My friend is currently in Liverpool and said you’d never know there was a pandemic there
Wasn't someone asking how China got it under control while other countries were struggling? This should explain it.
Update on case loads for the last 7 days, NI over double than England. East Mids increases all concentrated around Nottingham:
Yep. A Uni halls covid petri dish has been created.Anyone else think sending students back to uni for primarily financial reasons rather than just covering uni costs directly was one of the governments worst decisions, maybe only behind the care home shambles?
That’s good.My friend is currently in Liverpool and said you’d never know there was a pandemic there
Anyone else think sending students back to uni for primarily financial reasons rather than just covering uni costs directly was one of the governments worst decisions, maybe only behind the care home shambles?
Students have still been made to pay landlords or the unis for their accommodation so they’re hardly going to go and live in the accommodation and just stay in the house - plus most of the learning is online now.Yep. A Uni halls covid petri dish has been created.
Major mistake to add to the ridiculously long list of mistakes our government have made.
This is why we have both the highest number of deaths in Europe and the biggest shrinkage of our economy. They have absolutely ballsed it up.
Don't they go home over the weekends? In Belgium most of them do, so it eventually gets to the more vulnerable population anyway. Keeping them in school/unis for the sake of it because "we wouldn't know where they'd hang out otherwise" (what they're basically doing here) is a risky strategy imo, especially if you don't have the numbers to back up that there aren't many infections in school environments.What do you think university students would have been doing if the universities were closed? I’d say there’s a lot of student aged people in that Liverpool street scene. You could certainly argue that an upside of the university halls drama is that they’re not sharing households with older, more vulnerable relative.
What do you think university students would have been doing if the universities were closed? I’d say there’s a lot of student aged people in that Liverpool street scene. You could certainly argue that an upside of the university halls drama is that they’re not sharing households with older, more vulnerable relative.
Don't they go home over the weekends? In Belgium most of them do, so it eventually gets to the more vulnerable population anyway. Keeping them in school/unis for the sake of it because "we wouldn't know where they'd hang out otherwise" (what they're basically doing here) is a risky strategy imo, especially if you don't have the numbers to back up that there aren't many infections in school environments.
I think creating a bubble where low risk people can choose to risk infection while partying with other low risk people is a nice idea in some aspects (with obvious moral questions), but it's more theory than reality. I went to Liverpool uni and a significant chunk were relatively local and living at home or going home frequently, and it's a very small city so stepping out of that bubble into the cafes, pubs, shops and all the rest with the same older, more vulnerable people is just a short walk away for most students. Hence the hospitalisations now.
There are a lot more students partying now than there were when the vast majority went back to family homes over the summer. That might only have ever worked temporarily and they might have revolted at the idea of no uni anyway, but this doesn't seem like a better alternative at this stage.
New lockdown in NI. Apparently they came up with it in the middle of the night.
I wouldn't mind new restrictions if I didn't know that horrible lot in Belfast are making it up as they go along. They don't even seem to have a vague hint of a long term plan
so what does one do about 'them'?I am in my 40s, I have a house and a car and a job. I have 20 years experience which means I am valuable to the workforce. I have some money in the bank. Not millions but enough to survive on for a year if I lost my job.
There are many people like me, and we are the ones doing the right thing by working from home, limiting contacts with people to the bare minimum. Making sarcrafices.
These idiots that are out partying are all young people. They have feck all work experience. They have nothing behind them and most will have no money. They fail to realise that their actions could be so bad for the economy in the medium term. If the economy tanks even more because Covid overwhelms UK then what? What are all these young people going to do for a job and a mortgage. fecking idiots. They are destroying their own futures and the state will have to look after them with handouts. Brainless.
to demonstrate his shock/horrorWhy would he use an emoji?
Good if you like your hospitals full to the brim with dying peopleThat’s good.
so what does one do about 'them'?
No cos the trains are so fecking expensive. I'm off to Hull in a couple of weeks and the train (from London) was £70 despite booking in advance.Don't they go home over the weekends? In Belgium most of them do, so it eventually gets to the more vulnerable population anyway. Keeping them in school/unis for the sake of it because "we wouldn't know where they'd hang out otherwise" (what they're basically doing here) is a risky strategy imo, especially if you don't have the numbers to back up that there aren't many infections in school environments.
Which is funny because the Sinners down south are fecking experts at criticising other people’s plans.
A hint of good news on this, The PM has asked for an urgent review of this and has taken on the case herself. Fingers crossed the family get the right outcome.Jesus that’s a tragic story. Hard to understand why they can’t let them in. Even if they’re unsure about quarantine at sea, they could let them anchor up offshore, with enough food for a couple of weeks to be 110% sure they won’t bring the virus with them.
I still look back to the Cummings incident as a major reason why a lot of people aren't taking lockdowns etc as seriously as they perhaps would have if instead of excusing Cummings publicly, he was made an example of by our PM.
Up until that point, personally i had respect for the guidelines and for Boris. Now i dont really care. I will still do as i am told as i am compliant but i can completely understand why people will crowd a beach, or go to a house party and so on. There is no consequence for this behavior.
I wonder what cost it would be for everyone to be tagged, like a convict. Curfews can then be monitored within the set parameters.
It wouldn't explain the same spikes being seen in Holland, Czech Republic, France, Belgium, Spain & Ireland etc though?
It's possibly good news to see the "curve" in terms of deaths across the same countries being so much shallower than in Spring though (excl. Czech Republic):
Czech Republic is just ahead of the curve (no pun intended) on cases and deaths for the other countries are sure to follow their current trend shortly.
Had no idea they were getting such a brutal second wave. I mainly remember the Czech Republic being held up as doing a fantastic job to crush the first wave (early widespread mask use etc) Wonder what’s gone wrong for them since?
Long term plan? As far as I can see the long term plan is to get a vaccine.New lockdown in NI. Apparently they came up with it in the middle of the night.
I wouldn't mind new restrictions if I didn't know that horrible lot in Belfast are making it up as they go along. They don't even seem to have a vague hint of a long term plan
I wonder if a mixture of complacency and also fatigue i hurting lots of places. Its been a stressful year all over on many different fronts.Czech Republic is just ahead of the curve (no pun intended) on cases and deaths for the other countries are sure to follow their current trend shortly.
Had no idea they were getting such a brutal second wave. I mainly remember the Czech Republic being held up as doing a fantastic job to crush the first wave (early widespread mask use etc) Wonder what’s gone wrong for them since?
Whenever I’ve been to Blackpool, it’s been full of Scots. They love it.Hearing Sturgeon tell Scots to stop travelling to Blackpool is one of the oddest stories of the week
Why is that even a thing? No wonder they want to leave the UK if that's their experience.
I'm not a virologist but surely there comes a time when we know we are losing the battle to find a vaccine. When is that?
Czech Republic is just ahead of the curve (no pun intended) on cases and deaths for the other countries are sure to follow their current trend shortly.
Had no idea they were getting such a brutal second wave. I mainly remember the Czech Republic being held up as doing a fantastic job to crush the first wave (early widespread mask use etc) Wonder what’s gone wrong for them since?
If seven days is a long time in politics, how long is seven months in a pandemic? To most here, it feels like an age, writes Rob Cameron, in Prague.
Back in March, the Czech Republic was feted for its rapid response to Covid, shutting its borders and swiftly locking down most of the economy. People were told to stay at home where possible. Masks were made compulsory indoors and out. Most respected the measures with good grace and humour.
By the end of June, an infamous dinner party was held on Prague's Charles Bridge to celebrate the end of "this difficult period of the coronavirus crisis" (although not to declare the virus itself vanquished, as is sometimes wrongly claimed). At that time, the country of 10.7 million was seeing 150 cases a day and had recorded 347 deaths in just over three months.
The sun shone. Holidays were booked. Masks and other restrictions were gleefully abandoned.
Today, the Czech Republic has both the highest and the fastest-growing daily number of new cases in Europe, with figures almost double those in the UK. The ratio of positive cases to tests stands at 30% - a number that terrifies epidemiologists.
The total death toll now stands at more than 800, but will almost certainly pass 1,000 by next week.
Officials warn the country's hospitals could soon become overwhelmed.
The track-and-trace system has struggled to keep up. Authorities are taking days - sometimes 14 - to contact people who might have come into contact with an infected person. Its helplines are permanently engaged.
"A difficult period lies ahead of us. We will need all hands on deck," Health Minister Roman Prymula, himself an epidemiologist, told a televised news briefing. Standing next to him on the podium was Prime Minister Andrej Babis, the man whom many Czechs blame for the current crisis. It was Mr Babis - it is widely believed - who vetoed a plan to re-introduce regulations on masks. In the end, the numbers began their inexorable climb to their current peak, and new measures are being introduced anyway.
They were too little, too late.
The PM has warned that a new lockdown cannot be ruled out and urged people to stay at home for the weekend.
Czechs, meanwhile, are trying to grapple with the myriad new rules and regulations coming into force on Monday. Pubs, restaurants and bars will only be able to seat a maximum of four people at one table, and must close at 20:00. Wi-fi will be switched off in shopping centres to put off young people from gathering. Only groups of two will be able to enter shops or shopping centres together, and children aged 12-15 will take turns doing online teaching on a class-by-class basis, to keep classes from mixing in schools.
Some scientists say the Czech numbers in March were so low it was wrong even to call it an epidemic. That, sadly, is no longer the case.
So would you fine people that don`t have a mobile phone or have an old one that doesn`t support the app ?Long term plan? As far as I can see the long term plan is to get a vaccine.
However.
It is now being openly discussed that we may never find a vaccine. They didn't find a vaccine for SARS and it only died out because it mutated and became less dangerous. It took years. The Spanish flu after WW1 did the same.
It may be we are heading towards a scenario where the truth of the matter is just too unpalatable. I'm getting reports that we may even be in this for 5 years or so. These theories are not out of the question.
I'm not a virologist but surely there comes a time when we know we are losing the battle to find a vaccine. When is that? How long do the government wait until they say the search could take longer than we thought and we need to enforce track and trace to close the virus down. As far as I know only about 10% of the population have had the virus so potentially we could be looking at 400,000 deaths if this continues untracked.
We may be getting close to a time when the government will have to start enforcing stricter rules. We would need a new Covid law enforcement system. Maybe get the army on the streets. The scenes in Liverpool last night were the last straw for me. I'm just about ready to say lets get tough on this. People without the app immediately get fined as do people who don't use or enable its use. Spot fines for not wearing a mask etc.
My dad would be fecked - he has an old Nokia - it does phone calls and texts, that’s all he needs it for.So would you fine people that don`t have a mobile phone or have an old one that doesn`t support the app ?
Czech Republic is just ahead of the curve (no pun intended) on cases and deaths for the other countries are sure to follow their current trend shortly.
Had no idea they were getting such a brutal second wave. I mainly remember the Czech Republic being held up as doing a fantastic job to crush the first wave (early widespread mask use etc) Wonder what’s gone wrong for them since?
I know a few people like that.My dad would be fecked - he has an old Nokia - it does phone calls and texts, that’s all he needs it for.
If I book a Eurostar ticket to go to Amsterdam, will anyone stop me? Will I be interrogated on how 'essential' my travel is?
Yeah I was taken aback when I read this yesterday. Good but grim summary.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-54482905
I think the aspect of (mis)fortune is downplayed way too much when talking about the "winners and losers" in this thing. With 80% not transmitting the virus while a small proportion of super spreaders drive most of it, all you need is a couple of incidents in short succession and things start to take off. There are obviously exceptional examples in Southeast and East Asia which warrant some deeper analysis of cultural and behavioural norms in dealing with crises going forward, but I don't think there's a while lot separating the rest.
The governments who look embarrassing are the ones who have to deal with the most serious outbreaks and get overwhelmed. I think we've made too big an assumption about what causes the other a lot of the time. The Czech government were praised for being proactive, then criticised for being too authoritarian and overreaching, now they're being criticised for being buffoons. Theoretically they could all be true in different contexts but it seems unlikely.