Introduction About Site Map

XML
RSS 2 Feed RSS 2 Feed
Navigation

Main Page | Blog Index

Archive for September, 2022

Without Masks and Social Distancing COVID-19 Puts About 8 Times As Many People in British Hospitals

Latest available figures, released about an hour ago:

2022. Patients in hospital across the UK with COVID-19 (no lock-downs, but no restrictions on distance and exposure):

11-09-2022 5,875
10-09-2022 5,848
09-09-2022 6,020
08-09-2022 6,146
07-09-2022 6,212
06-09-2022 6,400
05-09-2022 6,515
04-09-2022 6,523
03-09-2022 6,484
02-09-2022 6,664
01-09-2022 6,915

Many of the above won’t make it until the Queen’s funeral.

2020. Patients in hospital across the UK with COVID-19 (no lock-downs, but masks worn and distance kept):

12-09-2020 814
11-09-2020 772
10-09-2020 946
09-09-2020 926
08-09-2020 896
07-09-2020 904
06-09-2020 819
05-09-2020 814
04-09-2020 820
03-09-2020 819
02-09-2020 805
01-09-2020 863

Remember: Surviving is one option; leaving the hospitals isn’t the end of it. You’re left scarred for life. After a while, if or when you die, they won’t even count you as a COVID-19 casualty.

Is the ‘convenience’ of ignoring the death toll worth the sacrifice?

It’s possible that the current monarchy ended earlier partly because of COVID-19 (both the husband and the wife).

Queen/monarchy and COVID-19

Maybe she could exceed 80 years in the throne had she not been infected.

According to StatCounter, GNU/Linux Fast Approaching 10% Market Share in the World’s Largest Population (India)

India and Linux

The September figures from StatCounter say that about one in 10 Indians is using GNU/Linux on the desktop/laptop; What’s significant here is the large number of users that translates into

Ending Monarchy on a ‘High Note’

Justice and monarchs are not concepts that can be reconciled (to coexist). Let’s choose one over the other.


My thoughts about Elizabeth’s death were expressed online and have been on the public record since the day the death was announced. I personally did not dislike Elizabeth and I know people who had strong opinions, harsh experiences etc. Hence, they disliked her and/or what she stood for.

70+ years is a very long time. It’s a sort of ‘time bridge’ (or wormhole) to the distant past. They insist that the “royals” no longer play any meaningful political role. If that is the case, then what’s the point of them?

Elizabeth was liked by many, both at home and abroad. The same cannot be said about either of her sons, including the elder.

Maybe it’s about time to accept that in a country where many say “eat or heat” it makes no sense to pay a ton of taxpayers’ money for both a funeral and a coronation. Maybe the big funeral can take place. A funeral not just for Elizabeth but also for the monarchy as a whole.

Democratic societies should recognise imperialism for what it is — a relic of the past, a shameful disgrace that involved colonialism, slavery etc. even if euphemisms like “commonwealth” are used (the wealth is not shared; it’s about extraction).

As noted before, Elizabeth seemed like a generally good person. Ending the Monarchy with “Elizabeth the Second” would seem better than ending it with another major scandal/blunder involving Andrew, Charles, and their sex lives.

As a side story, I was a room apart from “the Queen” when I was in London aged about 9*, she passed by us just over a decade ago in her car, and I was close to shaking hands with his son Charles some years when he visited Manchester. There’s nothing magical or exceptional about them, unless you believe the hype of course…

Judge people by their accomplishments, not family heritage.

____
* If I remember correctly, my parents asked if I could enter to see her too. My Ph.D. Supervisor received an OBE from her (in person). But she hands out a load of these. “BE” stands for something that seems like a stain on one’s reputation in the scientific world. We seek merit, not “medals” from self-appointed ‘royals’. Such medals are meant to serve themselves and their egos.

COVID-19 Vaccination in the United Kingdom Stalled (Even Young People Almost Stopped Taking It)

Here are things in perspective (England; new AstraZeneca customers)

COVID-19 first shot

Recent months (England); there are now well under 1,000 new adopters per day (those are mostly kids):

COVID-19 summer first shot

Distribution by age (notice it barely changes anymore):

COVID-19 by age

Number of UK Tests for COVID-19 Plunge (But Cases Rise!)

Interesting turn of events today:

Testing down sharply

Notice the numbers. Don’t we still need to identify who is infected? Apparently not. Liz TruSSmp acts as if COVID-19 was more or less a hoax and the Queen, who caught COVID-19 some months ago, has just died.

Will the Queen’s death be used as pretext to not release COVID-19 information for a while? All the pages in the portal look like this now:

covid-19-delays

I have nothing against the Queen. For the record, I have some respect for her. But the way COVID-19 is handled is a disservice for those of us not planning to get infected.

NHS Once Again Admits That the Number of Deaths It Gave Was Wrong (More People Had Died Than It Disclosed)

It keeps happening (sometimes thousands of ‘missing’ deaths, sometimes less)

Today, after eight days of silence, the portal coronavirus.data.gov.uk was updated. It’s the worst COVID-19 summer so far (in terms of deaths, hospital admissions etc.), but apparently keeping us updated every day isn’t seen as justified by Liz TruSSmp and her party.

Here’s a prominent new notice (top of pages):

September 2022

Log category: data issue

Deaths figures for England include backlog

There is a catch up in reporting of deaths by NHS England following the August bank holiday. Deaths figures by report date on 8 September 2022 include some deaths that would ordinarily have been reported on 31 August 2022.

Deaths by death date are backdated.

Screenshot (as this page will be deleted/wiped in the future):

Deaths figures for England include backlog

And then there’s also this:

8 September 2022

Log category:change to metric

Small number of additional deaths added in England

Due to improvements in processing methods, a small number of past deaths have been reallocated to fall within the 28 day interval for defining a death within 28 days of a positive COVID-19 test. This has resulted in the addition of 150 deaths between March 2020 and August 2022.
Additional details

Process improvements in identifying which specimen date is used to calculate time between a positive test and a death, a small number of past deaths have been reallocated to fall within the 28 day definition and a small number have been allocated to fall outside of the 28 day interval. This has resulted in a net change of adding 150 deaths between March 2020 and August 2022.

Screenshot (as this page will be deleted/wiped in the future):

Small number of additional deaths added in England

Well, it’s hardly the first time this happens. I’ve lost count of how many times they retroactively added deaths to past days, after graphs had already been rendered based on the smaller figures. Can’t they get the basics right? Like counting death certificates? These are people’s lives!

Human Memory’s Obnoxious Weakness

JUST to be clear, what’s described herein isn’t chronic. I believe this to be so widespread that every person is affected to some extent.


Tonight I decided to write about something that has been on my mind for years. It is something I’m sure some people can relate to.

One does not need to be a senile to forget some things. We all have limited capacity; there are limits in one’s memory and brains generally degrade in what they store and how much they can store. We can only try to train them to store more, and for longer.

Sometimes I forget something I was planning to check or do; all I know or can remember was the estimated importance or duration. Sometimes it comes back later, owing to some mnemonic or triggering vision/event. Sometimes it doesn’t come back at all. Sometimes I’m not even sure. It’s hard to verify anything about something you do not remember or did not remember moments ago.

From personal experience (live and learn!) I’ve learned this can happen either due to overload (trying to remember too many things at the same time and failing to take note of them… or literally write down notes). The other situation is an interruption or interference. Sometimes you know you already have too many tasks or ideas, so anything additional would almost guarantee the loss of one’s train of thought (or mental list; I set the limit at 3 or 4… anything beyond that is a stretch).

There are mitigations though; the simplest one is not caring. There’s no point spending hours passively or actively trying to recall something that’s either not important or a lost cause (cannot be recalled). Sometimes it’s a case of “it’ll come back later”. Another mitigation is more note-taking or making people aware that under some certain circumstances interruptions are not acceptable. Reducing any sort of multitasking can help too; try to serialise — to the extent feasible — almost everything in order to avoid overload. The mind isn’t meant to multitask anyway; it’s more like a round-robin instrument.

In the past this happened to me a lot more. Each time it happened I tried to learn from the mistake and prevent recurrence. Oftentimes attempts to recollect what was forgotten (‘recovery’ of a task) can drag on for hours. Imposing a break (like sleep or going somewhere else) can break the mental longing to recall. Sometimes it also help to mentally — as in mental note — rank importance of things. If something not important gets forgotten, at least you can convince yourself it’s not a big deal. And speaking of big deals, how big a task is (or how long it should take) can help classify it. If later on it comes back or springs back to mind it’s easier to reaffirm, “yes, that was it!”

At the end of the day we all have thoughts all the time. Sometimes we can write things down, type things down, and sometimes we cannot (sleeping, eating, showering), so limiting the persistence of thoughts is essential.

Unless you were going to phone an ambulance or turn off a boiling hob/oven, whatever it is you were planning to do (but forgot) is likely not critical — nowhere as critical as the time you might burn trying to recall it.

Mind mapping or memory management aren’t a new sort of challenge; there are various tools for that and compromises are made. With or without physical instruments, it’s possible to overcome to desire or longing to remember everything. In the process of backtracking you might even recall things you didn’t know you forgot (or things that needed to be remembered).

I’d love to know if other people have had similar experiences; I suppose more or less everyone has encountered this a lot, but the way people handle that may vary.

Retrieval statistics: 18 queries taking a total of 0.231 seconds • Please report low bandwidth using the feedback form
Original styles created by Ian Main (all acknowledgements) • PHP scripts and styles later modified by Roy Schestowitz • Help yourself to a GPL'd copy
|— Proudly powered by W o r d P r e s s — based on a heavily-hacked version 1.2.1 (Mingus) installation —|