Originally posted by Petrushka
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Coronavirus
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI've noticed no such problems here. Mask wearing is very good indeed in my town and you wouldn't get through the door in Waitrose without one. Social distancing also being observed very closely and this applies to all age groups, including children. Even teenagers are generously acknowledging their thanks when you give distance.
Not been up to Hexham for very many years. Had reason to visit a place called Prudhoe which isn't far away.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostOoo, Prudhoe. There's a place with mixed memories for me (and others in the Scratch Orchestra). An administrator for Northern Arts had suggested we camp on derelict land in front of his house in Prudhoe. Unbeknownst to both him and us, the land had been bought by a local farmer who took umbrage at our having pitched our tents there without his permission. I was dispatched to try and assuage his ire and explain how we had come to camp there and seek his permission to stay. He would have none of it, despite making no use of it himself at the time. Fortunately, we were able to arrange a far more pleasant camping site by a babbling brook, further out from Newcastle. It made travel to the various venues on our tour somewhat more awkward but the site itself was idyllic, as can be seen in the late Hanne Boenisch's 1971 film of the tour, "Journey to the North Pole".
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostWelcome proof that 'they' don't know everything about us yet, in the form of an email from Greater Anglia inviting me to renew my Young Person's Railcard .... it's been many years since I qualified for one of those, and my last annual season ticket before I moved and started to work from home expired in 1986.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostPronounced Prudder? I’m sure anton can confirm but famous in the Archers for Ruth’s roots! No doubt where you camped would have provided the historical venue for the ‘Water of Tyne’
OG
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostMore like Prooda (where the "oo" is short as in book - outside of Lancashire of course!)
OG
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According to the Guardian today , cases have more than doubled in all but one local lockdown area.
Now, you might think that a policy failing so badly might need to be changed or scrapped , but no, apparently we need just more local lockdowns according to the experts they quote..........I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostAccording to the Guardian today , cases have more than doubled in all but one local lockdown area.
Now, you might think that a policy failing so badly might need to be changed or scrappedIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBut we don't know what would have happened without the lockdowns. Nobody seems sure what the right policies are, and no one can predict what will happen if the policy is just to reopen and let people carry on much as usual (while wearing masks, of course, Stanley, in the knowledge that there is, in fact, no firm evidence that this does result in deaths).I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostJust asking the question FF, just asking the question......( not that I did in fact......)It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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We in Derry/Strabane have just achieved the honour of having the highest number of cases in Northern Ireland. We have therefore been hit with quite stringent measures effective immediately. We share a border with a high incidence ROI county who have similar restrictions imposed earlier. I agree it is necessary and I will go along. I think I'm 'doing the right thing', but I keep getting a whiff of something like epicaricacy in my own musings and mullings over our situation.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostTravellers arriving in the UK from Poland, Turkey and three Caribbean islands will have to self-isolate for 14 days from 04:00 on Saturday.
Yet again, the logic (if any) utterly defeats me.
If it matters, it matters NOW, not suddenly at 04:01 on Saturday.
Define "matters". How much does it matter? What is the threshold of mattering?
What is the rate of increase of the risk arising from these locations? And what is the rate of increase on that rate of increase? And so on...
At what moment in time will the prevalence in these locations equal or exceed the prevalence here? Prior to that it literally doesn't matter at all. Indeed, for as long as prevalence in those locations is lower than it is here, numerically it makes sense to import as many people as you can from there as it will dilute the epidemic here. Even once the tipping point is reached, does it have much/any lasting effect if you don't pull up the drawbridge instantly?
There is a danger that focussing on inconsequential arbitrariness in the detail of measures falls into the same category as the people who were getting aerated about a few thousand people a day arriving into the UK by plane/boat/whatever at the height of the first wave when 100,000+ people a day were getting infected locally anyway. It's a numerical red herring.
Every one of these decisions entails a tradeoff of risks and costs - the balancing of which nobody seems to agree about at all. Someone has to call it, the only thing they can be sure of is that whatever inherently arbitrary point they decide to draw the line at will be deemed "wrong" by a large body of people, almost none of whom are in possession of the data or any detailed understanding of the epidemiological objective. Then, once the purveyors of science and reason have done the best they can, politicians get to stick their oar in, at which point you might as well take up stacking water anyway...
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My point, perhaps not clearly enough made, is that I think that once a decision has been made (such as to impose quarantine on certain returning travellers) it should be imposed immediately, rather than announced as coming into effect at some future date, causing chaos and a scramble to return early to avoid the restrictions.
I go back to my example of shop opening hours and restrictions on purchases in Italy: imposed overnight. There was no panic buying.
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