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17 minutes ago, ayrmad said:

I honestly couldn't give a shite what any world leaders in this field are saying, I'll continue watching what's happening in places like Israel as well as what new data is saying. 

Up to now I'm not seeing doom and gloom, just might be a tight race for things opening with minimal restrictions this side of the summer. 

Exactly.

A lot of hypotheticals going around at the moment, but the data (both here and in Israel) is far more relevant than speculation or hot takes from scientists with weird motives.

Nobody is going to think “f**k it” tomorrow on the back of fantastic news about vaccine transmission, so NS and others should be pushing the positive message constantly.

There’ll be plenty out there who’ll absolutely buy into the negativity, and it’s a shite state of affairs for them.

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3 minutes ago, anotherchance said:

Exactly.

A lot of hypotheticals going around at the moment, but the data (both here and in Israel) is far more relevant than speculation or hot takes from scientists with weird motives.

Nobody is going to think “f**k it” tomorrow on the back of fantastic news about vaccine transmission, so NS and others should be pushing the positive message constantly.

There’ll be plenty out there who’ll absolutely buy into the negativity, and it’s a shite state of affairs for them.

I wish some that are struggling a bit on here would try and block the shite out and concentrate on what they're actually seeing unfold, we might not be going for a pint or a meal in a fortnight but we might be under less restrictions in 4 or 5 months than we've been since this shit started, I'll just wait n see. 

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1 hour ago, Ron Aldo said:

Who is he? Is he maybe referring to America only and factoring in that they don't expect to have as much of a vaccine uptake as we do?

America are also starting from an entirely different place to us.  Ripped through them worse than us and lighter lockdowns with far less compliance

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I wish some that are struggling a bit on here would try and block the shite out and concentrate on what they're actually seeing unfold, we might not be going for a pint or a meal in a fortnight but we might be under less restrictions in 4 or 5 months than we've been since this shit started, I'll just wait n see. 
Spot on.
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12 hours ago, ayrmad said:

Your venues will be some of the harder problems to overcome IF we've to live with SD going forward, my point about entrepreneurs was more about solutions to overcome SD. 

Drive by most hospitality venues and you'll see a few fans stuck to an outside wall, inside you'll likely see tables and chairs alongside some built in booths, currently most will have some forms of perspex dotted about, the fans and perspex are their to control and adjust the airflow in these venues, I'm just a layman but surely their must be the possibility of innovation creating a new way to control airflow whilst extracting and or neutralising any airborne nasties, having a booth that has no perspex separating it from the next one but rather an invisible pod created by a new system that keeps most of the crap from moving between different sections. 

The above, if possible, wouldn't eradicate Covid or similar in a venue but it would reduce it significantly. 

Like the majority of responsible bars and restaurants we (my Edinburgh outlet) invested significantly in perspex screens, improved ventilation (we already had a good ventilation system tbh) and other mitigations last summer. The hospitality industry in general spent millions on Covid protections, and instituted systems to maintain comprehensive customer databases to enable us to notify people in the event of an outbreak, as mandated by a government that had failed to institute its own effective track and trace system. Despite that significant level of investment, we were allowed to open for just over a couple of months (end of July until 8th October) in the last year, so it was a very expensive investment for a very short period of time, during which we had to observe severe restrictions on numbers, opening times and other conditions. We’d probably have been better off staying shut tbh. 

Nonetheless, irrespective of how much the industry had spent on mitigations, it took the Scottish government no time at all to take a broad brush, scapegoat the entire sector and close it down, and we’re going to be amongst the last sectors to be able to reopen.

One of the most frustrating aspects is that the entire industry (and I concede hospitality is a very broad church - there are responsible and less responsible operators) gets treated exactly the same. The best run outlets get smeared with the irresponsible practices of the worst. While the vast majority of operators are responsible, I’ve visited a few outlets (very much a minority) that spent almost nothing on Covid precautions, didn’t strictly observe the curfews, completely ignored the recorded music ban, failed to enforce social distancing, and generally had a half-hearted approach towards the guidelines, but as licensing standards officers weren’t actually visiting outlets and enforcing the regs during the time when hospitality was trading in central Scotland, the sector was only as strong as its weakest link. In the absence of an effective system off enforcement, in which irresponsible outlets could and should have been penalised and / or shut down, the government took the easier approach and demonised us all. 

As we saw with the recent Stirling University research paper on the hospitality industry, funded  by Scot Gov, which surveyed a tiny number of businesses (29) , there will alway be a proportion of rogue operators, and responsible operators will barely recognise the descriptions of practices within those establishments. 11 of 29 apparently had different groups freely mixing together, singing, shouting or otherwise breaching guidelines. That’s not the kind of pub I recognise, but that’s how the the industry is often perceived. I think those of us who did spend considerable sums of money on Covid mitigations have been deeply demoralised by how the hospitality industry as a whole has been stigmatised. I acknowledge there is no quick fix that will ensure you can stop a highly contagious respiratory virus from circulating within a highly populated indoor environment, and perspex screens, social distancing, improved ventilation etc are all mitigations rather than panaceas.

We know that the route back to normality is through comprehensive vaccination of the adult population, rather than through highly economically damaging and imperfect mitigations (and I include social distancing in that). What’s worrying the hospitality sector is that normality doesn’t seem to be on the table for the foreseeable future, even after full vaccination.

Edited by Frankie S
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1 hour ago, Todd_is_God said:

Wait till they see the data from Israel showing it's more like 90% of infections. 4U0m6pP.png

37 minutes ago, Left Back said:

Linda Bauld on Question time saying we don’t know if vaccines prevent transmissions and...but variants.

gordon ramsay facepalm GIF by Masterchef

She also brought in a buzzphrase I haven’t heard before “escape mutants”.  Yes Linda, that’s what your birth was.

Has there been anyone more useless throughout this entire catastrofuck than 'public health experts'? They are the same freaks who would usually appear once in a blue moon in side articles telling us to cut back on red meat or to not go out in the sun too much if we don't want to develop cancer. All they're saying is what they would like to see in their own perfect little worlds that we don't actually live in. Honestly, things like that just show real incompetence, and/or sinister/selfish motives.

How and why they seem to have so much influence on government policy in this situation compared to actual relevant scientists like epidemiologists and virologists I will never, ever know. In Scotland, it seems that three utter clowns in Devi, Bauld and Leitch run the show, and not one specialises in these fields. Incredible.

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9 minutes ago, Frankie S said:

Like the majority of responsible bars and restaurants we (my Edinburgh outlet) invested significantly in perspex screens, improved ventilation (we already had a good ventilation system tbh) and other mitigations last summer. The hospitality industry in general spent millions on Covid protections, and instituted systems to maintain comprehensive customer databases to enable us to notify people in the event of an outbreak, as mandated by a government that had failed to institute its own effective track and trace system. Despite that significant level of investment, we were allowed to open for just over a couple of months (end of July until 8th October) in the last year, so it was a very expensive investment for a very short period of time, during which we had to observe severe restrictions on numbers, opening times and other conditions. We’d probably have been better off staying shut tbh. 

Nonetheless, irrespective of how much the industry had spent on mitigations, it took the Scottish government no time at all to take a broad brush, scapegoat the entire sector and close it down, and we’re gong to be amongst the last sectors to be able to reopen.

One of the most frustrating aspects is that the entire industry (and I concede hospitality is a very broad church - there are responsible and less responsible operators) gets treated exactly the same. The best run outlets get smeared with the irresponsible practices of the worst. While the vast majority of operators are responsible, I’ve visited a few outlets (very much a minority) that spent almost nothing on Covid precautions, didn’t strictly observe the curfews, completely ignored the recorded music ban, failed to enforce social distancing, and generally had a half-hearted approach towards the guidelines, but as licensing standards officers weren’t actually visiting outlets and enforcing the regs during the time when hospitality was trading in central Scotland, the sector was only as strong as its weakest link. In the absence of an effective system off enforcement, in which irresponsible outlets could and should have been penalised and / or shut down, the government took the easier approach and demonised us all. 

As we saw with the recent Stirling University research paper on the hospitality industry, funded  by Scot Gov, which surveyed a tiny number of businesses (29) , there will alway be a proportion of rogue operators, and responsible operators will barely recognise the descriptions of practices within those establishments. 11 of 29 apparently had different groups freely mixing together, singing, shouting or otherwise breaching guidelines. That’s not the kind of pub I recognise, but that’s how the the industry is often perceived. I think those of us who did spend considerable sums of money on Covid mitigations have been deeply demoralised by how the hospitality industry as a whole has been stigmatised. I acknowledge there is no quick fix that will ensure you can stop a highly contagious respiratory virus from circulating within a highly populated indoor environment, and perspex screens, social distancing, improved ventilation etc are all mitigations rather than panaceas.

We know that the route back to normality is through comprehensive vaccination of the adult population, rather than through highly economically damaging and imperfect mitigations (and I include social distancing in that). What’s worrying the hostility sector is that normality doesn’t seem to be on the table for the foreseeable future, even after full vaccination.

I can't really disagree with much that you've posted, out of all the licence holders I've spoken to, none condone all the nonsense you hear about in the poorly run establishments, they all know that it's only going to negatively impact on their business. 

As for your last paragraph, I honestly don't see them getting rid of SD in the short term but the results of the vaccination programme might lessen the time and strictness of SD in hospitality. 

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Have to say that it was refreshing to hear from the Tory and publican on QT, the only other person I've heard questioning things in recent weeks is John Beattie on Radio Scotland, he's just started calling bullshit on folk in recent weeks and I quite enjoy listening to him. 

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And another thing: this absolute fucking absurdity that 'but we don't know if the vaccines will cut transmission' will be doing precisely zero to encourage less vulnerable groups, who just happen to be the biggest spreaders, to actually take up on it. Already in Europe there are reports that some people aren't wanting to take the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine because of the shit-stirring that went on about its efficacy recently. The same goes for nonsense talk about restrictions not being fully lifted once the rollout is complete.

It is just utterly terrible messaging from the people who are apparently meant to know better.

Edited by Elixir
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4 minutes ago, ayrmad said:

Have to say that it was refreshing to hear from the Tory and publican on QT, the only other person I've heard questioning things in recent weeks is John Beattie on Radio Scotland, he's just started calling bullshit on folk in recent weeks and I quite enjoy listening to him. 

Thought the Tory came across very well.  Reasonable, logical, pragmatic.

I’ll await the incoming.

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5 hours ago, Billy Jean King said:

There has barely been a cheep from any MSP regardless of party about measures currently in place. They appear to have full cross party support in Scotland which seems very odd. Not once has Davidson, Harvey, Rennie or Baillie even mentioned releasing lockdown or complained about it being extended.
 

It seems the challenge to restrictions in Westminster comes from the sort of gammon "hang em and flog em" Tories from the "Shires".

I don't think our dear old Scottish Tories have an equivalent in Holyrood unless anyone knows better?

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27 minutes ago, tamthebam said:

It seems the challenge to restrictions in Westminster comes from the sort of gammon "hang em and flog em" Tories from the "Shires".

I don't think our dear old Scottish Tories have an equivalent in Holyrood unless anyone knows better?

Cheap and ignorant posting..  Almost as bad as the idiotic posting over on the politics thread wherein the Natter Massive were speculating over the reintroduction of capital punishment.

No wonder that a failed and morally bankrupt administration in Holyrood gets so much credit for its incompetence when we have pish like this.

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