I expect a huge boom in people dying then...Luckily it looks like this lockdown shouldn't last too much longer in many US states -maybe another month or so, maybe not even that - I expect a huge boom in zoo visitors after that.
I expect a huge boom in people dying then...Luckily it looks like this lockdown shouldn't last too much longer in many US states -maybe another month or so, maybe not even that - I expect a huge boom in zoo visitors after that.
I expect a huge boom in people dying then...
I wasn't referring to the zoo visits...Cause zoo is the only place you can catch it in...
Luckily it looks like this lockdown shouldn't last too much longer in many US states -maybe another month or so, maybe not even that - I expect a huge boom in zoo visitors after that.
These reopening in Georgia - as minimal as they are - are a perfect example of how not to handle this situation. The death rates are going down, why not extend the order longer and try and eradicate this for good instead of rushing things which lead to more death? I would be ecstatic to be wrong, but things are looking pretty grim. The stay at home order has been extended through May here in Illinois where it hasn't even peaked yet, I believe the same has been done for New York and Wisconsin.
I don't think we will see an end to this virus until a vaccine is made. The United States is far too populated of a country for this to be contained through social distancing imo.
I'm not necessarily saying this is a good choice at all - only that zoos will benefit, which itself is a good thing in many ways.It really boggles my mind that you appear to think this is a good thing.
Well, eradication is basically impossible. Eradication would take many months of strict lockdowns, an unfathomable amount of testing, and greater limitations of movement than we even have now.
We cannot eradicate a disease that we barely understand.The death rates are going down, why not extend the order longer and try and eradicate this for good instead of rushing things which lead to more death?
We have no guarantee that there ever will be a vaccine. There is no precedent. The SARS vaccines were never deployed.
Indeed. Had the work proceeded to conclusion we would be way ahead today in identifying a vaccine for this related coronavirus. A valuable preparation for the next pandemic was abandoned because, well, no one thinks long-term when funding is involvedTo be fair, the reason they were never deployed was that SARS was virulent enough that it burnt itself out as a circulating pathogen![]()