What would happen if for some reason quantum entanglement were suddenly turned off? By "turned off", let's say that every entangled state is immediately replaced with a separable (but still classically correlated) state, e.g. a Bell state $(|00\rangle+|11\rangle)/\sqrt2$ might be replaced with $(|00\rangle\langle 00|+|11\rangle\langle 11|)/2$. The laws of quantum mechanics still hold.
What effect would this have on my everyday life? Could I still get out of bed, have a shower, take the bus to work, etc.? I'm not interested in the effect it would have on physics experiments such as Bell nonlocality no longer being detectable. I am interested in my everyday life as a non-physicist.
I have seen this similar question and find the answers given rather unsatisfactory. I understand that this scenario doesn't really make sense, since if the laws of quantum mechanics still hold then there will necessarily be entanglement, e.g. solving the Schrodinger equation to find the ground state of helium. I don't think this should make it impossible to understand the essence of the question and give some insight into how entanglement affects everyday life (if indeed it does).
Edit: another way of understanding what I mean by this question is "what processes in my everyday life rely on entanglement?".