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Phil G
24 April 2020 15:00:01


 


What do they mean out of context ???!!! There is no context. I read what he said and only a demented imbecile with an IQ of less than 20 could come out with the rubbish he said. If that is defensible then he might as well go out with an automatic machine gun and slaughter fifty children because they would defend that as well in some way.


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


He kept saying to advisor, yes we can look at that. He never fave any instructions or advice, just said we can look at that a number of times. Doesn't mean some fuckwit has to go and inject themselves to find out. He said THEY would look at it.

fairweather
24 April 2020 15:01:19


Just following on from a couple of posts yesterday - I have a feeling the Government are quietly losing their battle on lockdown enforcement , more and more people are out on foot , many groups of 3 or more , traffic is most definitely on the up also 


Originally Posted by: Gooner 


Still holding well here. People out exercising in the sun but any number over 2 always looks like a family to me. Traffic massively down still but quite a few white vans. Cars most likely returning shoppers or driving to a place of safer exercise like me. Whilst there is activity I don't see anything obvious that might increase transmission. Admittedly I am avoiding shopping areas so they may be a bit worse.


S.Essex, 42m ASL
Gooner
24 April 2020 15:04:46


 


It never was a "lockdown", it's "stay at home unless you need to go out". In a big city, lots of people have to go out, especially as shops are telling me not to order deliveries if they are physically able to go to the shops. 


 


As long as people are behaving when they do go out, no problem.


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


Exactly , it never ever has been a lockdown , we have had restrictions and advisories 


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Chunky Pea
24 April 2020 15:05:35


 


It's an incredibly difficult set of decisions to make. I think it's inevitable that the lockdown will begin to fall apart regardless of what the government says. I'm not sure about the sentence in bold though, all the evidence shows that in the vast majority of cases this is a deadly disease for the old and vulnerable. For the rest of society and in particular the millions of people under 45 the threat is very small. Set that against the fall out from lockdown and all the subsequent health problems that will arise with far reaching consequences and who knows what the best thing is to do?


Originally Posted by: Northern Sky 


Maybe one idea is to ease the lockdown restrictions on the under 45s. and make sure the elderly are well catered for if they continue to be afraid to go outside. 


Current Conditions
https://t.ly/MEYqg 


"You don't have to know anything to have an opinion"
--Roger P, 12/Oct/2022
Rob K
24 April 2020 15:07:06


 


He kept saying to advisor, yes we can look at that. He never fave any instructions or advice, just said we can look at that a number of times. Doesn't mean some fuckwit has to go and inject themselves to find out. He said THEY would look at it.


Originally Posted by: Phil G 


It doesn't matter if he advised people or not. The fact that in public he thought it was a good idea to muse on even thinking about injecting disinfectant into people is just crazy.


Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
fairweather
24 April 2020 15:08:36


 


Tips for two of the supermarkets:


Iceland: slots are released at random half-hour intervals. Keep checking every half hour (just after the hour/half hour) and you will get a slot


Tesco: slots open at midnight, on the dot, and they'll be for 3 weeks out (as they get snaffled up pretty quickly). Log on about 10 to midnight (as there are queues) and when the queue pops you'll be able to book.


M&S and Morrisons do food box deliveries - little choice on what you get, but better than nothing.


If anyone has similar tips for the other supermarkets, it'd be interesting to collate them.


(As I seem to be quite good at getting slots I now contact the neighbours and see if they need anything, they do the same if they're going out. It's proving a good system! I'm lucky to be in an area where us neighbours all know each other - my friends in more typical areas say that as nobody knows each other, this collating orders just isn't happening.)


 


Originally Posted by: Retron 


Thanks Darren. I have tried Tesco at midnight a few times but no luck. Managed to get an Asda delivery for May 2nd last Thursday. Like you, we are doing top ups with my daughter and so she drops off shortages when she gets a slot and we do the same for her.I suppose it is actually better if one person gets two people's shops where possible as it frees up slots.


Asda slots seem to appear about midnight and are two weeks in advance so like Tesco you have to plan a long way ahead if you want to stand a chance and even then I've only succeeded once. Other tip I've found the response from the app on my phone quicker than my PC.


S.Essex, 42m ASL
Hippydave
24 April 2020 15:09:41


 


Utilitarianism rears its ugly head...I have a close family member who is a philosophy major. I have a spent a number of hours engaged in devil's advocate discussion about the trolley problem which usually degenerates into an dumb argument about how many baby Hitlers you should let die to save one centenarian or something similarly intelligent . Suddenly these discussions seem a little bit less academic.


Her comment: "Utilitarianism is really dodgy ethically. But it's what you always end up doing in the real world when you have to make a decision."


My view is still that lockdowns breaking is partially just psychological. People have tried to be good, now they are getting bored, and have noticed other people breaking lockdown and the effect snowballs. Also, despite the fact this virus is nasty, it's not the Black Death. Many people won't know anyone affected, and so there isn't enough fear factor to keep everyone inside.


Originally Posted by: pfw 


I'd imagine the alternative to utilitarianism is pretty ethically dodgy too  Hey poor people we're rich and have the resources to ride out this storm and prosper at the other side so we're going to keep lockdown for a whole year, sorry lots of you will suffer badly and die.... (I know absurd example to prove a point and all that ).


I think you're right on the lockdown front - there's only so much bad news you can look at before you become immune to it (much like the point about how we all live with all sorts of other things that kill us without worrying about them). I think the other thing is that whilst I don't want to catch it, I can't help thinking when I look at the odds that as a healthy male, not obese, under 45 and no known underlying conditions the chances are I'd not be very ill and if I did get a bad case I'm very, very unlikely to die. I can't be alone in that and I can see why that attitude will lead people to break the rules. At least part of the problem is said people won't be entirely wrong - you could argue it means more spread and more vulnerable people dying but then could argue that why not just make the vulnerable isolate, not the rest of us too.  


Did I mention I think it's all rather complicated and messy


Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
SJV
24 April 2020 15:11:02


 


It doesn't matter if he advised people or not. The fact that in public he thought it was a good idea to muse on even thinking about injecting disinfectant into people is just crazy.


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


Absolutely. His comments were at best ill-judged and at worst completely indefensible and moronic.


I find it mind-boggling that people can defend him on this. First the malaria drug and now this. 

fairweather
24 April 2020 15:12:43


 


All we need now is some evidence that alcohol reduces the blood clotting risk and we can reopen the pubs (and put the ash trays back on the tables).



Originally Posted by: Ulric 


They can say what they like about smoking but when I see my 75 year old (formerly heavy smoker with COPD) take about 5 mins to get out of his chair and get to the door, then collapse back in his chair gasping I know he wouldn't survive the virus!


S.Essex, 42m ASL
The Beast from the East
24 April 2020 15:13:55


There's probably not a right answer to this but it's interesting that those commenting against easing lockdown for economic reasons are highlighting the strong possibility that this will lead to more cases and therefore more deaths.


IMO that's an entirely correct conclusion but does rather ignore the fact that the societal lockdown certainly appears to be causing a raft of additional deaths all of it's own and is likely to be causing other issues with things like a drop off in cancer diagnosis and people ignoring all sorts of other issues, either because they don't want to trouble the NHS or are afraid they'll instantly drop dead if they go near a hospital. (Because after all as the media says hospitals are essentially plague ships with people dropping like flies).


The BBC had an article about showing additional deaths during the epidemic and there's a lot more additional deaths than appears to be caused by coronavirus. 


So a straight line of what's good for everyone is a continued lockdown and trashing the economy as a result, is a very blinkered look at what is IMO a much bigger and messier picture. If I save 3 85 year olds who could be expected to have a total of 3-5 years additional life expectancy as a total for all 3, is this a good thing if I kill a 48 year who employs 30 people by destroying his business and the stress and anxiety kills him, directly or indirectly? In an ideal world I'd save the 85 year olds without killing the 48 year old but it's not an ideal world. If you look at recessions, they cause additional deaths and have a particularly strong negative impact on life expectancy on the poorer members of society - so by damaging the economy you're reducing life expectancy for quite a large number of people - is that a good result or even an acceptable one set against the lives saved? 


Society functions on the greatest good for the greatest number and I'm not convinced ongoing strict lockdowns are going to achieve that, particularly once we're past the initial phase of making sure the NHS isn't overwhelmed. Targeted easing of restrictions, with mass testing and isolating to get on top of local outbreaks/hot spots seems like the way out of this. 


Only a personal musing really but one think that strikes me every time I hear people highlighting deaths total is that the media reaction and to an extent general populations reaction seems to be one where you could be forgiven for thinking 800 people dying across the UK in a day is an unfathomably high number. As an average something like 5-7,000 people a day die every year in the UK, for a variety of reasons, many entirely preventable and yet society and the media shrug their shoulders and carry on. Don't get me wrong, the fact people are dying (and suffering) from this disease is horrible, but we're all human and we're all at risk every day of dying and the reaction to the outbreak seems to be one that largely ignores this, at least the media portrayal is anyway. If we're so concerned about covid deaths, why don't we have social distancing lockdowns every flu season? Why is smoking allowed? Obesity ignored, or largely? Air pollution? 


Clearly we need to have measures in place that help safeguard the NHS to ensure it can cope and function and clearly we need to try and safeguard people at risk from the disease (by which I mean at greater risk than the general population) but we need to balance that by trying to make sure measures taken don't cause as much or more harm as an unintended consequence.


All of the above doesn't even get to the vaccine question and whether we'll even be able to make a viable vaccine - we might be able to or we might not. If the latter occurs then what do we do, all largely sit at home and watch the country go bankrupt, other deaths spike, supply chains collapse etc etc? Presumably not, which brings you back to the question of what measures can and should be taken to avoid covid deaths and what measures shouldn't be taken as the harm they'll cause (and are causing) are worse than the harm they're preventing.


The above isn't meant to offend BTW and apologies to anyone that it does but I just think the situation is being shaded very black and white and it (IMO) really isn't that clean. 


Originally Posted by: Hippydave 


Brilliant post


I'm just hoping common sense prevails and we come out of lockdown by the end of May. I accept pubs, pop concerts etc will not be happening but we need normal shops and business to function and other health issues treated such as mental health therapies


"We have some alternative facts for you"
Kelly-Ann Conway - special adviser to the President
fairweather
24 April 2020 15:14:26


 


But where are these people going?


Originally Posted by: John p 


To a close by exercise location, their supermarket, to work, I guess?


S.Essex, 42m ASL
doctormog
24 April 2020 15:14:57


 


They can say what they like about smoking but when I see my 75 year old (formerly heavy smoker with COPD) take about 5 mins to get out of his chair and get to the door, then collapse back in his chair gasping I know he wouldn't survive the virus!


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


Whatever (as yet unproven) benefit smoking may have in protecting against Covid-19 is far outweighed by the numerous difference ways it is likely to kill you in due course,


KevBrads1
24 April 2020 15:17:00


 


He kept saying to advisor, yes we can look at that. He never fave any instructions or advice, just said we can look at that a number of times. Doesn't mean some fuckwit has to go and inject themselves to find out. He said THEY would look at it.


Originally Posted by: Phil G 


Yes you can look at it.....for about a millisecond.


After a millisecond's  thought: what a stupid idea! 


 


MANCHESTER SUMMER INDEX for 2021: 238
Timelapses, old weather forecasts and natural phenomena videos can be seen on this site
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Roger Parsons
24 April 2020 15:21:16


There's probably not a right answer to this but it's interesting that those commenting against easing lockdown for economic reasons are highlighting the strong possibility that this will lead to more cases and therefore more deaths.


IMO that's an entirely correct conclusion but does rather ignore the fact that the societal lockdown certainly appears to be causing a raft of additional deaths all of it's own and is likely to be causing other issues with things like a drop off in cancer diagnosis and people ignoring all sorts of other issues, either because they don't want to trouble the NHS or are afraid they'll instantly drop dead if they go near a hospital. (Because after all as the media says hospitals are essentially plague ships with people dropping like flies).


The BBC had an article about showing additional deaths during the epidemic and there's a lot more additional deaths than appears to be caused by coronavirus...


Society functions on the greatest good for the greatest number and I'm not convinced ongoing strict lockdowns are going to achieve that, particularly once we're past the initial phase of making sure the NHS isn't overwhelmed. Targeted easing of restrictions, with mass testing and isolating to get on top of local outbreaks/hot spots seems like the way out of this...


Only a personal musing really but one think that strikes me every time I hear people highlighting deaths total is that the media reaction and to an extent general populations reaction seems to be one where you could be forgiven for thinking 800 people dying across the UK in a day is an unfathomably high number. As an average something like 5-7,000 people a day die every year in the UK, for a variety of reasons, many entirely preventable and yet society and the media shrug their shoulders and carry on. Don't get me wrong, the fact people are dying (and suffering) from this disease is horrible, but we're all human and we're all at risk every day of dying and the reaction to the outbreak seems to be one that largely ignores this, at least the media portrayal is anyway. If we're so concerned about covid deaths, why don't we have social distancing lockdowns every flu season? Why is smoking allowed? Obesity ignored, or largely? Air pollution? 


Originally Posted by: Hippydave 


I caught the BBC piece, HD, and you have distilled it well here. There have been some cracking posts on it too - picking up on the ethical and pragmatic sides too. Thanks to all who had a say on it. Discussing it at home a few interesting questions were raised:



  1. Why did we not start our testing in care homes? This is a vulnerable cohort of people scattered across the country, many with additional medical conditions. By sampling care homes we would have had a better reflection of regional transmission and etiology than from those presenting at hospitals. It could have given us a helpful early warning system and the opportunity to highlight the danger to this group of people and the options for their treatment or care. It would also have highlighted the strengths and shortcomings of the social care system, and in particular the safety of people working in this sector.

  2. With social distancing measures in place, are we seeing a reduction in more common ailments and if so what does it tell us? Is it reasonable to project CO-19 risk from the infection rate of, say, the common cold?

  3. Picking up on the ethical points made - what about special needs folks, young people in particular. I've heard almost nothing about what is happening here - but it's a huge and diverse sector. I would be interested to hear of any reports on that.


Enough for now. Thanks again.


Roger


RogerP
West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire
Everything taken together, here in Lincolnshire are more good things than man could have had the conscience to ask.
William Cobbett, in his Rural Rides - c.1830
Retron
24 April 2020 15:22:04


Whatever (as yet unproven) benefit smoking may have in protecting against Covid-19 is far outweighed by the numerous difference ways it is likely to kill you in due course,


Originally Posted by: doctormog 


Indeed. I've seen the following in my close family, all caused by smoking:



  • Heart attack (grandfather, dead at 62)

  • Lung cancer (other grandfather, dead at 62)

  • Lung cancer (grandma, dead at 69)

  • Lung cancer (dad, dead at 67)


My dad said his greatest regret was taking up smoking in his late 20s. He stopped in 1990 (when he was 42, when my gran died), but it ended up killing him all the same.


I know you'll find people who smoke 30 a day and are in the 90s, or whatever, but from what I've seen it's an efficient way to die before 70. I do wonder what all that passive smoking as a child will end up doing to me!


Leysdown, north Kent
Phil G
24 April 2020 15:23:06


 


It doesn't matter if he advised people or not. The fact that in public he thought it was a good idea to muse on even thinking about injecting disinfectant into people is just crazy.


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


He said while looking at his advisor like, by injection, inside or almost a cleaning, all while looking at his advisor. Just talking out loud thought provoking, exploring, brainstorming. Ever done that? Not looking at the camera and sending a message to go out and bleeding inject yourself directly. Just certain people picking up every every comment and taking out of context. I don't usually defend him, but I'm defending him on this one. The ones that don't understand what was said, how he said it and to who have the problem they cannot differentiate, only blinkered in the hate.

SJV
24 April 2020 15:27:48


 


He said while looking at his advisor like, by injection, inside or almost a cleaning, all while looking at his advisor. Just talking out loud thought provoking, exploring, brainstorming. Ever done that? Not looking at the camera and sending a message to go out and bleeding inject yourself directly. Just certain people picking up every every comment and taking out of context. I don't usually defend him, but I'm defending him on this one. The ones that don't understand what was said, how he said it and to who have the problem they cannot differentiate, only blinkered in the hate.


Originally Posted by: Phil G 


But not when you're giving a press conference to tens/hundreds of millions across America and the wider world. Sure, we all make mistakes when under pressure and we've all said something stupid that we've then discounted or clarified.


However, he's the president of the United States. You can't just trot out a random thought as stupid as that and not clarify it further. The White House have understandably criticised the media for jumping on it and spinning it (not that there's anything to spin) but behind the scenes they must be extremely embarrassed at Trump's latest misjudgement. 

RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
24 April 2020 15:29:06


 


Absolutely. His comments were at best ill-judged and at worst completely indefensible and moronic.


I find it mind-boggling that people can defend him on this. First the malaria drug and now this. 


Originally Posted by: SJV 


It's not just his own crazy suggestions made on the hoof it's the way he contradicts his own health officials during the public briefings.


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/04/donald-trump-contradicts-health-officials-200423083555500.html


Rob
In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.
SJV
24 April 2020 15:33:18

Friday's NHS England deaths by actual day chart showing a continuation in the steady decrease (open in new tab for full size).


fairweather
24 April 2020 15:34:11


 


He kept saying to advisor, yes we can look at that. He never fave any instructions or advice, just said we can look at that a number of times. Doesn't mean some fuckwit has to go and inject themselves to find out. He said THEY would look at it.


Originally Posted by: Phil G 


Doesn't mean a fuckwit (who possibly as President should know better) has to say it or think it either! It's like you standing in front of your kids and saying "I wonder what would happen if we threw a match into that box of fireworks, just saying, it might be good, have a look at that mum and see what you think". 


S.Essex, 42m ASL
pfw
  • pfw
  • Advanced Member
24 April 2020 15:34:12


Whatever (as yet unproven) benefit smoking may have in protecting against Covid-19 is far outweighed by the numerous difference ways it is likely to kill you in due course,


Originally Posted by: doctormog 


Smoking is like playing Russian roulette with 3 chambers loaded rather than 1. And not being able to breathe for the duration of the game. And paying to play. etc. etc.


It's a bloody hard habit for people to quit though. I notice that nicotine patches have been selling out everywhere. It's less harmful than mainlining bleach I suppose...


--
Paul.
Phil G
24 April 2020 15:42:50


 


Doesn't mean a fuckwit (who possibly as President should know better) has to say it or think it either! It's like you standing in front of your kids and saying "I wonder what would happen if we threw a match into that box of fireworks, just saying, it might be good, have a look at that mum and see what you think". 


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


But the fireworks is a definite outcome and you would be looking straight at your audience, your family.  He said while injecting, inside, cleaning, a number of possibilities but all with an exploratory tone, but not one definite action and only talking and looking at his advisor.

xioni2
24 April 2020 15:46:46

Oh how badly this speech has aged, just listen to it carefully


pfw
  • pfw
  • Advanced Member
24 April 2020 15:49:38


Doesn't mean a fuckwit (who possibly as President should know better) has to say it or think it either! It's like you standing in front of your kids and saying "I wonder what would happen if we threw a match into that box of fireworks, just saying, it might be good, have a look at that mum and see what you think". 


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


As far as I can tell, Trump does things on the hoof all the time. He literally just says what pops into his head. This can be perversely very effective as it makes him seem far more genuine than the usual overcautious politician - because in a way he is. The problem is that it can also reveal him as genuinely stupid or genuinely ill-informed.


More generally, I have wondered if the combination of scientists and politicians at these briefings is a good idea. The scientists end up talking about policy and not science, and the politicians end up looking like idiots on the science issues. If I was Rasputin I would have considered splitting them up during Boris' convalescence. Get a minister to talk about policy and a scientist to answer factual questions about disease spread and modelling.


--
Paul.
Brian Gaze
24 April 2020 15:53:48

Grant Shapps is leading today's briefing. Could be worth watching for amusement value. Perhaps the How To Corp can provide guidance on crushing the corona virus.  


Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
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