Im hoping by the time this is all over I’ll be able to get a pretty sweet Joe exotic mullet done.
Make sure you get a prince albert too. Don’t half ass it.
Im hoping by the time this is all over I’ll be able to get a pretty sweet Joe exotic mullet done.
Looks like the Suck Cut!I used one of these for only the second time last week. Second time doing it myself I should say. My GF has given me a couple "Robojobs" as we refer to them.
https://haircut.com/
Edit-Here's the exact one I have: https://haircut.com/products/diy-model-by-robocut-40-w-power
I know I paid less than $79.99 at the time though.
In the market for a black market haircut, any leads?
Kind of seems like this shelter in place suggestion is weak at best. Mail is still being delivered, my oldest son the commercial electrician is still working, almost all eating places are still open drive up only. Hobby Lobby is still open, both hardware stores in town are still open. Auto parts stores, car dealerships still open, so outside of small retail stores, just what exactly is closed.
I can see grocery stores and gas stations, but it kind of like, If we have not specifically told you to close, schools, barbershops ect, you can do what you want.
Yes, this is a weak shelter in place.. It's actually one of the weakest approaches in the entire nation. There are plenty of businesses that are still open that are entirely non-essential. Obviously, there are businesses that need to stay open due to the supply chain, like Governor Reynolds talked about, but this current order is watered down.Kind of seems like this shelter in place suggestion is weak at best. Mail is still being delivered, my oldest son the commercial electrician is still working, almost all eating places are still open drive up only. Hobby Lobby is still open, both hardware stores in town are still open. Auto parts stores, car dealerships still open, so outside of small retail stores, just what exactly is closed.
I can see grocery stores and gas stations, but it kind of like, If we have not specifically told you to close, schools, barbershops ect, you can do what you want.
Yeah those types of places will continue to stay open. We're not going to close everything, because frankly we don't need to. But we do need to close businesses that are truly not essential.I agree it’s week in the sense it isn’t a shelter in place but the only thing you listed that shouldn’t be essential is Hobby Lobby. All of those other places need to really stay open. Hardware stores need to stay open so people can fix their homes. Electricians and plumbers need to be able to fix their things for people. Car places need to be open to fix cars for people who still need to drive.
Yes, this is a weak shelter in place.. It's actually one of the weakest approaches in the entire nation. There are plenty of businesses that are still open that are entirely non-essential. Obviously, there are businesses that need to stay open due to the supply chain, like Governor Reynolds talked about, but this current order is watered down.
A lot of people are still not taking it seriously. That adds to the spread and also adds to the length of time we're going to continue this. If we continue along these lines and later on open everything back up, most of these measures could have been for little or nothing.
If there is a shorter time frame, that means more people got it at one time, hospitals have an increased potential of being overrun, and more people die from the virus or because they were not able to be properly treated.This got me to thinking some on the length of it with people out and about. Aren't we trying to get people to stay at home to keep the spread from hitting as fast so the hospitals don't get overloaded. People have talked that we will all probably get this to some level, so wouldn't that mean that people being out and about may actually shorten the timeframe?
I think people shouldn't go out any more than they need to, but it got me thinking that the statement that people not obeying will make the situation longer may actually be false.
I agree it’s week in the sense it isn’t a shelter in place but the only thing you listed that shouldn’t be essential is Hobby Lobby. All of those other places need to really stay open. Hardware stores need to stay open so people can fix their homes. Electricians and plumbers need to be able to fix their things for people. Car places need to be open to fix cars for people who still need to drive.
If there is a shorter time frame, that means more people got it at one time, hospitals have an increased potential of being overrun, and more people die from the virus or because they were not able to be properly treated.
By continuing to not obey the guidelines or enforce more measures, not only does this timeline continue to stretch out, but the peak ends up getting pushed farther into the future as well. Say all these mitigations get lifted in a month but there's no more measures taken here. Because of the long incubation period, many people may not know they have it and will pass it on and it creates another chain. If people are out and about and we start getting back to "normal", the virus would not have been slowed down as much and could pop back up again in another big wave and we could potentially have to start this thing all over again.
That's what that study in England was talking about when showing the 3 different situations that could happen depending on the measures taken. The one showed absolutely no measures taken, the hospitals were overrun very quickly, and a lot of people died. The second measure was what we currently have, the hospitals might still get overrun, but the potential of this popping back up in a big way was incredibly high. The next measure was all of the steps taken, and in about two weeks the curve flattened.
Yes, you repeated some things I said. I understand that. Many times I like to look at several different scenarios. I will reword it a different way. I kept reading that by flattening the curve we will not have less people get it, but we will just allow hospitals to serve people better. It will push the peak out. I looked at the bell curve and it is flatter but it is pushed out timewise.
So all I'm asking is, by staying home and only going out when needed (which is done to save lives), to flatten the curve; does that actually make the statement that people make saying that by staying home we actually shorten the virus infactual.
Right right, so when you stay home you not only decrease the spread for that time period, but you also stop the spread from continuing on in the future. Say people are still out, we have a huge spike and hospitals get overrun, and we still don't do anything. That would mean this is still spreading and you could have another peak that ends up overrunning the hospitals later on.Yes, you repeated some things I said. I understand that. Many times I like to look at several different scenarios. I will reword it a different way. I kept reading that by flattening the curve we will not have less people get it, but we will just allow hospitals to serve people better. It will push the peak out. I looked at the bell curve and it is flatter but it is pushed out timewise.
So all I'm asking is, by staying home and only going out when needed (which is done to save lives), to flatten the curve; does that actually make the statement that people make saying that by staying home we actually shorten the virus infactual.