Coronavirus pandemic has turned the natural world upside down. Pen down your thoughts in about 150-200 words.(if possible with a poster)
Answers
Answer:
The coronavirus pandemic has turned our life upside down. Harried citizens living in noisy metropolises wanted some moments of peace, but now after three weeks of enforced lockdown, they want to return to their old rushed schedule. The sahib logs are missing their golf while true blue memsahibs have been reduced to being house helps.
The lockdown has been catastrophic for professionals, daily-wage earners and small businessmen, whose present earnings have disappeared and who apprehend an uncertain future. However, scratch the surface and you find that not much has changed for politicians. President Trump is busy cursing the Chinese, now, for bringing the “Wuhan virus” to the US. Some of his vengeful ire for multilateral agencies is now focused at WHO for “toeing the Chinese line” and “endangering American lives.”
In the meantime, Trump has found time to threaten India into sending the drug, hydroxychloroquine, to the US. Regardless of the fact that US had the highest number of casualties and the highest number of coronavirus deaths, Trump now claims that coronavirus is a waning force in the US. Similar
Explanation:
The virus doesn’t carry a passport or recognise frontiers. The only way of stopping its spread would be to shut borders wholly, and not even the most rabid nationalists advocate that. It would mean declaring that nations were prisons, with no one coming in or out – or at least not coming back once they’d left. In a world where we too casually assume that frontiers are significant, it doesn’t do any harm to be reminded of the basic fact that humans occupy an indivisible world.The atomistic billiard-ball model of the person – a model that dominates political and ethical thinking in the west – is biologically ludicrous and sociologically unsustainable. Our individual boundaries are porous. We bleed into one another and infect one another with both ills and joys.Exigencies tend to bring out the best and the worst in us. An epidemic may engender and foster altruistic heroes. It may remind us of some neglected constituencies