As long as we can buy enough time to get these cures tested and slow the infection rate, I think we’ll be OK, at least compared to Italy.I’m never an optimist, but for some reason on this, I am. I don’t think the US will be hit hard, but we’re reacting in a way to not become Italy. The economic damage is done tho...
The US numbers outside of huge cities don’t seem to be climbing as fast as I thought they would be now.
I’m sure this is wishful thinking but is there any chance that due to some x-factor that isn’t known yet, the U.S. might get hit even a little bit less hard than expected?
we talking layoffs, what about the general lack of productivity happening right now...group chat just turned into a group video call and all six of us are fukking around, including no one doing their hair, getting dressed, or wearing makeup - we looked a hot mess
a lot of people who don't actually work from home (regularly) are about to learn working from home is actually hard, you're either unproductive or you end up working like 7:30/8am-6-7pm because it's so easy to not log off
going everyday till we get back to normal.In a case like this, overreaction is better than underestimation.I’m never an optimist, but for some reason on this, I am. I don’t think the US will be hit hard, but we’re reacting in a way to not become Italy. The economic damage is done tho...
In the office I got an urgency to finish things by 5:30 PM.
It's showing our trajectory is steeper than both Italy and Iran. More than likely it'll remain specific cities on full time lockdown and not necessarily the entire country. But it's not looking good at all right now.I’m never an optimist, but for some reason on this, I am. I don’t think the US will be hit hard, but we’re reacting in a way to not become Italy. The economic damage is done tho...
