Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let? They are adults.
Adults are self supporting.
If you raise them right, college kids should be fully capable of making their own responsible decisions. Keep in mind if they weren’t in college, they would be working a full time job and likely supporting themselves.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s odd, because I know so many people with college aged kids who are currently taking a lot of precautions - no unnecessary trips to the store, wouldn’t dream of going out without a mask, won’t let their HS aged kids hang out with friends, yet I haven’t heard a one of them say they plan on keeping their kids home if colleges physically reopen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a college town. The restaurants just opened back up in my college town for inside dining. The restaurants are slammed with college students and professors.
My college town has about 70,000 students. Many live in apartments year round. College students in my town typically have a lot of money.
They are dining in restaurants. I fail to see campus not opening up.
College students are also working the restaurant jobs.
Life goes on.
What town is this? Have the restaurants opened up to full capacity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course they should go back. The risk to young healthy people is truly negligible.
Yup, that's the mindset here. Let the germspreaders in dorms with shared bathrooms kill off the staff and faculty.
The reality is most college accomodations are pretty luxe. The norm now is that the college student has their own bathroom and their own bedroom. They might share a kitchen area.
Virtually every kid has their own car. College students of today are not living in ghettos.
That is not the norm for both my children or friend’s children or my nephews. All seem to have 2-4 roommates freshman year- all in one room. A few had en-suite bathrooms, but most were down the hall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a college town. The restaurants just opened back up in my college town for inside dining. The restaurants are slammed with college students and professors.
My college town has about 70,000 students. Many live in apartments year round. College students in my town typically have a lot of money.
They are dining in restaurants. I fail to see campus not opening up.
College students are also working the restaurant jobs.
Life goes on.
What town is this? Have the restaurants opened up to full capacity?
University of Florida, Gainesville. Town just started opening up.
Anonymous wrote:If colleges open and the hospitals fill up, the colleges will close. Society can't continue with anything resembling normal if that means the hospitals are overwhelmed with COVID-19 patients. If the hospitals have capacity, then it's possible to keep opening up on track.
Hospital capacity is the key metric.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let? They are adults.
Well, "technically" adults. In actuality and maturity level, most likely not.
Anonymous wrote:Let? They are adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a college town. The restaurants just opened back up in my college town for inside dining. The restaurants are slammed with college students and professors.
My college town has about 70,000 students. Many live in apartments year round. College students in my town typically have a lot of money.
They are dining in restaurants. I fail to see campus not opening up.
College students are also working the restaurant jobs.
Life goes on.
What town is this? Have the restaurants opened up to full capacity?
Gotta be UGA or similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a college town. The restaurants just opened back up in my college town for inside dining. The restaurants are slammed with college students and professors.
My college town has about 70,000 students. Many live in apartments year round. College students in my town typically have a lot of money.
They are dining in restaurants. I fail to see campus not opening up.
College students are also working the restaurant jobs.
Life goes on.
What town is this? Have the restaurants opened up to full capacity?
Take a close look at who those people are. They are willing to let this country--in particular, the children--suffer in every possible way to ensure that Trump doesn't get reelected. This isn't conspiracy theory. Of course the virus is real and poses a great threat to certain communities and demographics. But the liberal have jumped on it and are forcing horrible policies onto the entire country to prolong the misery through November. We have to stand up to it and hopefully the colleges--liberal bastions that they are-- can lead that charge. If they open, students will return.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a college town. The restaurants just opened back up in my college town for inside dining. The restaurants are slammed with college students and professors.
My college town has about 70,000 students. Many live in apartments year round. College students in my town typically have a lot of money.
They are dining in restaurants. I fail to see campus not opening up.
College students are also working the restaurant jobs.
Life goes on.
What town is this? Have the restaurants opened up to full capacity?