Now I know why I distrust Dr Fauci ...
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It will be interesting to see how social interactions might change as a result of this viral outbreak. No doubt there will be changes to our strategic thinking, and the geopolitical landscape."The first gun that was fired at Fort Sumter sounded the death-knell of slavery. They who fired it were the greatest practical abolitionists this nation has produced." ~BG D. UllmanComment
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I for one have no desire to ever again shake hands with prospective employers, new contacts, casual acquaintances, or friends of friends. Maybe that feeling will go away, but I'm ok right now if it doesn't.Last edited by TSimonetti; 04-15-2020, 03:41.Comment
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If I remember history correctly the handshake was two fold in need. First since most people are right handed it was to show no weapon in your hand, nor could you readily grasp your sword/dagar. It was also to seal a bargain between two gentlemen...he gave his hand. I don't like a handshake because of issue #2.
SamComment
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The way the world sees things now may in fact become the new "normal".
Human contact with strangers may become less common, people may wash their hands more frequently, people may sanitize more. So much just can't be avoided though like closeness in a subway or Navy ship or even an elevator.
What seems to need to end are what and how the chinks eat in chinkland. The wet markets need to disappear. China needs to emerge from the 5th century and if they would curb their population they could feed their people and not feel the need to eat everything that crawls.
These viruses that have hit the world the past 100 years just went away on their own. They, and new ones, can come back at any time.Last edited by Gun Smoke; 04-15-2020, 05:28.Comment
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We'll adopt a new method of dining with masks -- injections per rectum.
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Or wear the Biden style mask. Turn it upside down to where the mouth is exposed or better yet wear it a little higher.Comment
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