Precisely - more tests equals more positives. This is exactly the kind of contextual information that we're not getting from Number 10.
But it's triple the amount of tests they were doing when they last got 30 positive cases, so surely that would mean the prevelance of the virus is receding (up here at least).
Are there are guidelines that say 'don't get on a train' or 'don't go to the beach'?
I may have missed them, all I heard from Johnson yesterday was 'heads, shoulders, knees and toes' or some such.
Ask yourself why now that people are not abiding by the guidelines in comparison to March and April. Beaches are open, trains are running, people encouraged to get back to normal, to work, to holiday in the uk, to see friends and family in a pub but not in a pub, dont see more than 1 other person in your dreams but dont dream, keep 2m apart except when youre only 1m blah blah blah. It's a **** show. Simple as that
Everyone is clear now what they should be doing but most choose to ignore the advice. People are being dicks and when it all kicks off again they’ll blame the government.
We all have to do the right thing and take personal responsibility and stop with excuses and blame.
It's just common sense!
It's just common sense!
My common sense (and experience) tells me that being on a half-full train where everyone is wearing a mask and being distanced on a beach in the fresh air is perfectly safe for everyone.
Because many people only ask for tests when they have "sort of symptoms" or "been in contact with someone who might be" you cannot quite say that. We may have always been picking up the majority of positives from start.But it's triple the amount of tests they were doing when they last got 30 positive cases, so surely that would mean the prevelance of the virus is receding (up here at least).
The common sense position is to buy an open ticket which does not tie you down to a particular train, and not to make seat reservations. Your life and health are more important than the price of your ticket. It also depends on the length of the journey - even if all people are masked there will be some relaxation of that discipline over a longer journey eg. with people taking them off to eat etc. There is no problem keeping a mask on for a journey of 90 mins. or less, but longer than that it becomes difficult for most people.What’s the common sense view on whether you board the train or not having bought an advance ticket and then see it’s busy as it pulls into the platform?
The common sense position is to buy an open ticket which does not tie you down to a particular train, and not to make seat reservations. Your life and health are more important than the price of your ticket. It also depends on the length of the journey - even if all people are masked there will be some relaxation of that discipline over a longer journey eg. with people taking them off to eat etc. There is no problem keeping a mask on for a journey of 90 mins. or less, but longer than that it becomes difficult for most people.
I wore one at the airport and on a 2.5 hour flight and didn’t notice any hysteria from the other passengers.
People have to get trains for work. If there’s one an hour it’s not ideal to buy an open ticket at greater expense in the hope there’ll be one in time that meets some arbitrary capacity limit.
But surely social distancing is easier without seat reservations. If you book tickets online with the Deutsche Bahn in Germany then you can see how full the train will be well in advance of actually getting on it.Virtually all long distance advance tickets are for a specific train and include a seat reservation
If I join the train and someone is sitting in my reserved seat I boot them out
Particularly if it is an opposing fan
You can’t know because the government stopped publishing the number of tests being done (in England at least) weeks ago, because the figures they were giving were plainly wrong, and they ran out of road pretending that they weren’t. So who knows how many tests are being done on individuals vs retests vs walk ins to get tested vs random community testing. Only the latter, on a large scale, will give us a sense of overall prevalence, as I think you alluded to earlier. Figures I saw earlier today showed a very low infection rate across the country, but with London double the next highest. But as these estimate were based on god knows what data, I can’t vouch for any type of accuracy.Yes, it does suggest that. We don't know if the increase in positives in parts of England is similarly just down to more testing.
Virtually all long distance advance tickets are for a specific train and include a seat reservation
If I join the train and someone is sitting in my reserved seat I boot them out
Particularly if it is an opposing fan
Virtually all long distance advance tickets are for a specific train and include a seat reservation
If I join the train and someone is sitting in my reserved seat I boot them out
Particularly if it is an opposing fan