ReginaldSmythV wrote: » Lives vs money. Money will always win.
gral6 wrote: » Are you happy enough to grow Roosters in the back garden?
ReginaldSmythV wrote: » I bought roosters all the way through lockdown.
gral6 wrote: » It would keep fuc.. all open. Get some fresh air, it helps.
average_runner wrote: » Hotels, Airbnb and campsites are booked out with staycations
Beechwoodspark wrote: » I asked about a month ago for the govt to have a no fly list of covid 19 countries where it is over a certain level. It is STILL not in place
Tenzor07 wrote: » Correct, I can't see anywhere which says that the 15 new cases came from someone who travelled here through Dublin airport, Ferryport, across the border from the North. Was it a returning fruit picker, was it a politician, an Irish nurse coming home to visit family after working the past 6 months in an NHS hospital..? You just don't know!To suggest closing down the transport infrastructure and blocking all entry points with burning tyres and pitchforks or something just means those who suggest it need to stop cocooning and get some outside air for a change.
Limpy wrote: » We Ireland =UK with regards to travel. All of Europe could ban the UK except Ireland. .
Limpy wrote: » They can't shut the UK out unless they put up a border and revoke the common travel agreement. Obviously that's not going to happen. We Ireland =UK with regards to travel. All of Europe could ban the UK except Ireland. All present restrictions can be circumvented by crossing the border in the North. Fact is due to the GFA and the border issue Ireland can't control its own destiny.
Spanish Eyes wrote: » UK and US to my mind are the current vectors. But the new Admin is terrified of upsetting either country. US is a basket case, and UK inward travel doesn't just mean Irish abroad coming home to visit Mammy. UK is a hub for many countries. And when you get to the airport, are there any checks on arrival? Apart from a flimsy bit of paper I doubt it. CV all kicked off here through International Travel. It spread around the world within weeks. Would be wise to remember that.
theological wrote: » I commented earlier on this thread about the prevalence of the virus in the UK. At the moment about 1 in 2942 people have coronavirus based on the latest figures from the KCL coronavirus tracker. That's rather small. I'm not in disagreement that travel should only be for necessary purposes, but the idea that the UK is a significant "vector" for the virus seems to be false in my mind.
Spanish Eyes wrote: » It is, as is US, Sweden, Brazil (lots here, how do they get here?) and many other places besides. They can stay away for now, but that is not going to be our decision, and the new Gov cannot make a decision either! So we have an indecisive Gov and a pandemic. Don't know which is worse at the moment.
Spanish Eyes wrote: » So we have an indecisive Gov and a pandemic.
gral6 wrote: » Are 16 cases a day a pandemic?
average_runner wrote: » That's not the issue, it's the rate it can increase so quickly like before. 75% cases are under 25, we need to identify where its occurring and not open the pubs till back under 1. Spain and France are showing signs of an Italy
ChikiChiki wrote: » Hmmm not sure if serious. That 16 cases in real terms could be translated to as much as 200 at this point allowing for the other 184 cases yet to be diagnosed. That is a problem.
average_runner wrote: » That's not the issue, it's the rate it can increase so quickly like before. 75% cases are under 25, we need to identify where its occurring and not open the pubs till back under 1.Spain and France are showing signs of an Italy
stephenjmcd wrote: » Current R rate wont feed into decision making, this has been as good as confirmed by Prof nolan. He stated only last week and confirmed again today with low case numbers R will rise, this was expected, you can't give accurate analysis using the R value when cases are low. Its basic data analysis when using a restricted base data set. As stated by Dr Glynn they're identifying clusters here and its nothing they didn't expect, majority are private houses involved while there is also clusters appearing again amongst healthcare staff in nursing homes. Spain have identified clusters and are implementing measures based on said clusters, likewise in France and they're reporting a large number of cases from their overseas territories. But all of the above is off topic for this thread. Just pointing out lots can be explained when you look into them
faceman wrote: » What now? Can’t comment on France but what is “signs of an Italy” and what are Spain doing?