poliphilo: (Default)
poliphilo ([personal profile] poliphilo) wrote2020-03-13 04:17 pm

In Note Form

The last time we gritted our teeth like this was when Tony Blair invaded Iraq.

I'd rather be fighting germs than people.

The Internet is going slow. Ailz says it's because people are working from home, placing huge orders with supermarkets, communicating by video rather than face to face. And so on.

Bumping elbows is a jolly way of greeting people, but I prefer Prince Charles' choice: hands steepled, a slight bow from the waist. Namaste.

Football is over for the duration. The May elections have been cancelled.

Life as usual is on hold. As Gaby Hinsliff points out in the Guardian, we may well change our minds about some of the things we do "as usual" when we find they're unnecessary or even rather silly. Epidemics- like wars- speed up social change. The world will be a different place when all this comes to an end.
cmcmck: (Default)

[personal profile] cmcmck 2020-03-13 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
A lot of Indian folk have been suggesting the namaste greeting.

[personal profile] almsfortheinsane 2020-03-14 09:29 am (UTC)(link)
I thought it was kicking legs?? :o I'd rather be fighting nothing.

[personal profile] almsfortheinsane 2020-03-14 11:11 am (UTC)(link)
:) <3
qatsi: (Default)

[personal profile] qatsi 2020-03-14 09:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Some of us gritted our teeth in the financial crisis of 2008. I think that was more abstract: something was badly wrong, but it wasn't clear how it would affect the day to day.

There's nothing the media like more than a crisis. It sells copy.

Did things change after 2003? After 2008? They probably did, in some ways, but I'm not sure I could say how. Iraq cemented Blair's reputation; the financial crisis cemented Brown's. Johnson has taken a gamble so far; if it works it's a smart move, but he could still be punished for it. (Which would be ironic, given so many other things he ought to be held to account for.)