The flatten the curve strategy being implemented isn’t about getting rid of the virus, but slowing the spread to keep hospitals from being overwhelmed. There’s no basis for predicting that the virus will just die out. If you look at the Spanish flu, the regions that flattened the curve had multiple humps from the virus outbreaking and receding. The only regions where it tailed off were those that took the devastation up front since they basically developed herd immunity along with a lot of people dying.
This is why I’m not very optimistic for the theme park industry. Absent a vaccine, working medication, or cheap and fast testing, I don’t see how you re-open any place of mass gathering without the risk of a super spreader incident reigniting an outbreak locally.
I never said that the virus would die off. I just said that all the projections I've seen show the peak being in the next couple of months and it tailing off beyond that. I just questioned the idea that it would come back and be worse than it is now. I've seen no reporting on it that shows that.
Right, but even in the article they mention normally they can see that coming but not this time. Disney had a bunch of big projects going on so it wasnrt for the lack of workin this case.
I can't speak specifically for Disney but often generally these are contractors so it isn't Disney's decision to lay them off but the contractor who is building it that did.