The coronapocalypse continues as folks can now "safely" say to themselves "I 
always KNEW something like this [fake apocalypse] was going to happen".

At least we're less insane than NooZealanders - aren't we?

In an absolutely apocalyptic and historic un-Australian event, Sydney's Bondi 
Beach was CLOSED DOWN!  Shocking news I know ... just how absolutely ______!

  Supermarket industry wades into 'uncharted waters'
  
https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/rollercoaster-week-for-supermarket-workers-as-industry-wades-into-uncharted-waters-20200319-p54bpx.html
    .. Shelves wiped clean, fights in the aisles, and sales through the roof. 
If there was one word to describe the last week across supermarkets, it would 
be "unprecedented".



Man literally TASERed for toilet paper:

  Coronavirus: Heartbreaking picture highlights impact of panic buying
  
https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/health-problems/coronavirus-heartbreaking-picture-highlights-impact-of-panic-buying/news-story/7668692090326e18c029521b042dc8a0
    [elderly lady weeps as she looks at long empty supermarket shelves]

    .. Tensions have boiled over into physical fights, with NSW Police charging 
two women with affray after an incident over toilet paper in a Chullora 
Woolworths in Sydney earlier this month. A man also had to be tasered in a Big 
W in Tamworth, northern NSW, over a stoush over the precious loo roll.

    Australia now has 1023 confirmed cases of COVID-19, and seven people have 
died.



Ok, ok, the science it is muffas:

  Science behind why Australians are panic buying toilet paper
  
https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/health-problems/science-behind-why-australians-are-panic-buying-toilet-paper/news-story/ab4f8d40b0fbf1b255fcd2cccee3ae1a
    Australians have left the world puzzled by their panic buying of toilet 
paper. This is the reason why we are reacting so strangely.

    Anxious Australians are buying toilet paper to deal with their worries 
about coronavirus but they should be considering other ways to relieve their 
stress.

    While other countries have run low on toilet paper, Australians are 
stockpiling despite there being no threat of running out as 60 per cent of the 
country’s toilet paper is manufactured locally.

    Vision of Aussies scrambling over each other to panic-buy multi-packs of 
toilet paper has been beamed across the world, leaving many puzzled.

    So why is everyone panicking?

    Dr Paul Harrison, a human behaviour expert at Deakin University, explained 
the reasons why Australians in particular were stocking up on toilet paper.

    “Research shows that in capitalist cultures like Australia, you deal with 
problems by buying things,” he told news.com.au. “Through times of trouble we 
are encouraged to spend our way out of it.”

    Dr Harrison said humans in general were drawn to “simple answers” in times 
of crisis.

    “Coronavirus is an abstract problem, with an unclear effect and it’s 
unfolding minute-by-minute,” he said.

    “Humans struggle with nuance and unclear outcomes and research shows that 
when people feel like they have lost control, they tend to be drawn to small 
things that they can control.

    “In Australia we are constantly told that we can solve problems by buying 
things, and research shows that buying utilitarian items such as toilet paper 
and cleaning products can rebalance that sense of lack of control.”

    One example of Australia’s tendency to throw money at something to solve a 
problem, was the current calls for a stimulus package to boost Australia’s 
economy.

    “I’m not saying that it can’t,” Dr Harrison said. “But it makes it seem 
like the simple solution is to buy stuff.”

    A secondary “herd effect” happens because people can see shortages 
happening and they don’t want to be the one left without toilet paper.

    There is also a cultural aspect to the panic buying related to Australia’s 
individualistic attitude.

    “Australians as a culture tend to think predominantly as individuals and we 
value things around assertiveness and independence,” Dr Harrison said.

    People who have individualistic tendencies tend not to feel supported by 
the community when things fall apart.

    “So in this kind of person with individualistic tendencies, amid stress and 
when the world feels chaotic, they fend for themselves and their family.”

    Australians have shown they can pull together as a community in times of 
crisis like this year’s bushfire emergency but Dr Harrison said coronavirus was 
different.

    “It is quite isolating, if you get it, you will metaphorically and quite 
literally be isolated,” he said. “So if you get it, people feel they need to 
look after themselves and their family.”

    Dr Harrison said trust in politicians and institutions was also at an 
all-time low and this exacerbated the feeling that people were on their own.

    “Something like 80 per cent of people don’t trust our institutions, which 
is not a great thing,” he said.

    “If a leader or (institutions like) the banks are not there in a time of 
need, it does erode your trust in them.”

    While some have questioned the usefulness of buying toilet paper, Dr 
Harrison said it came down to people feeling unsettled and wanting to take 
action.

    “Two things need to be satisfied: they need to be able to perform that 
action and for it to lead to an end state of feeling in control, and buying 
toilet paper satisfies both these,” he said.

    “If you think about it rationally it doesn’t make sense but most behaviour 
is not rational, it’s emotional.”

    Even when people make an emotional decision, Dr Harrison says that the 
cognitive brain will later provide a rational basis for that decision.

    All of these factors came together to explain Australia’s obsession with 
stocking up on toilet paper.

    “Buying toilet paper doesn’t make sense but it does,” Dr Harrison said. 
“It’s something people do buy weekly and you do need toilet paper, you just 
don’t need 100 rolls.”

    For people who want to ease their anxiety about coronavirus but want an 
alterative to buying toilet rolls, Dr Harrison suggested thinking about other 
people.

    “One way of reducing anxiety is to do things for other people,” he said. 
“Thinking about what things you can do for others also provides that sense of 
reward.”

    Supermarkets have urged shoppers not to stockpile as shelves are being 
constantly restocked. They have urged shopped to think of more vulnerable 
members of the community who may not be able to shop often or get to different 
stores in search of products.

    A Coles spokesperson said the supermarket did not advocate hoarding of 
goods and said shelves were being regularly restocked.

    “Coles is committed in delivering the best service to all Australians and 
during this challenged time is committed in ensuring all Australian communities 
have access to the products and services we all need. Coles wants to ensure 
that no matter where you live or how old you are, you have the same access as 
everyone else on your street.”



  "Unparalleled Challenge" - Inside America's First Locked-Down Major City, 
"Everything's Out Of Our Control"
  
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/unparalleled-challenge-inside-americas-first-locked-down-major-city-everythings-out-our
    .. California Governor .. issued a state-wide "stay at home" order

    .. San Francisco and the surrounding Bay Area issued 'shelter in place' 
orders after a surge of deaths

    .. Several days into one of the most extreme lockdowns, Bay Area residents 
have been forced to stay at home, only allowed to leave for essential travel, 
such as shopping for groceries, medications, fuel, caring for others, and 
exercise.

    NBC News spoke with one resident, Trish Tracey, who had to shutter her 
restaurant on Tuesday in the Mission district. She laid off her entire kitchen 
staff of 17 employees and has tried to renegotiate her lease. 

    "Everything is out of our control," Tracey said.

    .. The mass lockdown in San Francisco is serving as the blueprint of how 
other local governments in the state might have to resort to Martial law-style 
lockdowns. Other states, such as New York and Maryland, could be days or weeks 
away from a major lockdown to flatten the curve.

    .. "This is a challenge unparalleled to any challenge I have faced in the 
last 28 years of my career," Dr. Baldev Singh, a pulmonary critical care 
physician in nearby San Jose.

[and this one, worse than torture:]
    .. local economy grinds to a halt, tens of thousands of people have already 
lost their jobs, grocery stores run out of food, millions forced to shelter in 
place and watch Netflix
[oh the absolute horror - Netflix ought be outlawed immediately! Sheer torture!]

    .. the Bay Area could soon see troop deployment on streets to maintain 
order.



In other news, 2020 is turning out to be one hell of an entertainment year...

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