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In the week to 30 October, ONS says new daily infections in England stabilised at around 50,000.
All the stuff about mental health and delayed operations just underlines what I have been saying since this nonsense began.
So how many cases of longterm disability or early death, due to an entirely preventable disease, is acceptable?Can you name the one person in your immediate family you want to see hospitalised and disabled? And the one in your extended family you want to die from a COVID-related minor infection? If not, why mine?Endemic diseases do not go away by themselves. The first and most effective preventive measure against an airborne infection with a human vector is to prevent humans infecting each other. There is no magic in Australia or New Zealand, just very effective quarantine.You can probably quote a dozen places that got it wrong, for a dozen different reasons of compromise and incompetence. Far more useful to study those who got it right - they all used the same virus.
Why is South Korea and its excellent track and trace, medical provision and fastidious antipathogen psyche still experienceiNG cases?
Why did the first lockdown not work?
Quote from: PetrochemicalsWhy is South Korea and its excellent track and trace, medical provision and fastidious antipathogen psyche still experienceiNG cases?Because their last pandemic was around 2015, and it is still fresh in their memory.... and because their contact tracing system has access to the credit card records and phone records of patients and their contacts. I think that there would be a revolt if we tried that in my country! (At least this year - if aerial transmission of Ebola was possible, I think most people would be prepared to give up their credit card & phone details...)QuoteWhy did the first lockdown not work?You could argue that it did work, flattening the curve and bringing the number of new cases down.But unless you implement international quarantine, you will be continually introducing new cases throughout the country.And if people just get tired of masks and social distancing, cases will take off again, requiring a further lockdown.
Never before in the history of mankind has social distancing etc for pathogenic reasons been mandetory, it has always been on one's own initiative based on personal risk
Never before in the history of mankind has social distancing etc for pathogenic reasons been mandetory,
Official statistics to date:UK COVID cases: 17,500 per million population. Deaths: 730 per millionSweden COVID cases: 14,800 per million. Deaths: 600 per millionGiven that COVID arrived in Sweden a few months later that the UK, they really aren't doing particularly well, even by official statistics. You might make a better argument by finding a better comparator. TryNew Zealand cases: 400 per million Deaths 5 per millionIf you can find statistics for the consequent economic, health and welfare disaster in New Zealand, I'd be very interested.
doing anything else other than what Boris did is preferable.
Best call the WHO Alan, tell them it started in Britain as Sweden den had cases in March
What that actually say is doing anything else other than what Boris did is preferable.
.Indeed if you subtract the nursing home idiocy from the UK record, Sweden is doing extremely badly by comparison.
Never before in the history of mankind has social distancing etc for pathogenic reasons been mandatory, it has always been on one's own initiative based on personal risk
Quote from: PetrochemicalsNever before in the history of mankind has social distancing etc for pathogenic reasons been mandatory, it has always been on one's own initiative based on personal riskIn the Middle Ages, once a house was known to harbour the Black Death, I understand that those in authority marked the door, restricting movement in and out. That doesn't sound very voluntary to me...Ships arriving in Venice were forced into isolation for 30 (later 40) days - that wasn't voluntary. Infected citizens were exiled to an island in the lagoon- London had a nominated hospital for infected patients- Typhoid Mary in New York was exiled to an island in the harbour - Ships arriving in Sydney as recently as the 1900s were forced into quarantine if they carried smallpox or a number of other diseases.In the case of the Black Death, it was this voluntary social distancing that spread it faster.- Once this Plague arrived in a town, all the residents would get their belongings together, and move to another town- The rats (and their fleas and the bacterium) hitched a ride with the refugees to other towns, where it broke out too...- A lockdown and travel restrictions may have been more effective at slowing the spread.See: https://www.historyextra.com/period/medieval/plague-black-death-quarantine-history-how-stop-spread/Let's face it, restrictions have been enforced for more trivial reasons than public safety. Like: your social class, the color of your skin, or your religious or political beliefs... and it's still happening in many places today.
Quote from: alancalverd on 09/11/2020 19:33:32.Indeed if you subtract the nursing home idiocy from the UK record, Sweden is doing extremely badly by comparison.Citation needed.