Sanz was fucked with kidney failure, apparently.
Sanz was fucked with kidney failure, apparently.
Niko knows, that's a man who's lived a full life and had death beating down his front door.
@Lee last I heard there was some pretty significant doubt about whether that's how the virus' really got into humans, and looking at the latest it doesn't seem like anyone's worked out where it came from
Fair enough. The most recent stuff I read places the probability of it having come from bats (apparently a reliable reservoir for SARS type illnesses) as being high. But you’re right that it’s supposition at this point. The working theory, again according to the last couple of pieces I read on it, is that it was probably bats via something else. And the Chinese (or some Chinese) have a predilection for eating exotic animals. Like bats.
I read it was bats via civets.
I read it was bats via pangolins.
Pangolins, they love those tasty, performance enhancing scales. Are Pangolins even native to China?
I'd always assumed these things just start in China because there are the most people there.
In other news, I may have to revise my earlier prediction for Jersey to clock the first death locally, as apparently, somehow, of our 15 new cases since telling all and sundry to return due to the borders closing on Thursday morning, 2 of them have wangled their way into intensive care. Presumably they must have infected everyone on the likely packed flights they came back on and I reckon we probably outstrip northern Italy for oldies . . .
I have a cousin who lives next door to a lad who used to know someone who once lived in the same housing estate as a woman who was seeing a cop, and they told me it was bats via polar bears.
I was told that you're all batshit mental.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotla...lands-51990534
Average age of caravan owner? Can we not just let them all die now?
I think I see @Lee in the photo somewhere.
Just to let you guys know, there's growing data to suggest conjunctivitis-type symptoms can be the early presentation of a covid 19 infection.
Out-of-place yellow shit ruining everything at the minute.
Boris has told people not to visit loved ones on Mother's Day so I don't have to feel so guilty now.
Good (terrifying) thread here.
And his predictions based off yesterday's figures:
Fuck.
It's what I've been saying today/yesterday, we're going to be worse.
There's nothing to suggest we won't be.
And we knew about it in advance. 2 weeks ago. It's absolutely tragic.
The much-vaunted Italian LOCKDOWN was phased in as ours is being, and until today they were more interested in criminalising joggers than getting people out of factories and offices. It's just that people who only started following this two weeks ago looked at the Italians burning piles of leather jackets and assumed that they had chosen to dive right into house arrest whilst we continued to share bath water and lol it off.
Have they even made any headway in flattening the curve? Looking briefly at their data I'm struggling to see where they are making headway.
It would be funny, if it all weren't so morbid, to think that Boris Johnson held Churchill as his political role model, swoops into the PM's office just in time for the greatest national crisis since Churchill's time, and then proceeds to fuck it up in historically unprecedented fashion. What a fucktard.
Stay Home, Love Your Country
Last edited by John Arne; 22-03-2020 at 05:39 AM.
We have surpassed 300,000 coronavirus cases worldwide.
The first 100,000 took 3 months
The second 100,000 took 12 days
The third 100,000 took 3 days
The Green contribution.
That's almost as daft as not believing that climate change is a real issue. Almost.
They’re the people (him especially, being the party leader) pushing the climate message, is it any wonder?
It's because we're the most advanced that our response(s) have been shocking. Liberal democracy, individual liberty and globalisation are not set up for a pandemic.
I know you can say Japan/Korea have those things but they kind of don't, at the same time, life is structured around seniority and compliance there.
Someone was asking about Wales earlier
Good grief.
The thing is, it's not even slightly surprising. Who was actually expecting the Italians, French and Spanish to do what the government said?
We're heading down the same road, with a clear window into our future being plastered all over the tv, so we're worse and so is Borris. If you want people to stay home - force it. Asking nicely ain't going to cut it.
America will be worse than anywhere in Europe because they're full of various types of crazy and also the social contract is extremely weak bordering on non-existent. All that fluff in the consitution isn't going to be very useful now.
All the idiots refusing the vaccine is going to be glorious. This is last days of Rome stuff (errr... literally).
Tim Shipman’s piece in today’s Sunday Times is worth a read:
There was a moment, when the decisions were made, when they wondered what on earth they had done, how far they had been forced to go. A moment when they sat “shellshocked”, reflecting on choices that will change Britain for the rest of our lives. “It took us the weekend to get ourselves into the emotional position where we were comfortable taking the decisions we took,” a minister said. “They were massive.”
In politics, there is so much overstatement. Not this time. Ten days ago the government was slowly gearing up its response to the coronavirus crisis, downplaying the need for drastic measures. By Monday, Boris Johnson had ordered an expansion of the state not seen since the Second World War to save the National Health Service, an institution formed in the cauldron of that conflict. A wartime-style lockdown of the capital was under active consideration.
This weekend, the events of the last week have already changed health policy, changed the economy and are already changing the people involved.
The last time the British state began a multiple service attack on a lurking enemy — D-Day in 1944 — it became known as The Longest Day. On Thursday one cabinet minister reflected: “It feels like the longest week. It felt like Brexit was going to change the country but it is the coronavirus that will do that now.”
Senior figures in government are insistent that the changes they made to the virus clampdown were not “a U-turn” but a vehicle accelerating faster along a track already laid. In truth, they no more resemble what went before than the space shuttle did a Citroën 2CV.
Conversations with more than a dozen ministers and cabinet ministers, special advisers, Downing Street staff and civil servants reveal a human drama, of leaders tested as never before and of the single most frightening warning a British prime minister has received in eight decades.
A shock to the system
The meeting that will change British society for a generation took place on the evening of Thursday, March 12. That was when the strategic advisory group of experts (Sage in Whitehall parlance), the government’s committee of scientists and medics, gathered to examine modelling from experts at Imperial College London and other institutions.
The results were shattering. A week earlier, councils had been warned to expect about 100,000 deaths from Covid-19. Now Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer, and Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser, realised the estimates were wrong.
“Unmitigated, the death number was 510,000,” a senior figure said. “Mitigated we were told it was going to be 250,000. Once you see a figure of take no further action and a quarter of a million people die, the question you ask is, ‘What action?’” Another insider said: “There was a collision between the science and reality.”
Ministers had been on notice that drastic action might be needed since the virus first emerged in China’s Wuhan province in December. In January, Whitty told the cabinet: “It either stays in China or it will get everywhere.” For two months the government had time to prepare, but Johnson’s instincts were to resist a life-changing crackdown. “There was a lot of talk about how this was just a bit of flu,” one senior Tory recalled.
Dominic Cummings, the prime minister’s senior aide, became convinced that Britain would be better able to resist a lethal second wave of the disease next winter if Whitty’s prediction that 60% to 80% of the population became infected was right and the UK developed “herd immunity”.
At a private engagement at the end of February, Cummings outlined the government’s strategy. Those present say it was “herd immunity, protect the economy and if that means some pensioners die, too bad”.
At the Sage meeting on March 12, a moment now dubbed the “Domoscene conversion”, Cummings changed his mind. In this “penny-drop moment”, he realised he had helped set a course for catastrophe. Until this point, the rise in British infections had been below the European average. Now they were above it and on course to emulate Italy, where the picture was bleak. A minister said: “Seeing what was happening in Italy was the galvanising force across government.”
By Friday, March 13, Cummings had become the most outspoken advocate of a tough crackdown. “Dominic himself had a conversion,” a senior Tory said. “He’s gone from ‘herd immunity and let the old people die’, to ‘let’s shut down the country and the economy.’”
Cummings had a “meeting of minds” with Matt Hancock, the health secretary, who wanted stronger action to prevent NHS hospitals being swamped. Department of Health officials had impressed on Hancock that the death rate in Wuhan province was 3.4% when the hospitals were overrun and 0.7% elsewhere in China.
Johnson had also been queasy about the previous original approach. “Boris hated the language of ‘herd immunity’ because it implied that it was OK for people to die,” a senior source said. “Matt hated the language because it implied we had given up. You’ve got to fight.”
Cabinet ministers say Johnson has been far more decisive at crunch moments than his predecessor
The problem for the government was that at the moment herd immunity was being banished from policy, it had become the focus of publicity. That Wednesday, David Halpern of the Whitehall “nudge unit” put the phrase in the public domain. Two days later, Vallance repeated the idea on Radio 4. With Italy, France and Spain going into lockdown, the government’s critics accused Johnson of refusing to act because he wanted people to get ill.
Insiders say it was “very bumpy” that Friday. “The meetings were very messy,” said one source. But when Johnson gathered his key advisers in the cabinet room at 9.15am last Saturday there was unanimity. Whitty and Vallance explained that Britain had been four weeks behind Italy “and now we are closer”.
The two experts, together with Hancock and Cummings, all delivered to Johnson one message: “Now is the moment to act.” The prime minister agreed: “We must work around the clock and take all necessary measures.” One of those present said: “The mood in the room was astonishing. You could tell that something very significant had shifted.”
Flesh was added to the bones in another crunch meeting in Downing Street on Sunday night and again in the 9.15am meetings and bilaterals between Johnson and key cabinet ministers throughout last week.
The media was briefed that elderly and vulnerable people might have to self-isolate for a period of months and that everyone else would have to engage in “social distancing” — working from home, avoiding groups and unnecessary outings. Most significantly, without a gargantuan package of support for businesses, renters and the self-employed, millions of jobs would be lost and the economy would collapse.
The economic response
On Tuesday morning, as he prepared to unveil details of Britain’s biggest peacetime financial package, Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, gathered his closest aides and officials in his book-lined study in 11 Downing Street. “The scale of what is required is beyond anyone’s current imagination,” he said. “We have to remove all limiting assumptions.”
Over the weekend, Treasury officials worked through the night to prepare a package for business as if planning a full budget. “They did three months’ work in 48 hours,” a Treasury source said. It helped that Charles Roxburgh, the second permanent secretary, and Andrew Bailey, the new governor of the Bank of England, were both veterans of the response to the 2008 financial crash.
When he walked out with Johnson for a Downing Street news conference on Tuesday afternoon, aides were still finalising Sunak’s comments as the statement came off the printer. The chancellor had no time to rehearse or to prepare for questions but gave an assured performance as he outlined plans for £350bn of government-backed loans and cash grants for business. “We will do whatever it takes,” he repeatedly intoned.
Colleagues say Sunak’s confidence came because he is deeply engaged “in the weeds” of the policy. “Some ministers set the broad parameters for 15 minutes and the officials go away and do the work,” said one source. “He’s more hands-on. He prefers a 30 to 40-minute meeting where he can properly kick the tyres and help solve the problems. He’s across the detail.”
Measures to help save jobs took longer, with a plan for the government to pay a high percentage of wages in cash-strapped firms finally being announced on Friday afternoon. Sunak agreed the package in a meeting with Johnson on Thursday night in which the pair shared a vegetarian takeaway pizza. The prime minister said: “In 2008, the government looked after the bankers. Now we must make sure we look after the people first.”
At 11.30pm the chancellor was sending messages to his permanent secretary thanking him for the “superb” work of some officials. A colleague said: “He’s got the brainpower. More importantly, he’s got the character for this moment.”
Sunak will need it because the risks are immense. One friend said: “Rishi is very acutely aware that we are in danger of driving the economy off a cliff by shutting everything up. All this talk of bouncing straight back . . . we will have no airlines to bounce straight back with if we’re not careful.”
The prime minister’s big decision on Wednesday was that schools would close on Friday, a decision arrived at with Gavin Williamson, the education secretary. They decided to act as many schools took matters into their own hands, to try to ensure childcare for key workers.
It was another decision Johnson had resisted the week before, but cabinet ministers are clear that behind the scenes he has been far more decisive at crunch moments than his predecessor. “He’s been absolutely brilliant,” said one. “He makes decisions fast.” Another said: “If Theresa May was still be in charge we would, by now, have just about signed off a request that people wash their hands.” Another cabinet source added: “And if Philip Hammond was still chancellor he would have refused even to pay for that.”
Nonetheless, even admirers admit that Johnson is not finding it easy to project the same decisiveness in his somewhat hesitant public appearances. “He’s a naturally cheerful person,” one colleague said. “He finds it difficult to deliver bad news.” Business leaders were surprised during a conference call on Monday, when he was trying to persuade them to build ventilators, to hear him describe the effort as “Operation Last Gasp”.
Whitty and Vallance began their own press conferences at the end of the week amid concern that some of Johnson’s pronouncements — including a claim that they could “turn the tide” within 12 weeks — were not grounded in evidence. “Some of the experts are appalled by some of his claims,” a Whitehall source said. A Tory aide said: “Boris looks haunted. It’s like when George W Bush came in thinking he was going to be the education-reforming president and had to deal with the war on terror.” Another senior Tory said: “Boris is shellshocked.”
Johnson, who is a civil libertarian at heart, spent the week resisting Cummings’s demands for a full-blown lockdown of London — banning inhabitants from travelling outside the city.
Discussions about a shutdown were first aired at Cobra on Friday, March 13. By Tuesday the news was leaking after a Cabinet Office official emailed other departments to ask how a curfew might work. A Whitehall insider said: “It was quickly established that the Paris model — with people being issued paperwork and allowed out of the family home one at a time would not work.”
A senior Tory said: “Boris really doesn’t want to shut stuff down. He is more worried than most about the economic impact but also the social impact of locking people up in their homes for months. Fundamentally there is a Boris-Dom cleavage. First Boris bottled herd immunity. Now he’s bottling lockdown.”
Nonetheless, Johnson managed to fuel speculation that there would be troops on the streets and a travel ban by telling Wednesday’s press conference that the government “will not hesitate” to take further steps. “We live in a land of liberty,” he said. “But we will rule nothing out.”
On Thursday the PM’s spokesman was forced to say there were “no plans” to close down London transport and “zero prospect” of restrictions on travel. On Friday less draconian restrictions, closing pubs, clubs and restaurants nationwide, were unveiled. “Whoever was briefing details of the full lockdown is bordering on a national security threat,” said one Tory with links at the top of Whitehall. “They are promulgating misinformation and spreading alarm.”
Another source said the loose talk could have seen wealthy “superspreaders” flee London to infect people elsewhere: “If you’re going to do a lockdown you don’t tell people first or you find they are all on the roof getting the last helicopter out of Saigon.”
Nonetheless, Whitehall officials are quietly drawing up lists of key workers who would be issued with a travel permit if a full crackdown follows. Officials have also been working on a “lockdown list” of products that must be manufactured by law. They may yet be necessary. A minister said: “We won’t know for two weeks if the current measures are enough.”
Communication problems
On Thursday, after criticism from ministers and MPs that No 10 had failed to provide clear messages to the public, Cummings and the communications director, Lee Cain, summoned the team who won the general election.
Isaac Levido, the Tory campaign director, went to No 10, with former Vote Leave hands Paul Stephenson and Henry de Zoete on a video conference call. Together they devised a slogan “Stay home. Save lives. Protect our NHS,” which was rolled out on Friday.
The No 10 morning meeting is now held on the Zoom video app to allow more home working. To try to raise morale, Johnson has also sent video messages thanking civil servants for their hard work. On Tuesday he returned from a morning run with his dog Dilyn to find his spokesman, James Slack, at the back of No 10 wishing his mother a happy birthday. Johnson took the phone and spoke to her for 10 minutes.
However, many sources report that the Downing Street machine is fast running out of steam. “Everyone is working to capacity and is absolutely exhausted,” said one insider. “It’s utter chaos and there is no end in sight.”
Businesses phoning up to offer help say Downing Street seems “swamped”. One ventilator manufacturer claimed on Newsnight that the government had not put in any orders — though sources say 1,400 firms are offering to build them and by Friday morning eight companies who have never made a ventilator were turning them out.
Some in Downing Street are turning to drink. An aide joked on Thursday that they had run out of hand sanitiser and were “using the contents of a vodka miniature” instead. Others are recruiting old friends. Gabriel Milland, a former head of press to Michael Gove, was drafted into No 10 last week. Tom Shinner, the civil servant who did the most to prepare Britain for a no-deal Brexit, who left the government last year, has also been rehired.
The toll is telling on ministers and tensions between them have bubbled over. “It’s miserable and horrible and you just have to get on with it,” a cabinet minister said.
The “core four” in all the key meetings are the chairmen of four inter-ministerial committees: Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary, who chairs the international committee; Sunak, who chairs the economic committee; Hancock, who chairs the health committee; and Gove, who chairs the other public sector committee.
Numerous sources say Gove has repeatedly sniped at Hancock. “There have been tensions over where responsibilities begin and end,” one observed. Some ministers are lobbying to see Gove take charge if Johnson is incapacitated with Covid-19 or if he takes paternity leave, though Sunak ranks higher in the cabinet rankings on the gov.uk website and the job is likely to be Raab’s, since he is officially “first secretary of state”.
But a minister said: “Considering the scale of the massive decisions we have been making it has been remarkably collegiate.”
Ministers hope the dramatic events of the last week will reduce the likely death toll from Covid-19 to “a bad seasonal flu”, which means tens, not hundreds, of thousands of deaths. The worst recent year was 2014-15 when 28,000 people died.
But there are perils ahead. “Boris and his team are absolutely terrified because it will not be the NHS by end of this,” a Whitehall source said. “It will be the corona health service and will just be there to pump oxygen into patients.”
MPs speculate that there will be two big inquiries — an international one into the origins of the virus in China’s live animal “wet markets”; and a second into the government’s preparations and policy decisions. “If we end up like Italy in two weeks’ time and 30-year-old doctors are dropping dead, the government is going to be in big trouble,” a Labour MP said.
Amid the frenzy of events, more thoughtful Tories have concluded that the decisions taken last week will change three key aspects of the way the world works. One said: “One is the debate around globalisation. Is Trump right that we just need to build bigger walls, or is Gordon Brown right that global problems need global solutions? The second is Socialism v The Free Market. Large parts of the economy are going to be socialised after this. I fear it leads to nationalists and socialists winning, to national socialism.”
The third fissure may yet be the worst. “It’s the intergenerational question. It is unsustainable to have people in their youth put their whole life on hold for months while the economy tanks to save a 91-year-old who would have died six months later anyway.”
Whatever the outcome, ministers have little doubt about the significance of the virus. “It’s shaking the world,” one said. Another, who has been up to his neck in the dramas of the past three years, was more prosaic: “My obituary gets more interesting every week.”
The sadness is that there will be many other obituaries to be written too.
Interesting Lee (as Shipman always is) and in the 'third fissure' we have the nub of the upcoming problem I think.
It’s what we’ll end up doing. Lockdown for however many months this first peak takes to subside, then back out into society accepting the collateral for the sake of a bit of normality for a period. This isn’t going to be about saving the old or vulnerable. It’s going to be about having as few of them sick at one time as the health service can manage.
Fuck that noise. Military on the streets, please. Looking at Lombardy's case numbers since the lockdown, there has been no trend of this slowing down. At best, it stifled a week ago with 1,500 cases for a few days. Since the 19th they've accelerated past 3,200.
Last edited by Shindig; 22-03-2020 at 10:20 AM.
Given we don’t know the numbers of who have it in anything like enough accuracy I wouldn’t take accelerating case numbers as proof a lockdown isn’t working. With 800 dead in a day the 3,200 confirmed cases yesterday probably doesn’t cover many more people beyond the poor bastards who are in hospital.
True. And with cases you don't know the severity. Some could mild and isolating at home, some could be in the ICU already. And testing is always increasing. You know, for a country reluctant to test at the start of this, we're finding those swabs from somewhere. China's daily death count didn't break 150. For a country so dense, that's astounding. It's something we can achieve but we need authority willing to enforce it.
New cases are pointless. It's the deaths that are important.
It probably doesn't matter anyway. We can't do what China will actually have done if the numbers are true. What they claim to have done we could maybe do.
But no, I don't believe them.
I've just been in B&Q and it was heaving, so he might be onto something. There was also an old man shouting at people in the queue to spread out 'otherwise you'll kill people'. One man told him to fuck off and asked him why he was there if he was so bothered, which he obviously didn't have an answer for. That captures the dilemma quite neatly I think.
Not sure we want this anyway:
Quote:
I live in China, have done for some time.
Just wanted to explain what social distancing means here.
I left the country for 7 weeks at Chinese New Year. I returned this week. There was a 6 hour procedure to get off the plane, through immigration and health checks to finally arrive at a centre. In this centre you were organised depending on what district you live in. If you lived alone you could go back to your apartment*. My wife is now at home in our apartment.
I am currently, and have been for a few days, locked in a hotel room. I will be in here for 14 days. I can order food up to my room. There are 3 choices of meal in total for the duration of the stay. Each meal is around 8 quid. Oh, I am paying a grand for the stay (my choice I accept that, I chose to come home). I am not allowed to leave the room. Every two hours hazmats walk past the room spraying disinfectant everywhere. I have to report my temperature twice a day. On Day 15, medical professionals will take me back to my apartment and give me a special certificate that means I can go outside.
*My wife is not allowed to leave the apartment for two weeks. They have volunteers at the compound who will collect deliveries for her and put them at the door and quite literally run away. The only time she can open the door is to collect the delivery or put her rubbish outside. Our compound is quite friendly. Other friends have been sealed into their apartment with tape, others have cameras placed outside their door and others have a sensor placed on the door with strict instructions that they can only open the door once a day or they are arrested. We all have to report our temperature to authorities twice a day.
When we are finally allowed out we will be arrested if we do not wear masks, we will need to carry our certificates explaining that we have completed quarantine. Nobody is allowed to eat meals together. Starbucks have a rule, like many other places, of one person per table. Every shop, and I mean every shop, checks temp when you enter. Every food delivery you have you will be informed of the person’s temperature who cooked it and the person who delivered it temperature.
I am not complaining, I chose to live in China and do actually enjoy it here (well, not right now). These are the extremes China are going to, I fully understand that Europe is not China but fucking hell. I wouldn’t be going the pub in England if I knew how serious this was. Wuhan the epicentre is around two hours flight from Beijing. Italy is now worse than China and it is a similar distance away. Stay at fucking home.