People will want to get back to this routine as soon as possible, and the longer they aren't allowed to do that the more pissed of people are going to be. They don't want a "new normal" and will not accept it in the long term, you'll see.
Of course. And as I said already, how could they not? If this "new normal" that some are talking about is just switching to a society where you're being constantly told what to do and when you can do it, it looks a lot like home detention. Already said that, but that's currently what we are subjected to. Home detention. Even people under real home detention have more freedom than we currently do. Who would want to live like this forever? Seriously? It's mind-boggling to me that some people seem to see it as OK or even desirable. Please help me understand.
Well, you are in France where they want everyone to stay at home. Such a situation cannot continue. But there are alternatives which are just as effective and don't require people to stay inside. Over here everything is OK for as long as you keep a distance and don't gather in groups (3 is a crowd). This effectively means over here we can still do most of the things we always did.
Confinement is not just in France, FYI. Similar situation in many countries currently. But sure this can't be lasting and will have to end (although it may very well be decided again in the future, much more frequently than it ever did.)
But that's not just what I'm talking about. I was talking about everything people put behind the term "new normal", and everything that we can suppose might be.
"everything is OK for as long as you keep a distance and don't gather in groups (3 is a crowd)."
Do you call that normal? Seriously? Do you want to live in a world in which you can't be more than 3? In which you can't get close to anyone, meaning everyone is now a potential threat to anyone else? In which you may have to ask anyone to show you a certificate before getting closer than 1 or 2 m? Seriously?
I'm sure some of you have not thought this through really well, or are just reasoning as though ALL of this was temporary (which we can all hope for really), but here we were talking about what could be *permanent* after that.
You have to seperate 2 things here:
1) Working from home: It is likely a lot of people will like this and won't return to going to the office everyday.
2) Keeping distance is not going to be a new normal. That is temporary. And yes some countries are more strict than others. Last week the weather was nice so I met with one of my swim-friends at a beach. Ofcourse we kept a 2m distance but we could still have a normal conversation. OTOH my wife and I don't go shopping together (kinda take turns) and I'm staying away from my parents and older family members just to be sure.
Edit: one addition to distancing: I'm sure this can be done in shops and restaurants too with some extra care like cleaning the chairs, tables and menus after every visitor. Tables and chairs could be covered with a disposable sleeve too. Not ideal but not impossible to do.
I think you may have missed the point of what some are calling "new normal". As I said above, you seem to be reasoning as though the current changes are only going to be temporary, except for things that we can consider as positive, such as less pollution, more work at home, etc.
This looks overly optimistic, and anyway probably NOT what people willing things to get back to "normal" have a problem with. Who would be against less pollution and the ability to work at home if they so wish (as long maybe as it's not MANDATORY, because some people may actually have a problem with being FORCED to work at home if they don't like it)? OTOH, some people are fearing that some of the restrictions we are experiencing now may become permanent (of course in a lighter way as they are now, but still objective restrictions). As I said, I have no clue whatsoever what is going to happen, but from experience and what we can see now, this is not unlikely to happen at all. A very likely scenario is up to a few more months (till the end of 2020 basically as many already say), which is already a pretty long time. But it could last longer than this depending on how we manage to find a cure/vaccine, and other factors.
Now of course this may be all related to what anyone calls temporary. Even a few decades long event is temporary in the grand scheme of things... so yeah.
See how things are evolving and how what I said earlier can already be witnessed: people seeing anyone else as a potential threat. Recent posts show this. You think this is going to magically end from one day to the next?
Point is, you can't really blame anyone for not willing a "new normal", as this new normal is rather likely to be more annoying than fun for the average person. Not that there necessarily is any alternative to that, just a thought.