Tomorrow is going to be beautiful and I should be looking forward to a nice trail walk with my wife, baby, and dog. Not looking forward to the crowds anywhere we try to go. Not to sound snobby but it’s what I would be doing tomorrow regardless of the pandemic so it’s a little frustrating there’s going to be tons more people than you’d see even on a nice spring day. With the baby on a rigid eat/sleep schedule we can’t afford to venture too far from home but thankfully there’s plenty of trails (increasingly crowded) nearby. Have noticed more and more face coverings out there though which is nice.
To the “you can’t send people back to work until there’s a vaccine (a year from now)” and “you can’t keep people out of work for a year (what happens when half the workforce dies?)” argument, either option needs to consider the flip side. If we go back to work, what measures must be in place to keep people safe and if we stay home how will business adjust to accommodate more wfh and what new jobs will be created.
Neither option is cut and dry.