“I have no way to save my businesses that I’ve worked 17 years to build. And I’m afraid I’m going to not only lose my businesses but lose my house.”— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) August 23, 2020
With no end to the pandemic in sight, Texas bar owners and employees are close to losing everything: https://t.co/Tt2nviijSW
I'm not anymore.
There is no good reason why any restaurant, bar, or club in an urban area is open for indoor service right now https://t.co/bbIEJ8laJD— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) August 25, 2020
It wasn’t until Day 7 of her team’s coronavirus investigation when it dawned on Linda Vail, the health officer for Michigan’s Ingham County, that this was going to be a big one. It had started with just two infections at the college bar on June 18, not long after the state began reopening. But the numbers quickly jumped to 12, then 18, then 34.And there is still a controversy over whether public schools should be open or closed to students. By the time one of those classrooms has turned out to be a "super spreader," it will be too late. The short-term inconveience of having your children at home v. the long term consequences of a disease that may scar a generation the way polio did (sadly, I'm old enough to remember polio victims; the parents of school children mostly aren't).
As of Friday, she was staring at a spreadsheet with 187 infected at Harper’s Restaurant and Brew Pub.
“The tables were six feet apart, but no one stayed there,” she said. “The DJ was playing music so people were shouting, the dance floor started to get crowded. We had flattened the curve and then boom.”
The East Lansing case is what’s known as a superspreading event — possibly the largest so far in the United States among the general public. Many scientists say such infection bursts — probably sparked by a single, highly infectious individual who may show no signs of illness and may unwittingly share an enclosed space with many others — are driving the pandemic. They worry these cases, rather than routine transmission between one infected person and, say, two or three close contacts, are propelling case counts out of control.
Besides:
In what scientists are calling the world's first documented reinfection, researchers in Hong Kong are telling and investigating the story of the man, who seemingly recovered from the virus, only to become infected again, nearly five months later. https://t.co/HbI1vAnfS2— This Week (@ThisWeekABC) August 25, 2020
We keep doing this to ourselves, don't we? Swift was right; horses would be smarter than us, and better at this "civilization" thing.
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