|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 10:58:12 GMT
Everything else is on you. You decide to go out, you decide the risk and mitigate with mask and gloves and keeping your distance, or you just take your chances, it's all on you. You decide to stay in, you end up skint, that's also on you. Your choice in a libertarian free market. Of course it is, that is how any society with an economy (in other words any society at all) works,to a greater or lesser degree. It's called being human and having freedom. You're sounding a bit as if you want to live in a dictatorship where we are all told where to go and what to do every minute of every day. And your post ignores the methods of financial help given to those who, for better or worse, cannot work, or at present shop or be out at all. But that doesn't sit well with the damning indictment of modern society I suppose, never mind that in that aspect, though far from perfect, it is rather better than it was at many points in the past.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 11:03:33 GMT
How many of us can remember the new slogan from the Government? How many of us need a slogan? This is a disease, not some magical threat the like of which no human has ever known. We all know what diseases are and how they spread and this disease, severe though it may be, is one of a class of diseases we all know very well. Who among us can honestly claim they've never caught a cold or flu or be unaware of how they spread? I genuinely don't understand how people can look at what should be an easily comprehensible situation and not know what behaviour is and is not safe. I just don't get it. Nobody should find this confusing. And I don't understand how people on this forum can get to whatever age they are and still not know how diseases spread. Every single one of us should be able to figure out what to do. There are no excuses. Perhaps someone could explain to me how what the government says somehow negates all your experience of illness and all your understanding of disease and leaves you helpless to know how you should behave now, because I'm completely baffled.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 11:14:29 GMT
Nobody is writing off those deaths, and it's deeply offensive that you'd imply that I am. That was nought to nuclear, I wasn't talking directly about you. I was talking about me, LondonPostie, you, everyone who posts on here. Everyone that has been in the tales of 'lockdown ended' over the last few weeks and days posted on here and everywhere else. We went into lockdown two weeks too late and have come out (about) four weeks too early. Ah, sorry. I misunderstood. I'd been up since about 03:30 and wasn't at my best. I agree we went into lockdown too late. I was saying so at the time, while the politicians were doing what they always do with scientific evidence and picking the end of the error bars that suits them and acting like that's the reality. But I don't think we've left lockdown too early because we haven't actually left it yet. It's been eased, not ended. Where I am you'd never know that anything has changed: people are still queueing two metres apart at the supermarket and still standing back to let others pass, the car park where I leave my car at home is still as empty all day as it usually is first thing on a Sunday morning, there's hardly any traffic around, and most shops are still shut. If I hadn't watched the news or come here I'd never have known there was any difference. Yes, loads of idiots are flocking to crowded beaches, but let's not forget they were doing that every hot weekend. Idiots gonna idiot, and judging the behaviour of the entire population by what happens on a sunny beach is like doing a survey of people's hobbies on the top of Ben Nevis and concluding that the most popular leisure activity is mountain climbing.
|
|
754 posts
|
Post by Latecomer on Jun 1, 2020 11:29:16 GMT
How many of us can remember the new slogan from the Government? How many of us need a slogan? This is a disease, not some magical threat the like of which no human has ever known. We all know what diseases are and how they spread and this disease, severe though it may be, is one of a class of diseases we all know very well. Who among us can honestly claim they've never caught a cold or flu or be unaware of how they spread? I genuinely don't understand how people can look at what should be an easily comprehensible situation and not know what behaviour is and is not safe. I just don't get it. Nobody should find this confusing. And I don't understand how people on this forum can get to whatever age they are and still not know how diseases spread. Every single one of us should be able to figure out what to do. There are no excuses. Perhaps someone could explain to me how what the government says somehow negates all your experience of illness and all your understanding of disease and leaves you helpless to know how you should behave now, because I'm completely baffled. Your middle paragraph is precisely why we need a slogan. Clunk, click with every trip. Look left, look right, look left again. It’s called public health. Their first slogan Stay home. Protect the NHS. Save lives was good. It is complicated and half the problem is we cannot totally eliminate risk but the messaging recently has been terrible. For example, my work has been talking about people returning to work, when 95% of their work can be done from home. They have even dug out old jobs, that haven’t been done for the last 10 years and can ONLY be done in the office to “keep them busy until we open again”. Managers have heard “can return to work” and not “must stay at home if possible” I do blame the Government. People need guidance from public health and have always done so. They need adverts on the TV...remember the Green Cross Code and that was just to teach people how to cross the road....
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 11:54:50 GMT
... I genuinely don't understand how people can look at what should be an easily comprehensible situation and not know what behaviour is and is not safe. I just don't get it. Nobody should find this confusing. And I don't understand how people on this forum can get to whatever age they are and still not know how diseases spread. Every single one of us should be able to figure out what to do. There are no excuses. ... Your middle paragraph is precisely why we need a slogan. Clunk, click with every trip. Look left, look right, look left again. It’s called public health. Their first slogan Stay home. Protect the NHS. Save lives was good. It is complicated and half the problem is we cannot totally eliminate risk but the messaging recently has been terrible. For example, my work has been talking about people returning to work, when 95% of their work can be done from home. They have even dug out old jobs, that haven’t been done for the last 10 years and can ONLY be done in the office to “keep them busy until we open again”. Managers have heard “can return to work” and not “must stay at home if possible” I do blame the Government. People need guidance from public health and have always done so. They need adverts on the TV...remember the Green Cross Code and that was just to teach people how to cross the road.... What sort of slogan would you (or anyone else) suggest, then? We can't remain in lockdown forever, and it would be ridiculous to force the entire country to follow the same rules as the most dangerous places on the assumption that everything must be completely safe before anything is permitted. There are some places where people can do things safely that would be dangerous elsewhere. (On the way home yesterday I saw a family sitting on the grass verge outside their house. Safe for them in a small village in the middle of nowhere; extremely inadvisable in a city.) At some point the government has to hand over responsibility for people's safety to the people themselves. Slogans like "clunk click every trip" work because they apply to everyone all the time. The "stay at home, protect the NHS, save lives" was appropriate because it applied to everyone: the government needed to get the whole country shut down at once. But they can't reopen the whole country at once. It necessarily has to be done in stages as the risk decreases, with high-risk areas having more severe restrictions for longer. In that context, how can there be one slogan for everyone?
|
|
2,339 posts
|
Post by theglenbucklaird on Jun 1, 2020 12:36:10 GMT
Your middle paragraph is precisely why we need a slogan. Clunk, click with every trip. Look left, look right, look left again. It’s called public health. Their first slogan Stay home. Protect the NHS. Save lives was good. It is complicated and half the problem is we cannot totally eliminate risk but the messaging recently has been terrible. For example, my work has been talking about people returning to work, when 95% of their work can be done from home. They have even dug out old jobs, that haven’t been done for the last 10 years and can ONLY be done in the office to “keep them busy until we open again”. Managers have heard “can return to work” and not “must stay at home if possible” I do blame the Government. People need guidance from public health and have always done so. They need adverts on the TV...remember the Green Cross Code and that was just to teach people how to cross the road.... What sort of slogan would you (or anyone else) suggest, then?We can't remain in lockdown forever, and it would be ridiculous to force the entire country to follow the same rules as the most dangerous places on the assumption that everything must be completely safe before anything is permitted. There are some places where people can do things safely that would be dangerous elsewhere. (On the way home yesterday I saw a family sitting on the grass verge outside their house. Safe for them in a small village in the middle of nowhere; extremely inadvisable in a city.) At some point the government has to hand over responsibility for people's safety to the people themselves. Slogans like "clunk click every trip" work because they apply to everyone all the time. The "stay at home, protect the NHS, save lives" was appropriate because it applied to everyone: the government needed to get the whole country shut down at once. But they can't reopen the whole country at once. It necessarily has to be done in stages as the risk decreases, with high-risk areas having more severe restrictions for longer. In that context, how can there be one slogan for everyone? I'll try and give it a go... Make up a £350m NHS pledge on a bus? Get sacked by The Times and British Government for lying? But make ridiculous rule interpretations that make you and Dom Cummings look a Tw*t just to save your personal svengali's neck which endangers the lives of tens of thousands of lives which you compound by bringing forward policy announcements to ease lockdown weeks too early to get your personal advisor's face off the main stream news.... Nah I couldn't do that
|
|
1,863 posts
|
Post by NeilVHughes on Jun 1, 2020 13:50:49 GMT
Another interesting intervention this time by the British Medical Journal (BMJ) Covid-19: Questions of conscience and duty for scientific advisers www.bmj.com/content/369/bmj.m2102
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 13:53:32 GMT
How many of us can remember the new slogan from the Government? How many of us need a slogan? This is a disease, not some magical threat the like of which no human has ever known. We all know what diseases are and how they spread and this disease, severe though it may be, is one of a class of diseases we all know very well. Who among us can honestly claim they've never caught a cold or flu or be unaware of how they spread? I genuinely don't understand how people can look at what should be an easily comprehensible situation and not know what behaviour is and is not safe. I just don't get it. Nobody should find this confusing. And I don't understand how people on this forum can get to whatever age they are and still not know how diseases spread. Every single one of us should be able to figure out what to do. There are no excuses. Perhaps someone could explain to me how what the government says somehow negates all your experience of illness and all your understanding of disease and leaves you helpless to know how you should behave now, because I'm completely baffled. Dude! Try a little empathy! U going on and on about people not understanding what you do understand isn’t a good look. We all have different life experiences, education etc etc. I understand ur frustrated because it is clear to you but evidently it isn’t clear to all. Just accept it
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Jun 1, 2020 13:59:24 GMT
Got a protest march under way. Came past about 45 mins ago - maybe 200 - winding through the estates and heading towards Brixton police station. Not too hard to keep distance on a march but things are likely to get intense later this afternoon.
All kinds of pent up emotions. Helicopter and sirens before 2.30 does not bode well.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 14:13:29 GMT
How many of us need a slogan? This is a disease, not some magical threat the like of which no human has ever known. We all know what diseases are and how they spread and this disease, severe though it may be, is one of a class of diseases we all know very well. Who among us can honestly claim they've never caught a cold or flu or be unaware of how they spread? I genuinely don't understand how people can look at what should be an easily comprehensible situation and not know what behaviour is and is not safe. I just don't get it. Nobody should find this confusing. And I don't understand how people on this forum can get to whatever age they are and still not know how diseases spread. Every single one of us should be able to figure out what to do. There are no excuses. Perhaps someone could explain to me how what the government says somehow negates all your experience of illness and all your understanding of disease and leaves you helpless to know how you should behave now, because I'm completely baffled. Dude! Try a little empathy! U going on and on about people not understanding what you do understand isn’t a good look. We all have different life experiences, education etc etc. I understand ur frustrated because it is clear to you but evidently it isn’t clear to all. Just accept it I'm genuinely weeping with frustration here. This is preposterous. Are you all really suggesting that the idea that a disease is something you can catch from other people is advanced scientific knowledge that ordinary people shouldn't be expected to know? The whole point I'm trying to get across is that this isn't something that anyone should struggle with. It's absolute bottom-end low-level knowledge like which end of a fork goes in your mouth. It's not a thing that should be a struggle for anyone. How can you seriously suggest otherwise? Three direct questions for all those who think I'm unreasonable to which I want actual answers, not evasion, because it's starting to look like many people here are just trolling. 1) Roughly how old were you when you first grasped the idea that diseases are caught from other people? 2) Roughly what percentage of adults in Britain is it reasonable to expect not to understand that diseases are caught from other people? 3) What level of education is required to understand that diseases are caught from other people? A levels? A degree? Or primary school?
|
|
1,863 posts
|
Post by NeilVHughes on Jun 1, 2020 14:17:36 GMT
One thing I hope is that people will now know diseases are caught from other people and react appropriately going forward. How often have we had colleagues who should’ve stayed at home coming into work and playing the hero card and the ones who don’t considered lightweights.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 14:32:16 GMT
Dude! Try a little empathy! U going on and on about people not understanding what you do understand isn’t a good look. We all have different life experiences, education etc etc. I understand ur frustrated because it is clear to you but evidently it isn’t clear to all. Just accept it I'm genuinely weeping with frustration here. This is preposterous. Are you all really suggesting that the idea that a disease is something you can catch from other people is advanced scientific knowledge that ordinary people shouldn't be expected to know? The whole point I'm trying to get across is that this isn't something that anyone should struggle with. It's absolute bottom-end low-level knowledge like which end of a fork goes in your mouth. It's not a thing that should be a struggle for anyone. How can you seriously suggest otherwise? Three direct questions for all those who think I'm unreasonable to which I want actual answers, not evasion, because it's starting to look like many people here are just trolling. 1) Roughly how old were you when you first grasped the idea that diseases are caught from other people? 2) Roughly what percentage of adults in Britain is it reasonable to expect not to understand that diseases are caught from other people? 3) What level of education is required to understand that diseases are caught from other people? A levels? A degree? Or primary school? Who knows buddy but you have been going on and on about it from at least 10th May (Stay Alert thread). That’s 3 weeks. At what point will u just accept it and move on?
|
|
|
Post by talkingheads on Jun 1, 2020 14:39:13 GMT
Finally got a reply to my now eight emails to my MP about Cummings. Came in the post, some copy and paste twaddle about it being 'regrettable' and how we 'must now concentrate on Coronavirus' AKA towing Boris' line of 'Move On'. Seen lots of posts on Twitter from various people having received the same letter. What a waste of resources, he could have stuck it in an email, never mind the fact it ignored almost all of the points I raised in my email. If he thinks I;m going to stop emailing he's got another thing coming!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 14:43:31 GMT
"Flatten the curve" seemed to resonate almost universally. It was a simple message that helped people understand the WHY behind the actions asked of us as citizens and the metric guiding public policy.
It took weeks (or months in some cases) for that goal to be achieved. But that message influenced and informed individual choices and behavior, as well as government policy.
I think some (many?) now feel we lack an equally compelling and useful message/metric as we move through multiple stages with different terms and conditions. Same thing happens with color-coded terror alerts.
I'm not saying a slogan is the answer. But lacking a compelling and unified message/metric, it is hardly surprising after sheltering in place for many weeks that things are turning into a bit of a freefall and confusion is present.
|
|
1,970 posts
|
Post by sf on Jun 1, 2020 14:47:13 GMT
I'm not saying a slogan is the answer. But lacking a compelling and unified message/metric, it is hardly surprising after sheltering in place for many weeks that things are turning into a bit of a freefall and confusion is present. Not only is it not surprising, it's entirely deliberate. As I said somewhere else, it's become clear that public safety is not this government's highest priority.
|
|
1,970 posts
|
Post by sf on Jun 1, 2020 14:56:49 GMT
Are you all really suggesting that the idea that a disease is something you can catch from other people is advanced scientific knowledge that ordinary people shouldn't be expected to know? The whole point I'm trying to get across is that this isn't something that anyone should struggle with. It's absolute bottom-end low-level knowledge like which end of a fork goes in your mouth. It's not a thing that should be a struggle for anyone. How can you seriously suggest otherwise? You're right: this should be an incredibly simple concept for people to grasp. The fact that I see so few people, for example, wearing a mask while they're shopping, using hand sanitiser before they enter a supermarket, maintaining appropriate social distancing in the street suggests a lot of people still haven't got the message. Those pictures of crowds all over the place over the weekend suggest there's a lot of people out there for whom the penny hasn't dropped. You might reasonably expect that it's enough to demand people use their common sense. Unfortunately it clearly isn't.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 15:02:15 GMT
I'm not saying a slogan is the answer. But lacking a compelling and unified message/metric, it is hardly surprising after sheltering in place for many weeks that things are turning into a bit of a freefall and confusion is present. Not only is it not surprising, it's entirely deliberate. As I said somewhere else, it's become clear that public safety is not this government's highest priority. Public safety doesn't just relate to coronavirus though, and the government's job goes far beyond public safety. I'm not for one minute defending the Government, but I am genuinely astonished that people seem to think coronavirus is the only thing that matters or that the government should be allocating resources, time or importance to.
|
|
1,970 posts
|
Post by sf on Jun 1, 2020 15:06:10 GMT
Not only is it not surprising, it's entirely deliberate. As I said somewhere else, it's become clear that public safety is not this government's highest priority. Public safety doesn't just relate to coronavirus though, and the government's job goes far beyond public safety. I'm not for one minute defending the Government, but I am genuinely astonished that people seem to think coronavirus is the only thing that matters or that the government should be allocating resources, time or importance to. Please don't put words into my mouth.
|
|
311 posts
|
Post by olliebean on Jun 1, 2020 15:21:52 GMT
I think the misreporting from the media has something to answer to. I have watched every briefing bar one I think and seen one news bulletin a day. The headline that government scientists don't agree with what has been actioned is totally unrealistic when 3 out of 50 sage members are mentioned. The other 47 then are apparently in agreement. We can't possibly know that. All we know is that other 47 haven't publicly disagreed with the government's actions. That three have decided to publicly speak out against their employer's actions is worthy of note.
|
|
2,411 posts
|
Post by theatreian on Jun 1, 2020 15:53:19 GMT
The 'expert'!Denise Welch was making a good point on loose women today that we need to try and move on. They were discussing opening schools and the fact that it is low risk really. Over 22 other countries have managed it. She was also saying about the deaths likely caused from undiagnosed cancers etc and those not treated due to people being scared or not being able to be treated due to cancelled treatment. The lockdown is not over as was said previously, it is being gradually eased with no one forced to do anything. Lets hope some common sense prevails and we don't see mass gatherings taking place at beauty spots or elsewhere for that matter.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2020 16:27:47 GMT
Are you all really suggesting that the idea that a disease is something you can catch from other people is advanced scientific knowledge that ordinary people shouldn't be expected to know? The whole point I'm trying to get across is that this isn't something that anyone should struggle with. It's absolute bottom-end low-level knowledge like which end of a fork goes in your mouth. It's not a thing that should be a struggle for anyone. How can you seriously suggest otherwise? You're right: this should be an incredibly simple concept for people to grasp. The fact that I see so few people, for example, wearing a mask while they're shopping, using hand sanitiser before they enter a supermarket, maintaining appropriate social distancing in the street suggests a lot of people still haven't got the message. Those pictures of crowds all over the place over the weekend suggest there's a lot of people out there for whom the penny hasn't dropped. You might reasonably expect that it's enough to demand people use their common sense. Unfortunately it clearly isn't. But I think people do get it. My experience is different from yours, in that I haven't seen many people acting any differently from a couple of weeks ago. When I see people standing in a queue for the supermarket all carefully spaced out they're certainly not doing it because they think the tape on the floor is a magical anti-virus force field. Similarly when people step off the pavement to pass someone else. When neighbours meet in the street and carefully keep well apart. When people wait to use a letter box until the person already at it moves away. Not everyone, by any means, but that was the case right from the start. Most people do seem to understand it. But for some reason there are a few people here who seem to be convinced that the general public are dumb as a box of rocks and need a simple slogan or they'll all just rush out and forget everything that's happened, and I suspect that's motivated more by hatred of the government than any actual evidence that a significant number of people are confused. (To be fair, it's not exactly difficult to hate this government. If I wanted to post my opinion of Boris Johnson I'd have to disable the profanity filter.) I've tried several times to get people to explain why they think disease transmission is so hard to understand and mostly received insults in return, which I'm choosing to take as "we've got nothing". As for masks, I agree that some clear advice would be useful. They certainly help in stopping infected people spread the disease and should probably be required on public transport. I'm surprised the beaches weren't closed, but I don't think the crowds were there as a result of confusion over the government's latest message because there have been crowds before. No matter what the government says there'll be simpletons who think it doesn't apply to them. Unfortunately some of them are in the government itself. Personally I have enough faith in most people to be sensible that they'll do the right thing no matter what the government says. Right now I think that'll be enough. If it turns out it isn't then we're back in a full lockdown again.
|
|
1,970 posts
|
Post by sf on Jun 1, 2020 16:31:52 GMT
Personally I have enough faith in most people to be sensible that they'll do the right thing no matter what the government says. In that case, we've had very different life experiences, and you are very lucky.
|
|
311 posts
|
Post by olliebean on Jun 1, 2020 16:38:37 GMT
For me the issue isn't whether the required and sensible measures are inherently easy to grasp. It's that the communication from the government seems to be making simple matters more complex and confusing than they need to be. I can't help but think the reason for this is so they can later blame us for not following their instructions to the letter. Although there is also now a clear element of trying to obfuscate the rules surrounding what Dominic Cummings did.
|
|
754 posts
|
Post by Latecomer on Jun 1, 2020 16:43:47 GMT
Here we go.
Low contacts. Safe distance. Low risk
Then explain people can see the odd friend/family but please not all at once and please dont go mad....as little as you can live with. Safe distance...self explanatory Low risk....ask people to consider all their actions and think once then twice.
How’s that? I would user fewer contacts or low number of contacts but less words is more powerful and I think it sort of explains?
Anyone else?
|
|
754 posts
|
Post by Latecomer on Jun 1, 2020 16:45:05 GMT
Has to be better than Stay alert....
|
|