>LATEST CASES 13:41: 6 new cases in Colombia. 13:37: 2 new cases in Poland. 13:17: 121 new cases and 1 new death in the Netherlands. 13:10: 9 new cases and 1 new death in Spain. 13:01: 30 new cases in Sweden. 12:58: 4 new cases in Iceland. 12:49: 48 new cases and 1 new death in Spain.
I don't even get how you are supposed to stop something of this level. Shit like this I read >"As at many stores and markets in the city of 1.2 million, 100,000 fewer than Dallas, a person at the door wearing a mask and disposable gloves manages the long lines, allowing just 10 people in at a time.
>"I had to wait 15 minutes to get in," Luca Galli, a lawyer, 48, said in an interview. However, he added, "once inside, I could easily shop."
>He said that all the supermarket staff were wearing masks and that, at the cashier, people were told to stand a meter away from one another. It doesn't make that much sense because once someone coughs, it will linger in that place and not magically disappear. So people will still have to go through the same spots as everyone else, but just at a slower pace. Once someone touches a door, it will linger there too. You would have to wipe the door every time. And if you touch your clothes it will hit your clothes. Isn't this almost some kind of nuclear radiation level shit? With the sheer amount of people who are in the world and how many have contracted it, it is literally impossible to contain unless you have the world sit indoors for weeks and clean everything they touch. Then have someone go around cleaning everything from stores, public parks, transits, everything. Does this thing die after a set amount of time if it doesn't have a new host?