Coronavirus

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  • ardcarp
    Late member
    • Nov 2010
    • 11102

    There was recently an EXCELLENT programme on BBC World Serivice in their 'Forum' series.
    Three experts* (contributing from different countries) talked mainly about the effects of the Spanish Flu 1918 pandemic, but compared it with our own Covid crisis.



    An interesting fact, en passant, was that Lenin introduced the first ever free national health service!

    * One, a Norwegian, chaired last years WHO committee which warned of pandemics.

    Comment

    • MrGongGong
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 18357

      Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
      If the choice is between repeated national lockdowns, or targetted local measures, isn’t checking what is in place for wherever we travel, and checking where the borders are , a reasonable price to pay ?
      The senior members of the Tory party in here would be a "reasonable" price to pay IMV
      It will make the crops grow and heal the nation. The "science" is as credible as much of what comes out of Whitehall (and it's part of our long tradition of blood sacrifice). But who is to be Lord Summerisle ?



      and i'm sure everyone in here knows the song

      Comment

      • Count Boso

        Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
        Well at least 'Stay alert' is grammatically correct, unlike 'Stay home'.
        Idioms don't have to be grammatical, do they? 'Go home'? But in both cases 'home' is an adverb meaning to or in your home.

        As for Stay Alert' - I see Nicola Sturgeon says she'll stick with #StayHome/SaveLives for Scotland - and England may do as it pleases.

        Comment

        • oddoneout
          Full Member
          • Nov 2015
          • 9150

          As far as I can see whatever the PM chooses to say this evening has no significance in terms of what the public will do. The 'Stay(at) Home' message has gone is what people will have seen from the media this morning and that is what will be acted on or indeed has already been, judging by what I saw in my neck of the woods yesterday.
          It's difficult to know what is incompetence and what is deliberate.

          Comment

          • Eine Alpensinfonie
            Host
            • Nov 2010
            • 20570

            Originally posted by Count Boso View Post
            Idioms don't have to be grammatical, do they? 'Go home'? But in both cases 'home' is an adverb meaning to or in your home.

            As for Stay Alert' - I see Nicola Sturgeon says she'll stick with #StayHome/SaveLives for Scotland - and England may do as it pleases.
            Channel 4 has changed 'Stay Home' to StayAtHome.

            Comment

            • MrGongGong
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 18357

              Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
              It's difficult to know what is incompetence and what is deliberate.
              Getting drunk and shagging a work colleague = incompetence
              Walking out on your wife after she was diagnosed with cancer = deliberate
              Going to court to try and prevent the truth about your behaviour coming out and taking responsibility for your recklessness = deliberate

              Is this what you are referring to ?


              One could add (for balance)

              Deliberately sticking to a party leader who has no credibility and refuses to say what he thinks about the most important issue of the day = incompetence (and probably deliberate as well)

              Ahh well
              The rain has come which will help the allotment
              Last edited by MrGongGong; 10-05-20, 11:33.

              Comment

              • Dave2002
                Full Member
                • Dec 2010
                • 18009

                Originally posted by Count Boso View Post
                In any case, I'm not sure that the figures for countries' deaths v population are on their own any more meaningful than the raw 'number of deaths' on their own. Population distribution and density, percentage urban population, median age, geography etc all have to be factored in when considering the number of deaths. The UK being an island should theoretically be able to contain a spreading outbreak more easily than contiguous countries, or places like N. Korea where guards have been given orders to shoot anyone seen attempting to cross the border into the country.
                Yes - up to a point. There is no real point in doing international comparisons if we are not going to either benefit from them, or pass on our findings to other countries. The graph which is usually shown "demonstrates" that the USA is in a worse situation than almost any other country that we know about - but if it's done with a proportionate scale, then the rankings change quite considerably. That is useful in so far as it might make us think about what the different countries have done, which gives them these different outcomes. It's not a competition that any country really wants to win.

                Sometimes one wonders whether the politicians really want to concern themselves with trying to solve and overcome the problems, or merely to present a view and deflect criticism to others.

                Unfortunately it does seem to be the case that some sections of the UK population will be more susceptible to this disease, and have a much greater risk of dying or bcoming seriously ill. Up to now, even with the somewhat flawed messaging, and uncertain (mostly because of newness) science, the risks have been reduced. Is it very selfish and undesirable for older and vulnerable people to curb the activities of younger people who may already have had CV-19 and feel that they are immune from going out and "having fun", because it may significantly increase their own personal chances of affliction? Or is it very selfish of the younger people who act in such ways that other people really are going to suffer - and probably in the fairly near short term.

                Note that although many older people are more susceptible, that younger people have been ill, and died, and now we hear that even a young baby died of this disease.

                The herd immunity strategy would be OK if it were going to work, but all the evidence to date is that despite the virus being a nasty disease, and easily transmissable, that there aren't enough cases for such immunity to build up in a short time, and its lethal nature seems not to have abated. Even if there are 20,000 new cases per day (estimated and quoted somewhere recently), if that rate is fairly constant, it would take 50 days for a million people to be infected, and thus around 3500 days for a population of nearly 70 million people to have been exposed once each.That's around 9-10 years. Herd immunity wouldn't build up until a significant proportion of the population had experienced the disease - or that's my understanding anyway.

                Of course, relaxing all measures could get the new cases per day up in a short time, but the health service would be swamped very quickly, and that would really not be desirable at all, IMO.

                Comment

                • Padraig
                  Full Member
                  • Feb 2013
                  • 4231

                  Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
                  Channel 4 has changed 'Stay Home' to StayAtHome.
                  Slogan Alert!

                  Comment

                  • ardcarp
                    Late member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 11102

                    Stay (at) home.
                    Play (the) piano.

                    Why am I reminded of this?

                    One of the most thrilling grammar lessons of all time, tied in with an incredible chase scene, remarkably improved by a special set of presets of 60fps conve...
                    Last edited by ardcarp; 10-05-20, 10:58.

                    Comment

                    • Count Boso

                      Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick [he who … ] has defended the government's change in messaging from "stay at home" to "stay alert" ahead of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's lockdown speech later.

                      So what does "Stay Alert mean, Mr J? "Stay alert will mean stay alert by staying home as much as possible."

                      Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland keep the "stay at home" slogan as Labour warns the switch could be confusing.


                      So, what then is the difference between "Stay alert" and "Stay home"? While at home, do not doze off?

                      Comment

                      • Petrushka
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 12242

                        Originally posted by Count Boso View Post
                        Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick [he who … ] has defended the government's change in messaging from "stay at home" to "stay alert" ahead of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's lockdown speech later.

                        So what does "Stay Alert mean, Mr J? "Stay alert will mean stay alert by staying home as much as possible."

                        Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland keep the "stay at home" slogan as Labour warns the switch could be confusing.


                        So, what then is the difference between "Stay alert" and "Stay home"? While at home, do not doze off?
                        When the inevitable second wave comes the Government can blame 'the will of the people' instead of their own failings. Shifting the blame.

                        What is clear, however, is that somehow before too long there is going to have to be a trade off between the economy and public health otherwise the economy will face complete collapse.. Judging that moment will be a very difficult decision and we need a more competent person than Johnson to make it. If only Johnson had called an enforceable lockdown in early March we could well have been out of it by now and saved thousands of unnecessary deaths.
                        "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

                        Comment

                        • oddoneout
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2015
                          • 9150

                          Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
                          Getting drunk and shagging a work colleague = incompetence
                          Walking out on your wife after she was diagnosed with cancer = deliberate
                          Going to court to try and prevent the truth about your behaviour coming out and taking responsibility for your recklessness = deliberate

                          Is this what you are referring to ?


                          One could add (for balance)

                          Deliberately sticking to a party leader who has no credibility and refuses to say what he thinks about the most important issue of the day = incompetence (and probably deliberate as well)

                          Ahh well
                          The rain has come which will help the allotment
                          Well if there was a single postholder PM then the answer would come down on the side of incompetence, but considering there appear to be two people in the role then an element of malice aforethought creeps in as far as I'm concerned.

                          Comment

                          • johnb
                            Full Member
                            • Mar 2007
                            • 2903

                            Can posters please suggest some aspect of coronavirus that the government has handled correctly. (The NHS doesn't really count.)

                            This is a genuine request.

                            Please.

                            Comment

                            • LMcD
                              Full Member
                              • Sep 2017
                              • 8416

                              'Stay alert' is anagram of 'stale tray' - something to look out for on the occasion of your first post-crisis meal in a fast-food outlet.
                              I suppose you could congratulate the government on not following the example of certain American (N and S) presidents, but that's about it, I would say.
                              Last edited by LMcD; 10-05-20, 15:16.

                              Comment

                              • Dave2002
                                Full Member
                                • Dec 2010
                                • 18009

                                Now we are hearing that the infection rates in Germany are rising - again - so this is evidence that things aren't going to be easy.

                                I suppose HMG will try its "own" experiment, since it probably won't believe that. Actually that's perhaps a bit unfair - maybe it'll really suggest that we shouldn't just all rush out. We'll have to wait and see I suppose.

                                Comment

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