Colleges are allowing kids to come on campus, only to declare they can't do it safely and shift online.
They collect the tuition checks from the initial opening.
Then blame the students to shut it down
Completely coordinated. I hope they all go under
Yes, it's chaos. There is no unified central leadership to be found on how to navigate any aspect of the pandemic in the U.S. Why is that?
Yes, it's chaos. There is no unified central leadership to be found on how to navigate any aspect of the pandemic in the U.S. Why is that?
What would an effective response to a highly contagious virus look like?
Want me to post articles describing what a disastrous job obama/biden did with h1n1? Do you even care?
oh. It's Trumps fault?
FEMA stealing masks from states is his fault.
Not having a a decent test producing plan is his fault.
Politicizing mask wearing from the Oval Office is absolutely his fault. I'm sure others would've done it but at least he could've gotten on board quicker.
Saying he took no responsibility is his fault.
He is responsible for ALL national response to the virus, both the good and the bad.
FEMA stealing masks from states is his fault.
Not having a a decent test producing plan is his fault.
Politicizing mask wearing from the Oval Office is absolutely his fault. I'm sure others would've done it but at least he could've gotten on board quicker.
Saying he took no responsibility is his fault.
He is responsible for ALL national response to the virus, both the good and the bad.
Did he or did he not try to stop all flights from China as soon as he could to stop the pandemic?
At the quarter mark here it seems.... Is there still reason to think we couldn’t do this ?
Robert Reich
@RBReich
·
21h
Your reminder that the United States is the richest
nation in the history of the world.
So why can't we afford to safely return our children to school --
with adequate distancing between them,
extra classroom space,
added teachers, masks, sanitizers,
and temperature checks?
https://reason.com/2020/10/16/san-francisco-unified-schools-reopening-renaming-london-breed/
The officials in charge of San Francisco's public schools are hard at work—not coming up with a plan to quickly reopen the schools, but to rename as many as 44 of them.
As parents, teachers, and principals deal with the frustrations of distance learning, the San Francisco Unified School District recently asked them to brainstorm replacements for schools that are "inappropriately" named after problematic historical figures, such as Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and even Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D–Calif.).
"I don't think there is ever going to be a time when people are ready for this," Mark Sanchez, president of the school board and a member of the committee that proposed the changes, told the San Francisco Chronicle. "Predictably people are going to be upset no matter when we do this."
Maybe. But people are more upset right now, because San Francisco's public schools aren't even open and have no plans to reopen until probably January.
Many private schools in the city have successfully reopened. San Francisco, like D.C., New York City, Chicago, Baltimore, and many other large cities, has deemed it safe for privileged kids to go back to school. Yet families that rely on public education have been told they must wait, no matter the harmful consequences for their children.