[ul]
[li] Barbers, hairdressers, and all remaining retail stores larger than 400 m² were permitted to open today. It seems everyone and his dog decided that they absolutely had to get their haircuts and visit IKEA without delay, resulting in huge lines spilling out into the streets.[/li]
One hairdresser’s salon I walked past had a dozen people blocking pedestrian traffic outside, and the salon itself was so packed with customers that the staff barely had any room to move. It seems there was no attempt whatsoever to comply with the social distancing regulations. I hope this was not representative of what was going on in other businesses.
[li] Ipsos has conducted an international poll on how happy residents are with their respective governments’ handling of the pandemic. Austria is in second place, with its residents giving the chancellor a score of 6.8 on a scale of 0 to 10. New Zealand comes first with a score of 7.8, and Germany is third with a score of 6.0. France is in last place at 4.1. The UK, Italy, and Sweden have scores of 5.6, 5.5, and 5.2, respectively.[/li][li] Current statistics: 15,508 confirmed infections, 596 deaths, 13,180 recovered. Daily deaths are still rising, albeit at a low rate of 1.5% (averaged over the past week).[/li][/ul]
Something like this was happening in the Dallas, Texas, area today. A friend of mine drove past Home Depot, and she said she had never seen it so packed. No social distancing either. :smack: It’s like the past six weeks have been completely forgotten.
Are they also happy about the authorities that kept quiet about the positive cases in skiing resorts like Ischgl? Because as far as I know the class action law suits are already being set up…good chance that Austria’s actions (at least the actions of some authorities) played a large role in the spread of the disease throughout Europe.
At a time where people traveling from Italy were scrutinised heavily, groups of people were returning from Austria coughing and all… without anyone knowing there might be an issue, while people that work in frickin apres ski bars had been tested positive in the weeks before.
It’s great that you are happy with your government… but like all others: they haven’t been perfect.
“Georgia reported over 1,000 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Friday, the same day Gov. Brian Kemp lifted the shelter-in-place order for most of the state’s 10.6 million residents.”
Of course not. But that’s just one of many issues and incidents that the 1000 people who were polled had in mind when they answered the survey. Evidently the Ischgl scandal wasn’t seen as severe enough to bring the overall average score down too much.
You’ve switched from the third to the second person here, so I presume you’re addressing me personally. Let me be clear that I’ve never stated that I’m “happy” with the government, and anyone here who is familiar with my political views (expressed elsethread) will know that this is something I will never say about this government or any future one. What I will say is that I believe that the Austrian government’s handling of the pandemic has been, on the whole, better at averting illnesses, deaths, panic, and disinformation than the actions (or in many cases, inaction) taken by many other governments.
A Kazak woman in Turkey celebrated the easing of the local lockdown by going for a hike in Duden park. Pausing to have her picture taken before a picturesque background, she lost her balance at the cliff’s edge. Authorities recovered her body from the lake over a hundred feet below.
The virus did not end her life directly, but it tricked her into losing it. This invisible enemy is tres cunning.
Holy crap. Panama had been holding fairly steady at between 150 and 240 new cases per day and looked like it had reached a plateau at least. But today there were 370 new cases, more than 100 more than the previous peak.:smack:
We’ve been on pretty tight lockdown for over a month, with people allowed to leave their houses only for essential shopping for only two hours a day every other day, and a complete lockdown for everyone on Saturdays and Sundays. I don’t know how these new cases are being transmitted.
The fourth what, exactly? The point the author at the link is making is that these three types of places totally dominate the list of the largest such clusters. (And that this suggests a course of action going forward.) Where do hospitals fit in? How are they a fourth? Are there a nontrivial number of such clusters that were caused by a hospital?
Tru dat, but is anyone planning to have another big event like that anytime soon? Probably the biggest crowds anyone will see anytime soon will be at the anti-shutdown protests.