It will if it works.
Probably.
It will if it works.
My mum lives in rural North Yorkshire - (I was all set to recluse there in event of higher/civilization destroying mortality rates, pleased I didn’t.) - there’s been 1 death in her nearby region but they’ve been in lockdown along with the rest of us.You didn't really understand my post. In two weeks of "lock-down" we have seen nothing but an almost literal freeze in the numbers. No new deaths. Less than a hundred new infections. That wouldn't be plausible even if the lock-down put us all in individual hermetically sealed containers where scientists fed us through straws, because even if that were the case there would have been people who already had it but were not symptomatic yet before the lock-down went into effect that started showing up. And the way this thing is supposed to spread, the numbers should be hopping. And by "lock-down" what I really mean is all traffic and economic activity reduced by maybe 30-40%, so still thousands and thousands of people doing their thing with almost no restrictions.
See, when I talked about a magic wand I was being sarcastic. There's simply no way we should be seeing a freeze in numbers just because the governor issued a stay at home order. My opinion all along was that I would reserve judgment until I could see for myself in my own locality whether the hype and hysteria was justified as opposed to leaping to judgment based on stuff I couldn't verify, but we're well past the 4 week mark from first official cases and deaths and lo and behold....nothing is happening.
I guess the problem with disasters is that if you enact sufficient preventative measures, it looks like you were making a fuss over nothing.
And, of course, a lot of the best preventative measures will incur cries of "racism" and "imperialism".![]()
I disagree
Soldiers having a laugh in a war zone. I don't see any differnce.
Improving surveillance of wildlife diseases, funding appropriate research, strengthening communications and logistics channels, while making sure health systems can handle surges in demand, if necessary...none of this sounds racist or imperialist to me.
Apologies
I know I promised to refrain until 5/15 but this is just too spot on.
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The Thin Façade of Authority › American Greatness
The virus will teach us many things, but one lesson has already been relearned by the American people: there are two, quite different, types of wisdom. One, and the most renowned…amgreatness.com
Hanson received his B.A. with highest honors in classics and general college honors, Cowell College, from the University of California, Santa Cruz, in 1975[1] and his Ph.D. in classics from Stanford University in 1980.[2] He won the Raphael Demos scholarship at the College Year in Athens (1973–74) and was a regular member of the American School of Classical Studies, Athens, 1978–79.
In 1991, Hanson was awarded American Philological Association's Excellence in Teaching Award, given annually to the nation's top undergraduate teachers of Greek and Latin. He was named distinguished alumnus of the year for 2006 at University of California, Santa Cruz.[3] He has been a visiting professor of classics at Stanford University (1991–92), a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, California (1992–93), an Alexander Onassis traveling fellowship to Greece (1999), as well as Nimitz Fellow at UC Berkeley (2006) and held the visiting Shifrin Chair of Military History at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland (2002–03), and often the William Simon visiting professorship at the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine University (2009–15), and was awarded in 2015 an Honorary Doctorate of Laws from the graduate school at Pepperdine. He gave the Wriston Lecture in 2004 for the Manhattan Institute. He has been a board member of the Bradley Foundation since 2015, and served on the HF Guggenheim Foundation board for over a decade.[citation needed]
He is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and professor emeritus at California State University, Fresno,[3] where he began teaching in 1984, having created the classical studies program at that institution.
You'd be surprised Morbad.
For example, I've seen articles from certain newspapers and periodicals in a way that portray having a ship on station to deal with disaster relief as signs of a sad English obsession with bygone imperial glory and a sign of a system infested with endemic racism due to patriachially refusing to let these people manage their own affairs, and listening to similar lectures from my soon to be ex-wife and her friends in the pub, who couldn't be more champagne socialist if they tried, spouting all the buzzphrases like a young Lister in that old episode of Red Dwarf.
If theres a way for those with an agenda to square hole-round peg something to make 'the administration' look bad, make them look villains and stoke the fires of victim politics, they will.
But I don't remember any of that about the CDC's mission in China, for example. That was on-going, everybody was cool with it, then it got cut. There is not much to spin there other than that was a gamble that paid off rather poorly. Being clear about that is not as much about 'making the administration look bad' but more about making sure that the right decisions are made: both now and in the future. Denying that more things could and should have been done, and that some actions made things worse, is essential. I am not out for the heads of the Dutch or Belgian PM, but I absolutely want us to learn from this and make sure that when the next pandemic comes (and there will be a next one) we can do better than how we initially handled this.
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Coronavirus: Body-bag stocks 'in danger of running out'
Health workers have had to wrap bodies in sheets and polythene bags, according to reports.www.bbc.com
What kind of thought process inspires individual citizens to hoard body bags?![]()
Reality always wins. The Universe doesn't care about what we believe. It grinds on.
We can be humble and learn, predict trouble and prep, or we can stay arrogant and ignorant, get surprised, suffer and die.
What kind of thought process inspires individual citizens to hoard body bags?![]()
Try explaining to somebody that you need the money to prepare for the next epidemic, as you raise their taxes or make cuts to the welfare state, and see what happens.
Ah but if the globalist elites would only pay their fair share, countries would have piles of extra money, right?
Well, maybe.
Either that or those globalist elites would take themselves, and their businesses, elsewhere and then the country would lose out on not only any tax money they do pay but also the huge pile of money that all their employees definitely do pay.
That is always the scary scenario presented. But when taxes were far, far higher in the 50s and 60s the US economy did great and none of the major corps left. When in Europe the same corps who threaten to leave the US if they have to pay anything are taxed they just shrug and pay in. Or at least the part of it they can't evade.As long as they are able to make a seizable profit they simply don't leave.
I'm not sure arrogance or ignorance need to be involved..
With respect to learning, it is the central problem.
If you're gonna be part of the deep state you need to attend the meetings and hold nothing back.