Arguments for not going back to restaurants as they reopen.
A few things to read if you're watching people eat outside in groups and wondering what the hell they think they're doing.
"I'm Too Anxious to Eat at Restaurants Right Now," by Kat Kinsman (Food & Wine)
Now they're back—with a thousand precautions and protocols and outdoor-only seating and oh blessed day, a window for takeout cocktails—and I just can't make myself sit down at a table to join them. I'm too afraid, not of them but for them, and I don't know what the right thing is to keep them safe.
"I’m Not Ready to Go Back to Restaurants. Is Anyone?" by Tejal Rao (New York Times)
Restaurateurs, despite being pushed into the role, are not our public-health officials. Understandably, many want customers to fill up their dining rooms, to eat and drink well, and to spend money again. But after collecting data from 30 million credit and debit card holders, JPMorgan Chase found a close correlation between the level of spending in restaurants and new cases of Covid-19: Restaurants can easily turn into hot spots.
And from late March, "In China, a Glimpse at the Future of Restaurants," by Aaron Fox-Lerner (Eater)
Getting any customers to confidently eat restaurant food again remains one of the industry’s biggest obstacles. Diners are spooked. In response, many delivery orders now often include cards listing the names and temperatures of all the staff involved in preparing your food. Others, like the dim sum chain Jin Ding Xuan, send notes detailing the restaurant’s disinfection procedures.