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To: keat

Not obsessed. When a major power closes down a province with the population of Britain, and then expands the closure to roughly half of the nation’s workforce, to the point that the global supply chain is interrupted, and parts shortages begin to materialize, you stand up and pay attention. This is not the typical reaction to a bug. Maybe they know something we don’t.

At this point, it appears that the reaction is overdone. However, the jury is still out. We await further developments. China’s neighbors are taking serious measures, fearing the worst. If it turns to be a big fat nothing, they lose a few points of economic growth this year. But on the off-chance that this eventually turns out to be long-feared Spanish flu-like pandemic, with the prospect of millions dead per country, without adequate precautions, better safe than sorry.


67 posted on 02/28/2020 11:06:29 PM PST by Zhang Fei (My dad had a Delta 88. That was a car. It was like driving your living room.)
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To: Zhang Fei


When a major power closes down a province with the population of Britain,

china may be a major power, but it's still a third world country.      one should expect the occasional plague or two


76 posted on 02/28/2020 11:23:30 PM PST by 867V309 (Lock Her Up)
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To: Zhang Fei

In terms of the disease, I’d say the countries to watch at this point (besides our own) are Italy and S. Korea.


136 posted on 03/01/2020 11:26:11 AM PST by Paul R. (The Lib / Socialist goal: Total control of nothing left wort h controlling.)
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