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How much damage is Dorries doing to the Tory brand? – politicalbetting.com

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  • Saying "if you don't want to breathe it in, stay at home" isn't an honourable answer.

    Why?
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-66596319

    Rishi Sunak inadvertently failed to declare childcare interest, rules MPs watchdog

    Stupid Sunak
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159

    Another instance where comparisons with America doesn't work. The reason they don't show in the data is that British "SUVs" are nothing like US SUVs. British ones would be small to mid-sized cars over there.

    American ones would be considered like trucks here.
    We shall see. I'd be surprised the additional height, weight and reduced visibility doesn't have an effect.
  • Lockdown was wrong because young people had to put their lives on hold despite little risk of having serious complications from the disease but instead to protect the elderly.

    In response to this, young people had their taxes raised to the highest level ever, had the student loan conditions changed so they will never pay off their debt, are persistently called "thick", "woke", "entitled" and have literally nothing given to them at all and instead all money is funnelled to the elderly.

    I got lockdown wrong.

    Well said. So did I.

    You asked yesterday where have I changed my mind (and accepted my list) this is another big one. I supported lockdown at the time, I have subsequently accepted that I was wrong to do so.

    We need to stop living for the gerontocracy.
  • Yes. Having scared people voluntarily stay at home > having scared + non-scared people compulsorily staying at home.

    Nobody is saying normality was an option, so stop arguing against it.
    So Boris does a "carry on for Blighty" speech. There is no government scare tactics. No stay at home orders. But people would get scared as significant numbers of people got very sick and died.

    It wouldn't be government scare tactics. It would be natural human behaviour. That you don't seem to recognise this is why I keep pointing out that you sound a bit sociopathic on this one.

    It wouldn't just be the people sick staying home for a few weeks. A lot of people wouldn't be living their lives as they were because they would be sick, friends, colleagues or immediate family would be sick, or they just watch the news as the NHS is swamped and think "I'd better not go to the pub".
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    People's behaviour seems to be getting worse, as drivers, cyclists and pedestrians. Cars are getting safer, at least for passengers but that is a separate issue.
    Transport in general has got much safer in the last few decades. Road fatalities are half what they were when I first studied this nearly three decades ago, and the graph of plane crash deaths is really insane when you consider at the increase in flight numbers and passenger numbers over time. (Russian enemies excepted, of course, they have a habit of cars and planes randomly crashing!)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited August 2023

    There was that lad a few years ago that was convicted and jailed for running down and killing a lady after being
    charged with "wanton and
    furious cycling".
    Yes cyclists can be
    prosecuted under the OAPA if they hit a pedestrian causing bodily harm and were at fault.
    They can also be charged with dangerous or careless cycling

    "Dangerous Cycling UK Road Traffic Offence Guide - Motor Defence Solicitors" https://www.motordefencesolicitors.co.uk/offence-guides/dangerous-cycling/amp/
  • Well said. So did I.

    You asked yesterday where have I changed my mind (and accepted my list) this is another big one. I supported lockdown at the time, I have subsequently accepted that I was wrong to do so.

    We need to stop living for the gerontocracy.
    I've said my POV before and been accused countless times of hating the elderly and being ageist.

    And yet they're allowed to call me thick and woke whenever they wish.

    I've got no issue with the elderly, I loved and miss my grandmother dearly but they are incredibly entitled on the whole from my experience with them and have literally all the benefits handed to them and young people get nothing.

    In the last 13 years, young people have been given materially worse conditions every year. Elderly get protected.

    Scrap the triple lock.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    Sandpit said:

    Transport in general has got much safer in the last few decades. Road fatalities are half what they were when I first studied this nearly three decades ago, and the graph of plane crash deaths is really insane when you consider at the increase in flight numbers and passenger numbers over time. (Russian enemies excepted, of course, they have a habit of cars and planes randomly crashing!)
    I read the other day that air travel is now 80 times less dangerous than 50 years ago. It is an astonishing drop in risk.

    It would have been better still without the 737 Max
  • Eabhal said:

    We shall see. I'd be surprised the additional height, weight and reduced visibility doesn't have an effect.
    The extra weight of EV batteries might have an effect too.
  • MoanRMoanR Posts: 25
    DavidL said:

    Has this not been the situation in the US for some time now? We seem to be following their path, albeit a decade or so behind. I also suspect that the easy win of people giving up smoking has now fully worked through with little further gains to come (overall, of course smokers would benefit enormously individually).
    David
    Life Expectancy in the UK was doing OK until we elected Conservative governments

  • Eabhal said:

    We shall see. I'd be surprised the additional height, weight and reduced visibility doesn't have an effect.
    UK Range Rover Evoque weighs 1787 kg

    US Chevrolet Tahoe weighs 2541 kg

    They're not the same.
  • So Boris does a "carry on for Blighty" speech. There is no government scare tactics. No stay at home orders. But people would get scared as significant numbers of people got very sick and died.

    It wouldn't be government scare tactics. It would be natural human behaviour. That you don't seem to recognise this is why I keep pointing out that you sound a bit sociopathic on this one.

    It wouldn't just be the people sick staying home for a few weeks. A lot of people wouldn't be living their lives as they were because they would be sick, friends, colleagues or immediate family would be sick, or they just watch the news as the NHS is swamped and think "I'd better not go to the pub".
    I never said there should be a "carry on for Blighty" speech, I said there should be a "do what you think is best" approach.

    If people choose to stay home, then they choose to stay home, and furlough then should be available as a choice, not mandatory.

    So some people wouldn't want to live their lives? That's fine, that's their choice then. Whereas others who do can do - again their choice.

    I have no problems with free choice.
  • Eabhal said:

    Not in law you can't (at least for causing death).

    That's because it's exceedingly unlikely, though not impossible, that you are killed or injured by a cyclist.
    Depends if they actually stop at pedestrian lights! I was inches away from being hit by a cyclist at a pedestrian crossing a few years ago.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited August 2023
    Foxy said:

    I read the other day that air travel is now 80 times less dangerous than 50 years ago. It is an astonishing drop in risk.

    It would have been better still without the 737 Max
    Yes it’s astonishing.

    Don’t start me on the 737 Max, I’ll be here all day (and I’m currently two hours into what’s expected to be a 7-hour wait at the Ukraine-Poland border). Let’s just say that there was a massive regulatory and management failure at the FAA and Boeing, that led to a very sub-standard design of a key system being approved.
  • Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 754
    ydoethur said:

    Oh, bee have.
    That is a hive mentality
  • MoanR said:

    David
    Life Expectancy in the UK was doing OK until we elected Conservative governments

    Life expectancy has gone up under the Tories not down.

    That its fallen in a small minority of communities means its stayed the same or risen (and average is risen) in the overwhelming majority of communities.

    The reality is as David said, the "easy win" of cutting smoking has worked through the system now.
  • I've said my POV before and been accused countless times of hating the elderly and being ageist.

    And yet they're allowed to call me thick and woke whenever they wish.

    I've got no issue with the elderly, I loved and miss my grandmother dearly but they are incredibly entitled on the whole from my experience with them and have literally all the benefits handed to them and young people get nothing.

    In the last 13 years, young people have been given materially worse conditions every year. Elderly get protected.

    Scrap the triple lock.
    Why on earth would you consider "woke" an insult?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630

    Having a year and a half of lockdown restrictions, to prevent a year of deaths, is not worthwhile.

    Better to have that year of deaths, and have that year and a half of life.

    Nobody is proposing wishing away the virus, except those who still believe in lockdown. I am saying we should have lived with the virus.
    Can you set out exactly how we would have lived with the virus? What measures, if any, would you have used? What support for people choosing to isolate? Who does their job?
    You also seem entirely focussed on deaths. What of the hundreds of thousands with long covid (I believe more an issue prior to vaccination, the time you suggest living with it)?
  • Lockdown was wrong because young people had to put their lives on hold despite little risk of having serious complications from the disease but instead to protect the elderly.

    In response to this, young people had their taxes raised to the highest level ever, had the student loan conditions changed so they will never pay off their debt, are persistently called "thick", "woke", "entitled" and have literally nothing given to them at all and instead all money is funnelled to the elderly.

    I got lockdown wrong.

    Lockdown was horrendous in almost every conceivable way and some additional ones I hadn't even considered were possible. But some version of it was inevitable because of human behaviour.

    4th March 2020 I was at a trade expo at the ExCel. Tesco sent an email cancelling my meeting there the day after and it was baffling - why are they locking down their campus?

    Lets assume the expo was booked for 4th April instead and Boris had told everyone to Keep Calm and Carry On instead of declaring lockdown. No forced closures or cancellations. I'm very confident that the expo would have been cancelled anyway. Why?

    Because human nature. As soon as a public health disaster like this runs away with itself, people make their own decisions. Formula One didn't cancel the Australian Grand Prix, the McLaren team did by voluntarily withdrawing and forcing the organisers' hand. The same would have happened with football and other sports. As people fall ill in larger numbers things slow to a stop.

    The one thing the government got absolutely right was furlough and CBILS and other support. The no lockdown scenario still has a lot of business either shut down due to operationally being unable to function or because of a lack of custom. And no government support. And thus bankruptcy.

    So many businesses remain teetering on the brink of collapse due to the debts they ran up during Covid, and that is with support. Lets assume no support and a period of some revenues but full staff costs. They would have folded. So we avoid mandatory lock down, get effective shut down anyway, and absolutely bugger the economy regardless.

    There was no winning scenario. All we can do is understand the thing in detail and try and plan for the future where we avoid getting into the thing in the first place.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    Life expectancy has gone up under the Tories not down.

    That its fallen in a small minority of communities means its stayed the same or risen (and average is risen) in the overwhelming majority of communities.

    The reality is as David said, the "easy win" of cutting smoking has worked through the system now.
    I suspect that the next big move will come if some of the very hopeful trials for Alzheimer's prove a success.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited August 2023
    Eabhal said:

    Hard to prove. Anecdotally, driver behaviour seems to have declined since COVID, but you can't back that up with data easily as driving rates fell significantly in 2020/21/22 due to the lockdowns.
    Having been in Rome for the end of last month, and Athens for a lot of this month, the UK is still a haven of pedestrian-friendliness compared to both cities.

    If there are too many cameras in London, there are too few in central and southern Italy and Greece. They could do with a lot of cameras above the traffic lights, for instance, but there is an ultra-libertarian attitude against anything like that here, which just happens to conveniently align with the already existing latin and greek mindset about following many day-to-day rules.
  • Why?
    I suspect we're not going to have a meeting of minds here- ultimately it's a value thing and our mental maps of the world are too different.

    But very roughly, something like this. With an infectious disease around, there is going to be a reduction in human freedom for a while. At least, there is provided you aren't going for the "let it wash over us" approach.

    How do you distribute those freedoms? You can go for an unpleasantly hard lockdown of everyone. As I said unthread, that's not a trivial thing. As bad for society as participation in WW2. The alternative is to go for an even harder lockdown for a smaller (but not easy to define) group of people.

    As it happens, I don't think the second approach can be made to work on a practical level; our lives are too entangled to create an isolation group like that. And there's the whole asymptomatic transmission thing. But I'm also not keen distributing freedom like that.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    Foxy said:

    It is the reason why we need a proper enquiry, rather than one where conclusions are written first, then evidence made to fit.
    That goes against every precedent in history!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    Absolutely! Any choice any government would have made can be proven to be in error in hindsight when all the facts are known and the scenario has played out. We need to understand what happened, what the alternatives were, and how we could do it better next time.
    Like most sane people I'll give the government the first lockdown. Was it right or wrong who knows. We all have our views but it was understandable (Northern Italy, blah blah).

    After that no. No lockdowns. Keep schools open, take precautions for eg bus drivers, give advice, compensate businesses, individuals, and let those who are willing and able live their lives. More deaths? For sure. But a 20 mph speed limit on motorways would result in fewer deaths but we don't do that, do we.
  • Can you set out exactly how we would have lived with the virus? What measures, if any, would you have used? What support for people choosing to isolate? Who does their job?
    You also seem entirely focussed on deaths. What of the hundreds of thousands with long covid (I believe more an issue prior to vaccination, the time you suggest living with it)?
    I think the Swedes called this right and we should have done what the Swedes did:

    Educate people, warn people about the risks, offer furlough as an option [not mandatory] if people want to isolate, then let people decide for themselves what they want to do.

    As for long covid, same answer. Live with it.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    edited August 2023
    Sandpit said:

    Transport in general has got much safer in the last few decades. Road fatalities are half what they were when I first studied this nearly three decades ago, and the graph of plane crash deaths is really insane when you consider at the increase in flight numbers and passenger numbers over time. (Russian enemies excepted, of course, they have a habit of cars and planes randomly crashing!)
    I think that's broadly true, but there is some devil in the detail. Edinburgh over the last twenty years:

    All road casualties decreased from 2002 to 2008. It then plateaud until the rollout of 20mph, and we have had a very significant decrease since then.

    Cyclist injuries were trending up pre-20mph, and have dropped since then. There has been a huge drop in bus passenger injuries throughout.

    However, total serious injuries and fatalities are broadly flat. Cyclist serious injuries doubled during COVID years, and almost all of those were hit by a driver.
  • DavidL said:

    I suspect that the next big move will come if some of the very hopeful trials for Alzheimer's prove a success.
    Even if that doesn't improve life expectancy, it could dramatically improve quality of life, which is much more important.
  • MoanRMoanR Posts: 25

    Life expectancy has gone up under the Tories not down.

    That its fallen in a small minority of communities means its stayed the same or risen (and average is risen) in the overwhelming majority of communities.

    The reality is as David said, the "easy win" of cutting smoking has worked through the system now.
    Bart

    Your posts are always interesting and normally well thought out. You seem to be very clever.

    But this is just rubbish.

    Read the FT article.
    https://www.ft.com/content/3d25b1c9-33bf-448a-bb07-6a0fc3a8a603

    The UK has done badly on Life Expectancy in the last few years.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    UN judge in speech at Sadiq Khan's office says the UK owes £18 trillion in reparations for slavery.

    Spain, France and the USA also listed as owing trillions in reparations

    "UK’s £18tn slavery debt is an underestimation, UN judge says - BBC News" https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-66596790
  • UK Range Rover Evoque weighs 1787 kg

    US Chevrolet Tahoe weighs 2541 kg

    They're not the same.
    They aren't remotely the same. And the Good News is that technology is proceeding at pace. You can't get 5* NCAP without things like autonomous braking, and those systems will only get smarter.

    How do we make the streets safe for pedestrians?
    1. Road Safety awareness for pedestrians. If you're walking along with noise-cancelling headphones looking at your phone you're in danger
    2. Better street design. It isn't mandatory barriers or humps or any of that prescriptive nonsense - streets are different to other streets. But design layouts that remove the stupid
    3. More tech on cars. My Tesla has more cameras than I have eyeballs pointing in all directions all the time. I may not see the danger but the car will. Have cars which don't hit people as the new safety standard - we're already rapidly heading in that direction.

    The size of weight of the vehicle isn't the issue. You can design a big vehicle to be pedestrian friendly.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    edited August 2023

    You keep saying this thing. It did not happen. Schools remained open throughout.
    Remote learning, children trying to share one laptop on the kitchen table between three, if they had laptops. Eton moved seamlessly to remote learning and I'm not sure anyone there noticed the difference (although developmentally I'm sure they suffered like everyone else). Hartlepool High? Less so.
  • Eabhal said:

    I think that's broadly true, but there is some devil in the detail. Edinburgh over the last twenty years:

    All road casualties decreased from 2002 to 2008. It then plateaud until the rollout of 20mph, and we have had a very significant decrease since then.

    Cyclist injuries were trending up pre-20mph, and have dropped since then. There has been a huge drop in bus passenger injuries throughout.

    However, total serious injuries and fatalities are broadly flat. Cyclist serious injuries doubled during COVID years, and almost all of those were hit by a driver.
    When analysing cyclist injuries or fatalities do you control for discounting those who weren't wearing a helmet?

    Darwin award winners shouldn't really be included in statistics.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited August 2023
    GCSE pass rate falls

    "GCSE results 2023: Passes fall to pre-Covid levels as England sees steepest drop - BBC News" https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/education-66575574
  • TOPPING said:

    Like most sane people I'll give the government the first lockdown. Was it right or wrong who knows. We all have our views but it was understandable (Northern Italy, blah blah).

    After that no. No lockdowns. Keep schools open, take precautions for eg bus drivers, give advice, compensate businesses, individuals, and let those who are willing and able live their lives. More deaths? For sure. But a 20 mph speed limit on motorways would result in fewer deaths but we don't do that, do we.
    It turned into a bloody farce. A 5 step scale where they opened on 3.5. Local and regional lockdown steps at various degrees of stupid. Some areas had months of L4 semi-lockdown even when there was no formal lockdown.
  • MoanRMoanR Posts: 25
    Rest of my day will be spent in Nadine Dorries' constituency.
    Wife and I will help look after grandchildren. 4 months and 2 years old
  • They aren't remotely the same. And the Good News is that technology is proceeding at pace. You can't get 5* NCAP without things like autonomous braking, and those systems will only get smarter.

    How do we make the streets safe for pedestrians?
    1. Road Safety awareness for pedestrians. If you're walking along with noise-cancelling headphones looking at your phone you're in danger
    2. Better street design. It isn't mandatory barriers or humps or any of that prescriptive nonsense - streets are different to other streets. But design layouts that remove the stupid
    3. More tech on cars. My Tesla has more cameras than I have eyeballs pointing in all directions all the time. I may not see the danger but the car will. Have cars which don't hit people as the new safety standard - we're already rapidly heading in that direction.

    The size of weight of the vehicle isn't the issue. You can design a big vehicle to be pedestrian friendly.
    Indeed.

    We should also look at removing any barriers that prevent people from being in safer vehicles, with seat belts, brakes, 5* safety, air bags etc

    Instead for some reason people want to go the other way and put barriers on safer equipment up and have more people on more dangerous vehicles that are exposed to the elements with no seat belts, no air bags, no crumple zones, no automatic brakes etc
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Sandpit said:

    Yes it’s astonishing.

    Don’t start me on the 737 Max, I’ll be here all day (and I’m currently two hours into what’s expected to be a 7-hour wait at the Ukraine-Poland border). Let’s just say that there was a massive regulatory and management failure at the FAA and Boeing, that led to a very sub-standard design of a key system being approved.
    To add, aviation is an industry from which so many other industries can learn.

    They generally balance technology and innovation with reliability and efficiency, work with a no-blame culture, are assiduous in talking about mistakes, and report in detail on even relatively minor incidents, in order to try and prevent accidents.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159

    When analysing cyclist injuries or fatalities do you control for discounting those who weren't wearing a helmet?

    Darwin award winners shouldn't really be included in statistics.
    They wouldn't need to wear a helmet if they didn't keep getting hit by drivers. 100% of cyclist fatalities in Edinburgh over the last twenty years involved a driver.

    Very few people wear a helmet in the Netherlands, and they have some of the lowest fatality rates.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    TOPPING said:

    Remote learning, children trying to share one laptop on the kitchen table between three, if they had laptops. Eton moved seamlessly to remote learning and I'm not sure anyone there noticed the difference (although developmentally I'm sure they suffered like everyone else). Hartlepool High? Less so.
    Schools remained open in person.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    It turned into a bloody farce. A 5 step scale where they opened on 3.5. Local and regional lockdown steps at various degrees of stupid. Some areas had months of L4 semi-lockdown even when there was no formal lockdown.
    I think that was the epitome of the madness absolutely. Look at what it unleashed. Shop your neighbour and being started for walking while holding a cup of coffee in proximity to someone else.

    Bloody hell @contrarian was a whole lot more right than he was ever wrong. And if you read back at the posts at the time look at the abuse he received. He was just about bang on the money.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Foxy said:

    I read the other day that air travel is now 80 times less dangerous than 50 years ago. It is an astonishing drop in risk.

    It would have been better still without the 737 Max
    Go back another 20 or 30 years, and it would be an order of magnitude or two more dangerous again.

    My favourite is the iconic French flying boat, the Latécoère 631. Out of ten built, five crashed.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latécoère_631
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,320

    UK Range Rover Evoque weighs 1787 kg

    US Chevrolet Tahoe weighs 2541 kg

    They're not the same.
    They certainly aren't. A Tahoe is a body on frame vehicle and the Evoque is unibody/subframes. Chevy Blazer is the appropriate comparison to the Evoque.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Eabhal said:

    I think that's broadly true, but there is some devil in the detail. Edinburgh over the last twenty years:

    All road casualties decreased from 2002 to 2008. It then plateaud until the rollout of 20mph, and we have had a very significant decrease since then.

    Cyclist injuries were trending up pre-20mph, and have dropped since then. There has been a huge drop in bus passenger injuries throughout.

    However, total serious injuries and fatalities are broadly flat. Cyclist serious injuries doubled during COVID years, and almost all of those were hit by a driver.
    Cycling sounds dangerous, perhaps we need to discourage it?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    edited August 2023
    dixiedean said:

    Schools remained open in person.
    Only for vulnerable children.
  • Indeed.

    We should also look at removing any barriers that prevent people from being in safer vehicles, with seat belts, brakes, 5* safety, air bags etc

    Instead for some reason people want to go the other way and put barriers on safer equipment up and have more people on more dangerous vehicles that are exposed to the elements with no seat belts, no air bags, no crumple zones, no automatic brakes etc
    I am a little confused though. People in old cars tend to replace them with newer cars as they get more expensive to keep running or break completely.

    ULEZ, EURO emissions ratings etc etc are drivers of accelerating those changes into newer safer cars. Yet the right have decided that poor people should be in older more dangerous cars because freedom or some bullshit.

    Policy has done a very good job in driving both manufacturers to build safer vehicles and punters to switch to driving them. We need to advance those changes, not try and retard them as the Tories are now doing.
  • alednamalednam Posts: 186
    Henry Hill, News Editor of Conservative Home, says (in effect) that Starmer should arrange for the tabling of an Opposition motion to be put to the Commons—“That Nadine Dorries be expelled this House.”. I don’t doubt that such a motion would be carried. BUT the outcomes of votes on opposition day motions are “not considered legally binding”; and Dorries for her part would think it as nothing that Parliament had expressed its will that she not remain a Member, so that Sunak would still somehow have to arrange that she resign. It must be Sunak who arranges for Dorries to leave the Commons. Sunak and his Party must be shamed for having allowed Dorries to carry on. For more than a month it has been widely thought that it is high time Dorries resigned. It is is now high time that the leader of her wretched Party, the Prime Minister, should kick her out.
  • dixiedean said:

    Schools remained open in person.
    And I don't understand why some people refuse to accept that reality.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939
    edited August 2023
    TOPPING said:

    Only for vulnerable children.
    So. They weren't shut then.
    Your point about remote learning is valid, but. That was on a government who blithely announced every child who needed one would be provided with a laptop.
    Then did bugger all about it. It
  • Sandpit said:

    To add, aviation is an industry from which so many other industries can learn.

    They generally balance technology and innovation with reliability and efficiency, work with a no-blame culture, are assiduous in talking about mistakes, and report in detail on even relatively minor incidents, in order to try and prevent accidents.
    Indeed and yet for some reason the media often portray it as the polar opposite.

    Greys Anatomy (like many US dramas) had a plane crash as a storyline and then the doctors chose to sue in order to ensure the crash was investigated because otherwise it would be brushed under the carpet.

    Derek: We can't do this. I saw the plane. I went to the hangar and I saw the pieces of our plane laid out on the floor like a jigsaw puzzle. If we agree to settle, they do the investigation, and we can't do anything with the results.
    Airline Rep: Bayview Aeronautics will take the results and act accordingly.
    Derek: Oh, I'm sure you'll be very thorough. Big companies are always very good about self-policing.
    Callie: Mistakes happen, Derek. Accidents happen. We make mistakes that can cost lives, too.
    Derek: Yes, we do. But when we do, we have M&Ms, we pore over the files, we make sure it never happens again. And we try to make sure future patients never have to go through that grief. They don't have to sleep with the lights on every night because the darkness is too much. We just can't stand by and let this happen to other people's Lexies and Marks. We have to do something about it. We have to make this right.


    As if the medical community is unique for poring over the files, and airlines will just do what "big companies" do and brush it under the carpet. No air accident is ever dismissed like that, not unless it happens in Russia.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    Sandpit said:

    Cycling sounds dangerous, perhaps we need to discourage it?
    On the contrary: 0% of driver and pedestrian fatalities over the last 20 years in Edinburgh involved a cyclist.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214
    How much damage is Dorries doing to the Tory brand? Very little. Very few people can remember the story, most of those who do are already engaged and have alignment one way or another, and even for the switched-on-floating-voter, there are much bigger issues in play.

    However, it's odd that the Tories have done nothing. They should withdraw the whip given her failure to follow through on her resignation. Personally, were I the Mid Beds Association Chairman, I'd suspend her membership and take a resolution to expel her to the Association Executive (which would then get kicked upstairs to the Party Board, but would at least force a decision one way or the other).
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    edited August 2023
    dixiedean said:

    So. They weren't shut then.
    Don't be a twat. They were effectively closed to 98% of children. Parents home schooled their offspring.
  • I am a little confused though. People in old cars tend to replace them with newer cars as they get more expensive to keep running or break completely.

    ULEZ, EURO emissions ratings etc etc are drivers of accelerating those changes into newer safer cars. Yet the right have decided that poor people should be in older more dangerous cars because freedom or some bullshit.

    Policy has done a very good job in driving both manufacturers to build safer vehicles and punters to switch to driving them. We need to advance those changes, not try and retard them as the Tories are now doing.
    Speaking personally I've said we should assist poor people into being able to change their car.

    That means having inducements like scrappage incentives for old vehicles, or cutting taxes to make newer vehicles more affordable.

    That does not mean putting a punitive and regressive tax on old vehicles for those who can't afford to make the switch yet.

    Carrot not stick.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    HYUFD said:

    UN judge in speech at Sadiq Khan's office says the UK owes £18 trillion in reparations for slavery.

    Spain, France and the USA also listed as owing trillions in reparations

    "UK’s £18tn slavery debt is an underestimation, UN judge says - BBC News" https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-66596790

    It was a speech at City Hall, not "Sadiq Khan's Office". His office is in the building admittedly but I somehow doubt they could fit a speech in.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    There seems to be a disconnect between punditry and punters after the GOP debate. Ramaswamy stole the show. Ramaswamy has drifted in the betting.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    MoanR said:

    Bart

    Your posts are always interesting and normally well thought out. You seem to be very clever.

    But this is just rubbish.

    Read the FT article.
    https://www.ft.com/content/3d25b1c9-33bf-448a-bb07-6a0fc3a8a603

    The UK has done badly on Life Expectancy in the last few years.
    Increases in life expectancy here and in the USA have stalled, while continuing to rise in other developed economies.

  • Eabhal said:

    They wouldn't need to wear a helmet if they didn't keep getting hit by drivers. 100% of cyclist fatalities in Edinburgh over the last twenty years involved a driver.

    Very few people wear a helmet in the Netherlands, and they have some of the lowest fatality rates.
    As we discussed yesterday, the Netherlands have achieved this by building more roads, in order to ensure cars and cyclists have separated paths to be able to travel down.

    We should do the same. 👍

    They have dramatically more roads than we do, since we made the mistake of falling for the myth of induced demand and stopping road construction.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Nigelb said:

    Go back another 20 or 30 years, and it would be an order of magnitude or two more dangerous again.

    My favourite is the iconic French flying boat, the Latécoère 631. Out of ten built, five crashed.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latécoère_631
    The much more common Vickers Viscount, which I flew on as a child, lost around a third of the aircraft built.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and_incidents_involving_the_Vickers_Viscount

    Similarly, the Lockheed Constellation.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and_incidents_involving_the_Lockheed_Constellation
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    edited August 2023
    Ukrainians claiming to have conducted a special forces raid into Crimea. This follows months of raids across the Dnipro. Their confidence and capability is increasing. I don't see them being tied down in a stalemate indefinitely.

    It's about 100 miles from the coast currently under Ukrainian control.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    DavidL said:

    I accepted the first lockdown was necessary. We didn’t know what we were dealing with and Italy was indeed alarming.

    I also accept that it was rational to use lockdown measures when a vaccination program was being run out.

    But, in Scotland, we were in various levels of lockdown from 5th January 21 to 1st July. That was largely unnecessary and I would be confident that the costs, economic, social and educational, far outweighed any benefits.

    I really don’t say this to make a party political point. We need to learn from this and find better ways of assessing cost benefit analysis for such a thing. I very much fear that the inquiries will be a blame game with 20:20 hindsight. That is an utter waste of time and money. We need to learn the right lessons going forward and then hope that that proves to be a waste of time too because it doesn’t happen again.
    One thing that gets confusing is the very meaning of lockdown. The Omicron wave for example in Dec 2021 hardly constituted lockdown. These were the restrictions across the land, broadly mask up, and otherwise voluntary work from home:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/dec/09/what-are-the-covid-rules-and-guidelines-in-the-four-nations-of-the-uk

    Unnecessary perhaps, because Omicron was so much less dangerous than delta, but that wasn't clear at the time.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Dura_Ace said:

    They certainly aren't. A Tahoe is a body on frame vehicle and the Evoque is unibody/subframes. Chevy Blazer is the appropriate comparison to the Evoque.
    It's the market equivalent, though.
    We don't have anything like the Tahoe selling in any numbers in the UK.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159

    As we discussed yesterday, the Netherlands have achieved this by building more roads, in order to ensure cars and cyclists have separated paths to be able to travel down.

    We should do the same. 👍

    They have dramatically more roads than we do, since we made the mistake of falling for the myth of induced demand and stopping road construction.
    It was a rather callous remark about getting a "Darwin Award". You get a sense from your posts that you don't really care about people who cycle and walk, which I'm sure is untrue.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    TOPPING said:

    Don't be a twat. They were effectively closed to 98% of children. Parents home schooled their offspring.
    I think in the winter wave of 2020-21 close to half of pupils were attending in person, at least in England.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    Nigelb said:

    It's the market equivalent, though.
    We don't have anything like the Tahoe selling in any numbers in the UK.
    You're right, but this is a strawman argument. There are many more SUV sales in the UK than previously, these cars tend to be heavier, higher and with lower pedestrian visibility (particularly children), even if they aren't as bad as the US equivalents.

    There is no data to support my idea that casualties will increase as a result, but I don't think it's an unreasonable assumption.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    .
    dixiedean said:

    It was a damn sight more than
    2% this particular twat taught
    in person.
    As did my wife.
    The kids were in overcoats, as all the windows were open through the winter.
  • As we discussed yesterday, the Netherlands have achieved this by building more roads, in order to ensure cars and cyclists have separated paths to be able to travel down.

    We should do the same. 👍

    They have dramatically more roads than we do, since we made the mistake of falling for the myth of induced demand and stopping road construction.
    The Netherlands does not have dramatically more roads than we do. The mistakes in your calculation were already pointed out to you yesterday, so you have no excuse for repeating this fallacy. While its road network (like its rail network) may be somewhat more developed than ours, what it most obviously has is a far, far better cycling infrastructure. If you want people to cycle in safety, what you primarily need is better cycling infrastructure.
  • Eabhal said:

    It was a rather callous remark about getting a "Darwin Award". You get a sense from your posts that you don't really care about people who cycle and walk, which I'm sure is untrue.
    I'd say the same about idiots who drive without a seat belt.

    I cycle. I always wear my helmet.
    Cycling was my first independent mode of transportation as a teenager, I always wore my helmet.
    My kids cycle. They'd be grounded if I ever saw them out without a helmet.

    I do care about people who cycle. Its why I think they should wear a helmet.

    I think anyone who goes out on a bike without protecting their noggin is bloody moronic. Where I grew up, in Australia, it is a legal requirement to wear a helmet if cycling.

    I think there is no logic or justification for having to wear a seat belt while driving, but not having to wear a helmet while cycling. Cycling is more dangerous than driving, the least you can do is protect your head and put your helmet on, just as if in a car put your seat belt on.
  • alednam said:

    Henry Hill, News Editor of Conservative Home, says (in effect) that Starmer should arrange for the tabling of an Opposition motion to be put to the Commons—“That Nadine Dorries be expelled this House.”. I don’t doubt that such a motion would be carried. BUT the outcomes of votes on opposition day motions are “not considered legally binding”; and Dorries for her part would think it as nothing that Parliament had expressed its will that she not remain a Member, so that Sunak would still somehow have to arrange that she resign. It must be Sunak who arranges for Dorries to leave the Commons. Sunak and his Party must be shamed for having allowed Dorries to carry on. For more than a month it has been widely thought that it is high time Dorries resigned. It is is now high time that the leader of her wretched Party, the Prime Minister, should kick her out.

    Rishi could have avoided this whole mess simply by giving Nadine Dorries the peerage Boris had promised her.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,425
    edited August 2023

    The Netherlands does not have dramatically more roads than we do. The mistakes in your calculation were already pointed out to you yesterday, so you have no excuse for repeating this fallacy. While its road network (like its rail network) may be somewhat more developed than ours, what it most obviously has is a far, far better cycling infrastructure. If you want people to cycle in safety, what you primarily need is better cycling infrastructure.
    You what? We did the numbers, and they do have dramatically more roads than we do. 36% more road density in the Netherlands than England, that was the calculation.

    Building cycling infrastructure and building road infrastructure go hand-in-hand. New roads can come with new segregated cycling infrastructure - that's a win for cycling and a win for driving.
    New roads to alleviate traffic on old roads can come with cycling infrastructure on the new road and allow segregated cycling infrastructure on the now-quieter old road too - that's 2 wins for cycling and a win for driving.

    Cutting out road construction hurts cycling it doesn't help it. That's why the Netherlands have done the opposite, to great success.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    Eabhal said:

    They wouldn't need to wear a helmet if they didn't keep getting hit by drivers. 100% of cyclist fatalities in Edinburgh over the last twenty years involved a driver.

    Very few people wear a helmet in the Netherlands, and they have some of the lowest fatality rates.
    Indeed so. The effectiveness of the 1994 NZ compulsory all age bicycle helmet law was to reduce the amount of injuries, but this was achieved mostly by reducing the numbers of cyclists. Cycle hours dropped by nearly a half as a result. Fewer cyclists equals fewer injuries cycling. Paradoxically the risk for those continuing to cycle went up:

    http://www.cycle-helmets.com/zealand_helmets.html
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159

    You what? We did the numbers, and they do have dramatically more roads than we do. 36% more road density in the Netherlands than England, that was the calculation.

    Building cycling infrastructure and building road infrastructure go hand-in-hand. New roads can come with new segregated cycling infrastructure - that's a win for cycling and a win for driving.
    New roads to alleviate traffic on old roads can come with cycling infrastructure on the new road and allow segregated cycling infrastructure on the now-quieter old road too - that's 2 wins for cycling and a win for driving.

    Cutting out road construction hurts cycling it doesn't help it. That's why the Netherlands have done the opposite, to great success.
    Given the Netherlands has been putting cycle infrastructure on the roads since the 1970s, would you agree that in order to replicate them, we would need to do the same for every road we have built over the same time period? Not just new ones?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263

    Rishi could have avoided this whole mess simply by giving Nadine Dorries the peerage Boris had promised her.
    Wasn't the problem that she wanted a deferred peerage?
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214
    kinabalu said:

    There seems to be a disconnect between punditry and punters after the GOP debate. Ramaswamy stole the show. Ramaswamy has drifted in the betting.

    That's not necessarily inconsistent if punters believe (accurately) that winning this debate will result in attention being focussed on him, which will in turn cause his campaign to falter - a 'peaking too early' syndrome.

    However, I don't really think that is the case here and the market may well be getting it wrong; he seems to be well-placed in terms of skills, shamelessness and policy to sweep up the Trumpism-without-Trump vote and what were disqualifying attributes before 2016 aren't necessarily so any longer.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    edited August 2023

    The extra weight of EV batteries might have an effect too.
    The difference isn’t vast and is getting smaller as EV builders optimise during the battery as structure etc.

    In the U.K., most “SUVs” are a replacement for estate cars. Same volume, shorter and higher.

    The difference between them and the American P-1000 type vehicles…
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    Foxy said:

    Indeed so. The effectiveness of the 1994 NZ compulsory all age bicycle helmet law was to reduce the amount of injuries, but this was achieved mostly by reducing the numbers of cyclists. Cycle hours dropped by nearly a half as a result. Fewer cyclists equals fewer injuries cycling. Paradoxically the risk for those continuing to cycle went up:

    http://www.cycle-helmets.com/zealand_helmets.html
    Drivers also pass more closely if you have a helmet on. Some people keep a child seat fixed to their bike permanently for the same reason.
  • How much damage is Dorries doing to the Tory brand? Very little. Very few people can remember the story, most of those who do are already engaged and have alignment one way or another, and even for the switched-on-floating-voter, there are much bigger issues in play.

    However, it's odd that the Tories have done nothing. They should withdraw the whip given her failure to follow through on her resignation. Personally, were I the Mid Beds Association Chairman, I'd suspend her membership and take a resolution to expel her to the Association Executive (which would then get kicked upstairs to the Party Board, but would at least force a decision one way or the other).

    And what would be the point of all this? Dorries would still be an MP and the technicalities of not taking the whip would be lost on most voters (and her since she is not in the Commons to vote in any case).

    If the government wants an early by-election — perhaps the Chancellor took OGH's betting advice — then it should find Dorries some quid pro quo, a quango or industry body she can chair. If it does not want a by-election, it should do nothing.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,425
    edited August 2023
    Eabhal said:

    Given the Netherlands has been putting cycle infrastructure on the roads since the 1970s, would you agree that in order to replicate them, we would need to do the same for every road we have built over the same time period? Not just new ones?
    That's exactly what I've suggested, we should aim to do so by building new roads (with cycling infrastructure from the start) to alleviate car traffic on the old roads, in order to free space to build cycling infrastructure on the old roads too. Two birds, one stone.

    Unless we widen the road by knocking down buildings, we can't magically fix the mistakes of the past, so we need to invest in new roads in order to do so.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    kinabalu said:

    There seems to be a disconnect between punditry and punters after the GOP debate. Ramaswamy stole the show. Ramaswamy has drifted in the betting.

    Did he steal the show ?
    He certainly made an impression, but not necessarily a good one.

    It's an open question for now.

    The losers were DeSantis and Tim Scott.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    UK Range Rover Evoque weighs 1787 kg

    US Chevrolet Tahoe weighs 2541 kg

    They're not the same.
    The new Hummer EV won’t be coming to the UK - because it’s so heavy, anyone aged under 45 can’t drive it on a car licence.
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,795
    Sandpit said:

    The new Hummer EV won’t be coming to the UK - because it’s so heavy, anyone aged under 45 can’t drive it on a car licence.
    I'm sure if the super rich want it, they can get a van licence to get it.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    edited August 2023

    That's exactly what I've suggested, we should aim to do so by building new roads (with cycling infrastructure from the start) to alleviate car traffic on the old roads, in order to free space to build cycling infrastructure on the old roads too. Two birds, one stone.

    Unless we widen the road by knocking down buildings, we can't magically fix the mistakes of the past, so we need to invest in new roads in order to do so.
    Why not start by just putting segregated cycle lanes on our current roads? Much cheaper, and that's what the Dutch did.
  • Eabhal said:

    Why not start by just putting segregated cycle lanes on our current roads? Much cheaper.
    Because there's traffic already on our current roads, it needs to be alleviated by having an alternative route.

    That's what the Dutch have done and it works.

    Don't try to cut corners. If you want to copy the Dutch, then copy the Dutch. Build roads.
  • Foxy said:

    Wasn't the problem that she wanted a deferred peerage?
    Not quite. Nad wanted a peerage; it was Boris who wanted it deferred, and like a fool, she believed him when he said he'd sorted this out. That is why, on being told HOLAC would not swallow deferment, she offered to resign immediately in order to take the peerage. When HOLAC said that ship had sailed, there was no point in Dorries resigning so she hasn't followed through on her offer.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    That's not necessarily inconsistent if punters believe (accurately) that winning this debate will result in attention being focussed on him, which will in turn cause his campaign to falter - a 'peaking too early' syndrome.

    However, I don't really think that is the case here and the market may well be getting it wrong; he seems to be well-placed in terms of skills, shamelessness and policy to sweep up the Trumpism-without-Trump vote and what were disqualifying attributes before 2016 aren't necessarily so any longer.
    The fact that he bangs on about "Judeo-Christian values" and believing in One God* whilst being a practising Hindu, may be more widely notes.

    *Am aware many Hindus see Brahma as the One God, but the distinction is a little fine for most of the GOP base, I suspect.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159

    Because there's traffic already on our current roads, it needs to be alleviated by having an alternative route.

    That's what the Dutch have done and it works.

    Don't try to cut corners. If you want to copy the Dutch, then copy the Dutch. Build roads.
    Cyclists are traffic too!
  • Eabhal said:

    Cyclists are traffic too!
    Yes, and unless extra road space is built in order to have segregated cyclists then they'll be mixed in with the rest of the traffic.

    The Dutch solution, build more roads and have segregated cyclists, is safer for cyclists. It works.

    Cycling is not an alternative to building roads. Building roads helps cycling. We have 50 years of the Dutch doing this in action to show it works.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733

    That's not necessarily inconsistent if punters believe (accurately) that winning this debate will result in attention being focussed on him, which will in turn cause his campaign to falter - a 'peaking too early' syndrome.

    However, I don't really think that is the case here and the market may well be getting it wrong; he seems to be well-placed in terms of skills, shamelessness and policy to sweep up the Trumpism-without-Trump vote and what were disqualifying attributes before 2016 aren't necessarily so any longer.
    You're assuming that 'without Trump' means those voters carry on enthusiastically in favour of the next least rational candidate, whoever that might be.

    I'm not sure he has Trump's genius for crowd manipulation.

    The audience often cheered the attacks on him, in a manner which just doesn't happen with Trump.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    edited August 2023

    Yes, and unless extra road space is built in order to have segregated cyclists then they'll be mixed in with the rest of the traffic.

    The Dutch solution, build more roads and have segregated cyclists, is safer for cyclists. It works.

    Cycling is not an alternative to building roads. Building roads helps cycling. We have 50 years of the Dutch doing this in action to show it works.
    Why would you need more roads if cycling reduces the number of people driving?
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005

    Ukrainians claiming to have conducted a special forces raid into Crimea. This follows months of raids across the Dnipro. Their confidence and capability is increasing. I don't see them being tied down in a stalemate indefinitely.

    It's about 100 miles from the coast currently under Ukrainian control.

    It looks like the only areas Russia seems capable of defending are those which they have extensively pre-prepared with mines. Unfortunately there are a lot of those! Ukraine does seem to be making some good progress in the South having breached the first and most heavily defended line.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,425
    edited August 2023
    Eabhal said:

    Why would you need more roads if cycling reduces the number of people driving?
    Because it doesn't.

    The Dutch show this. They have the road space, they have the cycling infrastructure, but they still have most of their transportation via cars, but anyone can cycle safely if they want to. Which is because they've built roads.

    Building roads and cycling aren't alternatives. Driving and cycling aren't alternatives. Drivers can be cyclists and vice-versa.

    If you want Dutch lifestyle, follow Dutch policy, and build the bloody roads they've been building which come with cycling infrastructure.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    MoanR said:

    Rest of my day will be spent in Nadine Dorries' constituency.
    Wife and I will help look after grandchildren. 4 months and 2 years old

    Enjoy. When they get fretful, remember you’re going home tonight!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    You say 'keep schools open'. How do you do that when, say, 15% of the staff are off, either actually ill or isolating - and if you wouldn't have isolating measures, you'd then have epidemics running rampant through schools, so dropping available staff below safe levels anyway.

    But the main reason was to protect the capacity in the NHS, which was close to breaking point and had it gone past it, would have had exponentially greater knock-on effects. Ultimately, despite the five-tier system, the only thing that actually brought case numbers down was indefinite lockdowns - and prior to the vaccine, high case numbers inevitably led to high levels of hospitalisations and deaths.

    In the end (or the beginning), the formal lockdown was necessary to mandate and regulate because it was happening organically anyway, as people either fell sick or had to isolate (and remember that for the first 3-4 months, there wasn't the capacity for general testing so either you adopt the precautionary principle or again you let the virus run riot), meaning businesses and services didn't have a safe capacity to operate.
    Yes, lockdown was a pigs ear in many respects but pre-vaccine it was the only way to prevent a catastrophe. Covid spreads via the infected getting too close to others and passing it on, so you had to find a quick and dirty way of enforcing distancing between people. That's what lockdown did.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    edited August 2023
    Foxy said:

    I think in the winter wave of 2020-21 close to half of pupils were attending in person, at least in England.
    So over half not in school and all suffering one way or another.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I'm sure if the super rich want it, they can get a van licence to get it.
    Yes you’ll need to do a driving test to get a truck licence. Grey imports of American cars have been going on forever, it’s easy to get something registered in the UK if it’s capable of being registered elsewhere.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569

    Rishi could have avoided this whole mess simply by giving Nadine Dorries the peerage Boris had promised her.
    Why should anyone else keep Boris’s promises? He doesn’t!
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Quite an achievement.

    Scientists release the first complete sequence of a human Y chromosome

    https://news.ucsc.edu/2023/08/t2t-y-chromosome.html
    ..The structure of the Y chromosome has been challenging to decode because some of the DNA is organized in palindromes – long sequences that are the same forward and backward — spanning up to more than a million base pairs. Moreover, a very large part of the Y chromosome that was missing from the previous version of the Y reference is satellite DNA – large, highly repetitive regions of non-protein-coding DNA. On the Y chromosome, two satellites are interlinked with each other, further complicating the sequencing process. ..

    ..An unexpected finding from this paper was that Y chromosome DNA has been repeatedly mistaken to be bacterial DNA in past studies due to the incomplete removal of human contamination in bacterial DNA. This discovery promises to improve the study of bacterial species’ genomes.

    Human DNA can appear as a contaminant in the genomic samples of bacterial species because the bacterial DNA is often taken from swipes off of human skin. Scientists use the current human genome reference to identify which sequences come from human contamination and remove those, leaving just the bacterial DNA for their study. But, because large parts of the human Y chromosome were missing from the past human reference, scientists were not able to identify them as human and thus mistook them to be part of the DNA of the species they were studying. ..
  • @BlancheLivermore because woke is now used as an insult after the right captured it and used it for their own pathetic ends.
This discussion has been closed.