Friday, June 26, 2020

i do hope that the ambassador bridge is eventually expropriated and turned into a pedestrian walkway. the bridge may be of questionable use for heavy loads in the near future, but it could very well remain maintained for lighter foot traffic for quite some time.

i'm going to have to move, eventually, and i'm wondering if i don't want to focus my attention in regions around the new bridge, rather than regions around the tunnel.

https://windsorstar.com/news/local-news/michigan-court-rules-against-morouns-bid-to-stop-gordie-howe-bridge/wcm/f8408edc-1b38-425f-8563-f74307f49511/
so, it seems to be that the developing strategy in ontario is to delay the reporting, and tell everybody to wear a mask. that way, we can continue to try to ignore it, on purpose.

my position from the start is that these measures are useless in the long run, and there's essentially nothing a city like toronto can do about it. toronto is in a weird point, where the poor quality of the statistics that are available make it hard to measure whether it's reached a peak, like detroit or montreal. it could be that the delaying tactics were actually marginally effective, but in that case, that's all they were - delaying tactics. so, toronto is either unusually vulnerable to a late first wave attack, or it's got a lot of delayed reporting to do. either way, let's hope that the extended delay, reporting deficit or not, was enough that the system doesn't reach capacity along with whatever bump is inevitable on reopening.

and, let's hope that lessons have been learned about isolating the elderly properly. it should be a long time before normal social behaviour can resume again.

so, the mask thing is....it's a hope. really, the system is just giving up, realizing it can't wait this out, it can't delay and smother forever. so, go back to work. even if you're sick. just wear a mask.

my personal aversion to mask-wearing of any sort seems like somewhat of a marginal concern, in context. but, you still won't see me wearing one, in a city where there is actually no evidence of recent community transmission.

and, i'm curious how people react, in the long run.

i've got enough supplies, including some more marijuana, to last me another two weeks or so. let's see what happens.
workers tend to be far more naive about this than managers are, but don't you confuse yourself for a minute - the class war is perpetual. and, they'll strike whenever it's opportune.

if capital can find a way to use this as an excuse to decrease wages, it will.
i've made my aversion to the red cross, specifically, very clear - in addendum to my general aversion to the concept of private sector charity, which i'd argue should be outright abolished, and folded into government run services, instead.

but, they're really doing everything they can to avoid the obvious necessity, which is that they need to hire full-time, properly trained workers at living wages. they're going to bring in students, red cross workers...what's next, pilgrims? isis "refugees"?

until they get the basic fact through their head that they have to pay fair wages for labour if they want workers to give a fuck, our geriatric care sector will continue to lag others in the developed world. that's what we're doing wrong, and it's not just in this sector, it's across the board - we're not paying workers enough.

https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/coronavirus-live-updates-montreal-bar-owners-grapple-with-sudden-reopening/wcm/2622ef59-66ea-4707-be63-26239641522c/