Yeah, Texas here. Pretty much the same thing. Basically the only restriction is restaurants are like 50% capacity or something like that limit.
Thankfully my job is just letting us work remotely for 2 more weeks minimal because we actually had a small outbreak at one of our offices. Kind of scared them. So I will have at least 2 more weeks to see if this thing is going to end up a disaster or not.
Guess all we can do is try to stay safe and hope for the best. The solution to just about everything these days. Hope. Because nothing is bothering to really save you.
No one knows. Considering that rural areas of the US already have a fairly high number of infected people who can spread the virus around, it might be not very good.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/co...VkD?li=BBnb7Kz
Title: Coronavirus outbreak spreading farther into rural America
Excerpts:
A new analysis by the Brookings Institute demographer William Frey shows the virus spreading to new areas in almost every state in the country. But its spread is now more concentrated in smaller towns, rural areas and exurban areas that had previously been untouched.But that ratio has changed as the virus has spread beyond city borders. In the last week, almost a third of the counties experiencing high prevalence for the first time are rural or smaller communities, while just a quarter are urban cores.
The people living in these counties are 62 percent white, a shift from the end of March when counties with high prevalence were 48 percent white.
Much of the growth in rural areas comes in places where people are forced into higher-density situations. Prisons and meat-packing plants have suffered outbreaks in recent days.On the one hand, Easter ceremonies did not seem to cause the spike I was expecting.Hotspots have emerged in places like Kansas, Michigan, Illinois and Indiana, while cases have increased in southern states like Virginia, Florida and Texas.
On the other hand, it seems to have gotten the ball rolling, kind of like in volleyball with a player setting up the ball hitting it high into the air.
The "everything back to normal" policies could very well be the spike, depending upon how many people actually get out and mingle.
Meat packing plants have taking a lot of the blame for the spread of the virus through rural communities. I wonder how much truth there is to this. I suspect a fair amount.In Iowa, the virus first broke out in two epicenters, through a couple that had returned from a cruise in Egypt in an eastern county and in someone who had traveled from Europe through Chicago in a western county. Since then, the virus has marched through smaller counties where meat packing plants are substantial parts of local economies, said Christine Petersen, an epidemiologist at the University of Iowa.
Political ramifications:"We're starting to see in these small Midwestern counties these bigger outbreaks happening, because they can't social distance and they are required to go to work," Petersen said. "A lot of those packing plants are close to the interstate, because that's a good way to get material goods."
Overall, this article pretty much mirrors my thoughts. No one knows what will really happen. Even after it happens, it's not clear we will get a good picture of what is going on. What seems to be happening is that as Louisiana gets a handle on the cases started by Mardi Gras, with a much smaller new case rate than in the past, other states find their rates increasing to compensate.The further spread of the virus into smaller communities also means it is beginning to affect more areas that President Trump won in 2016. Trump won more than two-thirds of the 901 counties that have reached high prevalence status since March 30.
Those Trump counties are most significantly concentrated in southern red states, though there are a substantial number in swing states like Michigan, Pennsylvania, Florida and Texas.
A week or so ago, I predicted 60k deaths by the end of April and 100k by the end of May. The 60k happened, and I stand by my expectation of over 100k by the end of May.
Last edited by Omega10; 2020-05-01 at 02:20 PM.
Well I was right that it started spreading around far before the pandemic was announced, it was kind of too late when they did that, this thing was spreading around the world before xmas for sure.
Yes, a good interview. And, it was past midnight here and I got carried away a bit in my attempt to follow that school of thought My real position on Covid pretty much exactly coincides with Dr. Katz's: certainly we need some measures to control the pandemic, but without crippling the society too much.
I'm not advocating the 99% to make the decision for the 1%, I'm also not advocating the 1% to make the decision for the 99%, it would be equally selfish if the sick demanded that in order to postpone their deaths a bit, the rest of the world had to crash and suffer for unknown but substantial period of time. We need a balanced solution where the vulnerable are safe while the healthy are active at the same time.
My government has closed borders, closed schools, stay-at-home for those older than 65 (ended yesterday AFAIK), and mandatory masks in stores, that's all. Still people don't 100% obey the last two. And we have a military dictatorship. I imagine what people think in democracies with stricter measures. It can't last until the vaccine is cheaply mass produced, the 99% will want to live, not be sacrificed for the 1%.
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Obviously they thought 1000 deaths per day.
So the fault on Sweden's hight mortality rate seems to be... Imigrants.
Well, i must admit, they had to give us a plausable explanation.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/co...alists-britain
Some failures of the Swedish model have been acknowledged. But they are often linked to the lack of “compliance” of immigrants. Former chief epidemiologist Johan Giesecke explains the failure to protect the elderly in nursing homes with reference to “asylum seekers” and “refugees” on the staff, who “may not always be understanding the information”. This has met with silence, if not approval. It may already have been picked up by the Sweden Democrats, Sweden’s anti-immigration party, who now claim the health of elderly people has been put at risk for the sake of integrating uneducated immigrants.
I think he is not intelligent enough for the position he's in to function properly. Likely is stupid but I have another thought on why he's saying what he is saying at times like the China conspiracy theory.
It's 2020, an election year. He knows his base is watching every time he's out there talking so to mention Chinese labs as a source of the virus is appealing to his crazy base to drum up support for the election. Jingoism will bring their votes in, which is blame the chinese scientists is pretty much part of this.