Fogdog
Well-Known Member
Only about 10% of the US population has been exposed to the virus and 300,000 dead, hundreds of thousands more with permanent vascular disease from the effects of the virus. So, eff off with the "we'll get through this" bullshit. We have to change our behavior until a vaccine becomes available and even then we need to rethink how we socialize going forward.Apologies if my post was seen as ridicule. It started as a light attempt at humour, but should have stopped at the first line which is probably why that's all you responded to. So thx.
I understand your wife's situation probably more than yours, but I don't understand the fear at all. From her perspective what is she supposed to do? not teach? She's a teacher and there are kids that need teaching.
At the plant where I work I am part of one team that varies between 40-80 people to produce about 100-250 thousand servings of food a day. We had an outbreak for about two months during which about 10% of the workforce got sick. Very, very few people left to sit and collect benefits even though they could.
People were getting sick every week, there were announcements, rumours, sitting together and sharing food was banned, people were appointed to enforce that along with mask policy, there was contact tracing and mandatory testing for anyone that came into contact. The same will happen with the schools and everyone will get through it. They will probably close the classroom for two weeks if a single student tests positive.
People just do the best they can, there's no use worrying is all I meant by the last line.
Shame on your employer for not doing more to make your work force safer. Shame on him. I don't blame the workers, I blame the people who reap the rewards from your coworkers sacrifices.
Stop trying to kill my mother by pushing a false narrative. There is nothing funny in anything you said and stop trying to justify it a-hole.
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