Trevanion
Greatest Of All Time
RogerS":23rvegwz said:We were already doing that up here !
Yebut you were shooting at people's feet with your rifle once they got on the boundary! :lol:
RogerS":23rvegwz said:We were already doing that up here !
Phil Pascoe":38p577z5 said:I haven't any paracetamol ............ but I have a couple of months supply of morphine.
MikeG.":2vp2gmo6 said:RogerS":2vp2gmo6 said:Why was that Mike...rooms ? cooking ? Would really appreciate more info.
Every surface in every room I visited would need cleaning after every visit I made to the room, for a start. I mean, if we had a mansion with wings we could have separated completely, but that's not the way for most people. There's also the whole thing of being infectious before you know you are ill. I didn't know I was ill until Wednesday, but I'd caught the bug on the previous Thursday or Friday. So I had probably infected my wife before I even knew I was infectious. Once we thought through the implications we realised that isolation from each other within the same house just wasn't going to work. Sleeping separately, changing our individual towels every day, washing hands and wiping surfaces........we quickly realised it was all a bit token.
Chris152":yblvxchn said:Boris wants people to be able to go to the parks, to go for a walk and to get fresh air. (Just now in his address.)
Those running the parks and the National Trust are closing their parks because people going there en masse are a threat to public heath. (Just now in the BBC special news report in which Johnson made his address.)
(homer)
Bm101":k4hnwplo said:I spent the weekend taking my shed back to ground zero. Proper sort out from the ground up. Well happy.
Kids and mrs doing gardening etc. Spring sunshine. Bird song. Clarity.
Enough to take your mind off a pandemic briefly.
Next door meanwhile got people round. Not kidding. Garden party.
I see Bill later over front fence. Party Bill ?
Nooooo. Well a few. Its mothers day.
I know Bill. Didn't get my mrs nowt on account of the international pandemic. Or my Mum. I phoned her up. They are alright so far.
Well just a few people says Bill. A Usually Intelligent Man.
He shrugs. He knows but he is struggling to cope with the enormity of the change in circumstances.
You understand exponential growth though Bill I hint at politely. It's not 9 its 9 to the power of .
Yebbut.
Bill and his mrs help all the old folk. Done so for years. Really.
Good sorts. 9 people there today plus Bill and Mrs.
Educated sorts . Morally obligated. Business owners.
If Bill is doing it what hope have we got. I'm essentially a libertarian. Not currently I'm fookin not.
RogerS":p5xn47q1 said:a handy length of 4x2 accidentally swinging around as you thought you heard someone shouting 'Help' and you turned to see if you could help.
I agree but the practical side is that it is unlikely that there is enough of the law to go around. The background to that is of course good: we live in a society where we are governed and policed by consent.Chris152":25fwbjw3 said:Yep, what the Bills don't need is rather vague and contradictory advice. What they need are clear instructions backed up by the force of law.
Yep, all that's failing so we need laws enforced to control the situation.Andy Kev.":366srpol said:I agree but the practical side is that it is unlikely that there is enough of the law to go around. The background to that is of course good: we live in a society where we are governed and policed by consent.Chris152":366srpol said:Yep, what the Bills don't need is rather vague and contradictory advice. What they need are clear instructions backed up by the force of law.
What needs to make a comeback is something that we seem to have abandoned i.e. social pressure. In Bill's case it would involve everybody in the neighbourhood telling him that the party is over and the guests have to go home. We have developed, probably since the 60s, a culture whereby you do your own thing and "nobody ain't gonna tell me nuffink". Everybody's got rights but nobody's got obligations and because the police have effectively been neutered (what would happen to a copper these days who would give a child the traditional "clip round the earhole"? The answer is simple: no backup from parents or schools and probably disciplinary action.), it is increasingly difficult for them to react quickly and snuff anti-social behaviour out on the spot.
What Bill was doing is almost the definition of anti-social behaviour. The weird thing is that he's probably a nice, civilised bloke: he's forgotten his social obligations or probably more to the point, he is enough of a selfish individualist to resent himself conforming to them.
The very bottom line is the concept of consideration for others. In the case of this virus that does not mean keeping the music down at your garden party for fear of annoying the neighbours but not having the party at all for fear of taking out half the neighbourhood.
If I were bm101, I'd consider printing off my post about Bill and all related replies and showing them to him in a kind and friendly way so that he doesn't get too embarrassed.
Chris152":1fbntne5 said:Yep, all that's failing so we need laws enforced to control the situation.Andy Kev.":1fbntne5 said:I agree but the practical side is that it is unlikely that there is enough of the law to go around. The background to that is of course good: we live in a society where we are governed and policed by consent.
What needs to make a comeback is something that we seem to have abandoned i.e. social pressure. In Bill's case it would involve everybody in the neighbourhood telling him that the party is over and the guests have to go home. We have developed, probably since the 60s, a culture whereby you do your own thing and "nobody ain't gonna tell me nuffink". Everybody's got rights but nobody's got obligations and because the police have effectively been neutered (what would happen to a copper these days who would give a child the traditional "clip round the earhole"? The answer is simple: no backup from parents or schools and probably disciplinary action.), it is increasingly difficult for them to react quickly and snuff anti-social behaviour out on the spot.
What Bill was doing is almost the definition of anti-social behaviour. The weird thing is that he's probably a nice, civilised bloke: he's forgotten his social obligations or probably more to the point, he is enough of a selfish individualist to resent himself conforming to them.
The very bottom line is the concept of consideration for others. In the case of this virus that does not mean keeping the music down at your garden party for fear of annoying the neighbours but not having the party at all for fear of taking out half the neighbourhood.
If I were bm101, I'd consider printing off my post about Bill and all related replies and showing them to him in a kind and friendly way so that he doesn't get too embarrassed.
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