Saturday, June 26, 2021

21 November 2017 / Accepted: 8 January 2018 Wuhan Institute of Virology

 As a control, we also collected 240 serum samples from random blood donors in 2015 in Wuhan, Hubei Province more than 1000 km away from Jinning (Fig. 1A) and where inhabitants have a much lower likelihood of contact with bats due to its urban setting.   None of the donors had knowledge of prior SARS infectionor known contact with SARS patients.

Serological Evidence of Bat SARS-Related Coronavirus Infection
in Humans, China

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Makes sense!

 


Outfit colour clashes affect performance in football matches

The response times of footballers is slowed down when part of the kit worn by both teams is of the same colour, a new study shows.

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

You ear it hear first!

John Bercow has jumped on what he sees as a way to becoming Prime Minister.  Keir Starmer doesn't seem likely to make it, so maybe.....

Watch this space! 

Wednesday, September 05, 2012

And the rest!

While the Coalition buckles under the strain of economic stagnation, a new Civitas report shows that supporting the electronics sector could protect and create jobs. Selling Circuits Short by Stephen Clarke and Georgia Plank, reveals that the Government is ignoring the size and significance of electronics manufacturing.

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

Ello, ello ello!

Institutional racism is an unfair allegation to level at British police forces and its universal acceptance by public officials has led to harmful policymaking, according to a new Civitas report. In Mind Forg'd Manacles Jon Gower Davies outlines the history and influence of 'institutional racism' since the Macpherson inquiry, following the murder of Stephen Lawrence. He finds the evidence for institutional racism within British police forces to lack substance and describes how the resulting bureaucratic burdens placed on police forces have impeded their ability to serve the public.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Here endeth today's lesson. Harken & learn!

"The Food Stamp Program, administered by U.S. Dept of Agriculture, is actually proud that it is distributing the greatest amount of free meals and food stamps ever. Meanwhile, the National Park Service, administered by U.S. Department of the Interior, asks "Please Do Not Feed the Animals."  Stated reason for policy - because the animals will grow dependent on handouts and will not learn to take care of themselves. 

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Shelling out evidence: NIST ballistic standard helps tie guns to criminals



(Phys.org) -- Thanks to a new reference standard developed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), law enforcement agencies will have an easier time linking the nearly 200,000 cartridge cases recovered annually at U.S. crime scenes to specific firearms. http://phys.org/news/2012-08-shelling-evidence-nist-ballistic-standard.html#nwlt

Friday, August 10, 2012

Big Brother fights crime

New York police launch high-tech surveillance 
New York police on Wednesday launched what officials say is a revolutionary camera surveillance system that will simultaneously scan the streets and call up data on suspects.

Thursday, August 09, 2012

Could apply to police commissioners too!

Electing - rather than appointing - state court judges has drawbacks, study finds 
In traditional economic thought, competition is always good, and just as it's good for the economy, competitive elections should also make things better. But elections of public officials such as judges may have serious drawbacks. In the case of state court judges, for example, elected judges are far more variable in their sentencing than appointed judges, according to a new study.

Wednesday, August 08, 2012

A New take on the Broken Windows Theory

Study finds with vacant lots greened, residents feel safer 
Greening vacant lots may make neighborhood residents feel safer and may be associated with reductions in certain gun crimes, according to a new study from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Results show that residents living near greened vacant lots feel safer than those near non-greened sites. Additionally, researchers noted that incidents of police-reported crimes may be reduced after greening. The results expand upon previous studies and are the next step in helping researchers understand the full impact of vacant lot greening on crime, safety, and health. Full results of the study were published online this week in Injury Prevention.

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

Bother the country - let's just play tit for tat!


Plans to reform the House of Lords are being abandoned after Conservatives "broke the coalition contract", Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg has announced.
Agreement on an elected Lords could not be reached with Tory opponents, he said, and the plans would be shelved rather than face a "slow death".
As a result, he said Lib Dem MPs could not now support Conservative-driven changes to Commons boundaries in 2015.

Monday, August 06, 2012

Virtual Terrorists are not alone!

How the 'lone wolf' terrorist networks 
A mounting global threat is of terrorists who act as "lone wolves". Locating and preventing such terrorist activity is more complicated than organizational terror threats. A new study conducted by Prof. Gabriel Weimann of the University of Haifa, reveals that these "lone wolves" are not in fact so isolated and belong to virtual terrorist communities on the Internet.

Sunday, August 05, 2012

UKIP is NOT anti-European!


We're not anti-European!  We love Europe!  Europe is a rich tapestry of cultures, history and languages.  It has always resisted bureaucratic uniformity, long may it continue; vive le difference!  We respect the rights of sovereign states and their peoples to democratically determine their own futures, to live in peace and harmony whilst trading with each other.  We're already working with other democratic, freedom loving organisations, like ours, across Europe.
Nor is it right-wing, like the people of this country, it is a mix of all sorts.

Saturday, August 04, 2012

Longer custodial sentences lead to consistent reductions in crime

Longer prison sentences contribute to reducing property crime, according to a new Civitas report which shows that prison is effective, especially when targeted at serious and repeat offenders. Acquisitive Crime: Imprisonment, Detection and Social Factors by University of Birmingham economist Dr. Siddhartha Bandyopadhyay, with assistance from his colleagues Samrat Bhattacharya, Marianna Koli and Rudra Sensarma shows that for some crime types, longer custodial sentences lead to consistent reductions in crime.

Friday, August 03, 2012

UK election outcomes irrelevant, because of EU


"We are not governed from Westminster, we are governed from Brussels. It does not make any difference," he told the BBC's Hardtalk programme.

Find out more

"It no longer matter who sits in No 10. The penny is beginning to drop with the British people and British businesses that we are no longer a self-governing nation. That matters far more than which brand of social democracy gets into No 10."

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

Interesting?

Study: Conciliatory tactics more effective than punishment in reducing terrorism 
Policies that reward abstinence from terrorism are more successful in reducing such acts of violence than tactics that aim to punish terrorists, suggests a new study in the August issue of the American Sociological Review.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Not a lot of information, more a heads-up

'Predictive policing' takes byte out of crime 
Crime fighters have long used brains and brawn, but now a new kind of technology known as "predictive policing" promises to make them more efficient.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Possibly not a lot of help, but JIC (although not JIT)

Terrorism and the Olympics by-the-numbers: Analysis from UMD-based START 
History offers a warning, but no clear pattern on the true risk of terrorism at the Olympic Games, concludes a new report by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) based at the University of Maryland.

Crowd movement

Experiments inform study of crowd motion 
What must the staid-faced University luminaries in those portraits around Sayles Hall have thought while they watched this scene play out for four days last week? Over and over, two to 20 young men and women in bike helmets adorned with what appeared to be five large antennae walked back and forth across a cardboard-covered floor. En route to goals marked by numbers just beneath the portraits, they dodged each other and arrangements of cardboard pillars. Each time they generated patterns of foot traffic.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Euro 'is doomed' warn experts as eurozone 'sleepwalks towards disaster'


Euro 'is doomed' warn experts as eurozone 'sleepwalks towards disaster'


The euro has broken down and faces collapse with 'incalculable economic losses and human suffering', according to an extraordinary warning from a group of leading economists.
The 17 experts said Europe was 'sleepwalking towards disaster', adding that the situation in 'debtor countries has deteriorated dramatically'.


Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-2178622/Euro-doomed-warn-experts-eurozone-sleepwalks-disaster.html#ixzz21kKhNmds