As this drags on, more and more will see no other choice than to ignore the executive order’s cumbersome matrix of metrics, and simply reopen or reengage their business in order to save their livelihoods. Our guess is that it will only be after a healthy and obvious level of civil disobedience that Governor Cooper actually moves to return the state to some semblance of normalcy.Governor Roy Cooper extended the ‘Stay-at-Home’ order Thursday. The headline date on that extension is May 8. So, at first glance at the evening news it appeared to be merely another week or so under this un-American lockdown. Closer inspection of Cooper’s three phase, top-down, one-size-fits-all plan really sets us up for months more of isolation decrees from the government.
Rick Henderson points this out at the Carolina Journal:
“North Carolinians face a few more
months of at least partial isolation, based on recommendations Gov. Roy
Cooper made at a Thursday, April 23, news conference. […]
Cooper and Cohen based the guidelines loosely around recommendations announced
earlier this week by the Trump administration. But the timetables put
North Carolina at a competitive disadvantage with neighboring South
Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia. Those states either plan or have planned to relax some of their restrictions on commerce and mobility within a few days or weeks.
Cooper’s plan has the state gradually
reopening businesses and social gatherings under a three-phase system.
Perhaps after May 8. “It will depend on the facts and the data and the
science” before the first phase of reopening begins, he said.
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