gauchesnell wrote: » ????maybe. I think I have worked in one area like that but not currently or recently. Definitely no newspaper time in my experience so far in PS.
road_high wrote: » Other side of the coin- I worked much harder in the PS role I worked than the private role I’m in now- so much more autonomy and decision making. Probably more specific to the role, but I had tons of clients always ringing me, scheme deadlines etc.- if you didn’t do the job you’d be stirring up big problems. You were also chained to a desk or on visits 9-5 with a weekly diary to fill in of your activities. I couldn’t hack that now.
FloatingVoter wrote: » It's not official newspaper time. Just getting in early and get up to speed. Lads that I know working on sites do exactly the same. They just want to know about stuff going on in the world. I'd be doing the same if I was working in a bakery or a bar. I could call it cartwheel time but my back is shot. And I'm not doing Yoga for the same reason.
gauchesnell wrote: » wow...yeah there is a lot of PS hate at the moment which is understandable I suppose. We are still getting paid cos we are working from home - unfortunately some jobs cannot be done from home. There will always be messers no matter where you work. I despise working from home though
lord quackinton wrote: » updated - figures taken from worldometer Sweden Chances of dying from corona .025% - no lockdown Uk Chances of dying from corona .04% - late to lockdown and Large population Ireland Chances of dying from corona .025% - early to lockdown and small population. Half of Sweden’s population America Chances of dying from corona .019% - Donald trump has received world criticism and is held been personally accountable for the thousands of deaths Time to open up?
FloatingVoter wrote: » There could be a second wave. They all have their eyes on the Spanish Flu.
lord quackinton wrote: » updated - figures taken from worldometer Sweden Chances of dying from corona .025% - no lockdown Ireland Chances of dying from corona .025% - early to lockdown and small population. Half of Sweden’s population America Chances of dying from corona .019% - Donald trump has received world criticism and is held been personally accountable for the thousands of deaths Time to open up?
arctictree wrote: » What if they provide us with a plan but the numbers just stay where they are indefinitely? Do we just stay in lockdown indefinitely? Not going to work....
road_high wrote: » I don’t get it. If people wanted to join the ps there has been ample opportunities to do so in the past 5 years. Obviously there will be a recruitment bar now but might lift if the economy recovers quickly. The focus needs to be getting us all back to work for all our sakes. I know lots in the PS working away from home, doubly different as it’s not something they normally do unlike many of us that always did it with laptops etc- many wouldn’t have even had a laptop for to encryption and security protocols. There’s much more of a very rigid office culture in the PS.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » None of these countries are in a position to open. None of the top 30 countries are in condition to open. They have to try but it won't work. The world is in a trap, that's the reality of the situation.https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countriesAnd we are in this disaster because of China and off loading our industries to a totalitarian regime for 40 years. How has that worked out for the world? We are reaping now what was sowed decades a go.
Deleted User wrote: » I’m confused, what will be the benefit of extending lockdown when the majority of new cases and over 50% of deaths are in care homes? 593 is apparently how many deaths are from care homes. Most of the rest are also over 70s. Is the threat big for people below 70? Big enough to justify destroying our economy?
Princess Consuela Bananahammock wrote: » We're in this because of some bloke eating a bat. Also, New Zealand appears close to opening.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » And which government turns a blind eye to the cultural norms of a section of it's citizens and allows wet markets to operate? The country that tells lies to the world all the time. I'm not going to say any more on it because I think we all have a right to be ballistic about where we are. I'm confident that the world will turn on China for this and correct the imbalance of the last 30 - 40 years. A pandemic and the biggest recession probably in history coming. There is going to be consequences one way or another.
Princess Consuela Bananahammock wrote: » Cultural, yes. Offloading industries is not cultural though. Nor is it being totalitarian.
growleaves wrote: » That's not a real excuse and it doesn't make any sense why people are (seemingly) falling for it. Why do people "all have their eyes" on a diseases from 1918? Why don't they "all have their eyes" on the 1957 pandemic? A much-deadlier second wave would be like winning a negative lottery. There's no *particular* likelihood of it happening. Therefore making it the basis of our policy is stupid and insane.
Discodog wrote: » Finland opening all schools on May 15th.
JRant wrote: » Your right, there is no good reason for businesses like that to be shutdown. Minimal human contact and provide a serious that is much needed. In fact there are loads of similar types of businesses that there was absolutely no good reason to shutdown, well apart from the fact that they wanted everyone to stay in because a model so wrong that it's now laughable was predicting 120k deaths in this country.
Polar101 wrote: » But it is with some restrictions, and only for three weeks (school year in Finland ends on the first week of June).
Ferris_Bueller wrote: » This thread has become a nut house in the past couple of days. You'd swear that Varadker and Holohan were actively trying to ruin peoples lives the way some people are slagging them and calling them names on this.