Yes. That sucks. We have a meant to be ignored rule about plants on cabinet tops, but also an unspoken but enforced rule about who you should and shouldn't contact if you're faced with conflict at work. Guess which one I fell foul of?
@Arethosemyfeet My six-year-old grandson is on the spectrum as well. He is receiving therapy and is learning to be more flexible. He reminds me a lot of Young Sheldon and Calvin (and Hobbes). I wonder sometimes if I am also on the spectrum, but that is a long story.
Microbial pathogens don't much *care* about "edge cases"
Nor do they care about laws. The point that both Karl and I have been getting at is that "the law" and "the set of actions that minimize the risk of virus transmission" aren't perfectly aligned. There close-ish, but there are things that it is currently illegal to do that are in reality fairly safe, and there are things that are technically legal that are nevertheless foolish. It is there that you'll find some of these "edge cases".
Yes ... And by observation of actual "cases" -- which are NOT "edge" in any respect -- some (a minority, but an actual percentage) people don't bother to wash their hands after wiping after going poopoo ...
Sorry ... No excuse is legitimate ...
Comments
Yes ... And by observation of actual "cases" -- which are NOT "edge" in any respect -- some (a minority, but an actual percentage) people don't bother to wash their hands after wiping after going poopoo ...
Sorry ... No excuse is legitimate ...