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worsleyweb
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Hope they have him on CCTV and he or she gets fined for criminal damage. The architect who designed that wall should also face the same fine and be made to retrain.
Full phase three trials including safety are being run for these vaccines
They’ve fucked up big time when it’s all over they’ll have some questions to answer wankersIt's been the case for many months now.
What about smokers, drinkers, rock climbers etc?the risk to children from this virus is tiny. but adults who refuse the vaccine should be made to sign a form declaring they have sufficient health care insurance should they get covid. I dont see why i as a tax payer should be paying for healthcare for someone who could have avoided catching this virus just because they hadsome way out views and didnt want the vaccine. So not compulsory but you pay for your helthcare if you catch it. Might make people a little less selfish.
Sorry I was clumsy in my post. My concern is more that the long term side effects (hopefully there won't be any) won't become apparent for a long time.
Maybe but my post was about your comment on testing numbers.They’ve fucked up big time when it’s all over they’ll have some questions to answer wankers
Apparently Lancashire now in Tier 3 according to the BBC
Better than most other countries who still aren't there after 7 months then.
I am all for knocking the government when they fuck up, but not just knocking them for giggles. The truth is from a very poor start, we got our act together rather better than pretty much everyone else:
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Sure. It's interesting that we instinctively feel that a vaccine has more potential long term side effects than the disease itself. I don't think there's any good rationale for that - indeed it could easily be the case that even for low risk groups like young children, the chance of long term side effects from the bug far outweighs that from the vaccine.
Is it mainly Blackpool that’s causing the rise in numbers?in the quieter northern regions of Lancs this is hard to take, but i accept there is a geographical cut off point you must use to make things a bit easier.
My take on this too.Given the likely tiny fatality rate in the under 65's it should be encouraged in all people over that age, anyone considered vulnerable and 'key workers', if they want it, first and then anyone else who wants it further down the line.
I'm not defending the government's every action - far from it. It's just there seems to be an ever increasing political agenda on this thread, critical of the government no matter what it does. This was a prime example. From a very poor base, we've ramped up testing better than any other country, and yet the post to which I replied simply wanted to criticise. Even your comment above seems to be through gritted teeth. We have very similar populations to France, Germany and Italy and now have more testing capacity than any of them. In this respect, a "well done" is in order, not a criticism.Certainly tells a story about the start.
It would be more meaningful if presented (1) as a proportion of population (ours is 10x Denmarks) and (2) as a proportion of case numbers (Germany is currently 4x less than ours)
Then you'd see a rather different story.
And, of course, the criticism is not just over the test part, but actually moreso over the track and trace element.
Is it mainly Blackpool that’s causing the rise in numbers?
Be interesting to find out the general side effects (say per 100,000 or 1 million) compared with taking your chances of succumbing to the virus/disease itself (which will be different depending on the virus/disease).Sure. It's interesting that we instinctively feel that a vaccine has more potential long term side effects than the disease itself. I don't think there's any good rationale for that - indeed it could easily be the case that even for low risk groups like young children, the chance of long term side effects from the bug far outweighs that from the vaccine.
It's only when the infections spill over into the 40-65 age group that ICU admissions start to rise. Then once that gets a hold it then spills over into the 65+ age group and then hospital and ICU admissions start to zoom.Not if you look at hospitalisations, and that was what should have been being monitored elsewhere, and wasn't by the government.
Looks they’ve got a better deal than Liverpool. And gyms can stay openi think Burnley, Preston and Lancaster Uni are currently driving things but i will have a look at the rates later today and put up a graph. i believe Blackpool is stabilising
actually i will look into it as it was my impression numbers in general are plateauing