Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,190
Exactly my point. People are protesting the governor’s “order” based on false/inaccurate information. The PP whom I quoted specifically was referring to the order banning items which are not in fact banned.
But that is in itself a failure of leadership. Business owners and city attorneys reached out to Lansing for clarification and got no answer, or conflicting answers, or confirmation that the banned-but-not-really items were meant to be banned. There was terrible communication in the roll out.
I think these protests happening against the lockdown show how pathetic we are. In the U.K. they clap and cheer their healthcare workers. Here we give them unnecessary crap with these protests.
It isn't one or the other. A couple of the guys I know who participated in the Lansing protests were also organizers of local efforts to celebrate and support our local health care workers. The protests weren't about the front line workers, any more than an anti-war protest is about the enlisted men and women.
Thanks - I don't think that was intentional, but agree that it should have been planned to avoid it.
That hospital is down the street from the state capitol. Access ends up blocked by almost any demonstration of any size.
what was the deal with buying seed? Was it banned or was garden stores not essential. Here they were allowed to be essential.
In Michigan stores like Target and Wal-Mart were ordered to prevent people from buying “non-essential” items. Enforcement happened by stores blocking off areas and putting up signs on products to explain they were not sellable. This led to a lot of confusion about what was deemed “essential,” in at least one instance a big box store was preventing people from buying car seats.
Garden stores, if all they sell is gardening stuff (not hardware or lumber or groceries) were deemed non-essential in the governor's first order. So they were already closed. The second order ordered the closure of non-essential departments within stores that had an exception to continue operating as essential - places like Lowes, Meijer and Walmart - and specified garden centers as one of the departments that had to be closed. Some stores interpreted that as only the outdoor center, where live plants and soil and such are sold, while others taped off their seed racks and gardening gloves and pots inside the store as well.
The same issues arose with paint - some places only closed their paint-tinting departments, but were still allowing the sale of pre-mixed paints, spray paint, brushes & trays, etc. while others roped off the whole section. And with furniture - some places interpreted that to mean baby furniture, including car seats and high chairs and cribs, or stopped the sale of play rugs in the toy department, while others took it more narrowly and only closed their household furniture section. And as I mentioned up in my first reply in this post, getting guidance from the state on which of these interpretations was correct was a difficult thing to do, especially in the first week or so of the order.
5-Month-Old Daughter of New York City Firefighter Dies from Coronavirus: She 'Was the Boss'
Did we over react? Ask the parents of this 5-month-old.
Good public policy can't be based on appeals to emotion, no matter how tearjerking. I mentioned on another thread that I have a couple of nurse friends who think we need to outlaw backyard pools and "swim at your own risk" beaches because they've seen a couple of real horror stories of kids coming in brain dead but breathing after being revived at the scene of the drowning. We could undoubtedly save hundreds of lives a year if we did that. But would it be good policy? I'll bet if you asked the parents of one of those dead kids, they'd say yes. Does that make yes the right answer automatically? Or do we weigh something more than a family's grief in setting policy for an entire state or country?