt action.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797

    [Google Translate]

    A hard lockdown will apply in the Netherlands from 5 a.m. tomorrow morning. Sources in The Hague confirm that the cabinet is adopting the advice of the Outbreak Management Team to close as many sectors as possible. In any case, the new measures will remain in force until January 14.

    It was already clear that the OMT and the cabinet are very concerned about the rapid spread of the omikron variant of the coronavirus.

    The experts advise closing almost everything: only essential shops such as supermarkets and pharmacies should remain open, sources in The Hague confirmed yesterday. The cabinet held emergency consultations this afternoon and has reportedly adopted the advice for the hard lockdown.

    This means that the catering industry, non-essential shops and the sports and culture sector will have to close again. Pickup at shops and catering would remain possible. As far as the experts are concerned, all secondary schools and other educational institutions must also close. Primary schools have already closed early for the Christmas holidays.

    'Four people at Christmas'
    The group size outside is reduced to a maximum of 2 people. A maximum of 2 visitors should also be allowed inside. Reportedly there will be an exception for Christmas: then 4 visitors are welcome. This exception would not apply to New Year's Eve.

    The new measures will be explained in a press conference at 7 pm.


    https://nos.nl/artikel/2410002-vanaf-morgen-vrijwel-alles-dicht-harde-lockdown-zeker-tot-14-januari

    That's the hard lockdown the UK had in January-March? Except that at one stage we didn't allow booze takeaways, IIRC; otherwise identical

    God, it was brutal. Queuing in the freezing cold for supermarkets. One by one
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,785
    edited December 2021

    In this specific instance it isn't reasonable to expect a government to overturn the decision of an independent medical advisory committee. No sensible politician would, otherwise you get into Trump territory of advising bleach and giving anti-vaxxer massive amounts of ammunition.

    I have spent the past 2 years consistently pointing out the dumb shit the government have done time and time again. Go and check my 60k posts, there are absolutely loads of posts saying, FFS Boris has bottled a lockdown, he is leaving it too late. I was also massively critical of the idea of the tier system. I said we should have had border restrictions straight away during March 2020....I advocated for the sort of scheme Australia have employed....I said the government needed to kick SAGE up the arse in the summer and have them actually making a plan, when in fact they didn't meet for 2 months...

    I could go on and on and on.
    And no doubt will. (In fact, already have). :)
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546
    Cyclefree said:

    You clearly haven't met the same sort of rich people as I have.
    Although in fairness doesn't the nature of your job means you meet a disproportionate amount of greedy and rather dim rich criminals?
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    Pulpstar said:

    There's VAT on junk food

    Food and drink for human consumption is usually zero-rated but some items are always standard-rated. These include catering, alcoholic drinks, confectionery, crisps and savoury snacks, hot food, sports drinks, hot takeaways, ice cream, soft drinks and mineral water.

    What is there for antivaxxers ?
    They already are penalised. For example, there are different rules for where you can go for people who are vaccinated or unvaccinated.

    The simple fact is it’s not concern about the stress on health systems that’s driving the punishment debate but political views. Being an anti-vaxxer is seen as right wing, therefore it’s fine to punish. However, being fat is “your choice” and to criticise it is “fat shaming” so we never debate charging extra for it. Hence why we have to go the back door route of taxation (at least with cigs, it’s blatantly obviously smokers are despised. With fat people, it’s “oohhh, it’s your body, you’re beautiful”)
  • Cyclefree said:

    You clearly haven't met the same sort of rich people as I have.
    You can always trust @Luckyguy1983 to be completely wrong
  • MaxPB said:

    Because it won't help. The most likely unvaccinated person who might end up in hospital is going to be a 60-70 year old South Asian Muslim who doesn't drink, doesn't smoke and doesn't go to the pub, theatre, non-Halal restaurants, shops at the local Asian shop run by one of his mates who also doesn't smoke, doesn't drink, doesn't go to the pub, theatre or non-Halal restaurants.

    Vaccine passports might get a few extra under 40s to get vaccinated, sure, but that's not going to change the healthcare situation. They will do precisely zero to get those over 60s who are unvaccinated into the funnel. The unvaccinated in these cohorts will not be inconvenienced by them because nowhere they go need them or will bother implementing them.

    Vaccine passports are another one of those "let's look like we're doing something" measures. A tax at least raises some money.
    https://twitter.com/taxbod/status/1471977923355762689/photo/1
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    Cyclefree said:

    You clearly haven't met the same sort of rich people as I have.
    I think the previous presidential family gives a more accurate impression. I don't think the Left could have imagined a better example of how the super rich don't deserve their wealth.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    Leon said:

    But a truce, if called in Christmas 1914, would have saved millions of lives and billions of pounds/marks on both sides (and might have prevented the rise of communism and Nazism)

    And yet, on and on it went. An all-embracing disaster
    I think one factor was that so many had already been lost that only victory would make the sacrifice worthwhile.

    I guess there are still people aiming for complete victory over Covid, and not willing to accept a vaccine-mediated settlement.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,497
    edited December 2021
    90,418 cases....

    Wales don't report on Saturdays. Would be another 3k cases.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    kinabalu said:

    I'm certainly not a kooky optimist. I have a pretty good record on 'govt covid action' prediction.

    But ok, there is definition leeway here. Let's firm up. I don't think there'll be rule of 6, nor the closing down of hospitality. WFH is a certainty imo but guidance not law.

    I'm not quite as confident as I've been before though, this is true. And it looks like bad times coming for the NHS, regardless of govt action.
    You DO have a pretty good record on government action, which is why my question is sincere, if a little brusque

    The government is not proposing to close down "all hospitality", but they are proposing (it is alleged) to close down all indoor hospitality, which is essentially the same thing for 90% of businesses, esp in winter. And they are imposing restrictions on socialising, bringing back the rule of 6, et al

    That is a lockdown, and it seems you agree, and I am pretty certain it is coming. But I pray that you are right and I am wrong
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    Leon said:

    But a truce, if called in Christmas 1914, would have saved millions of lives and billions of pounds/marks on both sides (and might have prevented the rise of communism and Nazism)

    And yet, on and on it went. An all-embracing disaster
    Yes and it should have been done, but it takes two to tango.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651

    The contrast between photos of that young lass being pinned to the floor by a load of burly police officers for daring to break lockdown to attend the Sarah Everard vigil and a collective shrug of 'nothing to see here, gov' with respect to Downing Street must be doing a ton of damage to the Met's public reputation.

    It might, had the Met a reputation to lose......
  • Competition Update - no change:

    Highest Boosters to date: 861,306 (17/12)
    Nearest estimate: @carnyx (854,217)
    Next nearest: @Richard_Nabavi (896,322)

    Eliminated entries:
    @Endillion 525,600
    @MightyAlex 700,000
    @Cyclefree 723,527
    @Eabhal 825,000
  • 90,418.......armageddon delayed.....
  • MrEd said:

    I need to place greater attention on these horse tips!

    Ps hello @CorrectHorseBattery hope all good
    Hey, hope you're all well :)
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Cyclefree said:

    You clearly haven't met the same sort of rich people as I have.
    Reminds me of the story about someone asking why a rich lady was so niggardly with her money, to which the reply was "How do you think she got rich?"
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    https://twitter.com/taxbod/status/1471977923355762689/photo/1
    Yes, but as a few people point out there, if I go to the pub and I look under-age (obviously not now but back in the day), I was ID’d. No one said “you’re infringing on my civil liberties” or “it’s a disgrace”, you accepted it. No ID, no drink.

    I suspect the howls of outrage from certain areas are because they realise they benefit from certain “loose” practices.
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    Hey, hope you're all well :)
    All good thank you CHB!!!!
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,934
    The Dutch government appear to have gone collectively mad. So they lock down hard for 4 weeks, and cases stabilise or drop (or, as this is the big O, keep rising slowly?). Then they unlock again, and…whoosh. Up go the cases again. Then what, they lock down again? Then reopen again? Ad infinitum. Because the whole Dutch population is going to get this thing at some point. And arguably better to get it when the elderly are freshly boosted than next year when their immunity is waning again.

    I don’t think that’s going to happen here. Nobody will dare lock things down until after Christmas. By that time I wouldn’t mind betting that London cases will have peaked already anyway. Then Boris will have Baker and Co on his back benches to deal with. So they’ll go incrementally, by which point hopefully the country as a whole will have peaked and be on the way down.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797

    90,418.......armageddon delayed.....

    Denmark has also slowed, in the last couple of days

    Is this the first glimmer of hope? Is it going to do here what it did in Gauteng? Just fall back inexplicably?
  • Aslan said:

    Perhaps but people will make their minds up pretty quickly if the Tories run a campaign on "Starmer, the man that tried to overturn Brexit, is now going to hand back power over British laws to the EU" and the BBC fact checking is going to have to say this is true.
    You are assuming that everyone is against it. There are a lot of people who would like to have it back and the last vote was very nearly 50:50 and demographically a lot of younger voters might be motivated to vote to get it back and, as Leave voters tended to be older, a number of them will not be voting any more.

    Personally, I would vote to put FoM back in place so that that those growing up have more options than being locked up in Boris's Britain and businesses have an opportunity to open up all the markets that were taken away from them.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited December 2021
    MaxPB said:

    Because it won't help. The most likely unvaccinated person who might end up in hospital is going to be a 60-70 year old South Asian Muslim who doesn't drink, doesn't smoke and doesn't go to the pub, theatre, non-Halal restaurants, shops at the local Asian shop run by one of his mates who also doesn't smoke, doesn't drink, doesn't go to the pub, theatre or non-Halal restaurants.

    Vaccine passports might get a few extra under 40s to get vaccinated, sure, but that's not going to change the healthcare situation. They will do precisely zero to get those over 60s who are unvaccinated into the funnel. The unvaccinated in these cohorts will not be inconvenienced by them because nowhere they go need them or will bother implementing them.

    Vaccine passports are another one of those "let's look like we're doing something" measures. A tax at least raises some money.
    Do you have some facts to support that frankly dubious "South Asian Muslim" assertion ?

    I ask because the latest ICNARC report shows that 74% of patients admitted to ICU with Covid since May 2021 have been white. The ratios (rounded) are:
    White 74%
    Mixed 2%
    Asian 11%
    Black 8%
    Other 6%

    So yes, asian and black people are over represented but not massivley so. And consider also the wealth/deprivation breakdown. ICU covid patients are 3 times more likely to be from the most deprived quitile than from the least deprived.

    https://www.icnarc.org/Our-Audit/Audits/Cmp/Reports
  • Leon said:

    That's the hard lockdown the UK had in January-March? Except that at one stage we didn't allow booze takeaways, IIRC; otherwise identical

    God, it was brutal. Queuing in the freezing cold for supermarkets. One by one
    Shocked at Leon's naivety here.

    A careful perusal of the rules would have spotted that breweries with an off-site license could still serve takeaway in a closed bottle.

    tldr: stock up on growlers if that exception is not spotted.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    Leon said:

    Denmark has also slowed, in the last couple of days

    Is this the first glimmer of hope? Is it going to do here what it did in Gauteng? Just fall back inexplicably?
    I wouldn't count on it.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,934
    MrEd said:

    Yes, but as a few people point out there, if I go to the pub and I look under-age (obviously not now but back in the day), I was ID’d. No one said “you’re infringing on my civil liberties” or “it’s a disgrace”, you accepted it. No ID, no drink.

    I suspect the howls of outrage from certain areas are because they realise they benefit from certain “loose” practices.
    No, they are well aware of how voter ID has been a successful means of vote suppression employed by the Republicans in the US for years.

    Possibly erroneously in this case given the Tories’ new voting bloc may well include large numbers who would also be put off by ID requirements.
  • Do you have some facts to support that frankly obnoxious "South Asian Muslim" assertion ?

    I ask because the latest ICNARC report shows that 74% of patients admitted to ICU with Covid since May 2021 have been white. The ratios (rounded) are:
    White 74%
    Mixed 2%
    Asian 11%
    Black 8%
    Other 6%

    So yes, asian and black people are over represented but not massivley so. And consider also the wealth/deprivation breakdown. ICU covid patients are 3 times more likely to be from the most deprived quitile than from the least deprived.

    https://www.icnarc.org/Our-Audit/Audits/Cmp/Reports
    I had a South Asia neighbour for 8 years. He smoked and drank, but he drew the line at bacon/pork
  • 90,418.......armageddon delayed.....

    London definitely stabilising:

    https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/cases?areaType=region&areaName=London
  • Not sure when I'm going to use the Party Bus exemption in the current restrictions, but when the opportunity arises I will be on it. On. It.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    MaxPB said:

    I wouldn't count on it.
    I'm not counting on it, lol. I am indulging myself with a soupcon of faint faint hope, like a grind of fine kampot pepper to liven up the dull gruel of daily Covid shiteness
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232
    edited December 2021
    Leon said:

    Denmark has also slowed, in the last couple of days

    Is this the first glimmer of hope? Is it going to do here what it did in Gauteng? Just fall back inexplicably?
    81228 ; 91956 ; 89436 ; 66094

    13th -> 17th Dec by specimen date

    That looks over 100,000 incoming once they're filled to me.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809

    Sure. But we're being offered a choice between the experts who may have bits of it wrong or MPs with no training who may be lucky to guess a fraction of it right.

    So I back the experts. Their wrong is worth more than a gobshite ideologue MP's right.
    If what you're saying is we go with Chris Whitty or Desmond Swayne then I agree it's a no brainer. Sorry Dez.
  • MrEd said:

    Look, I did modelling (the Excel kind) for 20 years as a professional career. I can tell you this now that this idea that the ‘model is right’ or ‘follow the numbers / science’ is bollocks. Models are not neutral beings, they reflect the biases of their creators. Which is why you take 20 financial analysts’ models of the same company and they will have 20 different outcomes.

    If you blindly trust the experts, you are as much of an idiot as those who blindly trust politicians.
    Blind trust? No. But the simple truth is that the "forget the experts we are in charge" MPs are blind - literally. Saying "No lockdown because we don't want one" is fine - thats a political choice. But don't attack the medics for using their brains and experience and skill to analyse the situation just because you don't like their findings - just say you are making a different decision.

    This is the problem. Normal people are far more likely to follow Chris Whitty than Joy Morrissey. So they have to attack the whole idea of having a doctor because otherwise how do you persuade them that someone with no medical or scientific training is the better person to advise what we do?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    Do you have some facts to support that frankly dubious "South Asian Muslim" assertion ?

    I ask because the latest ICNARC report shows that 74% of patients admitted to ICU with Covid since May 2021 have been white. The ratios (rounded) are:
    White 74%
    Mixed 2%
    Asian 11%
    Black 8%
    Other 6%

    So yes, asian and black people are over represented but not massivley so. And consider also the wealth/deprivation breakdown. ICU covid patients are 3 times more likely to be from the most deprived quitile than from the least deprived.

    https://www.icnarc.org/Our-Audit/Audits/Cmp/Reports
    Yes, the areas with the lowest vax rates. I'm not being obnoxious, I'm just being realistic. If anything I think a vaccine passport will just reaffirm the pre-existing belief that they are seen as "other" and being persecuted or somehow singled out because of the skin colour, religion etc...

    There are so many better ways of getting these people vaccinated, a vaccine passport will achieve the sum total of fuck all. Countries that have implemented them still have many millions of older unvaccinated people but more under 40s vaccinated. Explain to me, other than making you feel superior, exactly what that achieves?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,388
    MrEd said:

    Yes, but as a few people point out there, if I go to the pub and I look under-age (obviously not now but back in the day), I was ID’d. No one said “you’re infringing on my civil liberties” or “it’s a disgrace”, you accepted it. No ID, no drink.

    I suspect the howls of outrage from certain areas are because they realise they benefit from certain “loose” practices.
    If it were the case, though, that people without photo ID were more likely to vote a certain way (being - say - poorer than average), then it wouldn't be unreasonable to suspect the motives were not entirely pure.

    In any case, I have proposed a perfectly sensible solution to this, that eliminates personation as a crime, without penalising those without photo ID. They have a polaroid camera at the polling station, and those without Photo ID sign the back testifying to who they are.

    After the election (and especially in the event of a very close result), one can confirm whether the person in the photo is who they say they are. The number of people who would commit personation while having their photo taken is going to be very, very small.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    This is what the government got through with Labour votes:


  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    .
    Aslan said:

    Yes, we are all aware of the Remainer arguments and we had a referendum campaign about it. The line that alignment is more important than democratic control was one considered and tossed out. If Remainers like Starmer, who tried to overturn a democratic referendum, try to do the same thing again by the back door, the public will swing back to the Tories.
    It's not a Remainer argument or anything to do with the referendum etc. It's simply that there's a price tag on this proposed divergence that in practice we're not prepared to pay unless we have to. Take REACH. A UK implementation apparently costs an additional £2 billion for companies that mostly have to meet EU standards anyway. The government hasn't entirely abandoned the idea, but it is postponed. At a certain point, a UK government will say, we're meeting EU standards, why don't we try to get recognition of that for preferential trading terms? Are people at that point going to say, no, we insist companies take on this unnecessary burden and we'll vote Conservative to ensure it happens?

    I suppose some will. But in a contest between rhetoric and reality, reality will eventually prevail. I know it hasn't happened yet, but give it time. My sentiment is that shift will start happening before too long.
  • Leon said:

    But a truce, if called in Christmas 1914, would have saved millions of lives and billions of pounds/marks on both sides (and might have prevented the rise of communism and Nazism)

    And yet, on and on it went. An all-embracing disaster
    Difficult to have a truce with Prussia-Germany when it ignores all the treaties it signed, invades neutral countries and isn't interested in anything but outright victory.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,388
    tlg86 said:

    This is what the government got through with Labour votes:


    Tickets to a hot new club?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,497
    edited December 2021
    The concern has to be that the usual day to day network of most people's lives is about to be expanded as people go to visit family and friends over Christmas. That will ensure a large network effect in terms of spread. Thus even if it was starting to burn through London (which I think is a long way from that), its now going to get well seeded everywhere else.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809

    I agree, but not your last sentence. That would be a slippery slope imo. (Next exclude, addicts, then those who caused their own injuries,... Where do you stop?)
    Denying unvaxed Covid suffers medical care is just not going to happen. It's an utterly pointless suggestion.
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673

    I had a South Asia neighbour for 8 years. He smoked and drank, but he drew the line at bacon/pork
    Black people making up 8% is astonishing. They are what, 3% of the population?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,388

    Do you have some facts to support that frankly dubious "South Asian Muslim" assertion ?

    I ask because the latest ICNARC report shows that 74% of patients admitted to ICU with Covid since May 2021 have been white. The ratios (rounded) are:
    White 74%
    Mixed 2%
    Asian 11%
    Black 8%
    Other 6%

    So yes, asian and black people are over represented but not massivley so. And consider also the wealth/deprivation breakdown. ICU covid patients are 3 times more likely to be from the most deprived quitile than from the least deprived.

    https://www.icnarc.org/Our-Audit/Audits/Cmp/Reports
    You do need to control for age: both in terms of vaccine uptake and in terms of hospitalisations.

    British Asians are - as a group - younger than the general population, no?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809

    The worst thing about the incoming 2 week lockdown will be the ninth week.
    Why would they present a 9 week lockdown as only being for 2 weeks?
  • Leon said:

    Denmark has also slowed, in the last couple of days

    Is this the first glimmer of hope? Is it going to do here what it did in Gauteng? Just fall back inexplicably?
    Probably not - but London has seen a drop in cases which could reflect modified behaviour - that's our canary in the coal mine.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    Strange to be on a crowded train with no worry about catching COVID nor inadvertently passing it on.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,629
    kinabalu said:

    Why would they present a 9 week lockdown as only being for 2 weeks?
    Because when the metrics don’t improve after two weeks, it gets extended. Then when metrics don’t improve after four weeks...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    kinabalu said:

    Why would they present a 9 week lockdown as only being for 2 weeks?
    Isn't that how they always do it? The Dutch said their indoor curfew would only last two weeks. Here they are entering a new "four week" full lockdown 6 weeks later.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    rcs1000 said:

    Tickets to a hot new club?
    Have you been to Elland Road?

    They might as well have stamped a yellow star on our arms.

    Not that they actually checked the QR code.
  • Leon said:

    But the totally INFURIATING thing is that UKG has made virtually no attempt to punish, tax or chide the antivaxxers into getting the jab. They are the reason we are back in the shit. Look at @foxy's post today - every Covid victim in his ICU is unvaxxed

    WHY is the government so totally spineless on this issue? Fear of being seen as racist? Fear of the "libertarian lobby"?

    Before they make my life miserable, and condemn my kids to more damaged mental health, perhaps the fucking government could tackle the people who are causing all this shit, rather than jailing absolutely everyone
    Anti-vaxxers are the useful idiots of authoritarian zero-covidiots, libertarian fantasists and NHS worshippers.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    dixiedean said:

    Strange to be on a crowded train with no worry about catching COVID nor inadvertently passing it on.

    Glad to hear you're recovered!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    MaxPB said:

    Yes, the areas with the lowest vax rates. I'm not being obnoxious, I'm just being realistic. If anything I think a vaccine passport will just reaffirm the pre-existing belief that they are seen as "other" and being persecuted or somehow singled out because of the skin colour, religion etc...

    There are so many better ways of getting these people vaccinated, a vaccine passport will achieve the sum total of fuck all. Countries that have implemented them still have many millions of older unvaccinated people but more under 40s vaccinated. Explain to me, other than making you feel superior, exactly what that achieves?
    Yes, I've long been a proponent of vaxports, but evidence of their success is quite limited. They arguably work if imposed early. Like Israel

    They are pretty much pointless in the UK at this stage, with Omicron
  • kinabalu said:

    Denying unvaxed Covid suffers medical care is just not going to happen. It's an utterly pointless suggestion.
    Being in ICU is punishment.

    Anyone who thinks otherwise has never seen the inside of an ICU. People who go in there have a very, very high risk of coming out dead and the survivors often have flashbacks and PTSD

    ICU is no featherbedded picnic. It is the last-chance saloon for the nearly dead.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Aslan said:

    But it won't just be the unvaccinated. If the NHS is overwhelmed, cancer treatments are delayed, A&E incidents take days to get to, more people die.
    Yep. The phrase "cure worse than the disease" has great currency amongst anti-lockdowners but it's a cover for sloppy thinking. They are forever blaming lockdown for what the VIRUS is doing.
  • Leon said:

    Denmark has also slowed, in the last couple of days

    Is this the first glimmer of hope? Is it going to do here what it did in Gauteng? Just fall back inexplicably?
    We all hope for fall back. And with steep spikes like this it always falls back. But no single day makes a trend, and there have been plenty of times where there's a day or two of drops, people think "its over" and then up it goes again.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,921
    edited December 2021

    London definitely stabilising:

    https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/cases?areaType=region&areaName=London
    People not reporting?

    The worst thing about a lockdown will be that it drags this thing out.

    My dad is on the shielding list. It is a lot easier to tunnel through a short sharp peak than through a long plateau.
  • dixiedean said:

    Strange to be on a crowded train with no worry about catching COVID nor inadvertently passing it on.

    Not to be a negative nelly.....if you had Delta, you aren't immune from Omicron.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809

    That would be a very funny comment, if it wasn't true...
    Opposite - it isn't true but it IS quite witty.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,546

    Being in ICU is punishment.

    Anyone who thinks otherwise has never seen the inside of an ICU. People who go in there have a very, very high risk of coming out dead and the survivors often have flashbacks and PTSD

    ICU is no featherbedded picnic. It is the last-chance saloon for the nearly dead.
    The issue is, while they're in there because of their stupidity and selfishness some totally innocent person who was involved in a car accident can't have that ICU bed which gives them their one chance of survival.

    And that's more than a bit off.
  • It will be interesting to keep an eye on testing numbers, are people going to be irresponsible and not test themselves so they can get on with their Christmas plans? Hopefully not.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    MrEd said:

    We are not what? Having another lockdown? Because we are having a lockdown, officially or unofficially. The streets are dead and no one is going out.

    In any event, you are missing the bigger point. We were promised that there would be an end to the endless round of restrictions, and one of the main arguments was that “the virus will get weaker”. We are now nearly two years in and, as has been posted, the Netherlands for example are going on a full lockdown and British travellers are effectively banned from visiting France.
    Yes, it's a hell of a pandemic and it has a way to run yet, esp globally. I'd make it go away if I could.
  • kinabalu said:

    Opposite - it isn't true but it IS quite witty.
    If the government go for a circuit breaker, it will end up longer than 2 weeks.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    kinabalu said:

    Opposite - it isn't true but it IS quite witty.
    No it is funny because it is true. All too fucking true
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    I'm going to guess that next week we'll get quite a few people not registering LFT positives to avoid being locked down for Xmas. In fact I think we saw that yesterday, LFT positives are down to just 13k, which is way under expectations. I wonder how reliable the next couple of weeks of stats will actually be.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    MaxPB said:

    I like the idea of a COVID NHS tax at 1% per year to help the NHS pay for COVID care which is refunded to people when they reach fully vaccinated status. That would get loads of people in the door as getting the vaccine is being linked to helping the NHS, lots of people still haven't made that connection.
    That's got more going for it than most of the ideas I've heard to slap the unvaxed.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,629

    Not to be a negative nelly.....if you had Delta, you aren't immune from Omicron.
    Best protection seems to be three doses of vaccine plus infection, closely followed by two doses plus infection. That and the recent infection means @dixiedean is chock full of neutralising antibodies. He’ll be fine.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073

    Where do you stand on remote lesrning? Is there more to come in making it smarter, and fairer across education as a whole, so there’s less of a drop off it it comes to closures? In first lock down, for some children it was via parents mobile phone. My concern is it just shows ’apartheid of the pocket’ across education system.

    Do you see my point? Has last two years highlighted lessons learned and actions to be taken in terms of who has Laptops to aid education and who doesn’t?
    Actually I backed 4 horses today, two had bad hair days, not in best of form, off the pace from early on and pulled up never really in it… just like the Tories in Shropshire North! 😆

    You are not obliged to answer my question there Ydoethur, but I think I am asking the right person close to education, have you seen equality in opportunity when it comes to IT for remote learning - if not, what will it take to get there?
  • Leon said:

    That's the hard lockdown the UK had in January-March? Except that at one stage we didn't allow booze takeaways, IIRC; otherwise identical

    God, it was brutal. Queuing in the freezing cold for supermarkets. One by one
    Did people in London really have to queue to go to the supermarket ?

    Or are you embellishing for dramatic effect ?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    MaxPB said:

    Glad to hear you're recovered!
    Thanks. Much easier than I was anticipating.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Surprised cases weren't up again - have people now twigged they can test at home, keep the good news to thenselves and be absolutely fine by Xmas?

  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Not to be a negative nelly.....if you had Delta, you aren't immune from Omicron.
    Oh for goodness sake.
    I am a great fan of information. But not that, now.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    Something completely different. And magical


    "Ambiguous grid by Kokichi Sugihara of Meiji University in Japan. A mathematically calculated combination of perspective and the physics of reflection produce this striking illusion that works in many configurations https://buff.ly/2KlbiKD [more: https://buff.ly/2HDW9GM]"


    https://twitter.com/Rainmaker1973/status/1472212555892355076?s=20
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    kinabalu said:

    That's got more going for it than most of the ideas I've heard to slap the unvaxed.
    Thank @Philip_Thompson, it's his idea! I'd stick it something like 2.5% on all income, earned or unearned for all ages with no thresholds. Make it punitive and the refund amount gets bigger all the time so the incentive to get vaxxed gets bigger too.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    Did people in London really have to queue to go to the supermarket ?

    Or are you embellishing for dramatic effect ?
    I can remember quite well having to queue for the supermarket during the first lockdown. I'm not quite sure how many occasions were due to capacity limits alone, and how much of it was down to the initial "panic buying" period, but it definitely happened round my way. I assume that London was similarly afflicted.
  • MaxPB said:

    I'm going to guess that next week we'll get quite a few people not registering LFT positives to avoid being locked down for Xmas. In fact I think we saw that yesterday, LFT positives are down to just 13k, which is way under expectations. I wonder how reliable the next couple of weeks of stats will actually be.

    Do we know how many LFTs are taken each day ?

    Not the official numbers because so many negative (and some positive) are not registered.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,311
    edited December 2021

    You are assuming that everyone is against it. There are a lot of people who would like to have it back and the last vote was very nearly 50:50 and demographically a lot of younger voters might be motivated to vote to get it back and, as Leave voters tended to be older, a number of them will not be voting any more.

    Personally, I would vote to put FoM back in place so that that those growing up have more options than being locked up in Boris's Britain and businesses have an opportunity to open up all the markets that were taken away from them.
    The "all Boris and the Tories need to do is scapegoat this group/ individual or that group/ individual" merchants haven't been paying attention to the economy. If the Conservatives will be "done for" that is what will " do them", and any amount of "it's the EU/Remainers/liberals/the left/Starmer/Davey are going to turn our once great nation into an asylum seekers/Rotherham taxi drivers' paradise" won't get a hearing.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    MaxPB said:

    Isn't that how they always do it? The Dutch said their indoor curfew would only last two weeks. Here they are entering a new "four week" full lockdown 6 weeks later.
    But the govt here doesn't have a history of that.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,629

    Did people in London really have to queue to go to the supermarket ?

    Or are you embellishing for dramatic effect ?
    Not London, but we had to queue our side supermarkets here in Warminster. Still do for the bakers when busy.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Best protection seems to be three doses of vaccine plus infection, closely followed by two doses plus infection. That and the recent infection means @dixiedean is chock full of neutralising antibodies. He’ll be fine.
    That's more like it. Cheers!!
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,629
    dixiedean said:

    Oh for goodness sake.
    I am a great fan of information. But not that, now.
    See my post for why that’s probably wrong.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,497
    edited December 2021
    dixiedean said:

    Oh for goodness sake.
    I am a great fan of information. But not that, now.
    BUT....with vaccination and so soon after prior infection, chances now are absolutely negligible and infinitesimal chance you will be effected in any way.

    Just saying plenty of people in SA had Delta, some had Alpha, Beta and Delta, and still got Omicron. Hence the its mild narrative.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    Did people in London really have to queue to go to the supermarket ?

    Or are you embellishing for dramatic effect ?
    Nah, I never queued in lockdown 3. Only for lockdown 1.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,388

    Probably not - but London has seen a drop in cases which could reflect modified behaviour - that's our canary in the coal mine.
    Guanteng cases are now barely more than half the peak. They've fallen that far in a week.

    And bear in mind that Omicron cases were basically zero there just 30 days ago.

    Now, that could be that it's all modified behaviour (but if it is modified behaviour, that tells you that lockdowns do work against Omicron, but that's another story). But I suspect it is mostly because it simply burns through the vulnerable very quickly.

    Hospitalisations remain ok. If Guanteng was going to have a massive problem, then - unless there is an unusually long incubation period for Omicron - it's going to be seen in the next seven days.

    I'm struggling to see why we would expect the UK to be much worse hit than South Africa. Sure, we're older, and we have less immunity conferred by infection. But we're older because we're healthier - South African life expectancy is in the mid-60s. And it's not like the UK doesn't have plenty of infection conferred immunity. Heck, it's got no shortage of people who've been treble jabbed and infected. It also doesn't have a major HIV/AIDS problem, a creaky health service, and both malnutrition and obesity issues.

    If London hospitalizations don't start to really move in the next week, then I think we can probably all breath a big sigh of relief. Based on actual real world evidence of hundreds of thousands of South Africans, Omicron does not seem to hospitalize or kill at the same rates as previous variants.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    kinabalu said:

    Why would they present a 9 week lockdown as only being for 2 weeks?
    These things have a habit of snowballing.

    Besides, it's not only the period of harsh measures that's the problem, it's the months and months of slow crawl out of them as well.
  • Glad to see you posting still @MrEd, don't be a stranger around these parts
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    BUT....with vaccination and so soon after prior infection, chances now are absolutely negligible and infinitesimal chance you will be effected in any way.

    Just saying plenty of people in SA had Delta, some had Alpha, Beta and Delta, and still got Omicron.
    But crucially it doesn't seem to have prevented severe symptoms in very many of them who had immunity from prior infection.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508
    Aslan said:

    Black people making up 8% is astonishing. They are what, 3% of the population?
    Actually I'd have thought it'd have been more given that they are much poorer, in worse health generally and much less likely to be vaccinated.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,797
    MaxPB said:

    Nah, I never queued in lockdown 3. Only for lockdown 1.
    Dunno where you were but there were regular queues for Sainsburys in Camden in the early evening, in the freezing fucking cold, in lockdown 3

    Outside London I only saw queues during lockdown 1
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    ydoethur said:

    The issue is, while they're in there because of their stupidity and selfishness some totally innocent person who was involved in a car accident can't have that ICU bed which gives them their one chance of survival.

    And that's more than a bit off.
    I don't think you can deny people medical care. But you can deprioritize them for treatment. If someone is in ICU for COVID because they are unvaxxed, there are no beds left because of many other similarly selfish people, and someone comes in due to a car accident, they should have to give that bed up.

    I think we can compromise though. People should only fall into the deprioritized category if they don't get a vaccine dose after six months of being eligible for it.
  • dixiedean said:

    Strange to be on a crowded train with no worry about catching COVID nor inadvertently passing it on.

    I sometimes think I was lucky getting covid in spring 2020 as I've not had to worry about it since.

    It was very unpleasant at the time though.
This discussion has been closed.