Phil Pascoe
Established Member
I feel rather sorry for Boris and co. - damned if they do, damned if they don't.
MusicMan":38tgptch said:I have too much to do, too, but I don't see myself achieving much if I die from the virus (high risk group here too). I admire your willingness to take one for the team, though.
We can't get rid of the virus before a year (vaccine development) or a few months (antiviral drug testing). We don't know positively if the herd immunity idea will work, but I think that actually it is our only chance. It can probably be delayed by the measures being introduced, and not overwhelming the NHS is required for us to have that chance. If we go about our normal lives, a lot of the most vulnerable will catch it and die and clog up the ICUs. The less vulnerable will contribute to the immunity pool without suffering many symptoms. If the vulnerable are isolated till the peak is passed (which is when herd immunity is a maximum) then we can mingle again with little risk (and with a health service that can cope again.
In case you think that I am supporting Boris and Co I think he and his gang are total twits. But the Chief Medical Officer and the Chief Scientific Adviser and their staffs are top-notch.
MusicMan":3rjsq8zy said:.... If we go about our normal lives, a lot of the most vulnerable will catch it and die and clog up the ICUs. ....
Chris152":2tdujlsx said:'In an open letter, a group of 229 scientists from UK universities say the government's current approach will put the NHS under additional stress and "risk many more lives than necessary".
The signatories also criticised comments made by Sir Patrick Vallance, the government's chief scientific adviser, about managing the spread of the infection to make the population immune.'
and
'In a separate letter to the government, more than 200 behavioural scientists have questioned the government's argument that starting tougher measures too soon would lead to people not sticking to them just at the point that the epidemic is at its height.'
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-51892402
Our Pm's more like a Chamberlain seeking appeasement than a Churchill taking the fight to the enemy. Discuss.
Now that one makes perfect sense to me. You can't really store fresh bread for very long but the flour to make your own has a much longer shelf life. To me it is a more sensible item to stock up on if you are planning on staying at home for a while (by choice or otherwise).Andy Kev.":9buou7v2 said:The really baffling one is flour for baking bread.
I imagine the concern is not so much picking up the virus from the bread but picking it up from the people you encounter at the bakery or while traveling there.Apparently, people are scared of picking up the bug when they go to the bakery. I don't get that because you see them bringing out the trays of hot rolls which are tipped into the baskets/under the counter glass. Then the ladies at the counter put on gloves to pop them in paper bags, so they never get handled.
phil.p":35k9euxc said:I feel rather sorry for Boris and co. - damned if they do, damned if they don't.
Well, that saves a lot of thinking, doesn't it? And if tens of thousands more people die than would have been necessary had we taken a different course, that's just the way it is - ours (and the scientific community at large) not to reason why, or to try to change the course being currently taken?Andy Kev.":d88brmi7 said:Time will tell if the govt's course of action is optimal or not. The important thing is to get behind it as by definition it is the only course of action we have.
Chris152":14ocn6ze said:Well, that saves a lot of thinking, doesn't it? And if tens of thousands more people die than would have been necessary had we taken a different course, that's just the way it is - ours (and the scientific community at large) not to reason why, or to try to change the course being currently taken?Andy Kev.":14ocn6ze said:Time will tell if the govt's course of action is optimal or not. The important thing is to get behind it as by definition it is the only course of action we have.
As for your conversion of 'scientists' to 'academics' and the suggestion of political intent, that might have more to do with your priorities/ hang-ups than theirs.
Can't be bothered communicating with you, Roger. Sorry.RogerS":12dbf0fu said:Not at all. We always get this from bloody academics. Firstly they are not in charge. They aren't the ones that the country elected to govern them. So they are just muddying the water.
Secondly, comparisons with Italy and Spain etc (they did it this way...so why don't we) is simplistic and ignores the social mores of the country compared to us. It ignores, for example, the fact that their attitude towards law enforcement is significantly different to ours. Don't forget that Spain was under a dictatorship for a very long time and that sort of thing sinks deeply into the national psyche.
We are just as likely to give two-fingers (unless you're a Goodie-Two-Shoes).
Chris152":1vzzgm2o said:Can't be bothered communicating with you, Roger. Sorry.RogerS":1vzzgm2o said:Not at all. We always get this from bloody academics. Firstly they are not in charge. They aren't the ones that the country elected to govern them. So they are just muddying the water.
Secondly, comparisons with Italy and Spain etc (they did it this way...so why don't we) is simplistic and ignores the social mores of the country compared to us. It ignores, for example, the fact that their attitude towards law enforcement is significantly different to ours. Don't forget that Spain was under a dictatorship for a very long time and that sort of thing sinks deeply into the national psyche.
We are just as likely to give two-fingers (unless you're a Goodie-Two-Shoes).
ScaredyCat":1ojpylee said:Andy Kev.":1ojpylee said:Apparently, people are scared of picking up the bug when they go to the bakery. I don't get that because you see them bringing out the trays of hot rolls which are tipped into the baskets/under the counter glass. Then the ladies at the counter put on gloves to pop them in paper bags, so they never get handled
Places like Morrisons/Sainsbury's allow you to 'pick and mix' from open containers.
Even if there were no virus, I'd never use them but some people might just consider it safer. When I make bread, typically it's got 500g of flour in it and the results are eaten within a day. 10 bags of flour doesn't sound a lot if you're not going back to a supermarket any time soon.
.
I'm not suggesting that people stop thinking or debating. It is however, a fact that this is a very rapidly spreading virus and therefore one course of action needs (needed) to be extremely quickly selected and implemented. Given that there is a fair range of options, the govt. acting on the advice of its scientific advisors, could do no more than weigh up the options and choose one.Chris152":2mde2goh said:Well, that saves a lot of thinking, doesn't it? And if tens of thousands more people die than would have been necessary had we taken a different course, that's just the way it is - ours (and the scientific community at large) not to reason why, or to try to change the course being currently taken?Andy Kev.":2mde2goh said:Time will tell if the govt's course of action is optimal or not. The important thing is to get behind it as by definition it is the only course of action we have.
As for your conversion of 'scientists' to 'academics' and the suggestion of political intent, that might have more to do with your priorities/ hang-ups than theirs.
The following institutions in Greece will remain closed from 14 March to 27 March:
1. Restaurants, catering businesses, bars, nightclubs, coffeeplaces, cafes, cafeterias, kafeneia and similar establishments. Businesses that offer delivery and take-away services are exempted. Similarly, bars, restaurants and cafes located in hotels, are allowed to serve their customers who are staying there, as long as they take measures to avoid overcrowding.
2. Theatres, cinemas and similar businesses where performances are held.
3. All libraries in the country, public or private.
4. Museums, historical and archaeological sites and buildings, and similar visitor attractions.
5. Private gambling businesses (casinos, card clubs, lottery businesses). People selling lottery tickets on the street are exempted, as are online gambling websites.
6. Gyms and similar facilities. Athletes preparing for the Olympic Games are exempted.
7. Fun fairs, flea markets and commercial exhibitions. Outdoors recreational spaces and public exercise spaces will remain open.
8. Amusement arcades and any other space offering similar entairtainment.
9. Hair salons, barbers, beauty salons, and similar places, such as massage studios.
10. Tattoo and piercing studios.
11. Personal escort services.
12. Shopping malls, large outlets, shops operating with a “shop-in-a-shop” policy.
Any of these businesses are allowed to operate without the presence of public.
At all points of service, every measure will be taken so that the maximum number of people in a queue is 5.
I suppose I could challenge you to prove the assertion in your last sentence and I also suppose that you wouldn't be able to.Marineboy":34xoj1zv said:phil.p":34xoj1zv said:I feel rather sorry for Boris and co. - damned if they do, damned if they don't.
Really? Quite apart from the fact that most experts (including the previous chief medical officer) disagree with the government approach, his and his party’s blind doctrinal approach to Brexit means that we have left those EU bodies which coordinate research into a vaccine and its subsequent procurement. Which means that we’ll get it after the rest of Europe and at a higher cost.
Andy Kev.":1ko9mtfi said:I suppose I could challenge you to prove the assertion in your last sentence and I also suppose that you wouldn't be able to.Marineboy":1ko9mtfi said:phil.p":1ko9mtfi said:I feel rather sorry for Boris and co. - damned if they do, damned if they don't.
Really? Quite apart from the fact that most experts (including the previous chief medical officer) disagree with the government approach, his and his party’s blind doctrinal approach to Brexit means that we have left those EU bodies which coordinate research into a vaccine and its subsequent procurement. Which means that we’ll get it after the rest of Europe and at a higher cost.
You do not know in which country and indeed on which continent a vaccine will be first developed. Scientific knowledge is promulgated on paper these days or even more quickly on this internet thingy. The point about scientific knowledge is that it can be replicated. I suggest that a far more likely scenario is that once the method of producing a vaccine has been made known, its manufacture will be taken up in any country which is technically capable thereof.
You're indulging in the kind of politicisation of a technical issue which I alluded to in other posts. You also seem to be doing it from a position of little knowledge of biological sciences. (BTW, I'm no expert but I do have a degree in Biology.)
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