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Re: Timely message to all



On 3/24/2020 9:12 PM, Bob La Londe wrote:
>
> On 3/24/2020 6:16 PM, doug wrote:
>  > "Bob La Londe" <none@none.com99> wrote in message
>  > news:r5e7lq$1849$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
>  >> On 3/22/2020 4:29 PM, Jim Davis wrote:
>  >>> I hope everyone is doing ok.
>  >>>
>  >>> I'm still going out and working on 2 new construction installations
> that
>  >>> are in progress and doing service calls, but keeping my distance from
>  >>> other workers which are few. I'm arriving on the job at 3 to 4 PM and
>  >>> working into the evening till 9 10 PM which pretty much leaves me
> alone
>  >>> on the job with no one else to come in contact with.
>  >>>
>  >>> Service calls seem less than usual so I have to assume it's because of
>  >>> the Virus slowdown. Only did two in the last few days and only have
> two
>  >>> scheduled for next week so far. One of them the people went to their
>  >>> house in the woods in Pennsylvania, so their house here will be
> empty for
>  >>> me to work in. The other is someone new to the area moving into one
> of my
>  >>> old customers condo, so I'm thinking they're kind of skittish about
> the
>  >>> new area and want protection more than being concerned about me coming
>  >>> into their personal space.
>  >>>
>  >>> Most people I've spoken to don't seem that concerned over the
> situation
>  >>> but they're taking normal precautions. Some are working at home.
> Some are
>  >>> working reduced hours. I went out on two estimates last week but I'm
>  >>> thinking that it will probably be an extended period of time before
> they
>  >>> get back to me. I've got my existing new construction jobs to keep me
>  >>> busy for awhile but I expect a slowdown in the future as a result of
>  >>> people being out of work etc.
>  >>>
>  >>> I've got some money owed to me but not enough to hamper paying my
> bills
>  >>> (yet)
>  >>> this month and probably next month
>  >>>
>  >>> So we'll see what happens over the next few weeks.
>  >>>
>  >>> I'm wondering if any of the small business assistance from the
> government
>  >>> will be available to me if things get worse to a point that I can't
> pay
>  >>> my bills. I'm only a one man company so I don't know how this is
> going to
>  >>> work and if I'll comply with the requirements.
>  >>>
>  >>> How's everyone else doing?
>  >>>
>  >>
>  >>
>  >> Different industry, but its mixed.  I ordered some raw materials from a
>  >> new vendor over the weekend and they shipped on Monday.  A little more
>  >> expensive than my regular material vendor, but quite a bit faster than
>  >> their 3-5 days to prep and ship orders.  I ordered the exact same order
>  >> from both vendors on Saturday.  The cheaper one hasn't shipped, but
> that's
>  >> normal for them.  Anyway, its good to know I can still order stock as I
>  >> need it instead of having to stock up more than I usually do. My other
>  >> main vendors all shipped weekend orders on Monday.  I was more worried
>  >> about supply side until yesterday.  It could of course still get worse,
>  >> but I think saner minds will prevail over the total "sky is falling"
> that
>  >> the media wants us to believe.
>  >>
>  >> On the sales side I've had from 2 to 6 months backlog of work for a few
>  >> years at any given time.  I try to keep it down to around 2, but
> when you
>  >> get big orders its hard to turn down the money.  I'm down to just a few
>  >> weeks backlog of work, and part of that is waiting on specialty
> tools for
>  >> special jobs.  Its a little worrisome, but I can always create a new
>  >> product and generate a few sales if stock and custom work remains down.
>  >> I've mentioned products I am working on to a couple customers that were
>  >> met with enthusiasm.  If it gets slower it just means more time to
> develop
>  >> and test prototypes.  New products always generate a few sales.
>  >>
>  >> Last week had a positive blip with a lot of small sales on "stock"
>  >> designs.  I figure a lot of guys are stuck at home so they were
> bored and
>  >> ordered stuff.
>  >>
>  >> Remember that vendor I mentioned that shipped stock right away.  They
>  >> called me this morning to sound me out about doing some of their
> machining
>  >> work.  They tried to sound up beat by saying about 80% of the shops
> they
>  >> work with are still going, but that told me that 20% of the shops they
>  >> work with aren't.  I hope their employees have jobs to come back to
> when
>  >> its all over.
>  >>
>  >> It might get tough, but unless we have actual deaths in the family
> we will
>  >> be fine.
>  >>
>  >> As of this morning we have seen a death rate of confirmed cases of
> about
>  >> 1.2% in the USA per the CDC.  This is with a virus for which there
> is no
>  >> vaccine.  Its no worse than a modestly bad contemporary flu year.  I
> get
>  >> it if its one of yours that is one of that 1.2%, but I don't see any
>  >> reason for the mass hysteria.  That's 1.2% of CONFIRMED cases. Not
> 1.2% of
>  >> the population.  Far below the CDCs own published threshold for the
>  >> "pandemic" they are pushing.  The damage to the economy already done is
>  >> far worse than anything from COVID-19 so far.  The economic damage
> could
>  >> get far worse.  We are much closer to a world wide economic tipping
> point
>  >> than we were after the 05/06 crash.
>  >>
>  >> Anyway I am not overly worried, but of those things i spend some time
>  >> worrying about the economic fallout concerns me far more than this
> strain
>  >> of Corona Virus.
>  >>
>  >> I hope you all are well and take realistic steps towards the future.
>  >
>  > The mortality rate of flu is normally about 0.1% of those infected.
>  > The global mortality rate of Covid-19 is somewhere around 3.4% of those
>  > infected according to WHO
>  > The mortality rate in the US might be a low as 1.2% at the moment,
> I'll take
>  > your word for it since I couldn't find a figure from the CDC today.
> But even
>  > if the US rate stays at 1.2% that's still 12 times higher than flu
>  > Covid-19 is far more infectious than flu and since its a brand new
>  > coronavirus there is little or no immunity to it and unlike the flu
> there is
>  > no vaccine for it, so left unchecked many more people will be
> infected than
>  > in a flu season.
>  > So even if  the mortality rate stays at around 1.2% of infections,
> which I
>  > doubt, the sheer number of people infected likely to get infected with
>  > covid-19 means the mortality rate of the population as a whole will
> be much
>  > higher than with a "regular" flu season.
>  >
>  > I get it, that the damage to the economy is immense and many small
> and large
>  > business's may not make it.
>  >
>  > You pay your money, you take your choice.
>  >
>  > I'll put my money on the scientists, not the politicians.
>  >
>  > I too hope that everyone stays well and that I am wrong in my
> interpretation
>  > of the current situation.
>  >
>  > Doug
>  >
>  >
>
>
> 611/48800 this morning.  I am sure they changed during the day.  Its the
> politicians and the media creating the frenzy, but its the frenzied who
> will destroy the world.  Not a virus.
>
> You deliberately chose not to hear what I said about flu.  I said a "bad
> flu year" in contemporary times.  Years when they get the vaccine wrong
> and the strains are stronger.  The death toll is much higher than the
> average contemporary year.  I'm not talking about going back 100 years.
> Just in your lifetime.
>
> So, you don't think the suicides, murders, and and deaths from poor
> health care of a collapsed economy that will last not for one year, but
> several, are worth considering.  Ok.  Your choice.  I'll send any
> referrals to Les & Jim.
>
> Underlying a lot of people's attidutes seems to be some misunderstanding
> that working for money so your family survives is somehow wrong. Society
> uses money as an "equitable" currency for exchange of goods and
> services.  Its inherent in society world wide, that those without money
> survive on the charity of others.  In local economies where few have
> money many don't because there isn't much charity to give.  No
> politician can tax me for what I don't have to force me to give it to
> those who choose not to work.
>
> If those who create jobs do not survive (businesses not just the owners)
> then you have a society with little money for everybody, not just the
> business owners.
>
> There is another problem many have not considered.  Civil rights in the
> USA are under attack during this government shutdown.  Once a battle is
> lost its lost.  Rarely is an inch lost ever recovered.
>
> Worse?  What if I am right.  That its self important chest beating and
> political hay making.  A bunch of opportunists using it to their own
> political advantage.  If there is really a hard corp pandemic the death
> toll will be much higher before anybody will believe it.
>
> Or you could be right. #boomerremover. There will be more freed up
> wealth for those who survive.
>
> The sky is falling,
> Chicken Little
>
>


The thing I've learned over all the years...
"Numbers" can be made to say anything you want them too.....

Gonna step out now and tell the tale from old ages point of view...

"Faith"  will keep you going,  Live or Die,  others will survive..

Give them "Faith"  to keep going, by the way you live...

--

*Rocky T. Squirrel, esq.*



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