Society's Child
Women are allowed to leave their homes for necessities on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Men can leave their homes for the same on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.
"On Sundays, everyone will have to stay at home," President Laurentino Cortizo announced.
The restrictions, which are in effect for at least 15 days, come on top of a nationwide lockdown that went into effect March 25. Panama currently has 1,317 cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, and 32 deaths from it.
The move could make it easier for Panamanian officials to ensure social distancing, Cortizo said on social media. The first quarantine measure required all Panamanians to remain in their homes except to get food or in case of an emergency, but apparently the rule was not enough. More than 2,000 people were arrested last week for breaking the rules, according to Agence France-Presse.
But the reason it needs to be stated is that the past couple of weeks has convinced me that many people actually don't seem to know this at all. Judging by comments I have seen in numerous articles, and the pushback I and many others have received from questioning the proportionality of the measures put in place to deal with the outbreak of Covid-19, there seem to be many people who think that economies are all about money and commerce and wealth. Well, there is that, but principally they are about people.
It works like this: I or A.N. Other state that we believe shutting down most of the economy for an indefinite period is an astonishingly disproportionate and dangerous way of tackling the threat from Covid-19, and we are immediately assailed with responses that run along the following lines:
- How can you equate money with people's lives?
- I can't believe you're bringing the economy into it when we're talking about saving lives.
- What a callous person you must be to put wealth and profit before people.
Hundreds of sailors gathered on the deck of the Roosevelt on Thursday night to bid farewell to Captain Brett Crozier, cheering him and chanting his name as he walked off the ship. They showed no sign of concern that doing so might expose them to the coronavirus - which started the entire drama to begin with.
"I've never seen anything quite like it," said Erik Slavin, writer for the military newspaper Stars and Stripes, sharing a Facebook video of Crozier's sendoff from inside the Roosevelt's hangar bay.
According to a new report from the New York Times, Americans bought nearly two million guns last month as the country slowly went into lockdown.
This was the second-highest sales numbers ever seen in the U.S. for firearms, surpassed only by the January after then U.S. President Barack Obama's re-election, which was also when the Sandy Hook shooting occurred. And while more guns were sold in January 2013, the numbers are actually extremely close — with roughly two million guns sold during each time period.
The coronavirus pandemic in Spain shows little sign of abating and as the country's hard-pressed health services battle valiantly to attend to the needs of the over 70,000 active cases nationwide the situation is worsening in terms of places to store those people who have lost their lives due to the ongoing crisis. There have now been more than 10,000 deaths directly related to the Covid-19 outbreak in Spain and funeral service sector workers are inundated, leading to the use of places other than morgues to try and alleviate the situation.
The main ice rink in Madrid, the Palacio de Hielo, has been turned into a temporary morgue during the pandemic and the IFEMA conference centre in the capital has been repurposed as a emergency isolation centre for coronavirus patients, in addition to military hospitals being set up on the outskirts of the city. In Barcelona, the situation has become so untenable that a three-storey car park attached to the Collserola de Barcelona funeral home has been converted into a temporary resting place for Covid-19 victims.
The woman called the police to report her neighbour. The neighbour and other "ignorant assh**** who can't follow the rules are killing people," she posted.
Others chimed in on Facebook, harshly criticizing those who violate rules that public health authorities have put in place to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
In the interview, Professor Bhakdi condemns the extreme and costly measures being taken around the world as 'grotesque', 'useless', 'self-destructive' and a 'collective suicide' that will shorten the lifespan of the elderly and should not be accepted by society.
His comments come as it emerges that the overall number of deaths in Europe during the outbreak so far, including in Italy, is no higher than usual for this time of year. In fact, it is lower.
Comment: See also:
- The global economy was deathly sick long before now, but Covid-19 will conveniently take the blame if it crashes
- Public health professors warn that COVID-19 crackdown could be more harmful than virus itself
- Almost a THIRD of US workers can't live on their paychecks, spelling doom for a service economy based on discretionary spending
Eight teams of doctors and nurses with state-of-the-art equipment as well as a unit of nuclear, biological and chemical protection (NBC) troops to carry out disinfection have been assigned by the Defense Ministry for the mission.
The first Il-76 cargo plane took off from the Chkalovsky airfield outside Moscow and landed at Batajnica Airport near Belgrade.
The flight between the Russian capital and Serbia takes less than three hours, with the Russian planes expected to make 10 trips - four more on Friday and six on Saturday - to deliver all of the intended cargo. Besides the 87 servicemen, they'll be carrying 16 military vehicles and a batch of individual protective gear.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic had asked his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, for aid in tackling Covid-19 in late March, with his request now being fulfilled.
As the parent of a disabled child, you need to become an expert at juggling all the balls you must keep in the air if you want to become the parent of a disabled adult, as I am fortunate enough to be. In all my 18 years of helping to look after my lovely daughter Elvi, I've never been so scared for her future as I am in this Covid-19 pandemic. Drop one of those balls at this time, and I could be signing my child's death warrant.
It's not just because the virus could be significantly more lethal for her. It's also because some doctors may take the view that my daughter's life is much less worthy of medical care compared to able-bodied people.
It has emerged this week that some GPs around Britain have been sending out letters to patients with existing health issues asking them to sign Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) forms, in case they catch the coronavirus and their condition worsens.
So that's that, then. It's asking these people to volunteer for death.
Chauntae Davies was recruited into Epstein's trafficking ring in 2001, when she was a 21-year-old massage-therapy student in California. She says the perverted financier groomed and sexually abused her for years before she escaped in 2005.
Davies' time in Epstein's world included a 2002 humanitarian trip to Africa with former President Bill Clinton on the money-manager's private jet. Actors Chris Tucker and Kevin Spacey were along for the ride.
Comment: On the elusive Ms. Maxwell who is unaccountably, still at large.
- 'They're nothing, these girls': Unraveling the mystery of Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's partner in crime
- Ghislaine Maxwell's powerful contacts protecting her in safe houses
- Large tranche of files released in Ghislane Maxwell lawsuit contain lurid claims about Jeffrey Epstein
- Epstein arrest casts spotlight on Clinton-connected socialite Ghislaine Maxwell
- Blackmailing America: The Epstein-Maxwell Racket Began in The 1980s
- Epstein madam Ghislaine Maxwell's host of family skeletons















Comment: So what's next? Start shooting people for being out? Oh wait, looks like Duterte beat them to it.