yes im a summerfag, hence the incoherent retardness
Sweden Never locked down and their curve is flattening
Because American life is highly litigous, with never having had the torte reform that most of the world has had in the mid 50's to late 70's. As such, businesses are open to a WIDE range of nuisance suits that would otherwise be thrown out immediately elsewhere. Also, because so much of a person's safety net, including health insurance, unemployment insurance, workman's comp, ect, are provided and paid for *by* buisnesses, they are ALSO open to a whole host of potential payouts that would otherwise just come out of general tax dollars elsewhere.
This creates a situation where business, particularly those that are open to and serve the public directly (thus opening themselves up to an even wider range of civil torte) are genuinely in fear of the potential claims. I mean, for example, let's say you go to a baseball game, get sick in the stadium, and die. Your family could feasibly sue the stadium/team for wrongful death for not taking the necessary precautions, cleaning, limiting of participants ect. And it wouldn't just be 1 lawsuit, but potentially hundreds. some of which could be your own employees.
It's just WAY too big of a risk. It's much easier to fire half your staff and go into economic hibernation, and rehire them after the situation has abated, than open yourself up to all the potential litigation.
Source: I am the Chief Engineer for a major food manufacturer and am privy to the conversations at the top of the chain and how and why we are scaling back operations. And likewise, I hear from our customers *their* reasons for scaling back operations and they align. And further, because I mostly deal with purchasing equipment, I see how *those* industries are functioning and scaling back and the reasons why.
So the system breakdown is near complete, and almost entirely borne of the lack of torte reform in the US.
Like last time you made this thread. When did it start flattening Apr 3 or Apr 15?
Ok but the thread is about Sweden, retard
He asked why Big Business wants the lock down to continue, my post is an inside look as to the *stated* reasons, at least how I've discussed it with our CEO/COO and the same positions at a number of *very* large down/up stream companies from me (including a major retail chain... or *the* major retail chain). I don't know or care what Sweden is doing, but I do happen to know why American big businesses are hesitant to end the lockdown and supporting its continuation as long as is necessary to mitigate their risk. It's very easy to scale back operation costs by just shutting everything down and firing the base line employees(non salaried), vs. the potential cost of even *1%* of them filing suits in a single year. The legal costs alone could make it all but impossible to continue capital investment (new equipment, acquisitions, ect) when this is over, whereas on our current path, we will be able to scale *up* our capital acquisitions when this is over. And we are not special, this is a *common* story among the other Fortune 500.
Maybe the country that lies about school girls receiving severe beatings and anal gang rapes by refugees is lying about their virus problem?
based muslim master race
That is not how it work, even if the reporting is late, it is still reported.
Also the dips is because its weekend and some section is either understaffed or shutting down for it. You're Swedish right? Why are you not aware of this?
15th and 16th should have recorded higher number than similar timeframe as the previous 2 weeks in order for it to be peaking instead of flattening.
Look at the graph. Is Sweden really flattening the curve? Yes or no.
Idiot who lives in the country in question actually believes it's a communist one because he's an idiot