Cleveland stores showed some effects on Wednesday. I went to my closest Walmart early Friday (7:30) and there were a lot more people than usual. It is on the outskirts of Oberlin city. Everything to do with paper was empty, except the gift wrapping section.Has everyone gone nuts?
No sane reason. Why are people buying bottled water? It's not like we're experiencing an infrastructure problem. The only water problem I've heard about is utility companies turning off water for non-payment. Given the current situation, that's inhumane.I went inside and bought some regular food but there was no gallon waters left,
Possible (probably), but another aspect is that people in farming and rural communities tend to naturally stock up more on most items, if for no other reason than convenience. Living in a city with three grocery stores between you and work makes it easy to get things just-in-time. So you think about getting paper towels when you put the last roll on (or even when the last roll runs out), knowing that you can always just hop over to the store in just a few minutes. If the hop to the nearest store is half hour or hour long round trip, you tend to plan a bit better. Add to that the fact that people that live in a rural area generally know that they are more likely to lose services and, if they do, the services are more likely to be out for longer than their city cousins are likely to experience, so some degree of prepping has always been the norm in such communities.Cleveland stores showed some effects on Wednesday. I went to my closest Walmart early Friday (7:30) and there were a lot more people than usual. It is on the outskirts of Oberlin city. Everything to do with paper was empty, except the gift wrapping section.
I actually needed paper towels, so I drove to my little village about 7 miles South. Things were basically normal. Maybe all the human herd-type live in bigger cities. Or, maybe farmers (it is an active farm community) are more down to Earth.
Quote - "From claiming Democrats were making the coronavirus "their new hoax"This is itself a hoax.
I noticed that none of the prices seem to have changed -- up or down. There are always a smattering of truly good deals (in addition to the background clutter of fake sales) and they seemed to be posted on both in-stock and out-of-stock items at about the level I've come to expect -- I took advantage of some of them even though it meant getting more stuff than I really wanted. The handful of paper products they did have were at their normal price, though yesterday they had a limit of one on all of them. Some of the specials required buying multiples, but without even saying anything they honored the multiple price on single units. The roll of paper towels I got was buy one get one free, so they just charged me half price. At this point I can't really complain about how the stores are dealing with it all.My local Meijer grocery store yesterday. They had hamburger on sale and I went to get some, along with other staples such as eggs and bread. I'd heard all these were becoming scarce, along with toilet paper. Still, I wasn't prepared to find this:
And the freakin' lobster was still $17.99/lb.![]()
Yes, but six weeks too late. This level of action might have mattered before the virus was 'everywhere' already. Now it's futile and will merely drag it out. Driving folks to the grocery stores so they can then hunker down isn't a great idea if a bunch of shoppers may be carrying the virus.Has everyone gone nuts?
Was it just hype?the hype around Y2K
I think it was, a combination of lazy engineering/programming practices, consumer and management ignorance, media hype, opportunistic lawyers, and management paranoia over liabilities.Was it just hype?
I do get a bit fed up with people saying it was all a made up hoax. I was one of the small army running around checking which systems had the problem and getting new bios updates, and patches from software manufacturers, installing all this and then re-checking.I think it was, a combination of lazy engineering/programming practices, consumer and management ignorance, publicity hype, opportunistic lawyers, and management paranoia over liabilities.
I didn't say it was a hoax. It was real. But it could have been mitigated years earlier. And we continue to make the same mistakes.I do get a bit fed up with people saying it was all a made up hoax. I was one of the small army running around checking which systems had the problem and getting new bios updates, and patches from software manufacturers, installing all this and then re-checking.
No, you didn't but folk do.I didn't say it was a hoax.
Yeah see that's what i saw too in the chicken isle. Didnt check the beef isle as well so not sure about that.My local Meijer grocery store yesterday. They had hamburger on sale and I went to get some, along with other staples such as eggs and bread. I'd heard all these were becoming scarce, along with toilet paper. Still, I wasn't prepared to find this:
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And the freakin' lobster was still $17.99/lb.![]()
How long before the 2020 great depression starts from these drastic measures?An estimated 4 million U.S. restaurant workers face the risk of layoffs within a matter of weeks as states and cities desperate to contain the coronavirus order eateries to close their doors.
That dire statistic, from outplacement firm Challenger Gray & Christmas, comes as California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Ohio and Washington, as well as New York City, force restaurants to stay closed at least until the end of March.
Although many food establishments are permitted to serve takeout and delivered meals, the sudden loss of so much business leaves most restaurant owners with few options but to cut staff. Ryan O'Donnell, founder of the Chicago-based restaurant group Ballyhoo Hospitality, said he felt "terrible" Monday as he laid off 240 workers.
Officials in six San Francisco Bay Area counties issued a “shelter-in-place” order affecting nearly 7 million people, requiring most residents to stay inside and venture out only for food, medicine or exercise for three weeks — the most drastic measure taken yet in the U.S. to curb the spread of the virus.
Yes I was also doing the Lawyers "Due Diligence" ad infinitum. Y2K Compliance certificates for every possible device that MAY have had a clock in it. And On-Site at midnight and a tour of every control on our large plant to inspect for any surprises. Nada...I was one of the small army running around checking which systems had the problem and getting new bios updates, and patches from software manufacturers, installing all this and then re-checking.