The Earl of Chesterfield, on 14 April 2020 - 02:19 PM, said:
This.
The Cheltenham festival is simply a symbol of this government's complacency. Or perhaps even the 'herd immunity' approach there's evidence of them contemplating.
I'm sure many in Europe looked on with the same incredulity with which we viewed Belarussian football matches after our lockdown...
(
https://bylinetimes....navirus-crisis/ )
12 March 2020: Addressing the “question of banning major public events such as sporting fixtures” the Prime Minister says “The scientific advice as we’ve said over the last couple of weeks is that banning such events will have little effect on the spread” (Prime Minister’s Office, 10 Downing Street).
Be interesting to see the evidence of this advice they received and who gave it to them, particularly given as you say that 99% of countries had already banned it. Can you imagine going to one of these events at the moment? You would have to be off your rocker. Given that we are standing 2m apart and in lockdown and the number of cases has 'flattened' there is no doubt that events like this at that time spread it around the country. I saw a fella from Barnsley in his 50's a friend knows who went there that has since tragically died from it, whether he caught it there we will never know, but imagine the spread all around the four corners of the country would certainly not have been helped with knock on effects.
I have no doubt that in my opinion they were pursuing a herd immunity plan at the time of Cheltenham, and still are to a certain extent.
https://www.bbc.co.u...merset-52217868
Know first hand of a relatively young individual with learning disabilities just last week whom would have always been medically classed as lacking capacity to make such a decision with suspected Coronavirus placed on a DNR order without their families consent.
I can imagine across the country there is many cases of this. Criminal.
Added to the carehomes being asked to accept elderly corona positive individuals akin to a pallative care situation.
https://www.thenorth...nts-care-homes/
Why can they not be treated (and possibly cured) in the nightingale hospitals if we have so much capacity? Why would they increase the risk of those in the homes catching it? It is interesting that the no doubt tragic figures are left out of the briefings. I was reading of a care home in Selston that has sadly lost 9 dementia patients so far.
This post has been edited by spireiterob: 14 April 2020 - 07:08 PM