"....Our immune systems are thought to have been severely weakened over the past two-and-a-half years of lockdowns and limited social interactions...."
Let's be honest, Ferguson is at best utterly incompetent, at worst highly dangerous.At least in 1967 there was not Neil Ferguson to produce his pie in the sky modelling doom and gloom, he got it very very wrong for foot and mouth, destroying many lives not only livestock. The same doom and gloom modelling which he also got so very wrong for Avian Flu, BSE, SARS, Swine Flu and the icing on the cake, covid.
Irrespective of whether many disagree, I would say the constant conveyor belt of vaccines have also weakened peoples own immunity, so many of them have "covid" multiple times or other illnesses following a jab, when those unvaccinated do not seem to either have had covid or have it multiple times.TheCOVID BedwetterDaily Mail has a piece today about bird flu, and the fact that it "...could be the next pandemic...." and it is "...already spreading in Britain...".
All a lot of scaremongering nonsense, but the most interesting quote from the article is by Keith Neal, emeritus professor in the epidemiology of infectious diseases at the University of Nottingham in which he says that the biggest threat to public health this winter is flu and that:-
Er, wasn't the purpose of lockdown and social distancing to "...keep people safe..."?
If the various COVID measures have weakened everyones immune system to the extent that they are now more vulnerable to existing respiratory viruses, then what exactly was the purpose of the measures in the first place?
ExactlyTheCOVID BedwetterDaily Mail has a piece today about bird flu, and the fact that it "...could be the next pandemic...." and it is "...already spreading in Britain...".
All a lot of scaremongering nonsense, but the most interesting quote from the article is by Keith Neal, emeritus professor in the epidemiology of infectious diseases at the University of Nottingham in which he says that the biggest threat to public health this winter is flu and that:-
Er, wasn't the purpose of lockdown and social distancing to "...keep people safe..."?
If the various COVID measures have weakened everyones immune system to the extent that they are now more vulnerable to existing respiratory viruses, then what exactly was the purpose of the measures in the first place?
TheCOVID BedwetterDaily Mail has a piece today about bird flu, and the fact that it "...could be the next pandemic...." and it is "...already spreading in Britain...".
All a lot of scaremongering nonsense, but the most interesting quote from the article is by Keith Neal, emeritus professor in the epidemiology of infectious diseases at the University of Nottingham in which he says that the biggest threat to public health this winter is flu and that:-
Er, wasn't the purpose of lockdown and social distancing to "...keep people safe..."?
If the various COVID measures have weakened everyones immune system to the extent that they are now more vulnerable to existing respiratory viruses, then what exactly was the purpose of the measures in the first place?
I'd say healthcare capacity is the most significant factor. While not the same as excess deaths, the elective care backlog was 4.4m going into the pandemic and latest is now 6.6m, but with pre-pandemic trends it would be 5.2m. No matter what approach you take to handling covid if the healthcare system struggles to cope in normal times during a pandemic it will always be much worse.I strongly suspect that lockdowns are the most significant factor. The unintended consequences are far reaching and will persist for some time yet.
It’s worth pointing out that the definition of “lockdown” in this context is a little unclear. Perhaps “lockdowns and other restrictions” would be a better description (and would capture some of the NHS policy changes you refer to below).
It's hard to know how much transmission was and wasn't stopped, suspected healthcare acquired infections grew substantially when hospitals were under pressure with high covid numbers and not a linear growth indicating a detioration. I suspect once red wards are near capacity, finding space or converting wards is tricky meaning others around them get exposed making the problem steadily worse. The answer is either have more capacity before pandemic or a more steady number of covid patients. The previous pandemic plan wouldn't have helped with that. Dropping those measures entirely would have meant that transmission started from low levels.There are two key points here in my opinion.
Firstly, hospitals largely failed to prevent the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 among patients. They were either attempting the impossible, or got it wrong (probably a bit of both) so there are lessons to be learned.
Secondly, not all departments in all hospitals were overwhelmed, or even particularly busy during each wave of infections.
I think we need to see a cost-benefit analysis in regard to these policy changes. I’m not convinced they did much to protect the vulnerable but they certainly put a large number of the non-vulnerable in harms way.
By high deaths in the prior pandemic plans I meant much larger than UK covid deaths, one publicly available exercise scenario had 450k deaths. What was missing in the exercises was a hospitalisation rate and thus no consideration of how far the "access prioritisation" would need to go - possibly a factor in the departure from that plan as well as questions of public acceptance of that high a death rate.Forgive me for stating the obvious, but we accepted a high number of deaths. We also abandoned normality so there’s a good argument that we got the worst of both worlds. Lockdown advocates often claim that it would have been so much worse without them, but can’t substantiate their claim. In fact the evidence we have suggests otherwise. There was also of course the option of targeted measures; it didn’t necessarily have to be all or nothing.
What was the IFR of the hypothetical pandemic on which these plans were based? I don’t know the answer but I’ll hazard a guess that it was higher than that of covid. I also suspect that it wasn’t so discriminatory, which would have made the original response even more appropriate to the actual situation in which we found ourselves.
All a lot of scaremongering nonsense, but the most interesting quote from the article is by Keith Neal, emeritus professor in the epidemiology of infectious diseases at the University of Nottingham in which he says that the biggest threat to public health this winter is flu and that:-
Er, wasn't the purpose of lockdown and social distancing to "...keep people safe..."?
If the various COVID measures have weakened everyones immune system to the extent that they are now more vulnerable to existing respiratory viruses, then what exactly was the purpose of the measures in the first place?
No they were not. Not only that, it scarcely got a mention in Parliament. People knew there was "a lot of 'flu about" and some people - particularly the elderly and immuno-compromised - took their own precautions. But no restrictions were imposed, no businesses forcibly closed, no ridiculous "guidance" issued, no face coverings, no unprecedented legal restrictions on people's lives. I think there was some political involvement with the procurement and distribution of vaccine, but I think that was about it. There were no daily figures published, no warnings of death if you went out. It was simply a non-event as far as most people were concerned, just something that was around but that was all. As far as I can recall, there was no debate over whether there should be restrictions or not. The question of restrictions simply did not arise - as they never had in any previous pandemic.Were any restrictions brought in for the Hong Kong flu in 1968?
Thank youNo they were not. Not only that, it scarcely got a mention in Parliament. People knew there was "a lot of 'flu about" and some people - particularly the elderly and immuno-compromised - took their own precautions. But no restrictions were imposed, no businesses forcibly closed, no ridiculous "guidance" issued, no face coverings, no unprecedented legal restrictions on people's lives. I think there was some political involvement with the procurement and distribution of vaccine, but I think that was about it. There were no daily figures published, no warnings of death if you went out. It was simply a non-event as far as most people were concerned, just something that was around but that was all. As far as I can recall, there was no debate over whether there should be restrictions or not. The question of restrictions simply did not arise - as they never had in any previous pandemic.
Will it "not be long"? The last notable pandemic was in 1968 with the Hong Kong flu, so 1968 to 2019 is 51 years. True, there was one in 1958 before that, but perhaps that was just bad luck; before that the Spanish flu was 1918, 40 years previously. It's really quite possible that most people over 40, for instance, will not experience another notable pandemic, bad enough for authorities to bring in restrictions, in their lifetimes.
The Tories have plenty of form on authoritarianism. For example Section 28, the poll tax (and attendant prosecutions), Brexit (and the authoritarian restrictions on the freedom to live where you like), and recent developments such as the Policing and Elections Bills. (I will admit that the Major and Cameron governments were not so authoritarian, though). Priti Patel in particular seems to me to be a very hardline authoritarian, and she was with Covid too.
That is a bit worrying but on the other hand, hopefully politicians now realise the economic damage caused by over-harsh and over-prolonged lockdowns and will not be tempted to implement another one when something considerably less severe than the notable pandemics of the past 100 years comes along.Apologies for the delay in response, I was away for a couple of days and trying not to think too much about the many woes of the modern world
I partly agree, but for example if the idea that we lockdown quickly and hard when something that *might* be problematic comes along becomes the norm, as many are trying to make it, then we could find ourselves with lockdowns and/or restrictions all over the place. In just the last 20 years we had SARS-1, MERS, swine flu, at least 2 bird flu scares (with another one being whipped up at the moment), etc. etc.
I see where you're coming from and I do remember some slightly-authoritarian things under the last Labour government. However the Tories are no better, and in my remembered lifetime (Thatcher onwards, I don't recall anything before that) the Tories have done significantly more, overall, to erode civil liberties than Labour have.I should be considerably more clearer that my concern is wider than just Covid restrictions, and when I say 'leave me alone' I'm really referring to the whole range of civil liberties issues, of which Covid restrictions manifested themselves as a very extreme example. I'd certainly agree that the Tories have pushed through some truly alarming legislation recently, and the media have been far too busy wittering on about Covid (and monkeypox and so forth) to draw sufficient attention to most of that. (And you're entirely right about Patel, who also should never have been back in government at all after what she did to be fired by May, never mind given one of the great offices of state).
My concern there, however, is that I don't expect Labour to perform any better, and again not just on covid or other pandemic restrictions. I say that as someone who was very concerned about civil liberties issues 15 or so years ago when Labour were last in power, indeed the last-but-one time I resigned from the Labour party was over exactly that. ID cards and 90 days detention-without-charge were the most notable issues there, but far from the only ones. And while Labour have opposed the occasional part of the recent deeply authoritarian bills the Tories have pushed through, they haven't opposed anywhere near enough of them. Take the wretched Online 'Safety' Bill, for example - the only objection they appear to have to that appalling collection of wildest dreams of the authoritarians, is to complain that it doesn't go far enough!
As such, I've no idea where I can go politically. I guess I'll just have to take each election as it comes and see who I find least appalling and if I can bear to vote for them. I've spoiled 3 of the last 4 ballot papers I've received and I feel I may well have to go on doing that.
In and of itself, that's a fair point. If there was a Brexit without restrictions on freedom of movement, it would not be authoritarian. The Tories have specifically chosen to implement an authoritarian flavour of Brexit, when they did not have to. That was purely their decision; they could have honoured the referendum result with something which caused considerably less state interference with people's lives and people's personal freedoms.(I would disagree with Brexit being authoritarian, in and of itself, however.
Modern government seems to be overwhelmingly concerned about the liberty of big business while being under-concerned by the liberty of its citizens.
I would agree with that.
The defining characteristic of the late 2010s and early 2020s seem to be a laissez-faire attitude towards multinational corporations, who can doubtless get away with anything (while I have no proof of this, and it's just conjecture, I would not be in the least surprised if energy companies are trying to exploit, and profiteer from, the situation) but increasingly harsh restrictions on civil liberties and personal freedoms. With a political memory stretching back to the 1980s, this is definitely the harshest and most grim political era I remember personally; and while I was not around in the 60s and don't really remember the 70s, I'd venture that we'd have to go back to post-war austerity to find a worse period.
Laissez-faire capitalism was pretty prevalent from the 1980s to the mid-2010s, and that had many problems, but personal freedom and liberty was also more valued (with some exceptions, one notable one being Section 28) in this era.
That is a bit worrying but on the other hand, hopefully politicians now realise the economic damage caused by over-harsh and over-prolonged lockdowns and will not be tempted to implement another one when something considerably less severe than the notable pandemics of the past 100 years comes along.
We didn't have a "monkeydown", at least. We should be thankful for that.
I see where you're coming from and I do remember some slightly-authoritarian things under the last Labour government. However the Tories are no better, and in my remembered lifetime (Thatcher onwards, I don't recall anything before that) the Tories have done significantly more, overall, to erode civil liberties than Labour have.
But if we do assume that both parties have equal form on authoritarianism, then for me personally, other factors come into play. Labour seem to be more concerned about those less-well-off in society and seem to be less prejudiced in general. They do not sound off about benefits claimants and immigrants every five seconds. They want to improve our relations with our continental neighbours, not worsen them. So, for these other reasons, it would have to be Labour over the Tories, any day, for me.
In and of itself, that's a fair point. If there was a Brexit without restrictions on freedom of movement, it would not be authoritarian. The Tories have specifically chosen to implement an authoritarian flavour of Brexit, when they did not have to. That was purely their decision; they could have honoured the referendum result with something which caused considerably less state interference with people's lives and people's personal freedoms.
If there was a "Brexit" that retained freedom of movement into the UK it would not have been Brexit. One of the fundamental pillars of the EU is free movement of people, goods and capital. "Normal" (i.e. non-EU) nations do not provide virtually unfettered access to 450m people from 27 other nations.If there was a Brexit without restrictions on freedom of movement, it would not be authoritarian. The Tories have specifically chosen to implement an authoritarian flavour of Brexit, when they did not have to. That was purely their decision; they could have honoured the referendum result with something which caused considerably less state interference with people's lives and people's personal freedoms.
Norway and Switzerland participate in the free movement of people, and ongoing single market membership was touted by many Brexiteers as the best and most likely outcome. I don't really see why anybody should respect your moving the goalposts on thisIf there was a "Brexit" that retained freedom of movement into the UK it would not have been Brexit. One of the fundamental pillars of the EU is free movement of people, goods and capital. "Normal" (i.e. non-EU) nations do not provide virtually unfettered access to 450m people from 27 other nations.
Of course you could argue that it is not the UK that is denying you that freedom but the EU that is being authoritarian. The UK allows you to up sticks and live wherever you like. it is the EU preventing you from doing so.
In other words, "We won, so we can we do we we like. It doesn't matter that we lied and cheated in order to do. If you believed anything we said, it's your own stupid fault, suckers.".
Wow. Everyone knows the success of the Leave campaign was built on deceit on a massive scale, but I've rarely heard any supporter of Brexit be quite so brazen about stating it.
For 1972 or before. Which for most of us is before our time...My goalposts remained firmly in place. Leaving the EU meant the return to normal behaviour for the UK.
This argument is not valid, but I won't pursue it here.If there was a "Brexit" that retained freedom of movement into the UK it would not have been Brexit.
Except the UK government started it, with their authoritarian restrictions on immigration from EU countries. So in my view, and bringing it back away from Brexit onto the general discussion of libertarianism versus authoritarianism, with that, Section 28, poll tax prosecutions, and all the rest, the Tories are clearly the most authoritarian of the two.Of course you could argue that it is not the UK that is denying you that freedom but the EU that is being authoritarian. The UK allows you to up sticks and live wherever you like. it is the EU preventing you from doing so.
We now live in a health and safety obsessed world. I don't think the rowing boats on Roath Park lake have been used since summer 2019. First Covid, then some sort of poisonous algae and now I believe bird flu is the latest reason. I wasn't planning to drink the water and birds get much closer on the footpath than they do in the water.An interesting measure of "acceptability of strong measures in the late 60s versus the 21st century" could be obtained, perhaps, by comparing the foot-and-mouth outbreaks of 1967 and 2001. The latter led to mass footpath closures, not just through cattle and sheep farms but places well away from them - including woodlands in suburban areas on the edge of cities with not a cow or sheep in sight. So I would argue (and believed at the time) that the 2001 footpath closures went well beyond what was actually required.
It would be interesting to note what, if any, restrictions on the public applied in the foot-and-mouth crisis of 1967. I would guess that footpath closures were restricted to open countryside in cattle- and sheep-farming areas, with other paths (e.g through woodland, across heaths) open, but obviously, not being around in the 1960s, I am not sure.
We now live in a health and safety obsessed world. I don't think the rowing boats on Roath Park lake have been used since summer 2019. First Covid, then some sort of poisonous algae and now I believe bird flu is the latest reason. I wasn't planning to drink the water and birds get much closer on the footpath than they do in the water.
There were no winners. The country was asked what it wanted and it replied. As I keep saying, in this and other threads, if people are gullible enough to believe a word that politicians tell them, then more fool them. I didn't believe what I was told by either side. I voted according to what I wanted (which was for the UK to leave the EU). No manner of lies or half truths had any influence on that decision. I'm sorry if some people were taken in, but we must all live and learn.In other words, "We won, so we can we do we we like. It doesn't matter that we lied and cheated in order to do. If you believed anything we said, it's your own stupid fault, suckers.".
Well let's not say "return" to normal behaviour. Let's say "begin to behave normally" then pre-1972 is not an issue. It is not normal for any sovereign nation to be subject to laws which have supremacy over their own, where disputes about those laws are determined in a foreign court. It is not normal for any sovereign nation to have no control over who legally lives and works within its borders (and to suggest the UK somehow had a get out clause from this is fanciful). It is not normal for a nation to be unable to conclude trade deals which suit it without seeking the concurrence of 27 other nations (whom they might not suit). I could go on, but much of what the EU imposes on its members is not normal (when compared to the over 150-odd nations in the world).For 1972 or before. Which for most of us is before our time...![]()
Except the UK government started it, with their authoritarian restrictions on immigration from EU countries.
You may well be right, my sister (3 doses) had a bad case of it recently and although I was in close proximity (and several other people who could have infected me for that matter) and unvaccinated, didn't at least seem to catch it (I felt well for the whole exposure period so I never bothered with a test). I may have had it in the first wave of 2020 with the natural immunity though.Irrespective of whether many disagree, I would say the constant conveyor belt of vaccines have also weakened peoples own immunity, so many of them have "covid" multiple times or other illnesses following a jab, when those unvaccinated do not seem to either have had covid or have it multiple times.
Funnily enough, I've been getting sniffles and colds since everyone else has started mixing. I tested one and it was covid - a medium strength cold in my experience. Thank goodness for the vaccines that it was a moment of curiosity and interest, rather than one of fear.