Doesn't really matter to be honest, we're all going to die anyway. An exercise in futility, that's what life is.
The fact that the biggest demographic in elections is those that couldn't even be arsed to turn up and vote tells you how much point there is in it.
Only two certainties in life: death and taxes. Unless you're Barrie in which case it's one certainty.
I was reading Janet Daley in the Telegraph on Saturday and she has concluded (probably correctly) that the EU has now decided that AstraZeneca is to root of all evil because its efforts to punish Britain are drawing more attention in Europe to British success in vaccine delivery compared to the continent’s shambles. In the interests of balance, I would suggest that AstraZeneca has not played this dispute very well. As one of the world’s biggest pharmaceuticals, I might have expected better PR from them even though vaccines are not their usual line of business. Funding for Oxford/AstraZeneca came from the British taxpayer so it was right that we insisted that it be delivered at cost for a period unlike the others, who may now look unfavourably on their competitor for commercial reasons – the BioNTech jab costs ten times as much. The two EU superpowers, France and Germany, have been the loudest questioners of the vaccine in the face of their domestic audiences, to the point where many of their people no longer want it. How long before Europeans realise that the survival of The Project matters more to their leaders than that of their citizens? Daley sees the EU as trying to apply “soft socialism” to vaccine supply. Everybody must have everything at exactly the same time – no preferential treatment. Certainly that is how it negotiated its contracts, ordering equal amounts from German Pfizer and French Sanofi. This is the root of why the E.S.S.R. is ultimately destined to failure – the race to the lowest common denominator, usually found at the bottom. Pursuing this policy also drags Britain back down into the gutter with the Europeans by penalising our successful vaccination program via a proxy, AstraZeneca.
For anyone that pays for Bupa , you won't be covered for any complications with the experimental gene therapy injection.
If you voluntarily take any experimental medical treatment and suffer side effects private health care won't cover you. The same as self inflicted drug or alcohol abuse , cosmetic surgery, fertility treatment or Aids HIV, corrective eyesight surgery or self inflicted injuries from dangerous sports.