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SOUTHEND United chairman Ron Martin feels not all the Shrimpers supporters will return to Roots Hall until there is a vaccine to stop coronavirus.
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Is that assuming that if you have had it you cant get it again, has that been confirmed as i am not up to date on all that as got bored with it all lolas soon as people get tested (anti body) and find out who has had it things will be possible
There is a 3rd option - governments prop up the shortfall, it's what is being proposed in the areas of industry I work in that require full (or near to) to make it financially viable.As today's announcement shows whilst the "2 metre" rule is in force schools cannot and never will be able to function properly. Likewise cinemas, theatres, concert venues, restaurants, pubs, aeroplanes and sporting stadia. As long as social distancing is here then none of these things can be financially viable.
So, to my mind, the government has two choices. Let all these "industries" die with the resultant devastating effect on the economy and people's lives or get rid of socially distancing which is being increasingly ignored anyway and which is ultimately unenforceable.
I am not a betting man but I'll wager that within weeks the "2 metres" will become "1 metre" and in the not too distant future it will just become "be sensible". Then football and all the other hospitality industries will be able to resume and actually be able to try and recoup some of their losses.
But where would the money come from for that?There is a 3rd option - governments prop up the shortfall, it's what is being proposed in the areas of industry I work in that require full (or near to) to make it financially viable.
If the industries simply won't exist then that's when they find the monies, no different to bailing out the airlines and banking sectorBut where would the money come from for that?
My gut feeling (and I've a big gut) is that social distancing will have gone before September.
Or of course, we could pay to watch live matches on our tv's at home for a small fee... oh wait?
As today's announcement shows whilst the "2 metre" rule is in force schools cannot and never will be able to function properly. Likewise cinemas, theatres, concert venues, restaurants, pubs, aeroplanes and sporting stadia. As long as social distancing is here then none of these things can be financially viable.
So, to my mind, the government has two choices. Let all these "industries" die with the resultant devastating effect on the economy and people's lives or get rid of socially distancing which is being increasingly ignored anyway and which is ultimately unenforceable.
I am not a betting man but I'll wager that within weeks the "2 metres" will become "1 metre" and in the not too distant future it will just become "be sensible". Then football and all the other hospitality industries will be able to resume and actually be able to try and recoup some of their losses.
My gut feeling (and I've a big gut) is that social distancing will have gone before September.
As today's announcement shows whilst the "2 metre" rule is in force schools cannot and never will be able to function properly. Likewise cinemas, theatres, concert venues, restaurants, pubs, aeroplanes and sporting stadia. As long as social distancing is here then none of these things can be financially viable.
So, to my mind, the government has two choices. Let all these "industries" die with the resultant devastating effect on the economy and people's lives or get rid of socially distancing which is being increasingly ignored anyway and which is ultimately unenforceable.
I am not a betting man but I'll wager that within weeks the "2 metres" will become "1 metre" and in the not too distant future it will just become "be sensible". Then football and all the other hospitality industries will be able to resume and actually be able to try and recoup some of their losses.
We’ll be back in lockdown by then, due to the second wave.
Maybe.
Ah, the fabled "Second Wave", eagerly anticipated by many to be worse than the Spanish Flu of 1919.
Well, in my job (which you might call as being in the "death industry") I have a bit of first hand experience of the effects of and measures taken to deal with the Wuhan Plague.
When all this started and people were going to be dropping like flies in the streets many, many temporary mortuaries were erected in the UK. a number being in Essex; in Basildon, Chelmsford and Upminster to name a few. Well, to date these have had ZERO occupants and are now being quietly dismantled. If the government really believes its own project fear about a far deadlier "Second Wave" just round the corner do you really think that they would be taking away the storage facilities?
I think it'll be all right.
Ah, the fabled "Second Wave", eagerly anticipated by many to be worse than the Spanish Flu of 1919.
Well, in my job (which you might call as being in the "death industry") I have a bit of first hand experience of the effects of and measures taken to deal with the Wuhan Plague.
When all this started and people were going to be dropping like flies in the streets many, many temporary mortuaries were erected in the UK. a number being in Essex; in Basildon, Chelmsford and Upminster to name a few. Well, to date these have had ZERO occupants and are now being quietly dismantled. If the government really believes its own project fear about a far deadlier "Second Wave" just round the corner do you really think that they would be taking away the storage facilities?
I think it'll be all right.