Desde mi punto de vista la violencia ha aparecido muy pronto y con mucha intensidad.
Y al loro que esto son sólo los jóvenes. Los adultos por su parte van a protagonizar un aumento de la jovenlandesesidad y una cadena de impagos absolutamente brutal. No va a pagar ni Cristo.
Todo ello aderezado con elecciones USA, Brexit, tensiones geoestratégicos, religiosas...
Nada que ver con '2008' , la palabra colapso, la palabra caos, están sobre la mesa.
La violencia a los que nos mandan se le da un ardite, la violencia que les importa es la que tú dices:
Aumento de jovenlandesesidad / impagos / no consumo, esta es la violencia que temen.
Lo demás les da igual. Lo que pasa que ahora le están viendo las orejas al lobo con la inmi gración, porque tercermundizar es lo que tiene, economía sumergida a nivel de hace 60 años, gente poco preparada y, lo más importante, gente a la que le importa un huevo prepararse, lo que quieren son paguitas y sanidad. Y esto más controlado no debería ser así, yo he trabajado con magrebíes, americanos ... y la mayoría de querida madre, pero si traes de todo y dejas entrar a todo cristo te pasará lo que está pasando ahora.
ostra, yo tengo unos vecinos jovenlandeses y son de querida madre, jorobar, son los únicos que hay en todo el bloque, y hay otros dos personas de color que comparten piso, que trabajan los dos que también. Esta gente quiere integrarse, si sólo tienen la oportunidad de meterse en un puñetero gheto, pues mal los vas a integrar. Pero claro, estos tienen cabeza, donde yo estoy no hay ascensor y pagan igual que por un piso más grande y con ascensor a un kilómetro, pero caminar ese kilómetro es estar in da Ghetto. Estos están aquí porqué no quieren vivir en el tercer mundo, no quieren importar tercer mundo aquí, pero si mezclas a los buenos, que son mayoría, con los que vienen a jorobar, que son bastantes, te lo cargas todo.
Y con los latinoamericanos lo mismo. La última vez que charlé con uno fue un instalador de ADSL que era buena persona, como era la última que tenía, ya a las 8, me fui a tomar un café con él, yo sé bastante del sector y el tío quería hacerme unas preguntas. Casi nos peleamos por pagar ver quién pagaba el café.
Si vigilas quién viene y echas a lo peor, todos ganaremos, ellos y nosotros.
Bueno, en USA está todavía lo del 30 de octubre, por lo que no os voy a dar la paliza con los datos que da el New York Times, pero en el The Guardian ya hablan de lock-down para dentro de nada:
National el bichito lockdown expected across England next week
Boris Johnson has bowed to pressure from his scientific advisers for new national lockdown restrictions, which are expected to be announced early next week, the Guardian has been told.
Sir Patrick Vallance and Prof Chris Whitty, who head the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), are understood to have warned the prime minister that the time has come for national action across England. Sage scientists presented Johnson with evidence at a meeting in Downing Street, where they explained that el bichito-19 is spreading significantly faster than their worst-case scenarios.
The scientists, who are supported by the health secretary, Matt Hancock, and Michael Gove, are understood to have argued that local measures are no longer enough and that the bichito could kill 85,000 people this winter. Sage’s proposals for a two-week “circuit breaker” over half-term were turned down by ministers. It is now thought something longer will be needed.
However, the exact extent of the new lockdown restrictions have yet to be decided. That will be thrashed out this weekend as Johnson and the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, try to work out what can be imposed across England without major damage to the economy.
The scientists have been warning for weeks that the pandemic is spreading nationally and that local action will not be enough. The React study from Imperial College London this week flagged that the R number – measuring how many people are infected by each person transmitting the bichito – was at its highest in the south of the country, which meant it was likely to amow the pattern in the north, which currently has the highest numbers of cases and where tier 3 restrictions are widely imposed.
The development came after scientists and public health advisers said imposing new national measures could “save
Christmas from the cobi19” and allow families to meet during the festive season.
Documents from Sage released on Friday showed el bichito was spreading significantly faster through England than even the government’s predicted worst-case scenario for cases and hospital admissions earlier this month.
Official figures
also showed that more than half a million people were estimated to have had cobi19 in the week ending 23 October, with more than one in 100 people infected in England, up from one in 130 the previous week. There were a further 24,405 positive tests in the UK and a further 274 deaths.
The impact on the economy of national restrictions would be significant, however. Many shops make the bulk of their profits in the “golden quarter” between Halloween and the January sales. The British Retail Consortium
has launched a campaign asking shoppers to “shop early, start wrapping, enjoy Christmas”.
Cases are rising faster in London and the south-east than in the north of England, which is subject to stricter measures, but the whole country is at a critical point, an Imperial College London report warned this week.
On Friday Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary,
did not deny ministers were considering introducing a higher tier 4 level of cobi19 restrictions for England, with officials reportedly drawing up plans to force restaurants and non-essential shops to close in areas with the highest infection rates.
Nearly 60% of England’s population is now subject to tier 2 or tier 3 measures, barring households from mixing indoors. Without intervention it was “only a matter of time” before most, if not all, of the country would face such restrictions, Dr Mike Tildesley warned.
Tildesley, an epidemiologist from the University of Warwick, helped produce a “reasonable worst-case scenario” for the modelling sub-group of Sage, which warned that 85,000 people could die from el bichito this winter.
He told the Guardian: “As epidemiologists we need to think about the impact on public health and that’s really key, but I think it’s important for us to acknowledge that the general public has had a pretty rotten year [but] I don’t think any of the science group would advocate that we should remove all restrictions at Christmas – it’s clear that that’s not possible.
“But speaking on behalf of myself, what I would like to see is that we are in a position to do a minor relaxation, for example allowing slightly larger family groups to be together, maybe having the rule of 10 or 12 instead of six. To do that we have to do something like a circuit break or something on a more national scale to bring incidents down … sooner rather than later.”
EDITO: Si para alguien es muy importante que se le traduzca un artículo, o quiere un resumen que lo diga, a pelo no me pongo a traducirlo.