March 12, 2020

From Gerald R. Lucas
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The Startcovid-19: day 1 | US: GA | info | act

20200312-c19-tweet.jpg

Last fall I read Stephen King’s The Stand. I read it while sick with a bad cold, or maybe even the flu. Still it made an impression, and I liked the novel. While nowhere near as severe as King’s Captain Trips, COVID-19 is amping up its spread in the US.

This evening, we received a notice from MGA’s president that instruction will be halted for the next couple of weeks:

Yeah, it’ true.

I’m not sure what a “business continuity plan” is, but I understand that this is a directive for me as faculty to get my classes online for the rest of the semester. No problem; I seem to have two weeks to make it so.

So far, Montessori is not closing, though Henry is on his three-week spring break. He was scheduled to go to camp, but I think we’re going to keep him home. Self-isolation seems to be the key here.

While Macon has had no reported cases of C19, I’m sure it’s only a matter of time. People are already starting to buy up all the toilet paper (this is not Ebola, folks). Autumn has stocked us with some essentials, and things are pretty normal right now. Today was a beautiful day.

Predictably, our federal government is more concerned with optics and the economy of rich people to really do anything. I’m not sure our state response has been much better. What is it with these republicans? Can we just elect Bernie, please? I know: the US hasn’t been progressive since the 17th-century. Why should we start now. (I know, this is a whole other topic.)

Still, here we go. We knew it was likely to happen for a while, and here it is. Let’s see how resilient we really are. (I’m going to keep track of this crisis with a running tag, upper-right on each page. Hopefully it won’t go past a dozen or so.)