More than 1,500 people on the company’s cruise ships have been diagnosed with Covid-19, and dozens have died.
The news, when it reached the Grand Princess early on March 4, barely registered at first. In a letter slipped under passenger cabin doors, Grant Tarling, Carnival Corp.’s chief medical officer, announced that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control had begun “investigating a small cluster” of Covid-19 cases in California that might have been linked to the ship. Thirteen days after leaving San Francisco for Hawaii, the vessel would be skipping a scheduled stop in Mexico on its return voyage and sailing back early to its Bay Area port.
That day, passengers noticed new hand sanitizer stations and crew members wearing gloves, but life on the Grand Princess, which advertises 1,301 cabins, 20 restaurants and lounges, about a dozen shops, and four freshwater swimming pools, otherwise went on as normal. Guests prepared for a ukulele concert, played bridge at shared tables, and took line-dancing classes. That night, Laurie Miller and her husband, John, attended True or Moo, a show featuring an emcee in a cow costume; the following morning, John joined about 200 other passengers in the ship’s Broadway-style theater for a lecture on Clint Eastwood movies. “I’m surprised they’re even letting this event happen,” he whispered to a nearby friend. “This is a big crowd.”
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They don't care because they are Not under U.S Law & are Registered
ReplyDeleteoutside the U.S for a Reason !!! It covers their ASS !!! + No Taxes !!!
New Laws needed to Govern Cruise ship industry !!!
They have it made , & use Slave Labor from all over the world !!!! CHEAP !!
I have been on Many cruises & I have NEVER seen even One ship
ReplyDeleteRegistered in America !!!
No Other business has such great Freedoms & Lack of Law to do as it
pleases !!! What a Business Model !!! (for them)
Those that go on out of country cruises need not expect the U.S. government to protect them from anything
ReplyDelete