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Never mind the tits, roddaz. Sid's a nordy. He probably looks like Arlene Foster now!rodders999 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 11:02 amBet you end up sprouting a massive pair of tits after it![]()
Send pics on if you do![]()
Sorted, Oxford jab.DB10GOONER wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 12:57 pmNever mind the tits, roddaz. Sid's a nordy. He probably looks like Arlene Foster now!rodders999 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 11:02 amBet you end up sprouting a massive pair of tits after it![]()
Send pics on if you do![]()
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I would.goonersid wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 2:13 pmSorted, Oxford jab.DB10GOONER wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 12:57 pmNever mind the tits, roddaz. Sid's a nordy. He probably looks like Arlene Foster now!rodders999 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 11:02 amBet you end up sprouting a massive pair of tits after it![]()
Send pics on if you do![]()
![]()
![]()
And FYI, I'm more like a young Liam Neeson![]()
But with big man boobs, just like Arlene Foster![]()
But would Sid let you!???DB10GOONER wrote: ↑Tue Apr 06, 2021 8:26 amI would.goonersid wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 2:13 pmSorted, Oxford jab.DB10GOONER wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 12:57 pmNever mind the tits, roddaz. Sid's a nordy. He probably looks like Arlene Foster now!rodders999 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 11:02 amBet you end up sprouting a massive pair of tits after it![]()
Send pics on if you do![]()
![]()
![]()
And FYI, I'm more like a young Liam Neeson![]()
But with big man boobs, just like Arlene Foster![]()
![]()
![]()
Surely the last year has shown the need to be cautious at this stage.SteveO 35 wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 7:54 amOn 18th January there were 39,249 people in the UK in hospital being treated for COVID-19
Yesterday it was 2,862 of which only 406 were only ventilators. So that's 0.004%, and 0.0006% of the population respectively
We've had between 30% and 50% of our staff at work back in the workplace on a socially distanced basis since the end of Feb. Not one single positive case reported
Still, must be cautious. Can't sit in a restaurant 2m away from the nearest person.
Get stuff moving FFS.
Last year we hadn't vaccinated 32m people and didn't have mass testing available to detect early cases.....nor did we have any 'red' countries or any semblance of controlling our bordersGunner Rob wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 8:59 amSurely the last year has shown the need to be cautious at this stage.SteveO 35 wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 7:54 amOn 18th January there were 39,249 people in the UK in hospital being treated for COVID-19
Yesterday it was 2,862 of which only 406 were only ventilators. So that's 0.004%, and 0.0006% of the population respectively
We've had between 30% and 50% of our staff at work back in the workplace on a socially distanced basis since the end of Feb. Not one single positive case reported
Still, must be cautious. Can't sit in a restaurant 2m away from the nearest person.
Get stuff moving FFS.
Only way things can open up more is if the borders are made tighter. Too many dangerous variants out there.
Nobody thinks its all over. What we know is that the top 9 categories of risk account for c.99% of the deaths and all of them would have received the first jab (which gives 80%+ effectiveness) by mid-April, and virtually all the top vulnerables have had two jabs by now. All of the scientists and pharma companies have confirmed that the vaccine can be adjusted for new variants in a matter of weeks, as is the case with the normal flu jab. It has already been confirmed that there will be booster vaccines in the autumn for the most vulnerable. In the UK we've supposedly 'over ordered' tens of millions of jabsGunner Rob wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 2:04 pmwe also dont know how long these vaccines last for so next winter for example is a complete unknown at the moment.
coronaviruses also survive by mutating. that's what they are good at it. In Brazil the variant there is so strong it is currently killing 25,000 people a week.
there seems to be an increasing view in this country that this is all over - it is far from being all over, although I am fairly confident that we should return to some kind of normality this summer here in the UK. i certainly wouldn't be rushing abroad any time soon though.
This^^^Gunner Rob wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 8:59 amSurely the last year has shown the need to be cautious at this stage.SteveO 35 wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 7:54 amOn 18th January there were 39,249 people in the UK in hospital being treated for COVID-19
Yesterday it was 2,862 of which only 406 were only ventilators. So that's 0.004%, and 0.0006% of the population respectively
We've had between 30% and 50% of our staff at work back in the workplace on a socially distanced basis since the end of Feb. Not one single positive case reported
Still, must be cautious. Can't sit in a restaurant 2m away from the nearest person.
Get stuff moving FFS.
Only way things can open up more is if the borders are made tighter. Too many dangerous variants out there.
Or......directly from PHE's report into vaccine effectivenessA11M11 wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 8:26 pmquote What we know is that the top 9 categories of risk account for c.99% of the deaths and all of them would have received the first jab (which gives 80%+ effectiveness) by mid-April, unquote
One dose of a COVID-19 vaccine gives 67% protection after three weeks, a leading epidemiologist has said.
Professor Tim Spector of King's College London, who runs the ZOE COVID-19 surveillance app, said data collected from 50,000 users vaccinated with either the Pfizer or Oxford/AstraZeneca jab showed one dose gave 46% protection after two weeks, rising to 67% after three to six weeks.
The app uses information submitted by more than four million users across the world to predict and track coronavirus infections across the UK and other countries.
"We have now got about a third of a million people who have logged their first dose of the vaccine with us on the ZOE app," Prof Spector told Sky's Sophy Ridge on Sunday
Just saying.