Covid: As Conservative MPs return to the Commons today, they push for it to become faster to normal.

So, in the latter case, some of your colleagues from previous parliaments, who will also have had to face a lot of consequences in their seats, all return to the Commons knowing that they have a great resolution to make, a resolution that will shape the existing debate on the degrees of taxes and expenditures in the long term.

It’s like this, should they push the accelerator and push for the economy’s opening, without more blockades nationwide?Or do they deserve to let it float on the brakes, keeping the economy relatively closed, as they prepare for such long-term closures, reflecting the anxiety of constituents for fear of viruses?

They may only start looking for an answer by thinking about the relief of the paintings of the general parliament at the end of March. In less than two months, the number of coronavirus cases appears to have peaked, even taking into account the doubt of knowledge.and adjustments in registration practice.

There are 3 daily peaks documented in the constant period from early April to early May, or around 5,000 instances consistent with the day. On August 26, there were about a thousand. And with a verification capacity lately of around 300,000 other people consistent with the day, a higher proportion of other people with the virus are being tracked, whether they are symptomatic or not.

It is very safe that the new instances will multiply as winter approaches, as other people combine less outdoors and more in tight spaces.But what is treated at most is not the number of instances, but the number of deaths and, given the long-term pain that Covid-19 can cause, hospitalizations.

There were 3563 registered across the UK on 1 April, the highest overall, which as of 19 August had been reduced to 109.The number of daily deaths recorded at its highest point on April 8 with 1,071… Lol

Now, it is incredibly likely that in the winter the number of hospitalizations and deaths will increase, but the history of the virus so far is that of treatments, the reduction of lethality or the expansion of immunity, or a sum of all, despite the absence of a vaccine.

Above all, the NHS is submerged. As Raghib Ali, a fitness educator who has also been on the front lines of the coronavirus, wrote on this site, it’s hard to see in existing trends how a wave of moment would overwhelm you.

The original motto of the government shutdown was: staying at home, the NHS, saving lives.It made sense. The audience reportedly rebelled in horror after Lombard-style scenes were broadcast in our hospitals, with other people “breathless, clinging to their breasts and tubes pumping oxygen into their oxygen-deprived lungs.”

This danger is remote lately. The blockade has eased since May: it is true that rest has been a two-step matter, a step backwards, with the embellishment of the NHS application, the failure of summer to reopen schools and the fight for mask, but there is no longer a compromise between “saving the NHS and saving the economy.”

In a sense, the balance is between weighing the threat to public fitness, easiing restrictions more quickly, opposing the threat to the economy, doing it more slowly: the classic debate between life and livelihoods.is between economics and fitness, but also among other types of fitness outcomes.

In May, we asked the Prime Minister 10 questions about closure, one of which asks the government for an estimate of physical fitness prices without coronavirus to date: in cancelled operations, intellectual fitness disorders, domestic and child abuse, cancer deaths, etc.. The answers are not yet clear.

But it is not transparent that the gains resulting from an attempt to totally extinguish the virus now assess the losses resulting from those deaths, abuses, intellectual health damage, etc.So now is the time for Conservative MPs and others to say this – and help direct public opinion rather than stick to it.

This means, in terms of opening up the economy, moving cash and state resources to pay other people, not checkers, to be paid for pictures and trains.Gordon Brown painted this technique with his tax credits, but within some limits it makes sense.

After all, his concept was based on an original conservative: the Family Income Supplement, which was later called Family Credit.Special assistance will be needed for those who have recently lost their jobs and for other young people looking to enter a devastated labor market, says Stephen Crabb.Universal Credit takes some pressure.

Regarding the closure of Covid-19, leading public opinion means pushing for hand washing, face covering and social distancing to do the maximum of work, and pushing only for the opening of schools and universities, but for relaxation faster. , organization, entertainment and retail restrictions.

At first glance, this looks a lot like a Swedish approach, however it is closer to that of Germany, due to the emphasis on massive testing. Germany is now tightening its locks after having loosened them in the past, yet it is the ambition of its testing program that has marked the country.

And while foreign coronavirus ratings are misleading, Germany (42 in terms of deaths consistent with millions) has a particularly higher style than Sweden (eighth in deaths consistent with millions) and more comparable to the UK.others of ours. But the same goes for Sweden, so how did we do it in Britain?

In the words of 3 high-level politicians, “the structure of an infrastructure capable of testing more than 300,000 people a day will have to be celebrated rightly.”But they continue to say that the strategy will now have to be taken to its next level: “have the confidence to get back to work …now it’s a duty, but this can only be achieved by learning to live throughout the virus.In the absence of a vaccine, mass testing is the only way to achieve this.”

This triple alliance is made up of Tony Blair, William Hague and Jeremy Hunt, the last of whom, since the early days of the pandemic, has been attentive to the good fortunes of mass testing and tracking in the Far East.winter wave, the selection is announced: massive locks, or even a national …or more effective testing and tracking.

There is no doubt that the Members insist: unless there is a sharp increase in the number of deaths, tests and screening will have to cope with the pressure, not only to save lives and livelihoods, but also to save lives and lives: those of others at risk, for example, of cancer or central disease; and those whose lives are ruined by, say, ruined intellectual fitness or abuse.

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