As well as suspending habeas corpus
I was actually really curious about who would contract it first.
Not in a morbid, sick way but in a, “This person can tell us what it’s really like through personal experience” way.
Massachusetts finally going on statewide lock down as of Tuesday.
It’s the low ceilings.
That’s a great site, and hella alarming.
Family sounds good. I don’t mind.
Joe traded in his night cap for a jacket and powered through. He sounds less than 100%, and his normal 100% is really like 70% to begin with.
Since there’s no testing unless you’re in serious trouble or in the NBA, hopefully we don’t find out, but it certainly wouldn’t be surprising if several people have had it/have it and are asymptomatic.
Some advice for those of you trying to get groceries delivered:
All of the local stores (Wgemans, Wholefoods, Sprouts, ShopRite, and some smaller independent ones) have no delivery times available most of the time you go to check out. First try checking out early in the day, like 6:00am. We were able to get a same day delivery from a local store that had no slots available yesterday but just refreshing at 6:00am.
For the bigger retailers, keep your cart open and refresh several times throughout the day. Seems like the shoppers/delivery drivers pick up shifts randomly so you have to get lucky and catch them at the right time. We had an Amazon/wholefoods order yesterday that showed no delivery options for the two days you could select. Refreshed at 6:30pm last night and had our order delivered at 8:00pm.
McClatchy filed for Chapter 11. They own the Miami Herald, I believe.
I forget where I first heard it (it very well may have been here), but if you want people to stay home: Pay them to do so.
In NY where the courts are on essential operations only Cuomo signed an executive order suspending all time limits in all forms in every statute until April 19th. It is very broad and definitely includes statutes of limitations.
Is that constitutional?
Very unlikely IMO.
The legislature gave him emergency powers to suspend or modify any statute to respond to the crisis, so yes.
Edit: It’s been used before, to a much lesser extent (after September 11th, after Hurricane Sandy). It’s been upheld I believe.
Edit Edit: He would not have the power to suspend anything in the NY Constitution, but everything he’s been suspending is statutory (and SOL’s are all statutory)
If I’m reading this right, and the information is good, the world ends in for the us in like five days?