There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Coronavirus (COVID-19) Discussion
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One day, solid dataset either way.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Here in TLV we reopened like 2 weeks ago....it's as if corona never happened now.....beaches are packed, people are pretty lax with mask wearing, etc. 2 weeks ago people didn't know to act, lots anxiety. And here got onboard with lockdown much earlier and way less backlash.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Humans adjust quickly but it takes a little time.
Yes. It’s an early prediction. Two weekend days (Friday and Saturday). I observed about the same on Friday.mbawavefan12 wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:41 pmOne day, solid dataset either way.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Weekdays won’t be an issue. . Weekends will give you a better feel for any huge second wave. The workers I observed were wearing masks and gloves.
The outdoor seating ok vs indoor not ok cracks me up. People think they are safer sitting next to one another outside now vs inside because of the government guidelines. So you’re seeing beach and parks being packed. Restaurants have figured out that also. They are now putting tents, tables and chairs outside in their parking lots to encourage more people to “feel” safer in hopes they come out.
Be proactive, being reactive is for losers..
Tulane Class of 1981
Tulane Class of 1981
over hear in Central Texas...a Claratin with a shot of Lemon Juice, and U are good to go...no waves, just fresh clean air with low humidity ( compared to NOLA )...now onward to making a Tee Time for this afternoon
Be a Hero Today.... Adopt a Shelter Pet... The Beatles once sang "Can't Buy Me Love"... I disagree, unconditional Love can be bought, for the nominal adoption fee at your local Pet Shelter !
Places packed on the southshore and no one following social distancing. As to the tents those businesses put them up May 1st when the governor allowed customers to eat outside. They are being left up now to make up for the space they can't use inside. The governor even acknowledged that when he started this phase of the re-opening. Has nothing to do with people believing they are safer outside.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 6:09 amYes. It’s an early prediction. Two weekend days (Friday and Saturday). I observed about the same on Friday.mbawavefan12 wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:41 pmOne day, solid dataset either way.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Weekdays won’t be an issue. . Weekends will give you a better feel for any huge second wave. The workers I observed were wearing masks and gloves.
The outdoor seating ok vs indoor not ok cracks me up. People think they are safer sitting next to one another outside now vs inside because of the government guidelines. So you’re seeing beach and parks being packed. Restaurants have figured out that also. They are now putting tents, tables and chairs outside in their parking lots to encourage more people to “feel” safer in hopes they come out.
BAYWAVE&Sophandros are SPINELESS COWARDS
YOU NEED LEVERAGE TO BE PROACTIVE!
Small time facilities for small time programs
6-4-23:Now all of the mistakes Tulane has made finally catches up with them as they descend to CUSAAC.
YOU NEED LEVERAGE TO BE PROACTIVE!
Small time facilities for small time programs
6-4-23:Now all of the mistakes Tulane has made finally catches up with them as they descend to CUSAAC.
Ok. I haven’t followed much of governors daily briefings. But from what I can see over here on the Northshore they are continuing to add more tents since May 1st. I went inside a popular restaurant last night and where they allowed inside seating. However there were more people choosing to sit outside under the tent. The waitress told me people feel safer sitting outside breathing fresh air vs inside. That’s all.winwave wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 9:23 amPlaces packed on the southshore and no one following social distancing. As to the tents those businesses put them up May 1st when the governor allowed customers to eat outside. They are being left up now to make up for the space they can't use inside. The governor even acknowledged that when he started this phase of the re-opening. Has nothing to do with people believing they are safer outside.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 6:09 amYes. It’s an early prediction. Two weekend days (Friday and Saturday). I observed about the same on Friday.mbawavefan12 wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:41 pmOne day, solid dataset either way.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Weekdays won’t be an issue. . Weekends will give you a better feel for any huge second wave. The workers I observed were wearing masks and gloves.
The outdoor seating ok vs indoor not ok cracks me up. People think they are safer sitting next to one another outside now vs inside because of the government guidelines. So you’re seeing beach and parks being packed. Restaurants have figured out that also. They are now putting tents, tables and chairs outside in their parking lots to encourage more people to “feel” safer in hopes they come out.
Be proactive, being reactive is for losers..
Tulane Class of 1981
Tulane Class of 1981
I'm sure there are some that may feel that way but the addition of the tents is because of the response the businesses got when they reopened with only outdoor seating on May 1st. They didn't know what to expect. When they got such a good response they ordered more tents. They knew the phase one opening was going to limit them inside so they saw the opportunity to make up for that lost space as there was no limitation imposed on the added outdoor seating other than their physical area available. So many now have more space than they did before. That's the driving force behind all the tents.
BAYWAVE&Sophandros are SPINELESS COWARDS
YOU NEED LEVERAGE TO BE PROACTIVE!
Small time facilities for small time programs
6-4-23:Now all of the mistakes Tulane has made finally catches up with them as they descend to CUSAAC.
YOU NEED LEVERAGE TO BE PROACTIVE!
Small time facilities for small time programs
6-4-23:Now all of the mistakes Tulane has made finally catches up with them as they descend to CUSAAC.
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Here in Colorado it's opening up pretty quickly, traffic is picking up and stores are jam packed, with long lines to get in. Mask and distance compliance is pretty good overall, but the high school and college kids are throwing caution to the wind--no masks and large groupings.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 6:09 amYes. It’s an early prediction. Two weekend days (Friday and Saturday). I observed about the same on Friday.mbawavefan12 wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:41 pmOne day, solid dataset either way.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Weekdays won’t be an issue. . Weekends will give you a better feel for any huge second wave. The workers I observed were wearing masks and gloves.
The outdoor seating ok vs indoor not ok cracks me up. People think they are safer sitting next to one another outside now vs inside because of the government guidelines. So you’re seeing beach and parks being packed. Restaurants have figured out that also. They are now putting tents, tables and chairs outside in their parking lots to encourage more people to “feel” safer in hopes they come out.
Tulane is the University of Louisiana
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The north shore is very different from the realities in the south shore. Is that clear?tpstulane wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 11:49 amOk. I haven’t followed much of governors daily briefings. But from what I can see over here on the Northshore they are continuing to add more tents since May 1st. I went inside a popular restaurant last night and where they allowed inside seating. However there were more people choosing to sit outside under the tent. The waitress told me people feel safer sitting outside breathing fresh air vs inside. That’s all.winwave wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 9:23 amPlaces packed on the southshore and no one following social distancing. As to the tents those businesses put them up May 1st when the governor allowed customers to eat outside. They are being left up now to make up for the space they can't use inside. The governor even acknowledged that when he started this phase of the re-opening. Has nothing to do with people believing they are safer outside.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 6:09 amYes. It’s an early prediction. Two weekend days (Friday and Saturday). I observed about the same on Friday.mbawavefan12 wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:41 pmOne day, solid dataset either way.tpstulane wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 11:10 pm There won’t be a huge second wave. I hit about 6 bars/restaurants tonight and they were 1/4 filled at best. The government has scared the hell out of everyone. Most people aren’t coming out. I would expect many restaurants will close permanently during Phase 1 or decide to close and wait for Phase 3. Those people that went out were mostly young in their 20-30’s. Beaches and parks may be overcrowded but it won’t help the economy because no one is spending money there.
My gym has about 20% of pre-virus now. People aren’t going out like I thought. I believe it will take a vaccine to get maybe 75% of the people back to pre-virus activities. The country is in trouble.
Weekdays won’t be an issue. . Weekends will give you a better feel for any huge second wave. The workers I observed were wearing masks and gloves.
The outdoor seating ok vs indoor not ok cracks me up. People think they are safer sitting next to one another outside now vs inside because of the government guidelines. So you’re seeing beach and parks being packed. Restaurants have figured out that also. They are now putting tents, tables and chairs outside in their parking lots to encourage more people to “feel” safer in hopes they come out.
- Show Me
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Georgia, Florida and Texas are approaching 3 weeks being open. There is no death spiral coming for you no matter how much the media wants it. Stop listening to them and go enjoy a restaurant or bar.
We either live and take our chances or hide and enter a Great Depression, and people will die anyways.
We either live and take our chances or hide and enter a Great Depression, and people will die anyways.
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+1,000. The Emperor Has No Clothes, and neither do many of the all knowing “scientist”, as well as the panic merchants in the media and political worlds. Heaven forbid we get back to some degree of normalcy, and their 15 minutes comes to an end.Show Me wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 6:44 am Georgia, Florida and Texas are approaching 3 weeks being open. There is no death spiral coming for you no matter how much the media wants it. Stop listening to them and go enjoy a restaurant or bar.
We either live and take our chances or hide and enter a Great Depression, and people will die anyways.
Tulane is the University of Louisiana
without the "pandemic, the majority of the all alphabet media types, as well as members of a particular political party, would have nothing to say. The shutdown, is their way instilling fear, dragging the economy to a halt, and making many reliant on Federal subsidies, without the designer ice cream of course.....HoustonWave wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 8:30 am+1,000. The Emperor Has No Clothes, and neither do many of the all knowing “scientist”, as well as the panic merchants in the media and political worlds. Heaven forbid we get back to some degree of normalcy, and their 15 minutes comes to an end.Show Me wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 6:44 am Georgia, Florida and Texas are approaching 3 weeks being open. There is no death spiral coming for you no matter how much the media wants it. Stop listening to them and go enjoy a restaurant or bar.
We either live and take our chances or hide and enter a Great Depression, and people will die anyways.
Be a Hero Today.... Adopt a Shelter Pet... The Beatles once sang "Can't Buy Me Love"... I disagree, unconditional Love can be bought, for the nominal adoption fee at your local Pet Shelter !
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…..without the designer ice cream....golfnut69 wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 9:21 amwithout the "pandemic, the majority of the all alphabet media types, as well as members of a particular political party, would have nothing to say. The shutdown, is their way instilling fear, dragging the economy to a halt, and making many reliant on Federal subsidies, without the designer ice cream of course.....HoustonWave wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 8:30 am+1,000. The Emperor Has No Clothes, and neither do many of the all knowing “scientist”, as well as the panic merchants in the media and political worlds. Heaven forbid we get back to some degree of normalcy, and their 15 minutes comes to an end.Show Me wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 6:44 am Georgia, Florida and Texas are approaching 3 weeks being open. There is no death spiral coming for you no matter how much the media wants it. Stop listening to them and go enjoy a restaurant or bar.
We either live and take our chances or hide and enter a Great Depression, and people will die anyways.
Tulane is the University of Louisiana
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I've gotta admit, there is a lot of very promising news on the COVID situation. As I type this, the market is up over 3%, mostly because of those overemotional researchers at Moderna who have had very good preliminary results for a vaccine.
BTW, until such time as a vaccine is available to all of us, there's still this:
BTW, until such time as a vaccine is available to all of us, there's still this:
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316k and still rising with the US pushing 85k deaths. Let's be honest with ourselves. If the world / US didn't take aggressive measures, those numbers would be much higher. I mean even the orange man said it himself, deaths in the US would be millions.
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And a lot of fools post that we did the wrong thing because it worked and millions of lives were saved. Let's also not forget that the real count that matters will be in 2022, when it's peaked and behind us as other pandemics have taken 2-3 years to peak.GreenPuddleSplash wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 3:38 pm316k and still rising with the US pushing 85k deaths. Let's be honest with ourselves. If the world / US didn't take aggressive measures, those numbers would be much higher. I mean even the orange man said it himself, deaths in the US would be millions.
" If you laugh, you think, and you cry, that's a full day.." Jimmy V
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We'll never know how many lives were saved or not by the Great Hunkerdown. I don't put stock in the "scientists" bogus models of what might have been. You're absolutely right that we won't be able to even begin to assess whether we did the right thing, or completely over reacted, until 2022. And it will be really interesting to compare the lockdown countries to Sweden and Taiwan where they didn't implement a broad based lockdown--they just locked down on the vulnerable segments of their populations. But on a per capita basis, C-19 has a long way to go before it approaches many past pandemics, including those where we had no lock down.DfromCT wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 4:46 pmAnd a lot of fools post that we did the wrong thing because it worked and millions of lives were saved. Let's also not forget that the real count that matters will be in 2022, when it's peaked and behind us as other pandemics have taken 2-3 years to peak.GreenPuddleSplash wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 3:38 pm316k and still rising with the US pushing 85k deaths. Let's be honest with ourselves. If the world / US didn't take aggressive measures, those numbers would be much higher. I mean even the orange man said it himself, deaths in the US would be millions.
Tulane is the University of Louisiana
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Bonjour à tous, Paris calling! Macron set the nation and capital free on May 11th. We got to ditch our "Vichy style walking papers" that day and France was the only country ordered to carry papers on you outside to show the police. You would think Macron would have known how that would look to older folks and history buffs, non? Currently, thanks to 2 month lock-down, the French are still displaying signs of being model citizens that follow orders well. (who would have thought the French could do this). People can choose to work from office or home, Churches closed, most schools, universities, restos (only take away still), parks closed, some beaches opening, max groupings of 10 people. 100 kilometers max by car journeys. More changes scheduled for June 1st, perhaps movies and restaurants opening. One thing being stressed in Europe (as opposed to USA), is that central A/C in restaurants can easily contaminate all the people in resto if one is sick, so they are going to encourage patio seating as an option as well (then you have to put up with smokers though). Prends soin de vous mes Greenies!
nic, nic, nic, swamp!
-Jack N. (Easy Rider)
-Jack N. (Easy Rider)
Now medical professionals say not to wear gloves amid coronavirus
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/14/can-wea ... perts.html
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/14/can-wea ... perts.html
Be proactive, being reactive is for losers..
Tulane Class of 1981
Tulane Class of 1981
I wear gloves precisely to keep myself from touching my face. The gloves make me way more aware what my hands are doing. In other news, dumb practices are dumb.tpstulane wrote: ↑Tue May 19, 2020 6:02 am Now medical professionals say not to wear gloves amid coronavirus
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/14/can-wea ... perts.html