Society's Child
Against the backdrop of the panic "We are all going to die!", Terrifying revelations of doctors and patients, quarantined states and apocalyptic news from Italy, I want to hear the voice of common sense.
Alexander Evsin - head of the situation center, deputy head of the data center (Center for Traffic Management of the Moscow Government). At the moment, the shift on duty is involved in large-scale anti-epidemiological measures in the city - in particular, it provides traffic management in the area of the construction of a new infectious diseases hospital.
"Homeschooling during the coronavirus will set back a generation of children," reads the headline of an op-ed at the Washington Post Friday by Kevin Huffman, now a partner at the City Fund, an education nonprofit that says it "partners with local leaders to create innovative public school systems."
Huffman wrote:
As the coronavirus pandemic closes schools, in some cases until September, American children this month met their new English, math, science and homeroom teachers: their iPads and their parents. Classes are going online, if they exist at all. The United States is embarking on a massive, months-long virtual-pedagogy experiment, and it is not likely to end well. Years of research shows that online schooling is ineffective — and that students suffer significant learning losses when they have a long break from school.
The company has now devised a way to track the spread of the coronavirus pandemic by focusing on atypical fevers associated with COVID-19. The company is able to generate a U.S. Health Weather Map that tracks these atypical fever trends around the country. The New York Times reports that as of Monday morning, fevers were down in three-quarters of the country from their peak levels on March 17. In hard-hit New York City, Kinsa data show that the number of fevers is trending downward, which correlates with the good news that the COVID-19 hospitalization doubling rate in that city has dropped from two days to four days.
The Government has said that it aims to boost the rate of tests to 25,000 every day by the end of April at the latest and has asked private companies to help drive up test production.
But one production firm, Luxembourg-based manufacturer Eurofins, told UK labs on Monday that deliveries would be delayed as core parts had been contaminated with coronavirus, the Telegraph reported.

A tent for testing and receiving potential coronavirus COVID-19 patients is pictured at Karolisnka Hospital in Solna, Sweden on March 31, 2020
The ban came into force on Sunday and those who violate it are facing fines or a jail term of up to six months.
The restriction, however, has had little to no effect on migrants and pro-migrant activists, who have been protesting in the city of Gothenburg for weeks already.
"Some believe the pandemic is a once-in-a-generation chance to remake society and build a better future," argues one advocate of climate alarmism.
So, in case you thought that Covid-19 is a global pandemic of catastrophic proportions, think again!
The Pacific Harbor Line train derailed Tuesday, running through the end of the track and crashing through barriers, finally coming to rest about 250 yards from the docked naval ship.
Federal prosecutors allege train engineer Eduardo Moreno, 44, of San Pedro intended to hit the ship, saying he thought it was "suspicious" and did not believe "the ship is what they say it's for.'"
The documents are part of a research project being conducted at the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research in Braunschweig, which will conduct blood tests among the general public for antibodies produced against the virus.
The antibodies will show which of the participants have had the virus and have recovered, according to a report by the German magazine Der Spiegel. Around 100,000 people will be tested at a time, and certificates issued to those found positive.
The testing could start in April if researchers are given the green light.
"You could give immune people something similar to a vaccination certificate that could allow them exceptions from limits on their activities," Helmholtz Institute epidemiologist Gerard Krause told Der Spiegel.

Data: Axios/Ipsos survey. Margin of error ±2.8 points for full sample. Margin for subgroups ranges from ±5 to ±9 points.
Driving the news: This sobering reality emerges from Week 3 of our Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
- The survey finds Americans with less education and lower incomes far more likely either to have to keep showing up at their workplaces — putting themselves at greater daily risk of infection — or more likely to have seen their work dry up.
- "The rich and affluent have gone virtual. They've maintained their jobs through the virtual world," he said. "The working and the poor are more exposed."
Comment: While the wealthy will be insulated from the worst of the financial and emotional effects of this hysteria, the ensuing impact on the majority will be devastating. The PTB are preparing for the time when the masses finally realize that the panic and lockdown over the virus was completely unnecessary and are setting the stage to institute martial law - among other things. The question is - are there enough people who can see what is happening and have the strength and will to resist?
- Covid-19 derangement syndrome: A world gone mad
- Medical martial law, cashless society, and UBI: Welcome to the Covid World Order
- The post-coronavirus world will be far worse than the pre-coronavirus world
- Coronavirus: You have given your freedom away don't abandon critical thinking too
- Chillingly, scariest coronavirus death toll may not come from covid-19
- The global economy catches Coronavirus: The Fed, the virus, and inequality
It was a mere four years ago when public outrage forced police in Missouri, Ohio and Colorado to stop intrusive DNA and drug checkpoints.
Currently, there are at least thirty-three different types of police checkpoints going on at any given time across the country.
In some states, police are actually setting up firewood, agriculture and fish and game checkpoints to name a few. With the outbreak of COVID-19, Americans could be facing new type of checkpoint across the country.
In Florida, state police are setting up checkpoints on Interstate 10 looking for Louisiana residents trying to enter the state. In Rhode Island police are stopping vehicles with New York state license plates and the National Guard is going door-to-door looking for New York City residents. The New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority has recently issued "travel papers" to all their employees.
My greatest fear is watching authorities use the public's fear of COVID-19 to create mandatory coronavirus checkpoints.













Comment: Apparently the Powers That Be are scared that their future wage slaves won't be as indoctrinated into the system as they would be if they had a traditional "education."