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Thread: Discutii despre coronavirus

  1. #1639
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docser...FCDC6DEC039365

    In the majority of countries, venture capital represents a
    very small percentage of GDP, often less than 0.05%. The
    two major exceptions are Israel and the United States,
    where the venture capital industry is more mature and
    represents 0.38% and 0.33% of GDP, respectively.


    Lauzi UK cu lucruri pe care nici nu le intelegi. Esti ca tanti Mioara, femeia de la curatenie, care a vazut titlul unui articol pe care nici nu s-a obosit sa-l citeasca si se apuca sa explice altora ca e chestia asta venture capital, a citit ea, englezii au venture de-asta cat Franta si Germania la un loc. Limiteaza-te la ce stii, capsunii aia nu se culeg singuri.
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  2. #1640
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    Sa nu-mi stricati englezu' meu ca ne suparam.

    Incepe Campionatul Mondial Vaccin Covid. CMVC
    Franta e pe ultimul loc la primul viraj cu doar cateva sute de vaccinati. China pe primul loc cu peste 4 milioane urmata de SUA cu aproape 4 milioane etc ...
    UK aproape 1 milion.

    Luxemburg are dublu vaccinati fata de Franta
    Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
    Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sevilla86 View Post
    https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docser...FCDC6DEC039365

    In the majority of countries, venture capital represents a
    very small percentage of GDP, often less than 0.05%. The
    two major exceptions are Israel and the United States,
    where the venture capital industry is more mature and
    represents 0.38% and 0.33% of GDP, respectively.


    Lauzi UK cu lucruri pe care nici nu le intelegi. Esti ca tanti Mioara, femeia de la curatenie, care a vazut titlul unui articol pe care nici nu s-a obosit sa-l citeasca si se apuca sa explice altora ca e chestia asta venture capital, a citit ea, englezii au venture de-asta cat Franta si Germania la un loc. Limiteaza-te la ce stii, capsunii aia nu se culeg singuri.
    uite-te la el sarmanu gugaleste de zor definitii.

    si cat de financiar ruptincur este el la curent cu tot ce misca tuamneeeeeeeeeeeeeee

    ma boo, daca uk reuseste intr-un an pandemic sa atraga capital mai mult decat ioropa toata dupa vaca aia de creer care-l porti degeaba: e bine sau e rau pt uk?

    si daca prin reducere la absurd reusesti sa dai un raspuns, poate mai citesti odata si vezi in ce ramuri importante se investeste.

    dupa aia joaca-te si tu ca cobain

  4. #1642
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    Da, stiu ca Sevilla e un google-fraier. Dar totusi incearca omu'
    Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
    Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.

  5. #1643
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    https://www.speedtest.net/global-index

    Englezii trebuie sa investeasca in tech pentru ca sunt rupti in cur
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  6. #1644
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    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...conomic-losses

    Guvernatorul bancii Angliei avertizeaza ca Brexit-ul va aduce mari pierderi economice, fiind de acord cu avertismentul din partea Office for Budget Responsibility. Acum il asteptam pe dascalescu sa ne spuna de ce nu e adevarat si de ce Andrew Bailey dezinformeaza
    Academia Rapid infiintata de catre generalul de securitate Vasile Malureanu supranumit €žtatucul politiei politice ceausiste €

  7. #1645
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    Rezultatele se vor vedea pe termen lung, sa zicem. Totul depinde de capacitatea economiei UK de a se adapta noilor reguli de comert import/export. Au ceva atuuri in buzunar deoarece au inca industrie fata de multi din occident de pe continent. Franta spre exemplu nu mai are mai nimic. Englezii nu au delocalizat ca nebunii si au taxe foarte scazute la productie fata de ce se practica in UE. Problema vine cand vor exporta deoarece taxele vamale intervin brusc. Mult va depinde de negocieri si accorduri comerciale cu parteneri UE si altii. Ei sunt si importatori deci pot juca cu taxele vamale si in sens opus.
    Alt argument al borisilor este ca s-au lepadat de capcana UE in negocieri. Acum vor face ce vor si cu cine vor. Sigur ca partenerii seriosi tot aia sunt. SUA, UE, Rusia si China. Restul sunt rupti in k* si nu reprezinta garantii pt dezvoltarea comertului la un nivel important. Dar acum pot negocia liberi cu China, SUA si ... mai putin Rusia deoarece nu se au la inima

    Dar sa revenim la vaccin Covid.
    Azi avem doua laboratoare omologate, Pfizer si Moderna. Ambele produc un vaccin de tip nou ARN messager, efficacitate anuntata la 95%
    Laboratorul francez Sanofi a negociat in acelasi timp cu UE productia unui vaccin traditional. Problema e ca va fi pus la punct in finalul anului 2021
    Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
    Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.

  8. #1646
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    Quote Originally Posted by delaparis View Post
    igur ca partenerii seriosi tot aia sunt. SUA, UE, Rusia si China.
    e rupt in gura si asta. rusia partener serios, tuaaaaaaaaaaaaamne.

    economia rusa e mai mica decat italia vere. pe rusi i-a ramolit tatucu rau de tot.

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    o sa moara ioropenii pe capete, romanacii extra fucked in the ass de uniune si de nemtalai.

    francoromanii de asemenea. fii atent cata prostie la d0b1tocii pe care si i-au pus in frunte. de boii astia le e frica la engleji? fiti seriosi


    It was the most excruciating moment of Ursula von der Leyen’s short tenure as President of the European Commission. On Friday morning she hastily put together a press conference to counter the growing media storm across Europe over the EU’s handling of vaccine procurement. She doubled down on ‘solidarity’, announcing that the Commission had managed to secure more doses of the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine, but also that the EU would stick absolutely to buying together. ‘We have all agreed, legally binding, that there will be no parallel negotiations, no parallel contracts,’ she insisted testily. ‘We’re all working together.’ At the same moment, however, her former colleagues in Berlin, where she was never po****r, were busily undermining her. Germany, it turned out, had secured an extra 30 million doses directly from the manufacturer. Vaccine nationalism, it turned out, was bad for everyone except Germany.
    It was not the first time national health ministers had broken ranks. In June the health ministers of Germany, France, Italy and the Netherlands were forced by their respective Chancellors and Prime Ministers to write to von der Leyen, apologising for their efforts to buy Covid-19 vaccines on behalf of their health systems. It was, they conceded, ‘of utmost importance to have a common single and joint approach to the various pharmaceutical companies’.

    At that moment, with the new coronavirus raging across Europe, and economies in lockdown, the EU was busily putting together a plan that would make sure that if and when a vaccine became available, the continent’s citizens would be the first to get the shot. ‘When it comes to fighting a global pandemic, there is no place for “me first”,’ argued von der Leyen when she announced the scheme, before pointing out that ‘harmful competition’ for scarce resources should be avoided. Instead, budgets would be pooled, and the mighty buying and regulatory power of the world’s largest trading bloc would secure access and terms far better than any could individually. Smaller countries, such as a typically eccentric UK, which opted out of the scheme, would be left to fend for themselves as best they could. It would be a powerful symbol of how the EU could protect its citizens from the gravest threat in a generation. Vaccine ‘nationalism’ would be crushed for the common good.
    Fast-forward seven months, however, and it is clear that it is not working out quite as planned. Europe is falling woefully behind in the race to vaccinate its citizens. Ugur Sahin, the founder of the German company BioNTech, which jointly created the first jab with Pfizer, has revealed that a slow, bumbling, arrogant EU failed to order enough supplies, while approvals have been sluggish, and the rollout across the continent has barely begun. In truth, the vaccination campaign is turning into the greatest EU catastrophe since the euro crisis of 2010-11. And while that only bankrupted three countries and condemned a generation of Greeks to poverty, this one will result in the deaths of tens of thousands of people.
    The facts are clear enough. At the time of writing, tiny Israel has carried out 1.2 million vaccinations, or 13 per cent of its po****tion, the US 4.6 million and Britain 1.3 million. But Germany has managed only 265,000, Italy 128,000 and France a mere 516. Even Russia, hardly anyone’s idea of an advanced state, has managed 800,000. Worse, it doesn’t look as if the situation will change any time soon. According to Sahin, the EU ordered so few doses of the BioNTech shot in the summer that it is now at the back of the queue for scarce supplies.
    Meanwhile, the vaccine it has ordered in big quantities, the Oxford-AstraZeneca shot, has not even started the EU approval process, even though it has already been sanctioned in Britain and India. It might be the end of 2021 before Europe is vaccinated, and perhaps even 2022.
    Unsurprisingly, people are starting to get angry. Markus Söder, the leader of the Bavarian Christian Social Union, sister party of Angela Merkel’s ruling CDU, blasted the programme at the weekend: ‘It is difficult to explain that a very good vaccine is developed in Germany but is inoculated more quickly elsewhere.’ The Italians are complaining that the Germans have stolen their supplies, while the Finnish health ministers complained the country received only 10,000 doses in the first batch.

    The EU ordered so few doses of the BioNTech shot that it is now at the back of the queue for scarce supplies

    So what went wrong? There were, as so often, three big problems: people, politics and bureaucracy. The EU has long harboured ambitions to take control of health policy, at the moment still reserved in the main for member states. Covid-19 presented the perfect opportunity. A virus, kind of obviously, has no great respect for national borders. It crosses them with ease. The crisis was a perfect moment for the EU to bounce back from Brexit, and take charge of coping with the epidemic with a transnational strategy based on science and co-operation. It would be a magnificent demonstration of the EU at its best, delivering for its citizens. It was hardly surprising that the Commission was so anxious to stop national health ministers buying their own supplies.
    The trouble is, the people in charge were not up to it. In Germany, von der Leyen was notorious for a spell as Germany’s defence minister that was characterised by a string of procurement scandals and disasters. The Bundeswehr concluded she was hopelessly out of her depth. Buying military and medical supplies is very similar, with the admittedly significant difference that one is designed to end lives and the other to save them: both involve lots of complex, expensive contracts struck in an emergency for stuff you aren’t yet sure works. Putting von der Leyen in charge of vaccine procurement was a little like getting Gavin Williamson to run the British effort: you can hardly be surprised if things start going wrong.
    Nor did the EU’s health commissioner inspire much confidence. Stella Kyriakides was appointed in 2019 after a brief career in Cypriot politics; with no disrespect to the Mediterranean island best known for a ramshackle blend of tourism and Russian money laundering and a po****tion of less than a million, it is hardly the place to prepare for an administrative task on the scale of vaccinating Europe.
    So it turned out. The EU was late to the party, placing too few orders, and at the wrong moment. Its initial budget for buying vaccines was just over €2 billion. In comparison, the UK, with 66 million people instead of 448 million, is set to spend £12 billion purchasing, manufacturing and deploying vaccines. The EU’s strategy was to pool its buying power to stop the drugs companies exploiting it. In fact, the vaccines are pretty cheap. The Oxford-AstraZeneca jab is just £3 a shot. At £20, the Pfizer vaccine is still great value (it would cost the UK about £2.4 billion to vaccinate everyone). Speed was the real issue; the money was largely irrelevant.
    Even worse, politics got in the way. Germany’s Der Spiegel has made the explosive allegation that France insisted the EU couldn’t buy more of the BioNTech jab than the one its national champion, Sanofi, was working on. But the Sanofi vaccine stumbled, making that worthless. As Sahin has revealed, the EU assumed that it would have a whole range of vaccines to choose from and became complacent. Finally, the European Medicines Agency has been painfully slow. Ironically, Britain’s own health regulator took advice from a Munich-based consultancy, Biopharma Excellence, on speeding up the regulatory process. As with the vaccine itself, plenty of German expertise, brilliant as always, has been deployed everywhere except in Germany.
    The EMA, the EU’s health regulator, approved the Pfizer vaccine before Christmas only under pressure from Berlin, and weeks after the UK. There is no sign of approval for the Oxford vaccine, even though it is the only one that has been ordered in bulk. The EMA says AstraZeneca hasn’t submitted its application yet; it doesn’t seem to occur to anyone to pick up the phone and ask. EU institutions still see their role as blocking what could be dangerous innovations. No one has stopped to wonder if sometimes — such as in a pandemic, for example — it might be better to encourage technology. But that’s bureaucracy: it sticks to the script long after it stops making sense.
    In truth, Vaccine-gate, as it is starting to be known in Germany and elsewhere, is turning into a rerun of the euro crisis. The EU, as so often, wills the ends but then hopelessly fails to put together the means to deliver them. It created a single currency with none of the mechanisms in place to make it work. This time around it has created a health policy, but without the budgets or expertise to deliver. Perhaps the most important lesson is this: the EU is governed by the idea that bigger is always better, and that co-operation is always better than competition. But it is clear that when it comes to creating and rolling out vaccines, that is far from true.

  10. #1648
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    o sa moara ioropenii pe capete, romanacii extra fucked in the ass de uniune si de nemtalai.

    francoromanii de asemenea. fii atent cata prostie la d0b1tocii pe care si i-au pus in frunte. de boii astia le e frica la engleji? fiti seriosi
    Momentan, au murit mai multi in UK decat in Italia, Franta sau Germania. UK e pe locul 5 in lume la decese covid. Si noi o ducem mai bine chiar si raportat la popullatie. Nu mai zic Germania, are popullatie mai mare decat UK dar are de doua ori mai putine decese covid.

    Voi l-ati pus pe Boris in frunte care a incercat sa lase virusul sa-si urmeze cursul si sa faca UK imunitate de turma. Dupa doua saptamani se kaka pe el de frica si a inchis tot. Pana acum, Boris si Trump sunt cei mai mari dob1toci.

    Quote Originally Posted by Sevilla86 View Post
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...conomic-losses

    Guvernatorul bancii Angliei avertizeaza ca Brexit-ul va aduce mari pierderi economice, fiind de acord cu avertismentul din partea Office for Budget Responsibility. Acum il asteptam pe dascalescu sa ne spuna de ce nu e adevarat si de ce Andrew Bailey dezinformeaza
    La asta nu vrei sa comentezi, te faci ca nu vezi?
    Last edited by Sevilla86; 10th January 2021 at 01:25.
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  11. #1649
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by delaparis View Post
    Sigur ca partenerii seriosi tot aia sunt. SUA, UE, Rusia si China. Restul sunt rupti in k* si nu reprezinta garantii pt dezvoltarea comertului la un nivel important. Dar acum pot negocia liberi cu China, SUA si ... mai putin Rusia deoarece nu se au la inima
    Ce comert sa ai cu Rusia cand iti produci intern 80-90% din necesarul de petrol si 50% din necesarul de gaze naturale?
    Rusia nu reprezinta nici 1% din comertul UK. In 2019, comert de 1.25 trilioane de lire, cu Rusia au avut 12 miliarde.

    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    e rupt in gura si asta. rusia partener serios, tuaaaaaaaaaaaaamne.

    economia rusa e mai mica decat italia vere. pe rusi i-a ramolit tatucu rau de tot.
    N-ai nici o treaba, ai invatat economie la cules de capsuni?
    Ce treaba are marimea economiei cu comertul? UK are comert mai mare cu Olanda decat cu Franta, Italia, Japonia, China etc. Importati aproape dublu din Germania decat din China. Marimea economiei nu are nici o relavanta. Natura importurilor de care ai nevoie dicteaza cu cine faci comert. La fel si la exporturi. Poti sa ai comert mai mare cu o economie mai mica decat cu o economie de 5 ori mai mare.

    Constientizez ca dascalescu e rupt in cur si nu are cum sa priceapa notiuni de genul asta.
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  12. #1650
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sevilla86 View Post
    La asta nu vrei sa comentezi, te faci ca nu vezi?
    ma boo, nu am comentat pt ca nu era nimic de comentat. iti dau un pont gratis sa nu mori b0u: cand vezi un articol care foloseste could, would te caci in el. e zero barat.

    de bou ce esti gugalesti ca tontu si pui niste cifre pe care nu le intelegi. auzi la el trade cu olanda > franta. vremea ponturilor gratis s-a incheiat si tot gugalitul din lume nu-l va ajuta sa inteleaga. o sa se dea de ceasul mortii ca un tont degeaba.

  13. #1651
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    It was the most excruciating moment of Ursula von der Leyen’s short tenure as President of the European Commission. On Friday morning she hastily put together a press conference to counter the growing media storm across Europe over the EU’s handling of vaccine procurement. She doubled down on ‘solidarity’, announcing that the Commission had managed to secure more doses of the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine, but also that the EU would stick absolutely to buying together. ‘We have all agreed, legally binding, that there will be no parallel negotiations, no parallel contracts,’ she insisted testily. ‘We’re all working together.’ At the same moment, however, her former colleagues in Berlin, where she was never po****r, were busily undermining her. Germany, it turned out, had secured an extra 30 million doses directly from the manufacturer. Vaccine nationalism, it turned out, was bad for everyone except Germany.
    It was not the first time national health ministers had broken ranks. In June the health ministers of Germany, France, Italy and the Netherlands were forced by their respective Chancellors and Prime Ministers to write to von der Leyen, apologising for their efforts to buy Covid-19 vaccines on behalf of their health systems. It was, they conceded, ‘of utmost importance to have a common single and joint approach to the various pharmaceutical companies’.

    At that moment, with the new coronavirus raging across Europe, and economies in lockdown, the EU was busily putting together a plan that would make sure that if and when a vaccine became available, the continent’s citizens would be the first to get the shot. ‘When it comes to fighting a global pandemic, there is no place for “me first”,’ argued von der Leyen when she announced the scheme, before pointing out that ‘harmful competition’ for scarce resources should be avoided. Instead, budgets would be pooled, and the mighty buying and regulatory power of the world’s largest trading bloc would secure access and terms far better than any could individually. Smaller countries, such as a typically eccentric UK, which opted out of the scheme, would be left to fend for themselves as best they could. It would be a powerful symbol of how the EU could protect its citizens from the gravest threat in a generation. Vaccine ‘nationalism’ would be crushed for the common good.
    Fast-forward seven months, however, and it is clear that it is not working out quite as planned. Europe is falling woefully behind in the race to vaccinate its citizens. Ugur Sahin, the founder of the German company BioNTech, which jointly created the first jab with Pfizer, has revealed that a slow, bumbling, arrogant EU failed to order enough supplies, while approvals have been sluggish, and the rollout across the continent has barely begun. In truth, the vaccination campaign is turning into the greatest EU catastrophe since the euro crisis of 2010-11. And while that only bankrupted three countries and condemned a generation of Greeks to poverty, this one will result in the deaths of tens of thousands of people.
    The facts are clear enough. At the time of writing, tiny Israel has carried out 1.2 million vaccinations, or 13 per cent of its po****tion, the US 4.6 million and Britain 1.3 million. But Germany has managed only 265,000, Italy 128,000 and France a mere 516. Even Russia, hardly anyone’s idea of an advanced state, has managed 800,000. Worse, it doesn’t look as if the situation will change any time soon. According to Sahin, the EU ordered so few doses of the BioNTech shot in the summer that it is now at the back of the queue for scarce supplies.
    Meanwhile, the vaccine it has ordered in big quantities, the Oxford-AstraZeneca shot, has not even started the EU approval process, even though it has already been sanctioned in Britain and India. It might be the end of 2021 before Europe is vaccinated, and perhaps even 2022.
    Unsurprisingly, people are starting to get angry. Markus Söder, the leader of the Bavarian Christian Social Union, sister party of Angela Merkel’s ruling CDU, blasted the programme at the weekend: ‘It is difficult to explain that a very good vaccine is developed in Germany but is inoculated more quickly elsewhere.’ The Italians are complaining that the Germans have stolen their supplies, while the Finnish health ministers complained the country received only 10,000 doses in the first batch.

    The EU ordered so few doses of the BioNTech shot that it is now at the back of the queue for scarce supplies

    So what went wrong? There were, as so often, three big problems: people, politics and bureaucracy. The EU has long harboured ambitions to take control of health policy, at the moment still reserved in the main for member states. Covid-19 presented the perfect opportunity. A virus, kind of obviously, has no great respect for national borders. It crosses them with ease. The crisis was a perfect moment for the EU to bounce back from Brexit, and take charge of coping with the epidemic with a transnational strategy based on science and co-operation. It would be a magnificent demonstration of the EU at its best, delivering for its citizens. It was hardly surprising that the Commission was so anxious to stop national health ministers buying their own supplies.
    The trouble is, the people in charge were not up to it. In Germany, von der Leyen was notorious for a spell as Germany’s defence minister that was characterised by a string of procurement scandals and disasters. The Bundeswehr concluded she was hopelessly out of her depth. Buying military and medical supplies is very similar, with the admittedly significant difference that one is designed to end lives and the other to save them: both involve lots of complex, expensive contracts struck in an emergency for stuff you aren’t yet sure works. Putting von der Leyen in charge of vaccine procurement was a little like getting Gavin Williamson to run the British effort: you can hardly be surprised if things start going wrong.
    Nor did the EU’s health commissioner inspire much confidence. Stella Kyriakides was appointed in 2019 after a brief career in Cypriot politics; with no disrespect to the Mediterranean island best known for a ramshackle blend of tourism and Russian money laundering and a po****tion of less than a million, it is hardly the place to prepare for an administrative task on the scale of vaccinating Europe.
    So it turned out. The EU was late to the party, placing too few orders, and at the wrong moment. Its initial budget for buying vaccines was just over €2 billion. In comparison, the UK, with 66 million people instead of 448 million, is set to spend £12 billion purchasing, manufacturing and deploying vaccines. The EU’s strategy was to pool its buying power to stop the drugs companies exploiting it. In fact, the vaccines are pretty cheap. The Oxford-AstraZeneca jab is just £3 a shot. At £20, the Pfizer vaccine is still great value (it would cost the UK about £2.4 billion to vaccinate everyone). Speed was the real issue; the money was largely irrelevant.
    Even worse, politics got in the way. Germany’s Der Spiegel has made the explosive allegation that France insisted the EU couldn’t buy more of the BioNTech jab than the one its national champion, Sanofi, was working on. But the Sanofi vaccine stumbled, making that worthless. As Sahin has revealed, the EU assumed that it would have a whole range of vaccines to choose from and became complacent. Finally, the European Medicines Agency has been painfully slow. Ironically, Britain’s own health regulator took advice from a Munich-based consultancy, Biopharma Excellence, on speeding up the regulatory process. As with the vaccine itself, plenty of German expertise, brilliant as always, has been deployed everywhere except in Germany.
    The EMA, the EU’s health regulator, approved the Pfizer vaccine before Christmas only under pressure from Berlin, and weeks after the UK. There is no sign of approval for the Oxford vaccine, even though it is the only one that has been ordered in bulk. The EMA says AstraZeneca hasn’t submitted its application yet; it doesn’t seem to occur to anyone to pick up the phone and ask. EU institutions still see their role as blocking what could be dangerous innovations. No one has stopped to wonder if sometimes — such as in a pandemic, for example — it might be better to encourage technology. But that’s bureaucracy: it sticks to the script long after it stops making sense.
    In truth, Vaccine-gate, as it is starting to be known in Germany and elsewhere, is turning into a rerun of the euro crisis. The EU, as so often, wills the ends but then hopelessly fails to put together the means to deliver them. It created a single currency with none of the mechanisms in place to make it work. This time around it has created a health policy, but without the budgets or expertise to deliver. Perhaps the most important lesson is this: the EU is governed by the idea that bigger is always better, and that co-operation is always better than competition. But it is clear that when it comes to creating and rolling out vaccines, that is far from true.
    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    ma boo, nu am comentat pt ca nu era nimic de comentat. iti dau un pont gratis sa nu mori b0u: cand vezi un articol care foloseste could, would te caci in el. e zero barat.
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  14. #1652
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    Sevilla vs. Dascalesc, a dream come true!

    Cred ca mai tare ar fi doar Dascalesc vs. Unghier, ala e show down-ul Universului! As cumpara bilete!
    The difference between a good and an awesome diplomat is the ability to reconcile the arrogant assholes with the scardy whiners, it's almost an art really!
    I know because I'M BOTH!

  15. #1653
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    Ce dascalescu... Isi da si asta cu stangu-n dreptu' ca lordliv. Nici nu trebuie sa caut in arhiva, pe aceeasi pagina de thread posteaza ditamai articolul plin de could, would dupa care zice sa ne kacam in articolele astea

    N-o s-o uit niciodata pe aia de la liviu...

    Quote Originally Posted by Lordliv View Post
    62 de puncte,pilot la volan!
    normal, masina pe care o am este o placere sa o conduc,si o conduc eu,nu ma conduce ea, ca pe altii care se fac ca_conduc o tara!

    nu merci,nu vreau un job
    Quote Originally Posted by Lordliv View Post
    cum ziceam,am sofer.nu stiu sa conduc!
    ----------------------------------------------

    Quote Originally Posted by Lordliv View Post
    ps3 aparu si dogioiu! sa mi-o sugi clona sekurista!
    Quote Originally Posted by delaparis View Post
    Din ce vad eu pe modcp Dogioiu e clona lui Tim
    Tot liviut e campion. Dar si asta e batut in cap
    Academia Rapid infiintata de catre generalul de securitate Vasile Malureanu supranumit €žtatucul politiei politice ceausiste €

  16. #1654
    visurat Novac's Avatar
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    asta parca era amic bun cu A3des

    Jessica Ellen Cornish brilliant performance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FaBAFRMwSgE

  17. #1655
    sport legend
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sevilla86 View Post
    uite cum isi demonstreaza imbecilitatea. mergi la capsunit vreo 10 ani, invata engleza de la surse.

    hopaaaaa brexitu te-a phutut in cur si nu mai poti merge

  18. #1656
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    ma tontilor

    care ma dumireste si pe mine?

    a primit romanica mai mult decat cele zece mii de vaccinuri pe care finlandia le-a cersit?

    odata ce aflati numarul un calcul simplu: cat va va lua sa vaccinati 21 mil de oameni.

    pardon, corectie necesara, scadeti vreo 4-5 mil pt ca se stie ca au ramas doar ciurucurile pe meleagurile dacilor.

  19. #1657
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    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    de bou ce esti gugalesti ca tontu si pui niste cifre pe care nu le intelegi. auzi la el trade cu olanda > franta. vremea ponturilor gratis s-a incheiat si tot gugalitul din lume nu-l va ajuta sa inteleaga. o sa se dea de ceasul mortii ca un tont degeaba.
    de notat ca dupa 24 de ore de gugalit prostanul tot nu a gasit raspunsul

  20. #1658
    Abomination Johnny D's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Novac View Post
    asta parca era amic bun cu A3des
    Atr3ides! Nu fi ciuperca!
    The difference between a good and an awesome diplomat is the ability to reconcile the arrogant assholes with the scardy whiners, it's almost an art really!
    I know because I'M BOTH!

  21. #1659
    DevilOfTheRhine Sevilla86's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    uite cum isi demonstreaza imbecilitatea. mergi la capsunit vreo 10 ani, invata engleza de la surse.

    hopaaaaa brexitu te-a phutut in cur si nu mai poti merge
    Brezitu' i-a futut in cur pe britanici, doar ca inca nu-si dau seama. Could, would in acel articol este folosit cu acelasi sens cu articolul postat de mine. Poate vorbesti engleza ca un geordie sau pikey care nu prea a dat pe la scoala.

    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    care ma dumireste si pe mine?

    a primit romanica mai mult decat cele zece mii de vaccinuri pe care finlandia le-a cersit?

    odata ce aflati numarul un calcul simplu: cat va va lua sa vaccinati 21 mil de oameni.

    pardon, corectie necesara, scadeti vreo 4-5 mil pt ca se stie ca au ramas doar ciurucurile pe meleagurile dacilor.
    S-au vaccinat 108,000 pana acum, 94,500 in ultima saptamana. Esti in urma cu stirile pentru unul care e atat de interesat de cum se vaccineaza in romanica.

    Quote Originally Posted by mihaidascalescu View Post
    de notat ca dupa 24 de ore de gugalit prostanul tot nu a gasit raspunsul
    N-am nevoie de nici un gugalit. UK are trading/comert mai mare ca valoare cu Olanda decat cu Franta. Este un fapt. Cine spune ca nu-i asa, nu stie ce zice.
    Academia Rapid infiintata de catre generalul de securitate Vasile Malureanu supranumit €žtatucul politiei politice ceausiste €

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