Then they leave that menu, and whether or not they wipe that down, who knows, and then the next person comes and opens, it touches it, and then goes and eats. The people, the accents, the Tim Tams, the Starburst Babies, and the ‘no worries’ attitude. And please use the contraction, it sounds very stilted otherwise. I can go into facility after facility, a restaurant or whichever kind of place, when they see me come in, they put their mask on. Get your haircut. I personally have been to restaurants where I’ll look over and see someone ordering, looking at their menu, and they literally sneeze right into the menu. We generate our own set of guidelines that compiles all the different ones and makes them readable. The Covid Consultants, a firm dedicated to advising entities from restaurants to nursing homes about how to reopen with minimal risk, was born. We have friends who recently went out to eat together. It's like the "they" in "they say you should wait thirty minutes before swimming after a meal." question, only a subordinate clause that substitutes the object can be introduced with "that", one that substitutes the subject cannot:

It’s really uncomfortable, and it’s annoying to have to go wash your hands all the time and to not hug your friends and to maintain a social distance of 6 feet from all people. Not only do you have these struggling businesses who are losing money left and right, but it’s impossible for them to get through these extensive guidelines. CAUTION: I'm not a native English speaker.I've just come across this post. That is not how we are used to living, but that is how we need to live, at least right now, and I’m sure for the near future, at least, because this is not going anywhere, unfortunately. Allow your friends some space if they are not ready for play dates or in-person gatherings yet. It ripped through my whole office; we all had it.” And then you get back your negative antibody test.

But I think that what we’re seeing now in some of the early data that’s coming out about antibody testing is that the antibodies don’t last long. may satisfy your grammatical criteria, but sounds less natural to me than the original version, which is simply more idiomatic.Your last point about "That I was mean to you doesn't mean you should be mean to me." I sat outside because I think that sitting outdoors is safer than sitting inside. A valid excuse when doing something.

This is going to be here for a while. Because so far, we still have room in most of our hospitals.

You People Who Famous. ... Of course, just because there is room for you in the hospital doesn’t mean you want to go there.

That’s a huge misunderstanding. Then the coronavirus hit. Your first sentence ("it doesn't mean") is the best. I would drop the comma entirely and go with this: "Just because I was mean to you doesn’t mean you should be mean to me." Read more quotes from Joseph Heller.