It's one of those things that should happen (especially in offices, hospitality, schools etc), but once the immediate threat recedes, falls down the priority list. Are any other countries putting serious investment into it out of interest?JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:34 amAt what point should the onus shift on companies + govt to make air quality & ventilation a priority?Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 6:52 am How many people are genuinely unable to be vaxed at this point? Genuine question.
And what restrictions should we be keeping in place? Mandatory masks or something beyond that?
So, coronavirus...
- Margin__Walker
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No idea!Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:43 amIt's one of those things that should happen (especially in offices, hospitality, schools etc), but once the immediate threat recedes, falls down the priority list. Are any other countries putting serious investment into it out of interest?JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:34 amAt what point should the onus shift on companies + govt to make air quality & ventilation a priority?Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 6:52 am How many people are genuinely unable to be vaxed at this point? Genuine question.
And what restrictions should we be keeping in place? Mandatory masks or something beyond that?
Employers and hospitality venues now have an obligation to put mitigations in place to make their establishments safe, that’s a legal obligation in Scotland. It’s not currently defined what those mitigations are though. Post emergency legislation, I would hope this obligation remains in place and is more explicitly laid out in terms of ventilation and/or filtration.JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:57 amNo idea!Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:43 amIt's one of those things that should happen (especially in offices, hospitality, schools etc), but once the immediate threat recedes, falls down the priority list. Are any other countries putting serious investment into it out of interest?JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:34 am
At what point should the onus shift on companies + govt to make air quality & ventilation a priority?
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
That and a better all round understanding of risk in everyday life that we just accept as ok.JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:57 am Essentially what I'd love to see as a reaction to the pandemic is a realisation that actually we spend a lot of time in unhealthy environments and we can and should be better at this.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
A lot of our inside environments are heavily artificial, overly sterile and unhealthy. Using more natural materials has a positive impact of people's physical and mental health.Biffer wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:05 amThat and a better all round understanding of risk in everyday life that we just accept as ok.JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:57 am Essentially what I'd love to see as a reaction to the pandemic is a realisation that actually we spend a lot of time in unhealthy environments and we can and should be better at this.
PFA's is going to be very interesting. HSE put a call out to industry and EU reach plus many US states are moving to limit or ban many of them. I always wonder with new car or paint, carpet etc.. smells is from off gasing from things that are partially cured.
Neither of my kids who work for major multinational companies are back in their offices yet. They pop in for the odd meeting every couple of weeks but otherwise are WFH. Both employers are still wary and are clear they have a legal responsibility for the health and wellbeing of employees when in the workplace. They are also concerned about large swathes of their workforce going off sick at the same time should they all be recalled into offices. Also both of my kids companies are realising that WFH hasn't had any real negative impact on company performance so are reluctant to make changes until case numbers fall a lot further. They are basically ignoring the Blonde Bumblecunts unscientific utterances and behaving a lot more sensibly than our Gov.Biffer wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:41 amEmployers and hospitality venues now have an obligation to put mitigations in place to make their establishments safe, that’s a legal obligation in Scotland. It’s not currently defined what those mitigations are though. Post emergency legislation, I would hope this obligation remains in place and is more explicitly laid out in terms of ventilation and/or filtration.JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:57 amNo idea!Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:43 am
It's one of those things that should happen (especially in offices, hospitality, schools etc), but once the immediate threat recedes, falls down the priority list. Are any other countries putting serious investment into it out of interest?
A number of my mates are now one or two days a month in the office, and have been told that's the permanent arrangement.dpedin wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:32 amNeither of my kids who work for major multinational companies are back in their offices yet. They pop in for the odd meeting every couple of weeks but otherwise are WFH. Both employers are still wary and are clear they have a legal responsibility for the health and wellbeing of employees when in the workplace. They are also concerned about large swathes of their workforce going off sick at the same time should they all be recalled into offices. Also both of my kids companies are realising that WFH hasn't had any real negative impact on company performance so are reluctant to make changes until case numbers fall a lot further. They are basically ignoring the Blonde Bumblecunts unscientific utterances and behaving a lot more sensibly than our Gov.Biffer wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:41 amEmployers and hospitality venues now have an obligation to put mitigations in place to make their establishments safe, that’s a legal obligation in Scotland. It’s not currently defined what those mitigations are though. Post emergency legislation, I would hope this obligation remains in place and is more explicitly laid out in terms of ventilation and/or filtration.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
My daughter in law works for a large Uk company and is still working from home - well, working from my study atm as they are having work done at home. I suspect that she'll continue to do so even after the pandemic threat is minimised. It's win win for her employer - they can reduce their overheads and reduce the chances of having lots of staff off ill.dpedin wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:32 amNeither of my kids who work for major multinational companies are back in their offices yet. They pop in for the odd meeting every couple of weeks but otherwise are WFH. Both employers are still wary and are clear they have a legal responsibility for the health and wellbeing of employees when in the workplace. They are also concerned about large swathes of their workforce going off sick at the same time should they all be recalled into offices. Also both of my kids companies are realising that WFH hasn't had any real negative impact on company performance so are reluctant to make changes until case numbers fall a lot further. They are basically ignoring the Blonde Bumblecunts unscientific utterances and behaving a lot more sensibly than our Gov.Biffer wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:41 amEmployers and hospitality venues now have an obligation to put mitigations in place to make their establishments safe, that’s a legal obligation in Scotland. It’s not currently defined what those mitigations are though. Post emergency legislation, I would hope this obligation remains in place and is more explicitly laid out in terms of ventilation and/or filtration.
This article on the use of Ivermectin may be of some interest. (it's a retraction on its efficacy - the collapsed URL doesn't make that clear)
https://blogs.jwatch.org/hiv-id-observa ... 022/02/12/
https://blogs.jwatch.org/hiv-id-observa ... 022/02/12/
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The very next day Bill Gates 'sadly' endorsed what the "whackos" are arguing:Niegs wrote: Thu Feb 17, 2022 5:33 am Speaking for 90% (or more!) of Canadians to the "end all mandates now" whackos...
https://www.informedchoiceaustralia.com ... he-vaccine
... and then today Ardern virtually admitted the same thing:
"Once we come through a wave and a peak of Omicron, that (mandates) equation changes because many unvaccinated people at that point will have been exposed to Covid-19."
Can't see the point of vaccine mandates. If numpties want to take the risk then let them at this stage. Canada and NZ are mostly vaccinated. Feel sorry for any health care workers who have to treat them but beyond that don't care. Like any religious group they aren't going to be persuaded.
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Be proud! It''s all over! Boris personally saved us!

I would keep the ONS surveillance survey going as it is in the grand scheme of things probably pretty cheap. Agree with ditching the large scale free testing, isolation etc... Keep testing in clinical settings for the moment but probably something to go in the summer.
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So yesterday NZ confirmed about 2,500 new cases and two deaths.
"... and two deaths".
WTF does that mean?
I know what it implies -- it suggests that Covid yesterday cut down two NZers, possibly healthy and in their prime.
We don't know if that is so or not, because we were not given any qualifying info by our govt which dictates the narrative.
But also yesterday an article in Stuff told that many who present at Emergency Departments in NZ for calamitous injury or illness totally unrelated to Covid are testing positive for the virus:
"All patients coming to EDs were tested for Covid-19 if they consented, and many, especially those who were vaccinated, tested positive despite not showing symptoms."
Now surely one can assume that those most in peril of dying would be the unfortunates rushed to various EDs for whatever health or injury-related cause, so did those two die the other day from or with Covid?
Last week, data on Australia's total Covid deaths over the two years told that the median age for the female dead was 86 and for male Covid deaths it was 81, and that the bulk who died 'of Covid' had several comorbidities.
It was widely known and accepted within just the initial several months of the virus back in 2020 that it was the elderly with severe health issues who were most at risk of Covid death. Yet multiple governments have deemed that it has been necessary to destroy (the lives and livelihood of) their populace in order to 'save' them.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/n ... or-covid19
"... and two deaths".
WTF does that mean?
I know what it implies -- it suggests that Covid yesterday cut down two NZers, possibly healthy and in their prime.
We don't know if that is so or not, because we were not given any qualifying info by our govt which dictates the narrative.
But also yesterday an article in Stuff told that many who present at Emergency Departments in NZ for calamitous injury or illness totally unrelated to Covid are testing positive for the virus:
"All patients coming to EDs were tested for Covid-19 if they consented, and many, especially those who were vaccinated, tested positive despite not showing symptoms."
Now surely one can assume that those most in peril of dying would be the unfortunates rushed to various EDs for whatever health or injury-related cause, so did those two die the other day from or with Covid?
Last week, data on Australia's total Covid deaths over the two years told that the median age for the female dead was 86 and for male Covid deaths it was 81, and that the bulk who died 'of Covid' had several comorbidities.
It was widely known and accepted within just the initial several months of the virus back in 2020 that it was the elderly with severe health issues who were most at risk of Covid death. Yet multiple governments have deemed that it has been necessary to destroy (the lives and livelihood of) their populace in order to 'save' them.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/n ... or-covid19
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Again we come back to it's not just them at risk, though. There's a non-negligible number of people unable to be vaccinated, they need everyone who can to get it.petej wrote: Mon Feb 21, 2022 8:43 am Can't see the point of vaccine mandates. If numpties want to take the risk then let them at this stage. Canada and NZ are mostly vaccinated. Feel sorry for any health care workers who have to treat them but beyond that don't care. Like any religious group they aren't going to be persuaded.
I'm also not wild about the idea of health service money being spent treating these fucking idiots when a simple jab would overwhelmingly cut the likelihood of them needing to have any kidn of medical intervention as treatement.
The mandates are there mainly for the healthcare workers and us oldies (our hospital was full a month ago with no covid cases so not much wiggle room at all.). Once this wave has gone through us I can definitely see a reduction in restrictions.petej wrote: Mon Feb 21, 2022 8:43 am Can't see the point of vaccine mandates. If numpties want to take the risk then let them at this stage. Canada and NZ are mostly vaccinated. Feel sorry for any health care workers who have to treat them but beyond that don't care. Like any religious group they aren't going to be persuaded.
I drink and I forget things.
In the UK Omicron really confused our statistics in terms of people dieing with covid not because of it. Such was the huge population saturation of it in Jan.convoluted wrote: Mon Feb 21, 2022 7:04 pm So yesterday NZ confirmed about 2,500 new cases and two deaths.
"... and two deaths".
WTF does that mean?
I know what it implies -- it suggests that Covid yesterday cut down two NZers, possibly healthy and in their prime.
We don't know if that is so or not, because we were not given any qualifying info by our govt which dictates the narrative.
But also yesterday an article in Stuff told that many who present at Emergency Departments in NZ for calamitous injury or illness totally unrelated to Covid are testing positive for the virus:
"All patients coming to EDs were tested for Covid-19 if they consented, and many, especially those who were vaccinated, tested positive despite not showing symptoms."
Now surely one can assume that those most in peril of dying would be the unfortunates rushed to various EDs for whatever health or injury-related cause, so did those two die the other day from or with Covid?
Last week, data on Australia's total Covid deaths over the two years told that the median age for the female dead was 86 and for male Covid deaths it was 81, and that the bulk who died 'of Covid' had several comorbidities.
It was widely known and accepted within just the initial several months of the virus back in 2020 that it was the elderly with severe health issues who were most at risk of Covid death. Yet multiple governments have deemed that it has been necessary to destroy (the lives and livelihood of) their populace in order to 'save' them.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/n ... or-covid19
On the 2 deaths. Looking it up NZ has 33k deaths per year. Or 90 deaths per day. So it’s pretty tiny in the scheme of things.
https://www.stats.govt.nz/topics/births-and-deaths
In terms of the various government premature easing of restrictions, this is the one I’m least worrying about. It’s already swept through here.Blackmac wrote: Mon Feb 21, 2022 7:49 pm Johnson's lifting of restrictions somehow reminds me of this. The Great War of 1914 to 1917.
I’m reminded of the one I thought was utterly stupid after the first re opening where everyone was still unvaccinated, the strain a very deadly one, and the government were actively urging people to return to work using public transport.
Gosh are we nearly 2 years in to this thing?
At least two years.. it was likely here before we even recognised it.. it's gone quick though..Ymx wrote: Mon Feb 21, 2022 10:10 pmIn terms of the various government premature easing of restrictions, this is the one I’m least worrying about. It’s already swept through here.Blackmac wrote: Mon Feb 21, 2022 7:49 pm Johnson's lifting of restrictions somehow reminds me of this. The Great War of 1914 to 1917.
I’m reminded of the one I thought was utterly stupid after the first re opening where everyone was still unvaccinated, the strain a very deadly one, and the government were actively urging people to return to work using public transport.
Gosh are we nearly 2 years in to this thing?
Going forward my only concern is that a new variant appears that is resistant to current vaccines that spreads fast and is deadlier than past ones... we all assume that future variants will always be milder... which while most likely, isn't necessarily so...
A country that remains in the EU is like a fortress with gates unbarred and unguarded
Suffer not the billionare paedophile to live
Only in scandal does duty end
Voting is the first step on the road to disappointment
Honestly, this shit writes itself
Suffer not the billionare paedophile to live
Only in scandal does duty end
Voting is the first step on the road to disappointment
Honestly, this shit writes itself
Just thought - I had the not at all onerous task of doing the H&S Policy for our place of work - a small office so it was next to nothing. I’d have to take Covid into account now, sod that, it’d be out of my comfort zone.Biffer wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:41 amEmployers and hospitality venues now have an obligation to put mitigations in place to make their establishments safe, that’s a legal obligation in Scotland. It’s not currently defined what those mitigations are though. Post emergency legislation, I would hope this obligation remains in place and is more explicitly laid out in terms of ventilation and/or filtration.JM2K6 wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:57 amNo idea!Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 9:43 am
It's one of those things that should happen (especially in offices, hospitality, schools etc), but once the immediate threat recedes, falls down the priority list. Are any other countries putting serious investment into it out of interest?
Thing is there were very few absolutes, it was all what’s reasonably practicable. Glad I’m out of it.
Absolutely - H&S is always about what's reasonably practical. But even within that I think it's very vague what needs to be considered atm.GogLais wrote: Tue Feb 22, 2022 12:51 pmJust thought - I had the not at all onerous task of doing the H&S Policy for our place of work - a small office so it was next to nothing. I’d have to take Covid into account now, sod that, it’d be out of my comfort zone.Biffer wrote: Wed Feb 16, 2022 10:41 amEmployers and hospitality venues now have an obligation to put mitigations in place to make their establishments safe, that’s a legal obligation in Scotland. It’s not currently defined what those mitigations are though. Post emergency legislation, I would hope this obligation remains in place and is more explicitly laid out in terms of ventilation and/or filtration.
Thing is there were very few absolutes, it was all what’s reasonably practicable. Glad I’m out of it.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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Are you 2 suggesting C19 is turning us into the Adeptus Astartes?

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We could do worse than sacrificing psychics (charlatans and shysters that they are) to keep Liz on the throne and stop Charlie taking over.
The Tories certainly are reminiscent of the High Lords of Terra right now...
The Tories certainly are reminiscent of the High Lords of Terra right now...
You sound like you're doing a Refry impression - but with a hugely improved command of the English Language.JM2K6 wrote: Tue Feb 22, 2022 2:38 pm Sadly no, just the poor bastards overseen by a heartless and uncaring beaurocracy that sees countless people die or live in misery thanks to dogma and power hungry ruling classes that see everyone else as chattel

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I'll have you know mine stops at the jaw line.
Hope everyone is OK, sturginho.sturginho wrote: Fri Feb 25, 2022 4:10 am After two years successfully avoiding the fucker, I've finally caught the fucking rona....
At least you have the game on Sunday to cheer you up

All the money you made will never buy back your soul