Claim of guesswork followed by guesswork ?
I did end it by saying I was happy to admit to not being an expert…
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Claim of guesswork followed by guesswork ?
Fair comment…..but if (big if) we end up with a mild version in mass circulation it’s possibly going to be little different to a host of other illnesses the vulnerable are far more susceptible to turning serious.
Completely agree re mixed messages, policing and lies, and would further add the selfish cohort who don’t give a toss about anyone else
Our strategy of having a high number of cases over months has been incredibly successful, compared to the over cautious Europeans, who continue to pay the price for it... with nightclubs and pubs and to some degree schools still at complete normality in this country, it demonstrates that we have every intention of continuing this strategy.
It is blindingly obvious that the mandatory mask wearing in shops and transport was brought in entirely to appease the sections of the public who are still terrified of the virus... and the intention was not in any way to actually reduce numbers.
Our strategy of having a high number of cases over months has been incredibly successful, compared to the over cautious Europeans, who continue to pay the price for it... with nightclubs and pubs and to some degree schools still at complete normality in this country, it demonstrates that we have every intention of continuing this strategy.
There will be so much health advice provided by experts and followed by the government that they just can not make public... having a high 'natural' number of cases over many months is surely one of them. In almost every possible scenario, it is desirable for us to continue our frequent and natural exposure to the virus in all its variants as they come into existence, and for the rest of time.
It is blindingly obvious that the mandatory mask wearing in shops and transport was brought in entirely to appease the sections of the public who are still terrified of the virus... and the intention was not in any way to actually reduce numbers.
Our strategy of having a high number of cases over months has been incredibly successful, compared to the over cautious Europeans, who continue to pay the price for it... with nightclubs and pubs and to some degree schools still at complete normality in this country, it demonstrates that we have every intention of continuing this strategy.
There will be so much health advice provided by experts and followed by the government that they just can not make public... having a high 'natural' number of cases over many months is surely one of them. In almost every possible scenario, it is desirable for us to continue our frequent and natural exposure to the virus in all its variants as they come into existence, and for the rest of time.
I've said this before, but the confidence with which you broadcast your made up theories as more or less fact, is breathtaking.
Whilst I am not an epidemiologist, I talk to a lot of people in clinical trials every day (you know what I do). Right at the start of the Pandemic I was told that the most likely outcome from all this was that the virus would mutate and get weaker over time, with us all eventually being infected and re-infected numerous times over the course of our lifetimes. The challenge was seeing out the period of time that it took for this to happen. We've all had the Spanish flu apparently- it now gives you the sniffles instead of killing you.
There's a vital step missing in your equation about heads and tails. You're right that every mutation of the virus has an equal chance of being "good" or "bad". But there are millions, literally millions, of mutations of the virus every day. I suspect that most infected people have at least one mutation every day as the virus replicates itself like mad. The crucial factor is whether those mutations go on to propagate and dominate.(Disclaimer... Not an epidemiologist but I am statistician with a background in mathematical modelling)
Mutations are random changes to the genetic pattern. By definition "random" means it doesn't follow a rule like always going up or always going down - but those outcomes are always possible.
Given there is a spectrum of possible outcomes from "you wouldn't notice this virus, it's harmless" through to "this will wipe out all life on earth". Virus' need a host to survive and multiply so the longer they exist (unchecked) the more they will tend to a steady state where there is an equal chance the mutation makes them more deadly than it makes them less deadly. That stable state will depend on huge numbers of specific factors unique to that virus.
Random means that a virus can just become harmless because it got heads followed by heads followed by heads etc in its random "coin toss" changes... But it is equally likely to get tails followed by tails followed by tails and so on until we all die!
It's sensible to take all precautions to reduce the number of mutations ... It might get better but it might equally get a lot worst. And if it gets worse first... People die and we might not be around to see the return to a mathematically stable state.
It is blindingly obvious that the mandatory mask wearing in shops and transport was brought in entirely to appease the sections of the public who are still terrified of the virus... and the intention was not in any way to actually reduce numbers.
Our strategy of having a high number of cases over months has been incredibly successful, compared to the over cautious Europeans, who continue to pay the price for it... with nightclubs and pubs and to some degree schools still at complete normality in this country, it demonstrates that we have every intention of continuing this strategy.
There will be so much health advice provided by experts and followed by the government that they just can not make public... having a high 'natural' number of cases over many months is surely one of them. In almost every possible scenario, it is desirable for us to continue our frequent and natural exposure to the virus in all its variants as they come into existence, and for the rest of time.
Good morning from Japan, where more of the population is vaccinated than the UK's yet everyone continues to wear masks, wash/sanitise hands and ventilate well. There's never been a lockdown either. Yesterday there was one death I think and new cases are almost invisible on the graphs. Still, people haven't been happy with how the government handled things at times, but I wonder in what parallel universe you live, where you can describe the UK as 'incredibly successful'??
We should do whatever we like, and then blame the government if it goes wrong.