I haven't figured out the precise
variable responsible, but: this entire millennium I've gone around
with a bureaucratic bull's-eye pinned to my back, compared to my
spouse or certain other adults I could mention: in Connecticut,
Virginia and now Georgia, I got a jury duty notice while Jeff remains
blissfully unencumbered, even though he and I have each registered a
car in our name, registered to vote and other activities which,
according to legend, make one more likely to get called for jury
duty.
I got the notice last Saturday, and
after the expected obscene grumblings went online to register as
required. Then the COVID-19 coronavirus came to Georgia, and
suddenly I'm a minor background character in a poorly written sci-fi
pandemic movie.
Did you know that Georgia has a state
park called Hard Labor Creek? I
didn't until this week, when I initially misread a certain news
announcement as saying the state was sentencing coronavirus patients
to quarantine at hard labor. Then Fulton County (one county over from
where I live, and home to much of Atlanta) closed its public schools
due to the coronavirus.
Jeff and I were out running our regular
weekly shopping errands yesterday when word came down that our own
county of Dekalb had also closed its public schools due to
coronavirus concerns.
We stopped at a Target and the toilet paper aisle was completely
empty, though we had no difficulty buying other things on our list.
We went to our favorite (nice-neighborhood) Kroger an hour or so
later -- the school-closure notice come out sometime after we left
Target but before Kroger -- equally gutted TP aisle, and the rest of
the store was packed with panic buyers. The checkout lines were so
long they stretched all the way to the back of the store. I have only
ever seen that once before in my life, in news photos of Houston
supermarkets just before Hurricane Harvey drowned the city. So we
left the grocery store without buying anything, since we didn't want
to wait in those insanely long lines. (Fortunately, we could afford
to do that since we weren't remotely close to running out of "food"
at home; at worst we were running low on certain perishable foods we
particularly LIKE.)
On the other hand, this morning before I woke up, Jeff went out to
our local (low-income-neighborhood) Kroger and was able to buy some
TP (though not our regular brand), a loaf of sandwich bread (ditto),
and most of our regular everyday grocery-list items too.
I'm not too terribly worried about the virus itself, but I am
concerned over how our country will respond, especially regarding the
Trump administration's with the usual “deny, deflect and kick
scapegoats” method of governance. And I find myself dreading jury
duty even more than I usually do.
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