Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Experts Warn Japan Is "On The Cusp Of A Large Outbreak"

Ozone Machine here: https://amzn.to/3bP8tAo
At the current 70% fatality rate in Wuhan China, little Japan will literally disappear, population wise. Like someone dropped 40 A bombs on it, but other than mass burial pits, no damage. And they know it. Believe me they know it. Makes no sense to release 3000 Diamond Princess inmates free to roam Japan, unless, of course, that is exactly what you want. Especially when they are all infectious.
With 66 confirmed cases outside the 712 infected aboard the 'Diamond Princess', Japan has the largest number of cases outside China. Nearing 38000, actual stats from Japan. Not fake numbers from WHO and CDC phuckos. Already, the videos from japan are starting to get out. And the sight is not pretty. Like China, people are falling over dead. And the hospitals? Forget about it.

As the government advises people to avoid crowded area, many companies have instructed employees to either work from home or minimize their time in-office. According to Nikkei, they include: Soy, Fujitsu, Toshiba, Takeda, NEC, KDDI and SoftBank.

To keep employees out of large crowds, Sony urged staffers Tuesday to telework and avoid commuting during rush hour. It is suspending its usual 10-day monthly cap for working from home.
For those who must physically be on-site, Sony is offering a flexible schedule with shorter mandatory hours of noon to 3:30 p.m., compared with the usual start time of 9:30 a.m. Bypassing rush-hour commutes will minimize the risk of contracting the coronavirus, the thinking goes.
Fujitsu is letting employees who are pregnant or have underlying health conditions to work from home for as many full days as needed, scrapping its usual weekly and monthly limits. Toshiba told all subsidiaries Tuesday to introduce telecommuting to all workers.
Takeda also urged its 5,200-plus workers to stay off and avoid commute during rush hour if they must come in at all. Among other companies advocating telework are NEC, KDDI and SoftBank Corp.
Shinzo Abe's government, eager to do everything it can to ensure that the Summer Olympics in Tokyo go off without a hitch, is backing the work-from-home policy for as long as necessary to prevent the virus from spreading.

The government has embraced such efforts. "It's important to create an environment where students and workers feel like they can stay home, and I ask for your cooperation," Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said at a response meeting Tuesday.
"Teleworking is an effective solution," he said.
"People must not go to school or work if they have coldlike symptoms, such as a fever, and avoid leaving the house," said Abe, who also discouraged large-scale events that could lead to widespread infection.
Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike on Monday threw her support behind teleworking and staggered commutes. "We need to start with what we can, and we'll come up with a detailed plan as soon as we can," she said.






Abe is especially concerned as infectious disease experts warn about the possibility of a China-style outbreak in Japan, as former FDA Director Scott Gottlieb said the country looked to be on the verge of a major outbreak.
The Tokyo Metropolitan Government decided that day to distribute roughly 150,000 protective masks to bus and taxi drivers in response to a request by industry groups.
The world is watching to see if Japan will see the first major outbreak outside China. Japan appears "on the cusp of a large outbreak and maybe epidemic growth," former U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Tuesday. The country's patient count has doubled in four days, he said.
"If you start to see this become epidemic in other nations or have other nations experiencing large outbreaks that's going to be extremely worrisome that we're not going to control this globally," Gottlieb said.
But with a stampede of passengers and crewmembers of the 'Diamond Princess' about to be released from a two-week quarantine tomorrow through Friday, even as the number of newly diagnosed cases continues to rise, Abe should probably pray that his government's top public health officials know what they're doing. 

Because only an idiot would believe they have their people's best interests at heart.

Tomorrow, they unleash thousands of plague victims to go frolic around Japan. It's too bad these Asian countries outlawed firearms. Because then at least, you could fight back, keep the plaguers out of your hamlet so you can live the simple life. But oh, fucking no, be obedient and get your plague and die like a cooley. Like all the rest are doing in

China
Vietnam
South Korea
Laos
Thailand
etc etc etc

And, of course, in the USA. We get to die like cooleys too.