It’s crazy how government shut down of businesses is so normal now.
Also, there’s no such thing as a non-essential business. Every business is essential to someone.
Lastly, the way you frame a question in a survey will skew the results. For example, asking “do you agree with shutting down non-essential businesses” will get a vastly different response than asking something else like “would you allow the government to shut down a business even though it would cause workers to lose their jobs?”
It’s crazy how government shut down of businesses is so normal now.
Also, there’s no such thing as a non-essential business. Every business is essential to someone.
Lastly, the way you frame a question in a survey will skew the results. For example, asking “do you agree with shutting down non-essential businesses” will get a vastly different response than asking something else like “would you allow the government to shut down a business even though it would cause workers to lose their jobs?”
I believe we are at the 'normalization' process that Yuri Bezmanov describes.
Ya, labeling certain businesses as non-essential sets a dangerous precedent.