Oxford AstraZeneca me up.
Steam Town- Blisterinâ the Sun (7%) tastes even better,
Oxford AstraZeneca me up.
Steam Town- Blisterinâ the Sun (7%) tastes even better,
Genius
Dude runs restaurant in Warsaw.
Police Raid
They leave empty handed.
Because everyone who makes a reservation has to sign & return and bring the original when they eat
Gig based
Employment Contract !
Employed as Menu Tasters they even get paid 20p in cash AFTER they have eaten, paid & filled in the survey form!
Likewise Oxford shot for me.
Minor sore arm but 6 hours on feeling a bit shit.
Chinese takeaway and beer will soon sort that
Iâm sure the virus will find it amusing.
Zakopane fvcktards last weekend
MLT liking that really annoyed me- Melville making out like âeveryone else can partyâ is UTTER bollocks.
20k people descended on a town of 35k population where every restaurant & bar was SHUT apart from McDonalds.
The main street Krupowski is where âa few hundredâ gathered and almost were all fined. Some were fined 2k POUNDS!
As a result of these idiots (and news coverage showed many more all late teens early 30âs flouting mask laws all day -one b1tch in a FUR COAT FFS simply said, âI couldnot find a mask to match my outfitâ
We now expect to be plunged back into full lockdown tomorrow because of these utter selfish pricks. The whole Nation would happily kick 7 bells of shit out of all of them.
As of midnight one thing these morons have achieved is to make it mandatory to wear Surgical masks not the fabric that everyone had been using. Great for these idiots in 4 and 5 star hotels but for 75% of the population they cannot afford them IF they could find them.
Senseless is not the word for it
This really isnt good news.
Seems immunocompromised humans can mutate the virus.
Obviously more research needed
This is fine if there is only one significant other who lives within easy reach of the care home. Otherwise itâs just yet another unworkable âinitiativeâ to add to the clusterfuck.
Lastbornâs boyf is getting his vaccination today despite being in 20s. Will be in contact with a lot of at risk people, so required.
Sounds like we had better shoot them all just to be safe
OH COME ON!
SRSLY?
BBC News - Bird flu: Russia detects first case of H5N8 bird flu in humans
An unsurprising response to Marr earlier
So kids dont get it spread the virus?
But for the 3rd time daughter has been sent self isolate for the 2 year old following a +ve test on a classmate
She is going nuts. Full time wfh on a huge IT Project, 6 year old home school & hyperactive bored 2 year old.
Sheâs gonna throw a fit when we post our holiday snaps this week
This chancer was handed 30 mil, apparently his paper cup manufacturing company had assets of minus 150 grand when he landed that one.
We are being governed by grifters.
Surely the fact it is being investigated is very good news?
This is very interestingâŠbacks up the UK Vaccination regime and shouts a wake-up call to the rest of the worldâŠfirst 7 minutesâŠ
Accountability in the mother of all oligarchies:
The UK governmentâs failure to provide protective equipment to all health staff treating coronavirus victims prompts questions over whether ministers are legally culpable for failing to prevent deaths. But ministers routinely act with impunity and every prime minister since 1945 has been complicit in deaths abroad.
Crown immunity
Yet Britainâs unwritten constitution is still permeated by the concept of Crown immunity. This doctrine, which surely should not have escaped the Middle Ages, deems that ministers cannot commit a legal wrong and do not act as persons but as agents steeped with Crown authority, and are therefore untouchable under the law.
If a minister breaches the criminal law outside of his public duties, she is subject to criminal law like anyone else. But if she makes decisions as a minister, however reprehensible or incompetent, these are considered as acts of government and not for the criminal courts.
Whether itâs war crimes by a prime minister, a ministerâs complicity in torture and rendition or catastrophic health and social policy decisions, accountability, we are told, is meant to come through democracy and parliament. But it doesnât.
Public inquiries tend to take years and can embarrass ministers but invariably fail to formally censure them, let alone hold them legally accountable. The common law offence of misconduct in public office sets an impossible threshold, even if it could be applied to ministers. The process of judicial review can sometimes act as a check on ministers, but the limitations are also stark.
For example, the Court of Appeal ruling in 2019 that UK arms sales to Saudi Arabia were unlawful, while important, required only that the governmentâs arms export decisions be reviewed. It was a million miles away from holding ministers individually culpable for the deaths of thousands of civilians in Yemen.
The failure to hold ministers accountable for contributing to deaths at home or abroad is one of the biggest gaping holes in the contention that British governance is democratic in a meaningful sense. If the rule of law is not made to apply to decision-makers with enormous power over life and death, but just to everyone else, what kind of a democracy is that?
Why do we allow this to continue?
Because the majority of the electorate havenât a clue?