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And thanks to those nutters, UK now is forced to order everyone to stay home for a minimum of 3 weeks, with the exception of going out to buy necessities and one daily exercise with a 2m distance from everyone.
Could foresee this happening as it is so infamous that some British just can’t go a week without a pint in pub or travel to the seaside for a sunshine when they have time to kill. They treat a national emergency as if it is a national holiday for mass gathering with thousands crowded on beaches last weekend. FFS!
Already prepared for the worst bought enough dry food to hold on for 2 months without going out at all. But I always hope for the best and get relieved when better often pops up, and it turns out the worst does come up this very first time when I was reluctantly buying so much at the time.
(Disclaimer: Those dry food are Japanese cup noodles and Thai rice from China Town which 99% local British would not have known about its existence, let alone tried it before - so there’s nothing like something was overbought and then others couldn’t buy it)
Wish everyone safe and sound at home. And also take great care of loved ones, especially elderly and those with needs.
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I hope you're all doing fine guys. Stay safe!
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"Stay calm and do not drink Chloroquine" :p
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Guys in Phillipines it is getting more hard and have big problems because of the corona virus.....
No public transport anymore here..... I see only private cars and motorcycles and bicycle (what I use)...... When I have to buy food but we stay as much in the house only in the morning we go outside our door to catch some sun (vitamin D) when there are no other people.
But the people who do not have jobs now= no salary = can not buy food......... the goverment have to help them now otherwise it will be chaos 1 of there days.
The economic, social and health cost, as well as having either or, will be a huge issue to resolve.
No money
= rather risk to work
= higher chance to catch the virus for ourselves and family
= even less money later when long-term health may deteriorate if catching virus
= society as a whole will get more widely spreaded and even less business can be done
= even less money
Therefore, the most sensible solution for governments, in the long run when lockdown is still in place, is to at least provide rations of basic food and necessities for free, so those who need food on the table would not risk themselves and also others for an even more serious outbreak just for the sake of basics. It would also stop the few from hoarding food and necessities as well.
Just need 1 virus carrier to become 415 in a 30-day cycle when restrictions are not working. It is quite an easy and straightforward choice of providing free basics with limited cost vs some hundreds of thousands overwhelming the healthcare system with thousands of deaths with grieve and emotional drain in a country.
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united states now officially has surpassed mainland china for the total number of confirmed cases in the us, the us has 86000 as of now
Yes, the China’s number is under-reported by at least 20-100 times of the actual figure.
Would 3,000 deaths among 80,000 infected (claiming 70,000 having recovered!?) in a country with a 1.4 billion population warrant a lockdown of a whole country for 2 months and counting? Someone who has a braincell would know the truth of true extent, not the quoted figures.
In India there is 21 days lockdown pan India.
also in the united states of america 45 out of 50 us states are now under stay at home orders
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Here in Phillipines we have lock down until april 12, but i can not imagine that ecerything goes back to normal in 1.5 weeks.
We have sice yesterday 2633 cases now here, and at least 107 died. And only 51 recoverd.... thats is a really high death toll here...
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2207 cases in greece,105 deaths , 269 recovered
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12739 active cases in India. 2463 recovered. 520 deceased.
We would have ended it by now but something very bad happened at New Delhi. There was a religious congregation at New Delhi which is responsible for 31 percent of the total cases in India.
Something similar happened in the UK with the Cheltenham festival, 250,000 people travelled to the festival over the four days it took place, I would make a guess that the Cheltenham Festival was the source of a good chunk of their confirmed cases, events were banned 3 days later but surely they could have stopped the festival from going ahead.
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I've seen this from different perspectives. When the virus broke out I was living in China in Shandong Province. I was immediately interested in it as many of my colleagues are obviously Chinese and I actually lived and worked in Wuhan in 2006/7. The Chinese New Year holiday started and all of the foreign staff flew off for our 3 week break, but kept in touch with work to see what was happening - it didn't feel like a normal break.
The lock downs started being announced, first in Hubei Province and then country-wide. My Chinese colleagues who stayed in China were forced to stay in their homes permanently and could only order stuff to be delivered (like food). Fortunately online shopping and food delivery are advanced and massive in China, you can order and have anything delivered to your door, from a take away to a case of wine to a laptop to a small electric scooter or car. Security was beefed up and lock downs strictly enforced, there was a huge concerted effort to keep everyone in and safe but still lots of delivery guys constantly buzzing around and medics going door to door. My flight from Bangkok back to China left without me on February 6th.
I stayed in Thailand until the end of March - about 8 weeks - and could walk or (more often) ride my motorbike around without any issues at all. A few people had masks on but supermarkets and malls were heaving with people, the bars and restaurants were still pretty full but you could get a seat in any, as the Chinese tourists had stopped coming. One hotel that exclusively catered to Chinese tour groups had 380 rooms but only 6 taken. When my extended visa was up I looked around and decided to go, for the first time, to Malaysia. Specifically Kuala Lumpur. I flew in and liked the ambiance of the airport, much more relaxed and cleaner than a lot of places I'd recently been to. I checked into my hotel in the city and three hours later they announced a country-wide lock down.
Okay, but I can still go shopping for food, go for walks in the city for exercise, and order stuff online, right? Not quite. Yes, you can have deliveries but my card doesn't work here except in the atm so cash only. Also you aren't allowed to go out unless it's to/from a supermarket or pharmacy. No going for strolls, runs, or bike rides. Definitely no renting a motorbike to tour around. So really all you can do is shop for food and medicine, which is a pretty strict lock down but not as severe as China. As I was staying in a hotel all I could do was order in food or walk to a nearby restaurant for take out. That quickly became boring so I started looking at leaving for somewhere else.
Vietnam had closed its borders to Brits and other nationalities, China was still not looking good, Cambodia was (and still is) suffering from blackouts daily, the Philippines had closed Manila, Indonesia was having big break outs of the virus, then Thailand shut its borders too, Myanmar also closed up, the flights to Laos dried up, Europe was a total no go because of the virus and lack of seats on flights there, Australasia was completely out of bounds as were south America, north America, Africa, the 'Stans, Russia, and I couldn't return home because my parents are very old and I'd been telling them to isolate way before the government announced it. Bearing in mind I was acutely aware of the issues in January, and read about them every day for hours since, there was no way I could return home without feeling at best apprehension, at worst survivors guilt.
So I rented an apartment in KL, walking around a supermarket (with face mask on, and having your temperature taken and hands steralised before you're allowed to enter - in small numbers only) I could shop for food to cook which feels pretty liberating now we're under such a strict lock down here. How long this will last is impossible to say. My month in my apartment is nearly up and my landlord wants to know if I will book another. Now China, particularly the province I work in, has zero new infections and I'd really like to go back to my apartment there after over 3 months away from my stuff. Unfortunately that isn't to be, so do I book another month? After spending 2 months constantly booking 'a few more days' in hotels, some permanency is pretty good. The thing is, another month is until the end of May when I left my place of work just after New Years. I can't totally comprehend this situation, it's always changing and so difficult to totally understand. I'll probably book another month, although I don't want to stay here because it's really boring and dull. But at least the apartment is lovely, really comfortable. I haven't spoken to anyone mask to mask in weeks, other than a quick trip to a hospital for a repeat prescription. Going a bit do lally, but that is normal for me.
Stay safe and good luck.
Puts my six weeks of lockdown with a six year old son into perspective.
I don't envy you at all.
Stay safe.
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We in Philippines have now 8212 cases and 558 died...
Still have lock down in Manila region... so my wife and kid stay in the house... and I will go the the grocery store... many out of stock and standing in line just to get in around 3-4 hours..
Stay safe guys...... health is everything now
India extended lockdown by another 2 weeks. So now it's 2 month of complete lockdown for 1.3 billion peoples.
I miss going out with my friends to cafes and movies....
Interesting thread and also nice to hear how is going all over the world.
I'm in UK and honestly I do not feel a big change as I can still continue my work both from site and home. Shops are stocked enough, there was a shortage of toilet paper when all the madness started but everything is decent now.
If anyone feels the need to speak or share their story please do not hesitate to do it. Being in contact with more people and sharing thoughts and ideas is the best thing we can do at the moment.
It's a little rough here. I've not been going to work, kids are home giving their own issues plus market places are close down to curb the spread of the virus. I work on a University System here in Nigeria and looks like the staff of the school are resuming back to work this week with the students in their various homes.
God will heal the world!
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