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What to do with a cornered rat. – politicalbetting.com

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  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Remember that funny old plague thing?

    Still an issue in some parts of the world. eg South Korea, once the poster boy of Covid control. They have just announced an extraordinary 342,000 new cases in one day, their highest ever, and one of the absolute biggest daily caseloads reported anywhere - eg India peaked about 400,000 a day, Brazil at about 250,000, and they are both vastly bigger than S Korea

    it must be Omicron (BA2?) combined with a lack of prior immunity

    And it is not some innocent explosion of mild colds, death rates are also shooting up dramatically (158 today, whereas S Korea is used to single digit death rates per day)

    Combined with the 5th wave Covid calamity we are seeing in Hong Kong, this is deeply ominous for China.

    They have zero prior immunity. As they keep telling us, proudly. If Omicron BA2 gets in to China, then it could be hellish for them; and it must be likely that it will do so, if it can easily cause such havoc in quarantined Hong Kong

    Just to add to the joys of the world
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,508
    Oz Katerji
    @OzKaterji
    Happening now in Maidan Square, a concert by the Kyiv Classic Symphony Orchestra

    https://twitter.com/OzKaterji/status/1501522456141520900
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    Russian historian on WATO sounding deranged.
    Putin has prevented a nuclear war, because Ukraine has the bomb almost ready to launch.
    Do they believe this, I wonder?
    Regardless, the psychology is fascinating.
    As is the belief anyone will buy this.
    The problem with fake news is it becomes less effective.over time. Because people simply shrug and say fake news. Haven't the Russians factored that in?
    Apparently not.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    TimS said:

    Might suit both Russia and Ukraine / the West for the conflict to stop quite soon and be negotiated out. For Eastern Europe, if it stops now it will be remembered like the winter war, a salutary lesson to Russia not to get over-confident and a deterrent against future adventures. It also means most of Ukraine remains intact or at least rebuildable. For Russia it ends before too many body bags return home and public disillusionment ratchets up, and gives them the chance to say "job done". For the wider West it stops us short of entering into a wider potentially nuclear war, and gives us time and space to phase out economic dependence on Russian commodities.
    The trouble is if Ukraine concedes something substantial then Putin might be seen to have won and that's a terrible precedent. There may be ways to give Ukraine security guarantees without Nato membership. More defensive weapons/aircraft, a demilitarised zone or something similar.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    MISTY said:

    Russia's Douglas C. Neidermeyers...??
    Thank you Sir. Please may I have another Animal House reference?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    'Putib hasn't risked that donuts impossible' strong candidate for best autocorrect of the day,
    The term autocorrect is surely the biggest mistake here?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    Dura_Ace said:

    The renewable energy and climate change debate is where US was on slavery 1860. We've got a whole section of society who find it inconceivable to conceive of the destruction of the potential wealth represented by fossil fuels in the ground.

    Hopefully the societal division will also become as bitter and violent as it did in 1860s America.
    There are places between do nothing and do everything, and the answer isnt equidistant between them. Pretending it's only those two options, or something at the mid point, is something only the deeply dishonest do.

    As much as you claim to want to see that bitterness and violence it's not necessary. Disruption? Yes. I dont think as much would be done without the passionate obsession of campaigners, they've really advanced the conversation. But acting like any shade of grey at all, just one even, is akin to not being able to contemplate change at all? No.

    Its not clever and it's not moral either, it's just dishonest.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    dixiedean said:

    Russian historian on WATO sounding deranged.
    Putin has prevented a nuclear war, because Ukraine has the bomb almost ready to launch.
    Do they believe this, I wonder?
    Regardless, the psychology is fascinating.
    As is the belief anyone will buy this.
    The problem with fake news is it becomes less effective.over time. Because people simply shrug and say fake news. Haven't the Russians factored that in?
    Apparently not.

    This is what I don't get. Who is this kind of rubbish aimed at? I can only assume they really don't understand the west at all.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,397
    FWIW and I am not sure how much credence to give it, but there are rumours circulating here that last night that quite a few Russian soldiers died in fights *between* Russian units. Others have died of the cold and the condition of the troops is said to be pitiful, with some, and possibly many, abandoning their kit and trying to find shelter in nearby houses or barns. It may be that the northern front has reached a crisis. Perhaps this explains the new flexibility in the Russian negotiating position.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,187
    kle4 said:

    There are places between do nothing and do everything, and the answer isnt equidistant between them. Pretending it's only those two options, or something at the mid point, is something only the deeply dishonest do.

    As much as you claim to want to see that bitterness and violence it's not necessary. Disruption? Yes. I dont think as much would be done without the passionate obsession of campaigners, they've really advanced the conversation. But acting like any shade of grey at all, just one even, is akin to not being able to contemplate change at all? No.

    Its not clever and it's not moral either, it's just dishonest.
    It's rather like Putin's thinking - smash the world until it looks the way I want.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Leon said:

    Remember that funny old plague thing?

    Still an issue in some parts of the world. eg South Korea, once the poster boy of Covid control. They have just announced an extraordinary 342,000 new cases in one day, their highest ever, and one of the absolute biggest daily caseloads reported anywhere - eg India peaked about 400,000 a day, Brazil at about 250,000, and they are both vastly bigger than S Korea

    it must be Omicron (BA2?) combined with a lack of prior immunity

    And it is not some innocent explosion of mild colds, death rates are also shooting up dramatically (158 today, whereas S Korea is used to single digit death rates per day)

    Combined with the 5th wave Covid calamity we are seeing in Hong Kong, this is deeply ominous for China.

    They have zero prior immunity. As they keep telling us, proudly. If Omicron BA2 gets in to China, then it could be hellish for them; and it must be likely that it will do so, if it can easily cause such havoc in quarantined Hong Kong

    Just to add to the joys of the world

    When not if.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    "Our drama at 2:15 focusses on PR in our elections."
    Radio 4...
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,395
    dixiedean said:

    Russian historian on WATO sounding deranged.
    Putin has prevented a nuclear war, because Ukraine has the bomb almost ready to launch.
    Do they believe this, I wonder?
    Regardless, the psychology is fascinating.
    As is the belief anyone will buy this.
    The problem with fake news is it becomes less effective.over time. Because people simply shrug and say fake news. Haven't the Russians factored that in?
    Apparently not.

    It was frightening - apparently intelligent, educated and well informed - completely deluded. If/when Russia loses the Dolchstoßlegende will be very potent.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668
    kle4 said:

    I meant every word. Putib, a cousin to Putin, is very concerned about western influence like donut consumption.
    If it will help the war effort, I will make the sacrifice of eating a whole box of doughnuts.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,962
    HYUFD said:

    Exactly, Labour would not be that bothered if they were only polling 20% in the South, if they were polling over 40% in London, the Midlands and Wales and North where their target seats mainly are.

    Similarly the LDs would not be that bothered if they were polling only 5% in the Midlands and Wales and North as long as they were polling 10-20% in the South where their target seats mainly are
    I think you are right, young HY. But I would go even further - to the level of individual constituencies. If a seat has a good nucleus of Lib Dem activists, then it is almost certainly going to fare better than one where these are missing. If you want a good indication of where these are, you have only to look at local government elections. If Lib Dems are active and doing well, they will be making good progress at the local government level too. A case in point is the North Shropshire constituency, of course.

    As I understand it, the Conservative Party has almost given up on individual activity. Everything is now automated and impersonal. That is why they do not really know what is going on. They operate with the same level of efficiency as the baking system. Everything is fine, just as long as everything goes right. But when a problem arises, they are very slow to spot it and correct it.

    As in the case of the present prime minister and his cabinet.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346

    This is what I don't get. Who is this kind of rubbish aimed at? I can only assume they really don't understand the west at all.
    A friend of mine will sadly be lapping it all up. :(
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    Germany is also looking a little ominous

    Yesterday: 193,000 cases, and 583 deaths

    Is it possible that Covid is coming round for one final lap, particularly picking on those countries which have done well so far? Like some cruel soldier bayoneting the wounded, and stealing their gold watches, after the battle
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,187

    When not if.
    One of my family just contracted Omicron. Completely isolating (because of caring for an elderly relative) - literal 2 minute conversation at distance with someone who later tested positive.

    Everyone is going to get this.....
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    I broadly agree that a major comeback for the Lib Dems in the SW will be difficult and slow, BUT there may well be a degree of reversion to the mean in 2024 as Brexit continues to recede as a defining issue.

    Chesham & Amersham is clearly in your new definition of Lib Dem heartland (with which I agree) but North Shropshire was, of course, a Leave voting constituency.

    There is also a fairly good message for the Lib Dems in the SW in that so much of the levelling-up rhetoric is about northern towns, and people in the SW, which has fairly high levels of deprivation in parts, tend to feel forgotten. That "we won't go all the way and vote Labour, but don't forget about us" message worked well for the Lib Dems for many years - it won't be easily recaptured, but hasn't disappeared.

    Taunton and Yeovil are probably their best bets next time, and Council results (albeit not a great indicator) suggest they are getting traction. Devon and Cornwall are probably more about getting back to some decent seconds - can't see huge shocks in 2024.
    Even after the by elections the LD majority in North Shropshire is 5,925 compared to 8,028 in Chesham and Amersham.

    There were also the local factors relating to Owen Patterson in North Shropshire and the national Tory lead had already fallen post partygate which it had not in the Chesham by election
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,716
    dixiedean said:

    Russian historian on WATO sounding deranged.
    Putin has prevented a nuclear war, because Ukraine has the bomb almost ready to launch.
    Do they believe this, I wonder?
    Regardless, the psychology is fascinating.
    As is the belief anyone will buy this.
    The problem with fake news is it becomes less effective.over time. Because people simply shrug and say fake news. Haven't the Russians factored that in?
    Apparently not.

    A lot of Putin's moves seem like a parody of all the stupidest shit the Americans have done over the last 30 years.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,794
    tlg86 said:

    Quordle ridiculously tough today!

    Daily Quordle #44
    4️⃣🟥
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    quordle.com
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    Ha ha - did you feel it was trolling you when you saw what word you'd failed to get?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,936
    edited March 2022

    This is what I don't get. Who is this kind of rubbish aimed at? I can only assume they really don't understand the west at all.
    It is strange isn't it?
    They claim our Western democracy is a threat to Russian values and way of life.
    Yet they treat the people as though our attitudes are precisely the same as their own.
    Maybe they really just do think everyone would just love to be like Russia if only given the chance?
    Ironically, much the same attitude as neo-Cons in America.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    I think I've seen this movie. Just wait until the formerly-extinct plant jumps the fence and threatens life as we know it ...
    I see that George Church's group is now thinking that when it de-extincts the woolly mammoth they will also miniature its size to more like a large dog. So we can all buy them as designer pets.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,187
    Leon said:

    Germany is also looking a little ominous

    Yesterday: 193,000 cases, and 583 deaths

    Is it possible that Covid is coming round for one final lap, particularly picking on those countries which have done well so far? Like some cruel soldier bayoneting the wounded, and stealing their gold watches, after the battle

    You are Thénardier and I claim my 5 sous.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    Leon said:

    Germany is also looking a little ominous

    Yesterday: 193,000 cases, and 583 deaths

    Is it possible that Covid is coming round for one final lap, particularly picking on those countries which have done well so far? Like some cruel soldier bayoneting the wounded, and stealing their gold watches, after the battle

    I wouldn't necessarily describe a soldier who is wounded after battle and immobile ready to be bayoneted as "doing well".

    But I see what you were trying to do.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    One of my family just contracted Omicron. Completely isolating (because of caring for an elderly relative) - literal 2 minute conversation at distance with someone who later tested positive.

    Everyone is going to get this.....
    The question for me, as I have already had it is; will I get it again?
  • NorthofStokeNorthofStoke Posts: 1,758
    Talking of the fragging of officers, is it possible that Home Office civils servants are doing it to Priti Patel by deliberately creating so many examples of terrible Ukraine visa issues? I mean, they can't be that cack handed surely?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    Leon said:

    Germany is also looking a little ominous

    Yesterday: 193,000 cases, and 583 deaths

    Is it possible that Covid is coming round for one final lap, particularly picking on those countries which have done well so far? Like some cruel soldier bayoneting the wounded, and stealing their gold watches, after the battle

    So a death rate of just 0.003% to cases, nothing of any real concern there certainly compared to Ukraine
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    edited March 2022
    TOPPING said:

    I wouldn't necessarily describe a soldier who is wounded after battle and immobile ready to be bayoneted as "doing well".

    But I see what you were trying to do.
    I was pleased with the "gold watches" touch. The gold watches symbolise their pride at having - relatively successfully - repressed Covid.

    But as we know Covid does not approve of gold watches. Covid punishes hubris
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Talking of the fragging of officers, is it possible that Home Office civils servants are doing it to Priti Patel by deliberately creating so many examples of terrible Ukraine visa issues? I mean, they can't be that cack handed surely?

    It's deliberate. The Prittster takes flak now (and poss gets thrown under bus) vs people in GE 2024 thinking What are all these ghastly Ukrainians doing here, that's not the brexit I voted for?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,253
    Lennon said:

    We clearly got stuck on different words!

    Daily Quordle #44
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    Quordle? The R value for Wordle derivatives must be even higher than Omicron.

    I'm thinking of making a Wordle derivative in which you have six goes to work out which derivative you are playing :wink:
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    One of my family just contracted Omicron. Completely isolating (because of caring for an elderly relative) - literal 2 minute conversation at distance with someone who later tested positive.

    Everyone is going to get this.....
    Not necessarily, if you've been triple-vaxxed.

    My own (unscientific) perspective is: The day after my mum died (non-covid), I spent the whole day my brother who was coughing, sneezing and feeling awful the whole time. I fully expected to catch his 'bad cold' but thankfully nothing - not a sniff(!)

    Although he tested negative on LFTs, his GP suspected covid and we both think that's right, and that my 3 vaccinations protected me from catching it.

    As I said, totally unscientific.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,781
    edited March 2022

    Talking of the fragging of officers, is it possible that Home Office civils servants are doing it to Priti Patel by deliberately creating so many examples of terrible Ukraine visa issues? I mean, they can't be that cack handed surely?

    Alternatively, it could be that all the most able senior civil servants have escaped from the incompetent bullying regime at the Home Office, leaving the poor bloody infantry with no leadership. I believe there has been something of an exodus in recent years at senior levels.
  • Did the more uncertain world cause a late swing back to incumbent?
    It's one term only for SK president - opposition candidate led in most of the exit polls but trails by 3.6% with 12% counted.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    TimT said:

    I see that George Church's group is now thinking that when it de-extincts the woolly mammoth they will also miniature its size to more like a large dog. So we can all buy them as designer pets.
    If you can do that with an extinct animal it's surely 10 times as easy to do it with an existing one? mini hippos, giraffes, gnus...
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Leon said:

    I was pleased with the "gold watches" touch. The gold watches symbolise their pride at having - relatively successfully - repressed Covid.

    But as we know Covid does not approve of gold watches. Covid punishes hubris
    PB a rich hunting ground.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    One of my family just contracted Omicron. Completely isolating (because of caring for an elderly relative) - literal 2 minute conversation at distance with someone who later tested positive.

    Everyone is going to get this.....
    Conversely I have just tested negative which makes me think the PB drinks was plague free.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    If things don't work out for Yoon in S.Korea I'm sure there's a place for him in Scottish politics.
    Along with the majority that voted against separatism.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    dixiedean said:

    Russian historian on WATO sounding deranged.
    Putin has prevented a nuclear war, because Ukraine has the bomb almost ready to launch.
    Do they believe this, I wonder?
    Regardless, the psychology is fascinating.
    As is the belief anyone will buy this.
    The problem with fake news is it becomes less effective.over time. Because people simply shrug and say fake news. Haven't the Russians factored that in?
    Apparently not.

    She sounded quite literally deranged, or very far gone on substances. Query whether r4 deliberately ran her for LOLs or couldn't find anyone normal.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,187

    Talking of the fragging of officers, is it possible that Home Office civils servants are doing it to Priti Patel by deliberately creating so many examples of terrible Ukraine visa issues? I mean, they can't be that cack handed surely?

    From the statements of an ex, who worked in Immigration law, the Immigration service was full of people who were dumb as a box of hammers. They could only follow detailed rules and would regularly just... stop if they got confused. At first, she thought they were being passive aggressive - but no, they were just dumb.

    Well into the 100ks of μUVDL
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    HYUFD said:

    So a death rate of just 0.003% to cases, nothing of any real concern there certainly compared to Ukraine
    I dunno. Of course it is nothing compared to potential nuclear war, but Covid has not entirely disappeared, and the global case rate is now ticking up after a period of decline. We may be entering another wave, they are definitely entering another wave in east Asia. Vietnam is also reporting record case numbers: 160,000 yesterday

    The big question, as ever, is will it crush health systems. Korea and Vietnam seem to be doing OK.

    Hong Kong is definitely not


    "Body bags, overflowing morgues and chaotic hospitals: Hong Kong’s pandemic goes critical"


    https://twitter.com/Gab_H_R/status/1501555739441176576?s=20&t=aJrtPKaRyTo3RKdzG7RL4A


    The crucial issue is whether China can keep Omicron out, and, if it can't, will it be South Korea (a nasty wave but not the apocalypse) or will it be Hong Kong (a horror show)
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Leon said:

    I dunno. Of course it is nothing compared to potential nuclear war, but Covid has not entirely disappeared, and the global case rate is now ticking up after a period of decline. We may be entering another wave, they are definitely entering another wave in east Asia. Vietnam is also reporting record case numbers: 160,000 yesterday

    The big question, as ever, is will it crush health systems. Korea and Vietnam seem to be doing OK.

    Hong Kong is definitely not


    "Body bags, overflowing morgues and chaotic hospitals: Hong Kong’s pandemic goes critical"


    https://twitter.com/Gab_H_R/status/1501555739441176576?s=20&t=aJrtPKaRyTo3RKdzG7RL4A


    The crucial issue is whether China can keep Omicron out, and, if it can't, will it be South Korea (a nasty wave but not the apocalypse) or will it be Hong Kong (a horror show)
    You are in cheery mood today!
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,187
    IshmaelZ said:

    Conversely I have just tested negative which makes me think the PB drinks was plague free.
    Among other things, it was plague free because

    - I did an LFT before attending
    - I tested positive on the LFT
    - I didn't attend.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492
    kle4 said:

    There are places between do nothing and do everything, and the answer isnt equidistant between them. Pretending it's only those two options, or something at the mid point, is something only the deeply dishonest do.

    As much as you claim to want to see that bitterness and violence it's not necessary. Disruption? Yes. I dont think as much would be done without the passionate obsession of campaigners, they've really advanced the conversation. But acting like any shade of grey at all, just one even, is akin to not being able to contemplate change at all? No.

    Its not clever and it's not moral either, it's just dishonest.
    Agreed. Comparing the issue to slavery is deliberate trolling.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    Leon said:

    I dunno. Of course it is nothing compared to potential nuclear war, but Covid has not entirely disappeared, and the global case rate is now ticking up after a period of decline. We may be entering another wave, they are definitely entering another wave in east Asia. Vietnam is also reporting record case numbers: 160,000 yesterday

    The big question, as ever, is will it crush health systems. Korea and Vietnam seem to be doing OK.

    Hong Kong is definitely not


    "Body bags, overflowing morgues and chaotic hospitals: Hong Kong’s pandemic goes critical"


    https://twitter.com/Gab_H_R/status/1501555739441176576?s=20&t=aJrtPKaRyTo3RKdzG7RL4A


    The crucial issue is whether China can keep Omicron out, and, if it can't, will it be South Korea (a nasty wave but not the apocalypse) or will it be Hong Kong (a horror show)
    Flu has not entirely disappeared either and we still have a few deaths from winter flu but it does not overload the hospitals as Covid no longer does either post vaccination.

    Whether China's vaccines work is a separate matter, for them the Hong Kong figures are not great but would be ironic if Covid was now largely non deadly outside China even if still deadly in China where it began
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744

    You are in cheery mood today!
    Just solidly reporting the facts, like any good flint knapper

    I wish Covid had entirely disappeared, and all we had to worry about was nuclear armageddon. Unfortunately it has not disappeared. The First Horseman is dawdling, his steed is chewing tussocks of grass, and refusing to move on
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    I've avidly read his output since seeing a reference in a post here. Fascinating and very convincing analysis.
    Yes, excellent analysis. For anyone who is intrigued by this approach to understanding organizational and governance structures, and their relationship to how we conceive of ourselves and the world, I highly recommend Frederic Laloux's most excellent book, Reinventing Organizations
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    HYUFD said:

    Flu has not entirely disappeared either and we still have a few deaths from winter flu but it does not overload the hospitals as Covid no longer does either post vaccination.

    Whether China's vaccines work is a separate matter, for them the Hong Kong figures are not great but would be ironic if Covid was now largely non deadly outside China even if still deadly in China where it began
    If China turns into Hong Kong, that is definitely a cause for concern for everyone, because it will screw up so many supply chains as they try to lockdown the whole country, yet again

    The various headwinds against the world economy right now are decidedly non-optimal
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979

    Ironically I think Maclean may have spent some of his life in Yugolsavia after the war, I read on Wiki that Tito gave him permission to buy a house on a Dalmatian island. It's a while since I read Eastern Approaches, did Maclean encounter Waugh and Randolph on his Balkan travels?
    Interesting area. Have you read Olivia Manning's Balkan Trilogy - set in wartime Rumania and Greece? Very readable with some vivid characters such as Prince Yakimov, the down-at-heel, English public school educated, refugee White Russian. Hope to start on the Levant Trilogy shortly.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    HYUFD said:

    So a death rate of just 0.003% to cases, nothing of any real concern there certainly compared to Ukraine
    The death rate is not calculated that way. If you're looking at today's death rate, the denominator is new cases about 2 weeks ago, not new cases today.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited March 2022
    Leon said:

    If China turns into Hong Kong, that is definitely a cause for concern for everyone, because it will screw up so many supply chains as they try to lockdown the whole country, yet again

    The various headwinds against the world economy right now are decidedly non-optimal
    Mind you that also might leave the Chinese government too preoccupied to invade Taiwan, even if not great for the Chinese people or global economy
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited March 2022
    TimT said:

    The death rate is not calculated that way. If you're looking at today's death rate, the denominator is new cases about 2 weeks ago, not new cases today.
    There is zero evidence of any rise in hospitalisations and deaths of any significance in any western nation post vaccination no matter the case rate from Covid.

    We are not going back to lockdowns or further restrictions unless a variant proves completely vaccine immune, we just get on with our lives and if we get it treat it no different to time off with flu
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    HYUFD said:

    Might you that also might leave the Chinese government too preoccupied to invade Taiwan, even if not great for the Chinese people or global economy
    It would be a brilliant narrative twist, and a superbly apt denouement, (albeit cruel) if Covid's final act on this earth was to fuck up China, royally

    It would convince me that we really are living in a simulation, and the simulators have great screenwriters
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    Alternatively, it could be that all the most able senior civil servants have escaped from the incompetent bullying regime at the Home Office, leaving the poor bloody infantry with no leadership. I believe there has been something of an exodus in recent years at senior levels.
    Let's be honest it has been like that for years. I think the home office has real difficulty attracting talent. Immigration enforcement just isn't where many people are keen to work.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Leon said:

    Just solidly reporting the facts, like any good flint knapper

    I wish Covid had entirely disappeared, and all we had to worry about was nuclear armageddon. Unfortunately it has not disappeared. The First Horseman is dawdling, his steed is chewing tussocks of grass, and refusing to move on
    Do you need to wear a mask in a shop after armageddon?
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    HYUFD said:

    Flu has not entirely disappeared either and we still have a few deaths from winter flu but it does not overload the hospitals as Covid no longer does either post vaccination.

    Whether China's vaccines work is a separate matter, for them the Hong Kong figures are not great but would be ironic if Covid was now largely non deadly outside China even if still deadly in China where it began
    In this winter and last winter flu had almost entirely disappeared from the UK. Future winter seasons will see both Covid and Flu competing with each other however. The UK numbers are just starting to tick up again along with many other countries in Europe. In this country we have to hope our 98%+ antibody rate is going to give us a good level of protection. I would expect there to be a fresh vaccination campaign later in the year with a new vaccine version targeting the newer Covid variants.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    TimT said:

    Yes, excellent analysis. For anyone who is intrigued by this approach to understanding organizational and governance structures, and their relationship to how we conceive of ourselves and the world, I highly recommend Frederic Laloux's most excellent book, Reinventing Organizations
    I've always wondered why the Mexican cartels got into avocados. I mean, avocados?!They aren't illegal and they aren't expensive. Avocados??? That thread explains why
  • glwglw Posts: 10,360

    Do you need to wear a mask in a shop after armageddon?
    No, you will have absorbed so much radiation anyway that wearing a mask will be futile.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    AlistairM said:

    In this winter and last winter flu had almost entirely disappeared from the UK. Future winter seasons will see both Covid and Flu competing with each other however. The UK numbers are just starting to tick up again along with many other countries in Europe. In this country we have to hope our 98%+ antibody rate is going to give us a good level of protection. I would expect there to be a fresh vaccination campaign later in the year with a new vaccine version targeting the newer Covid variants.
    There will be Covid vaccinations every winter as there are winter flu vaccines available every winter but there must be no further restrictions unless a variant proves vaccine immune
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    TimT said:

    The death rate is not calculated that way. If you're looking at today's death rate, the denominator is new cases about 2 weeks ago, not new cases today.
    OK.

    23rd February confirmed cases: 209,052

    The real problem with HYUFD's calculation is that it is 100x out
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    Leon said:

    I've always wondered why the Mexican cartels got into avocados. I mean, avocados?!They aren't illegal and they aren't expensive. Avocados??? That thread explains why
    Someone could write a great thriller about Avocados.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    kamski said:

    OK.

    23rd February confirmed cases: 209,052

    The real problem with HYUFD's calculation is that it is 100x out
    A death rate still well below 0.005%.

    I am not interested in case rate for Covid now just as I am not interested in case rate for flu.

    The only figures of any relevance are deaths and hospitalisations and the figures for those are still miniscule
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    HYUFD said:

    A death rate still well below 0.005%.

    I am not interested in case rate for Covid now just as I am not interested in case rate for flu.

    The only figures of any relevance are deaths and hospitalisations and the figures for those are still miniscule
    Do you really think 583 is less than 0.005% of 209,052? Explains a lot, I suppose.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    edited March 2022
    HYUFD said:

    A death rate still well below 0.005%.

    I am not interested in case rate for Covid now just as I am not interested in case rate for flu.

    The only figures of any relevance are deaths and hospitalisations and the figures for those are still miniscule
    In the West. Not in some parts of Asia

    Full blown panic in Hongers:


    HONG KONG — As the government in Hong Kong struggles to contain the city’s worst Covid outbreak ever, some residents have panicked. They have emptied supermarket shelves of vegetables and meat. They have raided drugstores for pain and fever medication. Those who could afford it have jumped on flights out of the city.

    Tens of thousands of new Omicron cases are being reported each day, and deaths have surged. The anxiety gripping Hong Kong is not just about the explosion of infections, but also about what the government will do next. Mixed messages from officials have left residents wondering: Will there be a lockdown? Will we be sent into isolation facilities? Will our children be taken from us if they test positive"

    https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1501528278305284100?s=20&t=fKPWhEZdS0wkGZZBfT3uMw
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited March 2022
    kamski said:

    Do you really think 583 is less than 0.005% of 209,052? Explains a lot, I suppose.
    Yes, it is 0.0027%.

    Boris and this Tory government have correctly removed all restrictions and we are not going back. Indeed by 73% to 22% Tory voters believe we must learn to live with Covid compared to just 22% who think we need to test more, wear masks more and vaccinate more

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2022/03/04/do-we-need-learn-live-covid-19-most-britons-say-ye
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,616
    Andy_JS said:

    I don't know whether anyone's written this — they must have done — but there's nothing wrong with being dependent on other countries for your energy sources provided they're fully democratic ones. The problem is being dependent on non-democratic countries, like Russia, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, etc.

    This is a bit starry-eyed imo.

    It is only months since a Minister in the Government of France, Clement Beaune, was threatening to use restrictions of Electricity supplies to the UK / Jersey as a weapon in a political dispute.

    Here's a Guardian report from September 21:
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/oct/05/france-uk-jersey-eu-energy-supply-fishing-row-channel

    This is despite a defined dispute resolution mechanism existing in the FTA.

    The Minister was not sacked, and is apparently in good standing.

    Fortunately we are (rather too slowly imo) pivoting away from any dependence on French electricity, which will gradually defang such threats.

    A similar point could be made about the EU-Switzerland relationship.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    kamski said:

    Do you really think 583 is less than 0.005% of 209,052? Explains a lot, I suppose.
    Also hospitalisations in Germany are running at an average of 800 a day, which isn't really "miniscule"
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,366
    HYUFD said:

    Yes, it is 0.0027%.

    Boris has correctly removed all restrictions and we are not going back
    I think your maths is a little screwy.

    583 is 0.27% of 209,000
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    HYUFD said:

    There is zero evidence of any rise in hospitalisations and deaths of any significance in any western nation post vaccination no matter the case rate from Covid.

    We are not going back to lockdowns or further restrictions unless a variant proves completely vaccine immune, we just get on with our lives and if we get it treat it no different to time off with flu
    As usual, you are not answering what I posted, but a completely different point to avoid admitting you were wrong.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    rcs1000 said:

    I think your maths is a little screwy.

    583 is 0.27% of 209,000
    Always multiply by 100 for a percentage!
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    HYUFD said:

    Yes, it is 0.0027%.

    Boris has correctly removed all restrictions and we are not going back
    Has "Boris" removed all restrictions in Germany? News to me. Also, I thought it was 0.27%, but as ever, I bow to your greater expertise about Germany.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    TimT said:

    As usual, you are not answering what I posted, but a completely different point to avoid admitting you were wrong.
    No I was posting that there is zero evidence of any significant rise in death rates regardless of case rate, so I could not care less what the case rate is now, next month or next year unless a variant proves vaccine immune
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    Leon said:

    I've always wondered why the Mexican cartels got into avocados. I mean, avocados?!They aren't illegal and they aren't expensive. Avocados??? That thread explains why
    There is a great netflix doc about it.

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11064620/
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    HYUFD said:

    Yes, it is 0.0027%.

    Boris and this Tory government have correctly removed all restrictions and we are not going back. Indeed by 73% to 22% Tory voters believe we must learn to live with Covid compared to just 22% who think we need to test more, wear masks more and vaccinate more

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2022/03/04/do-we-need-learn-live-covid-19-most-britons-say-ye
    It is actually 0.0027, or 0.27%. You forgot to multiply by 100 to get to %. Now, of course, you will post an entirely different point to avoid this inconvenient fact.
  • The Tories are officially out of ideas.

    Labour hasn't been in power for 12 years.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    TimT said:

    It is actually 0.0027, or 0.27%. You forgot to multiply by 100 to get to %. Now, of course, you will post an entirely different point to avoid this inconvenient fact.
    Regardless it is miniscule, I could not care less what the case rate is given the death rate is so tiny
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    They obviously don't require basic maths skills at Warwick University.....
  • kamski said:

    Also hospitalisations in Germany are running at an average of 800 a day, which isn't really "miniscule"
    800 per day seems pretty miniscule to me. How many people get hospitalised on a daily basis even pre-Covid?

    There will always be some sick people, always have been, always will be. That's what hospitals are there for. 800 people a day being sick to the point of hospitalisation in a country the size of Germany doesn't seem like anything to be that worried about to me, on a macro level there's bigger fish to fry.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Leon said:

    I've always wondered why the Mexican cartels got into avocados. I mean, avocados?!They aren't illegal and they aren't expensive. Avocados??? That thread explains why
    Yes, fixed location of the means of production and, relatively speaking, a high-value cash crop. The bottom line isn't the mark-up, but the absolute value which of course takes into account volume and reliability of cash flow (not being illegal).
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,502

    The Tories are officially out of ideas.

    Labour hasn't been in power for 12 years.

    The Conservatives have only been in power for just over two.

    Though they were in office for much longer before that, of course.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    They obviously don't require basic maths skills at Warwick University.....

    I have not studied Maths since GCSE though it really makes no difference to the point given the death rate now is well under half what it was in 2020 post vaccination.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,744
    rcs1000 said:

    I think your maths is a little screwy.

    583 is 0.27% of 209,000
    That's the fatality ratio being reported elsewhere, I believe. 0.3%

    Three times worse than flu?

    Enough to be problematic, given how obscenely infectious the BA2 Omicron variant seems to be

    At the moment maybe 1 in 12 South Koreans have Covid
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited March 2022
    kamski said:

    Has "Boris" removed all restrictions in Germany? News to me. Also, I thought it was 0.27%, but as ever, I bow to your greater expertise about Germany.

    I could not care less what Germany does, it has a Social Democrat led government, we have a Conservative majority government and it will decide nobody else and it and its Conservative voters want no further restrictions.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Leon said:

    I've always wondered why the Mexican cartels got into avocados. I mean, avocados?!They aren't illegal and they aren't expensive. Avocados??? That thread explains why

    PS. This, perhaps, suggests a way out of the conundrum posed by Cyclefree in the header. Once we have an immediate solution to the Russia issue sufficient to bring them back into the fold, lets get them fully updated and integrated into the knowledge economy. That is the least susceptible to mafiosi, as the value-generators cannot be killed, or imprisoned (at least not if you want to keep their productivity up) and they can run away to another jurisdiction.
  • Fishing said:

    The Conservatives have only been in power for just over two.

    Though they were in office for much longer before that, of course.
    The Conservatives, correct.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322

    800 per day seems pretty miniscule to me. How many people get hospitalised on a daily basis even pre-Covid?

    There will always be some sick people, always have been, always will be. That's what hospitals are there for. 800 people a day being sick to the point of hospitalisation in a country the size of Germany doesn't seem like anything to be that worried about to me, on a macro level there's bigger fish to fry.
    That's really stretching the meaning of the word "miniscule" beyond recognition.
    As it is hospitals in Germany are struggling, though they won't collapse, and that is why restrictions will only be removed fairly slowly over the next weeks.

  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,924
    MattW said:

    This is a bit starry-eyed imo.

    It is only months since a Minister in the Government of France, Clement Beaune, was threatening to use restrictions of Electricity supplies to the UK / Jersey as a weapon in a political dispute.

    Here's a Guardian report from September 21:
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/oct/05/france-uk-jersey-eu-energy-supply-fishing-row-channel

    This is despite a defined dispute resolution mechanism existing in the FTA.

    The Minister was not sacked, and is apparently in good standing.

    Fortunately we are (rather too slowly imo) pivoting away from any dependence on French electricity, which will gradually defang such threats.

    A similar point could be made about the EU-Switzerland relationship.
    The countries of the West need to get together and start to sign up to binding legal assurances on a range of issues of mutual dependency. Now we've seen who the real enemies are we need to get closer and more integrated, not less. It would be a disaster if the Western world started atomising.

    (The one exception to this possibly being the US-European relationship given the risks of another Trump presidency, where some EU self-sufficiency might be sensible).
  • Leon said:

    That's the fatality ratio being reported elsewhere, I believe. 0.3%

    Three times worse than flu?

    Enough to be problematic, given how obscenely infectious the BA2 Omicron variant seems to be

    At the moment maybe 1 in 12 South Koreans have Covid
    Why's it problematic? We lived with flu before this, we can live with a 0.3% fatality rate after this.

    Though in reality the fatality rate is likely to be even lower since that only counts the reported positive tests as opposed to actual infections (the asymptomatic are less likely to be tested and reported than those sick enough to go to hospital and die). Plus the 0.3% probably disproportionately includes antivaxxers who've made their bed and can die in it.

    Factor in vaccines and the asymptomatic and post-vaccine Covid is probably comparable to the flu, which we've always lived with.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    HYUFD said:

    No I was posting that there is zero evidence of any significant rise in death rates regardless of case rate, so I could not care less what the case rate is now, next month or next year unless a variant proves vaccine immune
    Q.E.D.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited March 2022
    Any comments?

    https://www.classical-music.com/news/cardiff-philharmonic-removes-tchaikovsky-from-programme-in-light-of-russian-invasion-of-ukraine/

    "Cardiff Philharmonic removes Tchaikovsky from programme in light of Russian invasion of Ukraine
    The orchestra had an all-Tchaikovsky concert scheduled for next week, but has decided to change the programme having deemed it to be 'inappropriate' at this time"
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    kamski said:

    That's really stretching the meaning of the word "miniscule" beyond recognition.
    As it is hospitals in Germany are struggling, though they won't collapse, and that is why restrictions will only be removed fairly slowly over the next weeks.

    Germany has a left led government, we have a right led government, what Germany does is irrelevant.

    This Tory government is in power until at least 2024 with a majority and it will not restore any restrictions as its core voters want.

    Only a vaccine immune variant would change the situation
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    Looks like the Russians are even worse drivers than Mrs U....

    https://twitter.com/oryxspioenkop/status/1501519621492510720?t=2lDNuBP0XoxPDPmbxi_g3Q&s=19
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,924
    Covid's comeback is almost a welcome change from WW3 discourse to be honest.

    What the last couple of months have shown extremely clearly is that there was only ever one truly gamechanging way of mitigating this pandemic, and that's vaccination (3 shots, including an MRNA booster). Everything else is a timing difference at best.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    TimT said:

    Yes, fixed location of the means of production and, relatively speaking, a high-value cash crop. The bottom line isn't the mark-up, but the absolute value which of course takes into account volume and reliability of cash flow (not being illegal).
    What is absolutely perfect is that I have read the entirely independent theory that the Sicilian mafia were a perfect fit for the heroin trade because they started out controlling the growth and export of citrus fruit in Sicily
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,415
    edited March 2022
    kamski said:

    That's really stretching the meaning of the word "miniscule" beyond recognition.
    As it is hospitals in Germany are struggling, though they won't collapse, and that is why restrictions will only be removed fairly slowly over the next weeks.

    800 / 83 million is fewer than 0.0001% of the population on a daily basis (not 0.00001% for the benefit of HYUFD) so how is that stretching the word miniscule beyond recognition?

    I think fewer than 0.0001% is pretty damned miniscule.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,924
    Andy_JS said:

    Any comments?

    https://www.classical-music.com/news/cardiff-philharmonic-removes-tchaikovsky-from-programme-in-light-of-russian-invasion-of-ukraine/

    "Cardiff Philharmonic removes Tchaikovsky from programme in light of Russian invasion of Ukraine
    The orchestra had an all-Tchaikovsky concert scheduled for next week, but has decided to change the programme having deemed it to be 'inappropriate' at this time"

    That's utterly ridiculous.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    Andy_JS said:

    Any comments?

    https://www.classical-music.com/news/cardiff-philharmonic-removes-tchaikovsky-from-programme-in-light-of-russian-invasion-of-ukraine/

    "Cardiff Philharmonic removes Tchaikovsky from programme in light of Russian invasion of Ukraine
    The orchestra had an all-Tchaikovsky concert scheduled for next week, but has decided to change the programme having deemed it to be 'inappropriate' at this time"

    Ooh me sir please sir pick me sir.

    Fucking stupid decision.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,464
    edited March 2022
    TimS said:

    Covid's comeback is almost a welcome change from WW3 discourse to be honest.

    What the last couple of months have shown extremely clearly is that there was only ever one truly gamechanging way of mitigating this pandemic, and that's vaccination (3 shots, including an MRNA booster). Everything else is a timing difference at best.

    I don't think we should also overlook the highly effective antivirals coming online and also now 2-3 very cheap drugs to treat people in hospital that seem to also have a decent effect on reducing severity / death.

    Hospitalisation used to be basically give them oxgyen and hope they don't get worse. Now there are some treatment options.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,187
    glw said:

    No, you will have absorbed so much radiation anyway that wearing a mask will be futile.
    Basically, like living on Fuel World.
This discussion has been closed.