Sunday, August 23, 2020

the war on fun war commences in september with

guest appearances by pals andrew cuomo and joseph g cairo and laura curran manning two windows at the levitown
branch of nassau otb as churchill downs opens.

the kentucky derby is sTurday september 5 and the oaks the day before with great stakes races earlier in the week as well


as a not dead yet nassau otb luminary once said, even a caveman can do it.


do not know if cuomo has ape hangers  on his Harley, but a politician or and politucal leader surely is upto the task of selling and cashing bets


join the war on fun and put workers where they are needed


talking and asking questions might work, but no laughing please


Andrew Cuomo doubles down in his ‘war on fun’https://www.nassauotb.com/ by working behind the counter in levitown with joseph g cairo& nassau county executive laura curran


No dancing at bars. No darts. No karaoke. So orders Gov. Andrew Cuomo, adding to his “order food, not just alcohol” mandate in what sure looks like an all-out war on fun.
Heck, the Great Drinktator has also banned comedy shows. You can’t have people guffawing into their face masks despite practicing social-distancing.
The gov has even used his emergency powers to ban dancing at wedding receptions. This, when New York hasn’t just flattened the curve, but crushed it — with new coronavirus cases and deaths at ever-lower levels.
As Karol Markowicz writes in Monday’s Post, these lockdown rules are “nutty.”
Eminently progressive state Sen. Jessica Ramos (D-Queens) reports that Cuomo’s State Liquor Authority agents have been harassing bar and restaurant owners in her district with summonses and the loss of liquor licenses under the gov’s “Three Strikes and You’re Closed” policy.
Cuomo’s rules are almost as deadly to businesses as the bug he says he’s fighting.
Andrew Rigie, head of the NYC Hospitality Alliance, says an industry survey found that 83 percent of dining establishments couldn’t pay their full rent last month.
Mayor Bill de Blasio, meanwhile, told WNYC he has “no plan” for the return of indoor dining in the city, since the bug resurged somewhat in Hong Kong and Europe after indoor dining resumed.
Is it any wonder that 100 restaurants in Brooklyn and Staten Island plan a class-action lawsuit to force the mayor and the gov to let their eateries reopen?
Give it a shot: Businesses will work to ensure that patrons practice safe dining and obey health protocols. If the curve bends too far up, you can always lock down again.
We join Markowicz in saying “Enough!” Give us back our city.

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