tab1
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H.R.
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December 2019
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by H.R. on Jun 17, 2020 4:07:49 GMT 1, Effect on the art market? Lol
How about effect on humanity? It’s a BULL $HIT, 3 ring, circus, SIIIDE SHOW! 😉
LEARN TO SWIM BEEOTCHES! ✌🏻
Effect on the art market? Lol
How about effect on humanity? It’s a BULL $HIT, 3 ring, circus, SIIIDE SHOW! 😉
LEARN TO SWIM BEEOTCHES! ✌🏻
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 17, 2020 10:40:54 GMT 1, news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-german-tourists-enjoy-crowd-free-mallorca-in-air-bridge-trial-12007798
If this fails will cost billions .logic would be to just keep borders shut until at least some sort of medicine / drugs available to help combat the virus , potentially just releasing multiple strains Of the virus into a country That may have been non existent in that country before . After curling is passed it is beneficial to The government to keep things how they are until a vaccine is developed
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tab1
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mrizzle
Junior Member
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January 2016
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by mrizzle on Jun 18, 2020 5:31:36 GMT 1, Can not see why the free school meals for children over the holidays were an issue Costs if social care intervention met for deprived Childen or at risk as of health risk to put in foster car 32 k www.nao.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Children-in-care1.pdfThese meal packages £4 per child per day Schools that have been closed for months , there electric , gas and water rates With not being used therefor bills lowered with contracted 0 hours cleaners wages not now met , budgets for temporary teachers for sickness all these savings would probably fund Each school meal program, this program only applies to certain groups , do not know why no was said initially
http://instagram.com/p/CBh3LOCAuap
I’m not sure what the situation was regarding free school meals (FSM) in England but, in Scotland, we have provided FSM to every child who meets the entitlement since lockdown began. Approaches has differed slightly depending on local authority but where I live this has come in the form of a £25 shopping voucher issued fortnightly to families for each child (where they meet the eligibility criteria - can demonstrate they’re in receipt of appropriate benefits/have a household below a certain threshold etc). Recently an additional £5 has been added to the payment issued to girls of a certain age to enable the purchase of sanitary products to combat ‘period poverty’ too. This was also paid throughout the Easter holiday period and Scottish govt recently announced it will continue to be paid throughout the summer holiday period with local authorities receiving financial support to aid this.
The only impact on FSM has been with regards to P1-3 pupils who, prior to lockdown, each received a free school meal regardless of family circumstance. Children of the age whose families meet the FSM entitlement have had to apply for vouchers rather than them being blanket issued but that’s about it.
Can not see why the free school meals for children over the holidays were an issue Costs if social care intervention met for deprived Childen or at risk as of health risk to put in foster car 32 k www.nao.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Children-in-care1.pdfThese meal packages £4 per child per day Schools that have been closed for months , there electric , gas and water rates With not being used therefor bills lowered with contracted 0 hours cleaners wages not now met , budgets for temporary teachers for sickness all these savings would probably fund Each school meal program, this program only applies to certain groups , do not know why no was said initially http://instagram.com/p/CBh3LOCAuap I’m not sure what the situation was regarding free school meals (FSM) in England but, in Scotland, we have provided FSM to every child who meets the entitlement since lockdown began. Approaches has differed slightly depending on local authority but where I live this has come in the form of a £25 shopping voucher issued fortnightly to families for each child (where they meet the eligibility criteria - can demonstrate they’re in receipt of appropriate benefits/have a household below a certain threshold etc). Recently an additional £5 has been added to the payment issued to girls of a certain age to enable the purchase of sanitary products to combat ‘period poverty’ too. This was also paid throughout the Easter holiday period and Scottish govt recently announced it will continue to be paid throughout the summer holiday period with local authorities receiving financial support to aid this. The only impact on FSM has been with regards to P1-3 pupils who, prior to lockdown, each received a free school meal regardless of family circumstance. Children of the age whose families meet the FSM entitlement have had to apply for vouchers rather than them being blanket issued but that’s about it.
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ajr
New Member
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February 2018
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by ajr on Jun 18, 2020 8:34:51 GMT 1, Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me...
Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me...
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 18, 2020 12:03:08 GMT 1, Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me...
Another example where savings could be lessened The hand sanitiser and extra cleaning items needed , this could be bulk purchased by the government as every school would need these products And the savings would be immense .
But each school is independently sourcing their own items out of their own budgets .
The same happens with police and fire brigades where they use the same items and they could purchase in unison to create savings
Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me... Another example where savings could be lessened The hand sanitiser and extra cleaning items needed , this could be bulk purchased by the government as every school would need these products And the savings would be immense . But each school is independently sourcing their own items out of their own budgets . The same happens with police and fire brigades where they use the same items and they could purchase in unison to create savings
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ajr
New Member
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February 2018
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by ajr on Jun 18, 2020 12:23:42 GMT 1, kink of crazy, everyone bidding against each other for the same items causing price inflation and huge waste of public funds. No coordination at all. Seems like a simple thing to implement, but what do we know!
kink of crazy, everyone bidding against each other for the same items causing price inflation and huge waste of public funds. No coordination at all. Seems like a simple thing to implement, but what do we know!
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 18, 2020 14:20:39 GMT 1, kink of crazy, everyone bidding against each other for the same items causing price inflation and huge waste of public funds. No coordination at all. Seems like a simple thing to implement, but what do we know!
And in a time where funding will be scarce you think the government would have departments to coordinated this? Tens of millions could be saved , rather than schools in each borough let alone nationally out bidding each other for contracts as you pointed out . These products will be need to be met long term so the savings if coordinated in purchasing the items needed would be immense
kink of crazy, everyone bidding against each other for the same items causing price inflation and huge waste of public funds. No coordination at all. Seems like a simple thing to implement, but what do we know! And in a time where funding will be scarce you think the government would have departments to coordinated this? Tens of millions could be saved , rather than schools in each borough let alone nationally out bidding each other for contracts as you pointed out . These products will be need to be met long term so the savings if coordinated in purchasing the items needed would be immense
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mrizzle
Junior Member
🗨️ 2,215
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January 2016
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by mrizzle on Jun 18, 2020 14:42:49 GMT 1, Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me...
Without saying too much, my professional role sits within education and we will not allow Zoom meets because of the safeguarding concerns but we have been very successfully delivering digital learning for a few months now using a combination of digital resources and video lessons. We don’t use Zoom but there is guidance for professionals in order for video to be used safely by children and young people and teaching staff.
Totally agree RE the non-existent savings. The purchase of PPE, hand sanitizer etc will negate any of these. There have also been significant additional strains and costs placed on other services and there are HUGE funding gaps for local authorities that will almost certainly result in services being cut.
Again, this is ignorance on my part but why are schools having to absorb the costs for procurement of hand sanitizers, cleaning materials etc? In Scotland, these are being bulk purchased by local authorised and distributed to schools. Obviously this doesn’t cover private schools but all state schools are not required to use individual school budgets for these purposes.
Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me... Without saying too much, my professional role sits within education and we will not allow Zoom meets because of the safeguarding concerns but we have been very successfully delivering digital learning for a few months now using a combination of digital resources and video lessons. We don’t use Zoom but there is guidance for professionals in order for video to be used safely by children and young people and teaching staff. Totally agree RE the non-existent savings. The purchase of PPE, hand sanitizer etc will negate any of these. There have also been significant additional strains and costs placed on other services and there are HUGE funding gaps for local authorities that will almost certainly result in services being cut. Again, this is ignorance on my part but why are schools having to absorb the costs for procurement of hand sanitizers, cleaning materials etc? In Scotland, these are being bulk purchased by local authorised and distributed to schools. Obviously this doesn’t cover private schools but all state schools are not required to use individual school budgets for these purposes.
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 18, 2020 14:54:27 GMT 1, just view the press briefings of the the nations the views on social distancing for example a few weeks back . the leadership of Scotland and response is more direct and thorough than in England ,we on an art forum can see logical savings that the government of Scotland has implemented but in the uk are letting schools burn their already limited resources ,then emergency funding will be sent to local governments .where as the items bought by the schools are used in the NHS,police and fire brigade the savings to buy these items under one contract would be the most cost effective approach . then we wonder and we find out that organisations are cut with funding for the disabled and elderly as funding has run out ? All these organisations are under the responsibility of the government , if joint purchasing can not be done on a national level then local government , boroughs/ councils can implement a joint purchasing agreement to create savings as at the moment government have given 25 million to each local authority in emergency funding to spend how they choose?
Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me... Without saying too much, my professional role sits within education and we will not allow Zoom meets because of the safeguarding concerns but we have been very successfully delivering digital learning for a few months now using a combination of digital resources and video lessons. We don’t use Zoom but there is guidance for professionals in order for video to be used safely by children and young people and teaching staff. Totally agree RE the non-existent savings. The purchase of PPE, hand sanitizer etc will negate any of these. There have also been significant additional strains and costs placed on other services and there are HUGE funding gaps for local authorities that will almost certainly result in services being cut. Again, this is ignorance on my part but why are schools having to absorb the costs for procurement of hand sanitizers, cleaning materials etc? In Scotland, these are being bulk purchased by local authorised and distributed to schools. Obviously this doesn’t cover private schools but all state schools are not required to use individual school budgets for these purposes.
just view the press briefings of the the nations the views on social distancing for example a few weeks back . the leadership of Scotland and response is more direct and thorough than in England ,we on an art forum can see logical savings that the government of Scotland has implemented but in the uk are letting schools burn their already limited resources ,then emergency funding will be sent to local governments .where as the items bought by the schools are used in the NHS,police and fire brigade the savings to buy these items under one contract would be the most cost effective approach . then we wonder and we find out that organisations are cut with funding for the disabled and elderly as funding has run out ? All these organisations are under the responsibility of the government , if joint purchasing can not be done on a national level then local government , boroughs/ councils can implement a joint purchasing agreement to create savings as at the moment government have given 25 million to each local authority in emergency funding to spend how they choose? Just had our governors meeting and my understanding is that schools in England must follow council/DfE guidance. Vouchers come to about £15 per week per child. Children that decide to go back to school in reception,yr1 or yr6 will not get them (as they get school meals). Children not going back will get a food box until the summer holidays where then it goes back to vouchers. A rather strange situation. As for school costs being reduced, the extra cleaning, hand sanitising etc far outweigh reduced electricity consumption. As an example, our school has spent an extra 5-6k in preparation for reopening. The biggest crime for me is that alot of children risk 6months with no schooling or interaction with their teachers and classmates. Apparently unions are not in favour of zoom lessons due to privacy and safeguarding concerns. Seems a bit weak to me... Without saying too much, my professional role sits within education and we will not allow Zoom meets because of the safeguarding concerns but we have been very successfully delivering digital learning for a few months now using a combination of digital resources and video lessons. We don’t use Zoom but there is guidance for professionals in order for video to be used safely by children and young people and teaching staff. Totally agree RE the non-existent savings. The purchase of PPE, hand sanitizer etc will negate any of these. There have also been significant additional strains and costs placed on other services and there are HUGE funding gaps for local authorities that will almost certainly result in services being cut. Again, this is ignorance on my part but why are schools having to absorb the costs for procurement of hand sanitizers, cleaning materials etc? In Scotland, these are being bulk purchased by local authorised and distributed to schools. Obviously this doesn’t cover private schools but all state schools are not required to use individual school budgets for these purposes.
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tab1
Full Member
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Gentle Mental on Jun 19, 2020 4:37:46 GMT 1, There is a cheap treatment now that reduces chance of death by a third. So infection rate maybe up but less will die. Making this far less deadly.
Possibly same as the flu?
Covid is over.
Huge mess to clean up. But it’s over.
There is a cheap treatment now that reduces chance of death by a third. So infection rate maybe up but less will die. Making this far less deadly.
Possibly same as the flu?
Covid is over.
Huge mess to clean up. But it’s over.
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Javier
Junior Member
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November 2019
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Javier on Jun 19, 2020 6:23:08 GMT 1,
Easy solution. Close your own borders. Problem finished. Or the problem is the tourism and not the tourists? Don’t let traveling for leisure people from the worst infected country in Europe at this moment. Thanks
Easy solution. Close your own borders. Problem finished. Or the problem is the tourism and not the tourists? Don’t let traveling for leisure people from the worst infected country in Europe at this moment. Thanks
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Happy Shopper on Jun 19, 2020 7:52:28 GMT 1, There is a cheap treatment now that reduces chance of death by a third. So infection rate maybe up but less will die. Making this far less deadly. Possibly same as the flu? Covid is over. Huge mess to clean up. But it’s over.
Only helps certain types of patients. Could have saved 5000 people out of over 40000 deaths, possibly. So not a third.
Still far, far worse than flu!
There is a cheap treatment now that reduces chance of death by a third. So infection rate maybe up but less will die. Making this far less deadly. Possibly same as the flu? Covid is over. Huge mess to clean up. But it’s over. Only helps certain types of patients. Could have saved 5000 people out of over 40000 deaths, possibly. So not a third. Still far, far worse than flu!
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tab1
Full Member
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 19, 2020 9:18:52 GMT 1, Every action the government has taken is to save money whic in the end of each delay has caused extra billions to be spent and increased the death rates
Every action the government has taken is to save money whic in the end of each delay has caused extra billions to be spent and increased the death rates
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drip
Junior Member
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February 2015
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by drip on Jun 19, 2020 10:49:16 GMT 1, There is a cheap treatment now that reduces chance of death by a third. So infection rate maybe up but less will die. Making this far less deadly. Possibly same as the flu? Covid is over. Huge mess to clean up. But it’s over. Only helps certain types of patients. Could have saved 5000 people out of over 40000 deaths, possibly. So not a third. Still far, far worse than flu! Plus they still don't know the long-term effects of this virus on the body though, even if you don't die from it. They're learning all the time, but it appears to be quite a b*stard to lungs and other internal organs.
There is a cheap treatment now that reduces chance of death by a third. So infection rate maybe up but less will die. Making this far less deadly. Possibly same as the flu? Covid is over. Huge mess to clean up. But it’s over. Only helps certain types of patients. Could have saved 5000 people out of over 40000 deaths, possibly. So not a third. Still far, far worse than flu! Plus they still don't know the long-term effects of this virus on the body though, even if you don't die from it. They're learning all the time, but it appears to be quite a b*stard to lungs and other internal organs.
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tab1
Full Member
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 26, 2020 0:58:56 GMT 1,
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tab1
Full Member
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 26, 2020 12:16:17 GMT 1, This petition ended ages ago.
This petition ended ages ago.
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 26, 2020 12:22:19 GMT 1, This petition ended ages ago.
Posted as of the governments response Which the majority of the country has not followed
The r rate is higher than the acceptable level , the nation is not following advice given yet restrictions are lifted next week when clearly shown by protestors , visitors to the beaches and the illegal raves nation wide no one is following any of the governments advice .
The only option is to release isolations during peak summer months to present that the government is still in control as the public are breaking all rules regardless now and re engage the isolations over the winter months which the public would be more willing to accept . October with no cure or prevention will be a colossal Month for infections and deaths to spike
This petition ended ages ago. Posted as of the governments response Which the majority of the country has not followed The r rate is higher than the acceptable level , the nation is not following advice given yet restrictions are lifted next week when clearly shown by protestors , visitors to the beaches and the illegal raves nation wide no one is following any of the governments advice . The only option is to release isolations during peak summer months to present that the government is still in control as the public are breaking all rules regardless now and re engage the isolations over the winter months which the public would be more willing to accept . October with no cure or prevention will be a colossal Month for infections and deaths to spike
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skAcid
New Member
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October 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by skAcid on Jun 26, 2020 12:24:46 GMT 1, This petition ended ages ago. Deadline
12 September 2020
All petitions run for 6 months
This petition ended ages ago. Deadline 12 September 2020 All petitions run for 6 months
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wrigs
New Member
🗨️ 497
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July 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by wrigs on Jun 26, 2020 14:53:33 GMT 1, I’m certainly not condoning it but the reasons why so many people flocked to the beach and are holding illegal raves is precisely because of said lockdown. If we have another lockdown economically we’ll be heading back to the dark ages so they’ll try all they can to stop that. Hopefully people have got it out of their system and will go back to being a touch sensible once things open up slightly.
I’m certainly not condoning it but the reasons why so many people flocked to the beach and are holding illegal raves is precisely because of said lockdown. If we have another lockdown economically we’ll be heading back to the dark ages so they’ll try all they can to stop that. Hopefully people have got it out of their system and will go back to being a touch sensible once things open up slightly.
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Jun 26, 2020 16:18:38 GMT 1, 80s illegal raves all summer now If enough people attend These raves police are powerless to stop unless they attend prior to setting up .
80s illegal raves all summer now If enough people attend These raves police are powerless to stop unless they attend prior to setting up .
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by sandinista on Jun 26, 2020 16:54:32 GMT 1, They should just make it mandatory for any rave to last 21 days so everyone is isolated. Make Glastonbury a 3 week lock in.
They should just make it mandatory for any rave to last 21 days so everyone is isolated. Make Glastonbury a 3 week lock in.
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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tab1
Full Member
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nex
Junior Member
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February 2009
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by nex on Jul 1, 2020 10:09:55 GMT 1,
I’d politely suggest this isn’t about ‘everyone’ but more pertinently Trumps America
I’d politely suggest this isn’t about ‘everyone’ but more pertinently Trumps America
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wrigs
New Member
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July 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by wrigs on Jul 1, 2020 10:47:39 GMT 1, Trump doing his very best to burn down any remaining relationships the US has with the rest of the world.
Trump doing his very best to burn down any remaining relationships the US has with the rest of the world.
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