AlbertC
Superstar
I'm holding off international travel until mid to late-2021 at earliest. Too much uncertainty, especially with future waves of the virus that can emerge at various times depending on which part of the world.
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So I was listening to TVO The Agenda and thought it was interesting discussion with the virus impact to Long-Term Care homes.
It has?the UK has banned mass gatherings and events until August 31.
China is the source of the virus. Someone needs to explain to me how that is racist since it is a well established fact. As to assigning blame, if that is important, then it depends. Is it the culture that practices what are widely recognized as unsafe food handling practices? If that is true, then any number of countries are in the same boat. Is it the state that allowed the practice to continue and apparently bungled the response?
I’ll be 50 in 2021. I remember when China didn’t have this hold and impact on the world. Toys or electronics if they came from Asia were made in British Hong Kong, Japan or Singapore. It wasn’t that long ago that China didn’t dominate our economies, labour standards, universities, tourism and trade. I know we can’t put the genie back in the bottle, but life was okay pre-China.Issue is China is unique in the scale of exotic animal wet Markets.
Recode is the newsletter of California’s information technology trade. Of course they have to be critical of Trump. But that doesn’t stop its sweetheart leaders like Twitter from making like robbers with the publicity and growth. Anyone else who spread lies and hate like Trump would have been banned from Twitter years ago. The hypocrisy from Silicon Valley is clear.In a newly released interview, taped on March 16, Recode co-founder and newly appointed New York Magazine Editor-at-Large Kara Swisher called Trump an “epic troll,” saying his use of Twitter (TWTR) to spread misinformation has hampered the federal response to the coronavirus outbreak and put lives at risk.
“It's a dangerous tool in his hands,” she says of Trump, who has 77.4 million followers on the platform. “This whole crisis has sort of been a backlash to that.”
“It's fascinating how badly he's handled Twitter during this crisis,” she adds. “I think people don't like falsehoods, you know, his political attacks are one thing but this is people's lives. And when he's lying about actual science, it's a problem.”
Trump spread a number of false or misleading statements on Twitter in recent weeks. On Feb. 24, he tweeted: “The Coronavirus is very much under control in the USA.” On that day, the Centers for Disease Control reported 53 confirmed cases of coronavirus in the U.S.; as of Saturday morning, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. rose to more than 706,000, according to Johns Hopkins University
On March 9, Trump posted two misleading tweets that blamed a market plunge on an oil price war and “Fake News,” and emphasized the comparatively small number of deaths caused by the coronavirus as opposed to the seasonal flu. Around the world, roughly 6.4% of people infected with the coronavirus have died worldwide, though that death rate is like an over-count, as deaths are easier to track than infections, the New York Times reported.
Nevertheless, the mortality rate of the coronavirus is thought to be higher than that of the seasonal flu, which kills 0.1% of infected individuals, Johns Hopkins University says.
Less than two weeks after the March 9 tweets, Trump tweeted that a combination of anti-malaria medicine hydroxychloroquine and antibiotic azithromycin “have a real chance to be one of the biggest game changes in the history of medicine.”
Trump is an 'epic troll' whose Twitter use is 'dangerous' amid coronavirus, Kara Swisher says
Recode co-founder and newly appointed New York Magazine Editor-at-Large Kara Swisher called Trump an “epic troll" in a newly released interview with Yahoo Finance.finance.yahoo.com
Bloomberg doesn’t need to go to Germany to find sound management of Covid19.Meticulous and Orderly, Germany Can Handle a Pandemic
Picture the opposite of the U.S. under Donald Trump during the Covid-19 outbreak. That’s Germany under Angela Merkel.
By Andreas Kluth
April 16, 2020, 12:30 AM EDT
www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-04-16/coronavirus-meticulous-germany-knows-how-to-handle-a-pandemic
It has?
Latest UK media says: “Dominic Raab has extended the UK coronavirus lockdown for 'at least' three weeks, until May 7”.
I don’t think I can easily cancel for refund if travel restrictions are lifted. We have booked West End theatre tickets, steam train outing in Pickering, etc. If all these things are closed or if the airline and overall travel ban is still on then I think we’ll have to cancel. We‘ll see.
Here’s what TD Expedia says on their travel site. I’ll check back with them after April 30.
If your flight is scheduled to depart after April 30, 2020:
Please wait and check back closer to your date of departure for the latest policies. If you do want to cancel today, you can do so from the My Trips page, but please be aware that all normal cancel penalties will apply.
If your hotel stay is scheduled to begin after April 30, 2020:
Please wait and check back closer to your date of departure for the latest policies. If you do want to cancel today, you can do so from the My Trips page, but please be aware that all normal cancel penalties will apply.
My TD travel gold visa has some additional cancelation protections. I hope to get at least half back, but really it’s not going to break the bank. Im easy going about it, let’s see what happens in May.This is why you should never book through third-party vendors like Expedia.