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Coronavirus: What Is Life Like Now Where You Are?
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Apart from empty shelves of toilet roll and liquid cleaners, everything else is mostly normal. I notice rice & pasta missing but we don't buy that anyway.
So far it's not affecting us, and I have worn gloves all day long at work anyway, plus I work alone which is always a plus even in the best of times (I'm a transport driver).
We'll see what happens on St. Patricks Day, thats 'home coming' time for the student fraternity. Thousands of them take to the streets drinking & partying.
Regional police are asking people not to attend Waterloo's unsanctioned St. Patrick's Day parties as they try to ensure public safety in the face of COVID-19.
Not a smart idea to do that this year.
Regards, Jon S.
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Here in Washington, D.C. the mayor has ordered all restaurants and bars closed as well as all gyms. You can still get take out and home delivery but that's it. A couple of restaurants vowed to defy the shutdown order but soon relented when the mayor said we ain't kidding around here guys. This will be enforced.
c.d.
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The Star 24th Oct 1888
The Malady That Is Upon Us.
Influenza, known in France as the grippe, is just now epidemic in London, says the Medical Press and Circular, and possibly elsewhere in the British Isles. It is quite distinct from the ordinary "cold in the head," to which it stands in much the same relation as cholera does to summer diarrhoea. It is not, strictly speaking, infectious, although it occurs in epidemic form. The victims are stricken down simultaneously, often by hundreds and even thousands. The first great epidemic occurred as far back as 1580, and spread all over Europe. Since that time epidemics have broken out at irregular intervals. The most marked feature of this malady is the intensity of the nervous phenomena. Some years since the entire crew of a man-of-war cruising in the Channel were incapacitated within a few hours, to such an extent, and with such impartiality, that the vessel had to hoist signals of distress and obtain assistance to navigate it. When it invades a town the disease conquers the whole population at one fell swoop. The epidemic of 1847 in one month skipped from Spain to Newfoundland, and from New Zealand to Valparaiso, Syria, Africa, and even to Hong Kong. It usually travels from east to west. Apart from the ordinary symptoms of catarrh, respiration is often extremely embarrassed, and sometimes death results from positive "paralysis of the lungs."
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They say that the great thing about Glasgow, is that you never know where your next invasion of privacy is coming from.
Well, things are pretty dead up here.
Very strange to see busy out of town retail parks pretty much deserted.
No privacy to invade.
However I did read something yesterday that cheered me up immensely.
Some of my favourite books are childrens books:- Wind in the Willows
- The Giving Tree
- Winnie the Pooh
- The Mysteries of Harris Burdick etc, etc
Piglet is nervous, and asks Pooh what would happen if a tree fell on top of them.
"Supposing it doesn't ", said Pooh.
Piglet was comforted by this.
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Here in NSW everything is shut down, people are acting like idiots, supermarkets are ripping people off, the Courts have even shut up shop, meanwhile no govt handouts, Mrs Gut still has to trot off to come in contact with 1200 dirty little grits that never wash anything and have no idea of social distancing, while I wait and see if the procedure on my spine goes ahead or not. Great fun.
G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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