photo credit: businessinsider.com
President Trump has been suggesting that the various
restrictions recommended to slow the spread of the coronavirus could be lifted
as early as Easter (April 12). He has
referenced the economic health of the US, and the other day I quoted Mike Rowe:
. . .we’re treating a virus that
MIGHT have devastating consequences, in a way that will GUARANTEE devastating
consequences.
. . .
. . . I also know that Safety First
is no way to live indefinitely. We are at base, a Safety Third nation. We can’t
remain in the air raid shelter indefinitely – if we do, they’ll be no country
left, when we finally emerge.
In response to Trump’s optimism and intention to balance the
health of people with the financial health (and security) of the country, the
markets started to rebound.
Cleveland.com reported yesterday:
Gov. Mike DeWine also insisted he wasn’t that far apart from President Donald Trump on
their approach to the coronavirus. Trump wants America to get back to business
around Easter, about two weeks from now.
But now The Hill reports that
Democratic and Republican
governors, as well as local officials, are pushing back against President
Trump’s signals that he wants to restart the economy by Easter, warning that
ending strict social distancing practices could put millions of lives at risk.
Governors have ordered residents to
practice those distancing procedures, to varying degrees. Many have ordered
residents to stay at home, ordered nonessential businesses closed and banned
gatherings of all but a few people.
And several say they will keep
those orders in place even if Trump rolls back the few national restrictions he
has put in place.
Among those governors is Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine:
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) said
“people are dying and people don’t feel safe,” therefore the economy would not
come back.
“We have to #FlattenTheCurve so
that when the wave comes, it’s not as big as it would have been and we are
prepared for it. We are going to get our economy back, but we have to get through
it, protect as many lives as we can, and then move forward. I’m looking forward
to that day, but it’s not here yet,” DeWine tweeted.
Meantime, we’ve been to the grocery store, been
patronizing our local bistros by ordering take-out, comparing notes with family
and friends, etc. So far, everyone we’ve
talked to is looking forward to getting back to normal. They're concerned but not scared. We’re optimistic.
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