• MelodiousFunk@slrpnk.net
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    29 days ago

    I love how it seems that the entirety of the US refers to it as “lockdown,” despite most retailers being open for business, Karen bringing all 6 kids with her to Walmart, Kyle assaulting anyone who even looks like they suggest that he wear a mask, and legions of “essential workers” being treated like shit on all sides. Sure, “lockdown.”

      • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        Were you locked down? Unable to leave your house? Kept there by force of law?

        Or do you not understand the word “lock” perhaps?

        • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          The problem with people like you is you take everything so literally and then easily get offended.

          No one in the US refers to lockdown in a way that implies they were forced into their homes and literally locked in side.

          It’s just a word people use to describe loosely that they were staying home.

          I don’t know where you live but where I live the state was placed into a state of emergency and hardly anyone was on the roads. Normally there is traffic every where I live but at time the roads were empty. People were home instead of at school or at the office or off on vacation. Stores were either closed or open but empty.

          Sure there were plenty of people that didn’t care but clearly enough did care that there was a noticeable decrease in the amount of traffic every where.

          What word would you use instead of “lockdown” that doesn’t offend you so much? Maybe you just live in a deep red state.

          • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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            28 days ago

            as an aussie, who lived in melbourne, so was inside for 80% of 3 years enforced by police including curfews enforced by police helicopters… all of which the general public by a very large majority agreed with in order to save lives

            what yall in the US went through was absolute hell. what was forced on you was in many ways worse than what we went through… the constant fear must have been horrible

            but the US response was pathetic and needs to be remembered for exactly what it was: a complete shit show, that SPECIFICALLY DID NOT INCLUDE LOCKDOWNS… australia and countries that did lock down… a real lockdown had significantly lower death rate… your lack of lockdown led to over 1 million deaths

            by using language like that, it leads to things like holocaust denial: people forget, and then people say it didn’t happen

            never forget that trump and his administration, along with that of many republican governors, were directly responsible for a huge number of those millions of deaths. never let them spin the narrative

            … also, yknow, saying what you went through was a lockdown completely trivialises our hellish experiences… you didn’t lock down; we put in the fucking work and saved lives… it’s a comment on the US and how toxic individual liberty at all costs can be, and something that we are very proud of how we handled: for years we traded individual freedoms to save the lives of those around us

          • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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            27 days ago

            Do you think “offended” means “correcting incorrectness”? Did your grade school teachers seem offended to you? No. And this helped me understand your style.

            I get it, you’re speaking emotionally through exaggeration to make a point. And by “you don’t live in the US”, you must’ve meant that they didn’t understand your American style of over exaggeration.

            But if you want to be understood, it helps to use words as they’re intended, or make it more clear that you’re being dramatic for effect.

  • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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    28 days ago

    There was actually a lot of good news during that time. How quickly nature recovers when humans just collectively stop milling about for a while. Did we learn a lesson from that? I fear not. The economy needs to roll on!

    • NoForwardslashS@sopuli.xyz
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      28 days ago

      We learned it is much harder to keep tabs on workers when we can’t physically see them and that is much more important than productivity.

        • snooggums@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          This should have been obvious since everything else about business is more important than the general public. You can commit mass murder as long as it is for profits, and if you commit fraud as a company policy then nobody goes to jail.

          • admin@sh.itjust.works
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            28 days ago

            As far as I’ve noticed for as long as I’ve been alive, a corporation can get away with things such as:

            • harm their costumers
            • kill their employees
            • tax evasion
            • commit fraud
            • bribery (lobbying)

            And that is just from ths tip of my tongue, but for some reason laundering money is a big no no. I think only the alphabet bodies can get away with that.

  • Destide@feddit.uk
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    29 days ago

    Everyone at the time “we should really try and keep this…right I’m off to the corner shop in my f250”

    • _chris@lemmy.world
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      28 days ago

      It’s looked like this pretty much every day since the clean air acts of the late 80s.

      This picture specifically is the morning after a rainstorm. That always cleans it up a bit more.

      LA is not anywhere near as bad as the movies make it out to be. It was that had, though, before emissions regulations.

  • altphoto@lemmy.today
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    27 days ago

    In Kenmore WA, you could hear a pin drop. The birds sang and you could hear your self think. It was weirdly quiet.