LONDON, U.K. -- Maybe this is the day to declare lockdown over.
Or half over.
It鈥檚 frankly hard to know where we are on this restless Friday of our national collective struggle.
We鈥檙e supposed to 鈥淪tay Alert,鈥 but not 鈥淪tay at Home.鈥 Well, almost. We鈥檙e supposed to 鈥淪tay at Home鈥 if we can work from home, but if we can鈥檛 work from home, we鈥檙e supposed to go to work. And 鈥淪tay Alert.鈥
I prefer the Bee Gees 鈥淪tayin鈥 Alive.鈥
We can go to the beach, but a lot of beach towns don鈥檛 want us to go to the beach.
See?
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England鈥檚 Chief Medical Officer tells us we鈥檙e having winter when it鈥檚 really late spring, verging on early summer.
This is actually good news. He means that the death rate has fallen to normal wintertime levels.
Along with that, we got some numbers today that confirm stuff we already knew. It鈥檚 always reassuring, or maybe alarming, when a trade or government agency puts it down in writing.
Online food shopping went up by 83 per cent in April. We knew that because we鈥檝e all been online buying flour, toilet paper, and bottles of wine.
The purchase of household goods on line went up by 104 per cent. In our house, we bought a cheap parasol for the terrace, Dettol wipes, candles and paper napkins. Thousands of paper napkins. It was a mistake.
At the same time, online purchases of shoes and clothing dropped 20 per cent. Raise your sanitized hand the last person who bought a pair of jeans over the net.
I鈥檓 waiting for the post-lockdown sales.
Here鈥檚 the most distressing number: when the lockdown is lifted.
It all comes down to one metre.
Imposing a two-metre distancing rule would mean that only 20 per cent of pubs could profitably reopen. Make it a one-metre distancing rule, and most could.
The source on this is the . Those people should know.
Let鈥檚 finish today with strawberries. As in, who鈥檚 going to pick them?
Not just strawberries鈥攆ruit and vegetables of all kinds that are normally picked by workers from Eastern Europe. Not this year.
In desperation, the government is looking for 60,000 to 70,000 out-of-work British who are willing to get out there and pick.
鈥淧ick For Britain,鈥 as the slogan goes.
Farmers desperately need help, but they鈥檙e worried a lot of Brits will sign up, hate the work, and only last a few days. In other words, they want 鈥減ickers that stick,鈥 as opposed to 鈥減ickers who aren鈥檛 stickers.鈥
Prince Charles was brought in to give the campaign a bit of royal gloss. After all, he too is a farmer.
In a video message, Charles called for a great 鈥渓and army鈥 of workers to get out there and鈥ell鈥tick to it.
Pick for Victory.