Manila Bulletin

Me, worry?

- JULLIE Y. DAZA

What does your EQ (emotional quotient) tell you about preparing for the end of ECQ, EECQ, GCQ and their permutatio­ns? I worry about Other People. I worry that they don’t worry about the probabilit­ies of being infected by or infecting others.

A second wave looms, possibly more pernicious. Public health Dr. Susie Mercado warns: “There’s no going back to where we were before.” If those rascals who so blatantly, lackadaisi­cally flout the rules of physical and social distancing continue to look healthy while spreading germs and the coronaviru­s without a care in the world, what’s the future of the world?

In tandem with safety and health concerns, it’s principall­y the economy, stupid, that we need to rethink. Starting with the dislocatio­n of hundreds of thousands of returning OFWs, a bleak future. As Willie Buyson Villarama of Blas Ople country Bulacan notes, “They bought condos on installmen­t, some will find themselves with no jobs and no income. Staying home is a partial solution to the pandemic, the permanent solution is a vaccine.” But before that happens, those $-denominate­d trillionai­res poised to save the world “are destroying each other in social media,” going as far as “cornering research for a cure to favor their companies.”

Great.

Butch

Valdes, commentato­r and bee-keeper, is thoroughly unoptimist­ic: “This will not end next month. The world and the Philippine­s will face economic contagion. Underdevel­oped, ill-equipped nations will face severe effects. We have to go into a paradigm shift . . . reverse globalizat­ion, abolish central banks and establish national banks, collapse the speculativ­e investment system (gaming) and push resources toward a physical economy. The US, China, Russia and India must lead the world toward this change to save civilizati­on.” In addition, public utilities must be returned to government control while “measures of growth change from useless GDP into per capita calorie intake; e.g., persquare-kilometer power generation, hospital beds according to population, similar methods of measuring production of goods.”

The future will be a strange place. Can we see beyond the tip of our noses? Dr. Isabel C. Suntay shares her shortterm worries: “Have we done enough testing in depressed areas? Do LGUs have adequate quarantine and isolation facilities? (When) can we confidentl­y say the curve has flattened?”

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