Anonymous wrote:Um, absolutely not. 9/11 terrorist attacks on 2 of the country’s most symbolic cities, collapse of the twin towers on live tv, thousands dead (many who jumped to their deaths), lower Manhattan covered in soot w pedestrians running for their lives…..all followed by a 20 year war on terror and complete change in the legal framework of the U.S., complete reboot of domestic and airport security.
Vs
Lockdown and virtual schooling.
You tell me
Anonymous wrote:There wasn’t one big day. It was many small days that slowly eroded at normality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? I remember my college aged cousins going out to bars for st Patrick’s day on 3/17 before Baltimore city closed the bars the day after.
All k-12 schools in the DMV and most places closed down on March 13, that why of most talk about March 13.
Schools closed. Restaurants, stores, businesses, doctors offices didn’t close until the following week. I was at a bridal shower in DC on the 15th and the restaurant was packed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher with school age kids. The date didn’t automatically mean anything to me and opened this to see what happened in the world that I missed this week. No, the day of the covid shut down of schools was nothing like 9-11. March 13th is not etched in many of our minds.
Quoting myself. I remember that Friday because one of my kids had friends over and a sleepover. Things didn’t get really serious until the next week and it was a quick progression. Remember, at that point it was just two weeks to flatten the curve…
Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher with school age kids. The date didn’t automatically mean anything to me and opened this to see what happened in the world that I missed this week. No, the day of the covid shut down of schools was nothing like 9-11. March 13th is not etched in many of our minds.