English, asked by kallaralianmol66, 5 months ago

write a letter to your friend and ask to alert about the second wave of Corona

it was your task and if you complete it very well so I will become your follower ​

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

I recently discussed the state of the pandemic with Céline Gounder, an infectious-disease specialist and epidemiologist at Bellevue Hospital and N.Y.U.’s Grossman School of Medicine. She is the host of the “Epidemic” podcast and a member of the Biden-Harris transition team’s covid-19 advisory board. During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, we discussed how public-health professionals should approach their messaging this winter, the continuing importance of “flattening the curve,” and the challenges of planning the next Administration’s coronavirus response.

Historically, one of the ways in which the federal government can encourage states is through funding. So, for example, if you tied funding to testing, if you tied funding to certain data reporting, if you tied funding to certain staffing that you need to recruit and train, and so on, that is going to be probably your greatest lever—the carrot of funding.

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Answered by poojithar378
1

Answer:

INDEPENDENT NEWS

Corona Virus: Letter To A Friend

By: Don Franks

Published: Mon 30 Mar 2020 10:45 AM

Hi David,

You would have heard that the whole country is locked down and with breaks for exercise and shopping, we’re all living under a sort of voluntary house arrest.

Well, this time we can’t hand the dispute over for the Trades Council to save our face, we can’t even call a mass meeting and agree to go back on the bosses terms.

We can only stay staunch and hold out for a win.

Of course a factory strike analogy goes only so far, like the analogies with World war 2 several people have cited.

Today we’re not in a strike or a war but confronted with international spread of a frightening virus with no known antidote.

Yes, hunger, wars, alcohol, tobacco and existing influenza kill millions more than this virus every year, that’s still no reason to take Corona virus lightly.

So the authorities here have chosen to impose a lockdown, to try and break the chain, a strategy which so far seems to make sense.

Some of us are much better placed than others. Despite government relief measures, thousands of workers will be struggling desperately. Some will lose their homes, many workers won’t get their jobs back.

The situation in some deprived overcrowded New Zealand homes right now doesn’t bear thinking about and its still just early days under lockdown.

At the moment there’s understandable faith in the authorities line of march and positive response to the Prime minister’s injunction for everyone to be “kind to each other”. Some people angrily dismiss any questioning of our government over this.

I think at such a time we need our critical faculties more than ever. As my friend Renée Anna put it:

“The state is made up of a network of institutions and those institutions are simply not basically “nice.” Asking questions about the response also does not amount to minimising the threat that COVID-19 represents or thinking it is a conspiracy, or even that it’s being purposefully exploited right at the moment or whatever.

Today the working class is in from the margins, it’s value strongly apparent.

When we get through the present stage of the drama, will these realisations translate into a revived socialist current? During the last few weeks, the capitalist class has shown they can make radical decisions. I’m hopeful that our side can too.

Best to your and yours,

Don

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