米国 31%が4月第1週の家賃を支払わず 5月1日に家賃不払いストライキを呼びかけ

コロナ外出禁止、失業の影響を受け、4月5日までの速報値(6日以降の振込および電子決済を含まず)によると、米国全土で31%が4月分の住居家賃を支払っていない。昨年3~4月の滞納率は28~29%であった。
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/over-30-us-renters-didnt-pay-april-apartment-rent

5月1日に家賃不払いストライキ実行を呼びかける活動家も現れた。
https://www.housingjusticeforall.org/

商業物件については、多くの小売りチェーン、レストラン等が、アマゾンに利益を吸い取られる形で経営危機に陥り、コロナ前から米連邦破産法11条に基づく民事再生を申し立てていた。

コロナによる外出規制が、彼らのビジネスを窒息しさせた今、多くの企業が閉めた店舗の家賃減額もしくは支払い猶予を求めているし、現在は求めていない企業についても近々家主に要求するとみられている。
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/total-halt-47000-stores-shutter-across-us-virtually-all-retailers-stop-paying-rent

米国ボストンのホームレス避難所 半数にコロナ感染、しかし全員が無症状

米国マサチューセッツ州ボストンのあるホームレス用避難所の全員にコロナ検査をしたところ、半数が陽性とされたが、その全員が全く無症状であることが判明した。
関連記事

・・・米国のホームレスといったら、一般的には栄養状態が悪く、大半が薬でイカれていると指摘されている集団。この人たちがコロナに感染して、この程度の症状。

検査環境が整い、正確なデータが取ることができるようになれば、現状ほど大騒ぎして対応しなくても済む病気であるという評価に落ち着く可能性が出てきた。




Shocking Report Shows Half The Homeless At Boston Shelter Tested Positive For COVID-19: And None Had Symptoms
by Tyler Durden
Sat, 04/18/2020 - 21:00
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/shocking-report-shows-half-homeless-boston-shelter-tested-positive-covid-19-and-none

Researchers and clinicians who have 'experimented' with random mass testing for COVID-19 have made some pretty amazing - and amazingly depressing - discoveries. Yesterday, we shared a report about one sweeping antibody testing regime set up by researchers in Santa Clara County in California.

The study found that the estimated level of novel coronavirus penetration in the county was "50-80% higher" than what had been recorded.

If that isn't enough to terrify every day trader who ratcheted up their exposure heading into the weekend, a news story about another surprising discovery - this time on the East Coast - has just come to our attention.

After a cluster of cases involving residents of a South Boston homeless shelter, Massachusetts public health officials tested every resident of the Pine Street shelter in Boston's South End.

The results have garnered the attention of the CDC, which is "actively investigating the situation," according to Boston 25 News.

The CDC is now "actively looking into" into universal COVID-19 testing at Pine Street Inn homeless shelter.

The broad-scale testing took place at the shelter in Boston’s South End a week and a half ago because of a small cluster of cases there.

Of the 397 people tested, 146 people tested positive. Not a single one had any symptoms.

"It was like a double knockout punch. The number of positives was shocking, but the fact that 100 percent of the positives had no symptoms was equally shocking," said Dr. Jim O’Connell, president of Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, which provides medical care at the city’s shelters.

O'Connell said that the findings have changed the future of COVID-19 screenings at Boston’s homeless shelters.

The big takeaway, if you couldn't tell, is that a pattern is developing here: When mass testing is conducting, a shocking number of new cases are being identified, and - what's even more surprising - often none of them even show any symptoms/.

As we've noted several times already today, the theme of under-counting cases and deaths in institutions like nursing homes, prisons, homeless shelters and other settings has been especially prominent lately, as officials try to compensate for missed or undercounted cases and, in some countries, the veracity of the 'official' numbers is becoming a hot potato political issue.

The discovery of so many asymptomatic cases, many of which involve individuals who are indigent and presumably at high risk, has, according to the report, changed the way public health officials in Massachusetts are testing.

O’Connell said that the findings have changed the future of COVID-19 screenings at Boston’s homeless shelters.

"All the screening we were doing before this was based on whether you had a fever above 100.4 and whether you had symptoms," said O’Connell. “How much of the COVID virus is being passed by people who don’t even know they have it?"

The 146 people who tested positive were immediately moved to two different temporary isolation facilities in Boston. According to O’Connell, only one of those patients needed hospital care, and many continue to show no symptoms.

But that's not all: It's also forces officials to confront the uncomfortable elephant in the room: what would "the curve" look like if we had the capacity for general testing?

"If we did universal testing among the general population, would these numbers be similar?" said Lyndia Downie, president and executive director at the Pine Street Inn. “I think there are no many asymptomatic people right now. We just don’t know. We don’t have enough data on universal testing to understand how many asymptomatic people are contagious."

Hundreds of tests are now set to be conducted at additional Boston homeless shelters in the coming days.

"It tells you, you don’t know who’s at risk. You don’t know what you need to do to contain the virus if you don’t actually have the details or facts,” said Marty Martinez, Boston’s chief of Health and Human Services.

What would be the takeaway here? Is the mortality rate in the US, which has lingered at a surprisingly high 5% according to the official numbers, in reality significantly lower? Or is there perhaps even more that we're missing here?

テレワークできない人たちの叫び

日本人ってこうなんだよねー。混乱する職場の様子と、苦渋に満ちた労働者の表情が目に浮かぶ。

日本人の労働者はたいした給料もらってないのに、まるで自身が経営者であるかのように思考し行動し発言する。全身全霊で会社に尽くしたのに、今年のボーナスと来年のあなたの給料は削減される。なぜ一杯働いたあなたの給料が削減されるの?あなたが資本家ではなく、所詮は労働者だからです。早い人は、失業しかけているでしょう?少し距離を置いたところから日本人を観察すると、かなりおかしいですよ。

あの集団から一抜けといて本当に良かった(爆)。



「オフィス街の人出、5~6割減 政府の目標に届かず」のヤフコメ
朝日新聞デジタル 4/18(土) 19:40配信
https://headlines.yahoo.co.jp/cm/main?d=20200418-00000032-asahi-bus_all&s=lost_points&o=desc&t=t&p=1