I've heard from four different people with friends/family in the government to expect a nationwide lockdown with no travel or leaving home except for emergencies starting either monday or sometime early next week.
Agreed, I don't think we can avoid it at this point and they've been kind of getting us ready for that it seems with these little changes here and there so it's not as much of a shock to all of us. I can say that from a law enforcement perspective there are some changes I'm seeing at my level that lead me to believe that's going to happen in the future. No one has said "Hey this is happening on X date, " just a hunch of mine.
I’d imagine leaving home to get groceries would still be acceptable, right? If not, imagine the hysteria at the local super markets over the next few days. Be worse than it already is.I've heard from four different people with friends/family in the government to expect a nationwide lockdown with no travel or leaving home except for emergencies starting either monday or sometime early next week.
It is accelerating. We did not enact distancing measures soon enough or strict enough. People were out en masse as late as this weekend. The new cases is concerning but what I'd be more concerned about is the new deaths. We are upping the ante faster than Italy did when they exploded over 100 deaths per day and beyond. I fear we will be there very soon and probably worse. The spread is similar or worse than Italy and our population is 5 times theirs. We won't see numbers level off for at least 2 weeks and likely longer because our social distancing measures as of today even are not strict enough. Bars and restaurants still open in MississippiAs you note, the rapid increase is primarily just finding the cases that were already out there but hadn't been confirmed. Also, the incubation period for the virus is 1-14 days with a mean time of 5 days, so what we'd see even with perfect testing would be a rough average of exposures from 5 days earlier. As social distancing and quarantines are enacted there will be a delay in seeing the results.
So it might not be accelerating.
Groceries will be considered essential travelI’d imagine leaving home to get groceries would still be acceptable, right? If not, imagine the hysteria at the local super markets over the next few days. Be worse than it already is.
Loeffler, a freshman Georgia senator, sold as much as $3.1 million worth of stock from Jan. 24 — the day she attended a private coronavirus briefing — through Feb. 14, the Daily Beast reported Thursday. Loeffler — whose husband is chairman and CEO of the New York Stock Exchange — also reportedly bought shares in the tech firm Oracle and Citrix, which provides teleworking software.
Some Democratic officials said Burr and Loeffler should be investigated and potentially disciplined — or even face criminal charges — for the suspiciously timed transactions.
“Senator Burr should resign and prepare to spend some quality time with a federal grand jury,” tweeted Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.).
“Senators Burr and Loeffler should be investigated by authorities and the Senate Ethics Committee,” former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro said on Twitter. “If the evidence suggests they engaged in insider trading, they should be charged and stand trial.”
Four senators dumped millions of dollars worth of stock while Capitol Hill was being briefed on the threat of coronavirus but before the markets tanked as infections soared, disclosure records have revealed.
Republicans Richard Burr, Kelly Loeffler and James Inhofe and Democrat Dianne Feinstein collectively offloaded up to $11million in stock between late January and early February, according to records seen by The Daily Beast, New York Times and ProPublica.
Burr, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee that was directly briefed on coronavirus, sold up to $1.7million in stock including in hotels, according to reporting from ProPublica.
Feinstein, a member of the same committee, sold up to $6million in stock including in a biotech firm.
As America digs in against coronavirus, a former Husker great is doing his part in Kansas City.
According to a report by KMBC News in Kansas City, former Husker great Will Shields and his wife Senia have donated 96,000 meals to families impacted by the coronavirus.
Shields announced Thursday that through the Will to Succeed Foundation he is donating 96,000 meals to Harvesters and the Food Pantry at Jewish Family Services. Harvesters is a regional foodbank that serves a 26-county area in northwestern Missouri and northeastern Kansas.
Will to Succeed will provide funding for 60,000 meals through Harvesters and 36,000 through Jewish Family Services, which is a partner organization with Harvesters.
“At times like these it is so important we come together as a team to help keep people fed,” Shields said in the report. “We’re asking former Kansas City Chiefs players, local businesses and current and former elected officials to join in efforts helping out fellow citizens during these unprecedented times.”