Huntergonzo wrote: » You always see these episodes of South Park and the likes where there's idiotic mass hysteria, with people darting around, panic buying etc. And you just laugh, cause it's ridiculous and you think, 'ah well that wouldn't happen in real life'.......fast forward to today!
Seamai wrote: » Imagine the state of his skin (and innards) after eating all those.
retro:electro wrote: » I just went into my local super value for two things and turned on my heels when I saw the lunacy. Queues of trollies down the aisles. The shops aren’t even closing ffs what are people at. There was still a lot of pasta and toilet roll left and for a second I thought will I? Before going nah fcuk it and heading out the door. No one is going to be let starve
TheBoyConor wrote: » Perhaps that is why the shops are all sold out of tissue paper. Everyone is locked up at home pulling themselves asunder. With ever increasing vigor with each day that passes.
WrenBoy wrote: » Ya but I think the fear for many is if they start to feel sick, they would rather not go out to shops and risk spreading it. I was fairly relaxed about it but its getting in my head now to be honest.
1882 wrote: » It is amazing to witness the stupidity of people Wibbs.
Mickeroo wrote: » People are, for the most part, pretty thick.
CrankyHaus wrote: » I actually feel sorry for lower income Americans here. It's easy for us to mock when we have more or less universal health care, basic health information is much easier to come by here and there is less distrust of government. In the US the disadvantaged are putty in the hands of shysters and quacks and scared poor people who cannot access virus tests may reach for any straw. I know someone who went on a healthcare exchange to rural Oxycontin country and his stories of ignorance resulting from disadvantage were fairly sobering.
retro:electro wrote: » Worst comes to the worst there’ll always be someone who can drop stuff to your door. Or you’ll be in hospital and won’t have to worry about it :pac:
endacl wrote: » Hope they’re panic buying condoms as well to prevent the spawning of future generations of stupid.
Cuddlesworth wrote: » Bloke in front of me had two trolleys of food, including 20 carrot cakes. I'm trying to get my head around how long it takes to go through 20 carrot cakes, even in a place that likes them.
Wibbs wrote: » If they had two braincells to rub together these panic buyers might consider the close quarters of hundreds of other people coughing, sniffling and farting, touching trolleys and basket handles, freezer doors and sale items. It's a petri dish of possible contamination and it's a near certainty that people panic buying today will be infected by Covid and some will die and some will be left with buggered lungs. Just because they needed to stock up on five packets of bog roll? Unreal.
Peregrinus wrote: But it's Trump's problem. His main re-election shtick is "look how high I made the stockmarket go!"
Deleted User wrote: » To play devils advocate, we only have 43 confirmed cases. We know this will rise rapidly in the coming days. That's a certainty. Everything else - whether you may be able to do a meaningful shop tomorrow (or require 2-3 visits), whether stores will be quieter when you shop tomorrow etc - is an assumption.
tdf7187 wrote: » The time has come to crack each others' heads open and feast on the goo inside.