Daryl wrote:We have had about 95 deaths out of 25 million people. Excluding one cruise ship and one nursing home halves that.
As in the US our states have some variation, but essentially the situation has been. Food, fuel, hardware, and alcohol shops open, dress shops shut (online ok). Only allowed out of home for essential services like going to work, or shopping, and then only one at a time and local. No family visits or travel. No elective surgery or non urgent dental.
These restrictions are gradually being lifted now. You can travel up to 50 kms, dress shops and such are reopening, however you still have to stay 1.5 metres from others. Reminds me of trying to fault find a car or computer, just change one thing at a time.
Not having anything like the US National Debt our governments have been able to pay people to stay at home for now, (about $750 a week I think). People who have lost their jobs due to this and can't pay rent, can't be evicted.
For the past two months I have been legally able to go grocery shopping, but being in several at risk groups I've opted to get my stuff delivered.
As I have said, we look at the two extremes of China's and the US's street scenes, and each seems surreal and SiFi to us.
I will finally mention that we did dodge a bullet, having extensive Chinese tourism, education and business ties, but shut that down hard and early, much to their disgust.n7axw wrote:Fireflair is right. Daryl, finally nobody can survive without an economy. I don't know how far Australia is shut down. That goes beyond the protests of gun toting right wingers. I suspect that a gradual reopening with a willingness to tamp down on hot spots is already in order.
Don
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With a moratorium on evictions or even rent, it will be interesting to see how many landlords start torching their rental properties for the insurance money.