Los Angeles Times

Stay-at-home consensus

- t’s safe to say

Ithat the vast majority of our letter writers are on board with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s stay-athome order to slow the coronaviru­s’ spread. Some have sent letters expressing worry over what the restrictio­ns mean for people’s livelihood­s, but fewer still have questioned the need for much of the economy to shut down.

In fact, the high number of sharp rebuttals to two readers who on March 20 harshly criticized Newsom help illustrate how strong the consensus is among our letter writers on social distancing and the governor’s order. Here are some of those rebuttals. — Paul Thornton, letters editor

Newsom’s speech was scary because it had to be, writes Mindy Taylor-Ross of Venice:

One letter writer from Pasadena said Newsom “outraged” him with too much bad informatio­n in his address to the state on March 19 announcing his stay-at-home order. The writer said that people “understand the seriousnes­s of the situation fully,” which we do not, and are “doing all we can,” which we

are not.

Doing all we can is not partying like it’s 1984 on the beach. Get real, stay home, listen to advice, and protect your loved ones and people around you.

John Reed of Hemet lashes out at people who refuse to stay at home:

“Is the governor kidding me?” So begins the diatribe from a reader in Redlands. “No one is going to order me to stay at home .... This has gone too far.”

Well, at least he gets one thing right: “This” has gone too far. Of course, he’s talking about government interventi­on in an effort to prevent the spread of COVID-19, while most of us are referring to the spread of this disease because of people like the writer who are so determined to look out solely for themselves that they don’t care about the rest of us.

The writer sounds like he would have joined the spring breakers in Florida. Let no man tell him what to do; it’s only for the sake of our world.

Richard Schmittdie­l of Glendale wants more informatio­n:

I admire the letter writer’s dedication and work ethic. I’m also really glad he still has a job to go to.

But he would do the rest of us a favor if he’d let us know where that is and where he’ll be, so that we can protect ourselves by staying the heck away from him until this virus thing blows over.

Steve Durgin of Woodland Hills has a request:

In response to the writer who said he has a job, that job is not at home and the governor has gone too far, unless he is providing essential services, that job is on hiatus, as is mine.

Stay safer at home and help keep the rest of us safer, please. No man, infected or not, is an island.

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? AT RALPHS in Westcheste­r on March 22, a worker stands at the door to allow only a few shoppers at a time to enter because of distancing guidelines.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times AT RALPHS in Westcheste­r on March 22, a worker stands at the door to allow only a few shoppers at a time to enter because of distancing guidelines.

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