![]() ![]() We know that there is no going back to “before.” Too much has happened. But the arrival of a new subvariant is also a reminder that the pandemic is not over. And yet the dire predictions of a city damaged beyond repair proved wrong.Īs Plague Year 3 dawns, infection rates have plummeted. J7:47pm Updated There has been no substantial evidence that lockdowns prevented coronavirus deaths amid the pandemic, compared to the avanclance of science proving otherwise. ![]() Something has been lost, some kind of trust perhaps. Two years and 40,000 deaths later, there remain rips and rifts in the social fabric that have not been repaired and may not be for a while. has state and transit officials dreaming big again about putting the. 1 that more pain and suffering is on the horizon as COVID-19 cases climb again and officials plead with unvaccinated. The rate at which disaster ensued was in every sense of the word breathtaking. NY COVID latest: Monday, Augby: PIX11 Web Team. The governor of New York said that day that there would be “community spread” of the new disease but that there was “no reason for concern.” The mayor said that the virus “could be anywhere” but told us to go about our normal lives. If a fellow New Yorker had told you on March 1, 2020, what the next two years held for the city, you would not have believed it. Emma Brockes The airlessness of lockdown as a family has been replaced with uncomfortable proximity to 8.5 million people Fri 03.00 EDT Last modified on Fri 16.34 EDT. Ap3:44pm Updated Economy desk: NY’s Lockdown Self-Harm The Great Lockdown of 2020, laments The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board, involved massive, self-inflicted harm. The airlessness of lockdown as a family has been replaced with uncomfortable proximity to 8.5 million people, says Guardian columnist Emma Brockes. ![]()
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