The world today is very different from what it used to be: quarantine, chaotic border controls, overcrowded hospitals, closed schools, kindergartens and colleges, deserted streets, doctors and medics in protective suits, half-empty shelves and rows in markets, and home closures. is part of the new everyday life.
Quarantine, self-isolation, social distancing and contact reduction, mortality rates, endangered populations, testing, panic and crisis reserves are all part of the new vocabulary. We all follow the daily records of the number of infected people in our country and around the world.
- Blinds descend all over Europe… Maybe we are embarking on a dark, involuntary social experiment that reveals everyday habits and practices that we would miss if eradicated and which could disappear surprisingly easily - The Guardian columnist describes the emergency Finsliff.
And we will surely be reminded of the fact that today the world is really more closely connected than ever, that we cannot isolate and love and that the challenges we face are common, as the virus knows no boundaries and cultural barriers. We will encourage and, hopefully, the solidarity of our fellow citizens as well as the responsibility, above all to ourselves and our family, and then to the whole of society as a whole. And that will undoubtedly be the positive consequence of this disaster.