Brexit, for once some facts.

jonathan.agnew

Esteemed Pedelecer
Dec 27, 2018
2,400
3,381
So just criticising and repeating the problem with no real answer again. Please read my post again and try to understand it. We've proved we cannot do enforcement of the type you suggest, goodness knows we've tried hard enough, heavy handed policing including roughing up women and even £10,000 fines.

Otherwise blinkers on and just keep going round in circles getting nowhere.
.
We can do enforcement. And have when we had to control spikes. As we have done successfully. But that does not please conservative donors and backbenchers. Who find the principle of prioritising life and welfare of citizens over money sloshing in repugnant. And so we have had repeated I'll advised lifting of lockdown, not prompted by the public. The public, now, are largely very apprehensive about the lifting of the lockdown. As with the Iraq war and many other destructive damaging destabilising conservative and neoconsevative decisions of the past, it is done in our name, but definitely not in our interest.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: oldgroaner

oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
80
By any measure doing as NZ did would put a huge dent in the 150,000 dead total.
This Derek and his sheep is just BS !look at the figures for Japan

"In Japan, from 3 January 2020 to 5:41pm CEST, 2 July 2021, there have been 801,721 confirmed cases of COVID-19 with 14,802 deaths

The current population of Japan is 126,108,312 as of Monday, June 14, 2021,

More than double our own.
Further to that the notion that you can rely on the British public is simply never ever going to work.
You can't beat a pandemic with D.I.Y
 

oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
80
I object your Funny emogee, I'm posting realistic answers and alI get in response is criticism. Criticism without an alternative answer to the problem is pointless,

You have no answer to Covid so you'll have to live with it. That might mean lots of things, but funny isn't one of them.
.
Sorry but I don't find your realistic answers to be realistic at all the word I would use is disastrous or even catastrophic

About as good as Lincoln's decision to go to the Opera
 
  • Disagree
Reactions: flecc

oyster

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 7, 2017
10,422
14,609
West West Wales
42,302 cases. Well on the way to the promised land of 100,000.
On a more positive note, Dublin has taken delivery of 3 hydrogen fuel celled double decker buses , with a 400 km range. They will be used on major suburban / semi rural route The hydrogen will be electroylised ..water There are very few double decker buses using hydrogen yet
Did you notice my post about H2?

https://www.pedelecs.co.uk/forum/threads/hydrogen-refueller-reaches-the-farthest-corners.41472/
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,195
30,600
We can do enforcement. And have when we had to control spikes. As we have done successfully.
Delusional, no we haven't, that's why we are where we are, a huge swathe of the public have ignored our ineffectual "enforcement". They don't just ignore, they openly defy with large protest demonstrations and marches.

Our infection and death rates show how unsuccessful we've been.
.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: oldgroaner

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,195
30,600
Sorry but I don't find your realistic answers to be realistic at all the word I would use is disastrous or even catastrophic

About as good as Lincoln's decision to go to the Opera
And you think you have a realistic answer? Throwing more money away to achieve nothing.
.
 
  • Like
Reactions: oldgroaner

Danidl

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 29, 2016
8,611
12,256
73
Ireland
42,302 cases. Well on the way to the promised land of 100,000.

Did you notice my post about H2?

https://www.pedelecs.co.uk/forum/threads/hydrogen-refueller-reaches-the-farthest-corners.41472/
I hadn't!. Maybe my mistake for doing a few queries about hydrogen a few weeks ago, but I am now getting lots and lots of information about pilot and early adopter schemes. The key point I had not picked up until now is that hybrid systems with a low power fuel cell trickle charging a smaller lithium ion battery , for the high power surges makes a lot of sense in utility vehicles. Hydrogen scales much more satisfactorily than battery, and gives a lighter weight package for long range. The weight of a fuel cell and hydrogen storage is less than the equivalent range battery
 
  • Like
Reactions: oyster

oyster

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 7, 2017
10,422
14,609
West West Wales
I hadn't!. Maybe my mistake for doing a few queries about hydrogen a few weeks ago, but I am now getting lots and lots of information about pilot and early adopter schemes. The key point I had not picked up until now is that hybrid systems with a low power fuel cell trickle charging a smaller lithium ion battery , for the high power surges makes a lot of sense in utility vehicles. Hydrogen scales much more satisfactorily than battery, and gives a lighter weight package for long range. The weight of a fuel cell and hydrogen storage is less than the equivalent range battery
And even a Welsh hydrogen car!
 

Jesus H Christ

Esteemed Pedelecer
Dec 31, 2020
1,363
2,206
Sorry but I don't find your realistic answers to be realistic at all the word I would use is disastrous or even catastrophic

About as good as Lincoln's decision to go to the Opera
What is your solution? What would you do that is not being done now (furlough, social distancing laws and mandatory face masks are not working). Explain how your strategy would cause the public to behave differently to how they are today and hence reduce infections.

I think flecc is right, people will only learn and behave appropriately for the given situation after experiencing pain. That’s especially true in the U.K. What’s also true is that when the pain hits again, the public will want to blame someone else for their own stupidity.

Non of the above excuses this government for their lack of leadership and clear guidance.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: oldgroaner

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
20,368
16,870
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
Again it's what we've already been doing and it hasn't worked, nor will it if attempted again.
it has kept the NHS functioning and lowered the death toll.
Official model predicted 800,000 deaths and the hospitals overwhelmed at 300% of its capacity for the first year if we did not take measures to contain covid.
 

oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
80
And you think you have a realistic answer? Throwing more money away to achieve nothing.
.
My realistic answer is to throw vast amounts of money and resources at these things
Intensive research of alternative treatments and methods of killing airborne virus particles either by light or possibly electrostatic charge fields
In other words find and exploit its weaknesses using non medical technology as well
Here is an example
Genius New Device Can Kill 99.9% of an Airborne Virus in The Blink of an Eye
Improved vaccines
Improved treatment for those affected
Improved masks
look at the possibility of treatment via E cigarettes to kill the virus in the lungs before it gets too established
Develop air sanitisers for public places
Set ventilation standards with them included

And of course using lasers and vibration
Shake viruses to death

Start up new factories to produce the above in quantity.

It isn't Rocket Science, just a pragmatic approach to what is in fact a war we can't win by dying in droves, however convenient that may seem to some.

The only way to fight this thing using "Common Sense" would be to develop a vaccine that simultaneously achieved two impossible things
1; Cured Stupidity
2: Reprogrammed the Human brain to think and act logically in response to threats they can't actually see.
 
Last edited:
  • Agree
Reactions: Woosh

oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
80
What is your solution? What would you do that is not being done now (furlough, social distancing laws and mandatory face masks are not working). Explain how your strategy would cause the public to behave differently to how they are today and hence reduce infections.

I think flecc is right, people will only learn and behave appropriately for the given situation after experiencing pain. That’s especially true in the U.K. What’s also true is that when the pain hits again, the public will want to blame someone else for their own stupidity.

Non of the above excuses this government for their lack of leadership and clear guidance.
Just have in a post... and yes you are right about this government and the fact that no matter what the threat level the public won't act sensibly
 

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
20,368
16,870
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
What is your solution? What would you do that is not being done now (furlough, social distancing laws and mandatory face masks are not working). Explain how your strategy would cause the public to behave differently to how they are today and hence reduce infections.
our government is capable of throwing vast sums at test and trace then it should put twice as much into funding research into treatments and make it an absolute priority.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,195
30,600
My realistic answer is to throw vast amounts of money and resources at these things
Intensive research of alternative treatments and methods of killing airborne virus particles either by light or possibly electrostatic charge fields
In other words find and exploit its weaknesses using non medical technology as well
Here is an example
Genius New Device Can Kill 99.9% of an Airborne Virus in The Blink of an Eye
Improved vaccines
Improved treatment for those affected
Improved masks
look at the possibility of treatment via E cigarettes to kill the virus in the lungs before it gets too established
Develop air sanitisers for public places
Set ventilation standards with them included

And of course using lasers and vibration
Shake viruses to death

Start up new factories to produce the above in quantity.

It isn't Rocket Science, just a pragmatic approach to what is in fact a war we can't win by dying in droves, however convenient that may seem to some.
I haven't said I'm against any of these things, of course I'm not and they are already happening. That's how you know about them!!

But they all take a lot of time so we need better meanwhile, not jam tomorrow. You're all agreed we are going to get a lot more deaths short term, so make them serve a useful purpose as I've said.

That is using them to frighten the public into behaving better, NOT doing the following which is what they've been doing thoughout:

Hyping the effectiveness of the vaccines with the 90%+ nonsense.

Hyping how well we've been doing.

Hyping the NHS performance

Hyping the advances in successful treatment of Covid.

Constantly reassuring the public about restriction easements on the way.

Not making predictions about huge number of deaths, since when they don't come true the public become cynical.

All these give the public the impression that there's nothing to worry about since it looks under control. That's reinforced by most people not knowing anyone who has died from Covid and often not knowing anyone who's even caught it, so they think "where's the threat?" or even that Covid is faked.

Instead, concentrate on telling the truth and not the positives:

Concentrate on the rising death numbers only when they actually happen, not failing predictions, and without burying the public in silly charts that make it seem they are trying too hard to convince.

Advise getting the vaccines only to reduce your suffering if you catch Covid, but say that as vaccines to prevent catching Covid they are very poor.

Openly admit the NHS is very limited in what it can do to treat Covid once caught.

Regularly report the pressures on crematoriums, burial grounds and funeral directors struggling to cope as the true death numbers rise.

Report on the rise in planning applications to build crematoria.

In a nutshell, just giving the public the gloomy prospects to get the message to sink in.
.
 
Last edited:

sjpt

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 8, 2018
3,832
2,756
Winchester
50K / day was predicted by 19/07. It’s really going to accelerate from Monday onwards when the public become responsible for their own destiny.
With rates already going up so alarmingly it is going to be very difficult to analyse data and isolate (a) this pre-existing 'base' growth, (b) spikes from the world cup, and (c) extra growth from premature removal of the lockdown.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,195
30,600
our government is capable of throwing vast sums at test and trace then it should put twice as much into funding research into treatments and make it an absolute priority.
The £300 billions wasted in closing businesses where they'd be safer and keeping people off work to crowd onto the beaches in droves would have been a good start in this.
.
 
Last edited:
  • Agree
Reactions: Jesus H Christ

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
20,368
16,870
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk

Quote:

Imperial College London researchers found fewer than 85 per cent of over-80s had detectable levels of the virus-fighting proteins two weeks after their second AZ jab.

By contrast, the proportion of over-80s with antibodies after getting the second Pfizer vaccine was almost 98 per cent.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: sjpt and oldgroaner

Danidl

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 29, 2016
8,611
12,256
73
Ireland
I haven't said I'm against any of these things, of course I'm not and they are already happening. That's how you know about them!!

But they all take a lot of time so we need better meanwhile, not jam tomorrow. You're all agreed we are going to get a lot more deaths short term, so make them serve a useful purpose as I've said.

That is using them to frighten the public into behaving better, NOT doing the following which is what they've been doing thoughout:

Hyping the effectiveness of the vaccines with the 90%+ nonsense.

Hyping how well we've been doing.

Hyping the NHS performance

Hyping the advances in successful treatment of Covid.

Constantly reassuring the public about restriction easements on the way.

Not making predictions about huge number of deaths, since when they don't come true the public become cynical.

All these give the public the impression that there's nothing to worry about since it looks under control. That's reinforced by most people not knowing anyone who has died from Covid and often not knowing anyone who's even caught it, so they think "where's the threat?" or even that Covid is faked.

Instead, concentrate on telling the truth and not the positives:

Concentrate on the rising death numbers only when they actually happen, not failing predictions, and without burying the public in silly charts that make it seem they are trying too hard to convince.

Advise getting the vaccines only to reduce your suffering if you catch Covid, but say that as vaccines to prevent catching Covid they are very poor.

Openly admit the NHS is very limited in what it can do to treat Covid once caught.

Regularly report the pressures on crematoriums, burial grounds and funeral directors struggling to cope as the true death numbers rise.

Report on the rise in planning applications to build crematoria.

In a nutshell, just giving the public the gloomy prospects to get the message to sink in.
.
And might I suggest , remove the nonsense of a death within 28 days of a positive CV19 test . We know that people linger on for weeks and weeks, often in high dependency or ICU , before finally losing their struggle.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: flecc

Advertisers