You know the masks don’t work right. The holes in the masks are larger than viruses. I heard an analogy like looking at a building under construction and having a large scaffolding set up, it’s like throwing a marble at the building and expecting the scaffolding to stop the marble.
You know the masks don’t work right. The holes in the masks are larger than viruses. I heard an analogy like looking at a building under construction and having a large scaffolding set up, it’s like throwing a marble at the building and expecting the scaffolding to stop the marble.
yes. the cognitive dissonance about the supposed lethality/danger of the virus -- so dangerous that we need to stand 6 feet apart and sanitize our groceries before putting them in the house, but we can toss these supposedly dangerous items anywhere on the ground was insane.
The information about the size of the particles fitting through the holes in the mask -- that information was a bit more "advanced," and I think fewer people were able to grasp how ridiculous the masks were. But I would have thought that there would have been some alarmist guidance coming from our public health authorities about the importance of "safely" disposing of the germ-riddled personal protective gear.
All it took was fogging glasses or needing gaps in the sides to be able to breathe, or watching the doctor vape while wearing various masks to realize it was all nonsense.
You know the masks don’t work right. The holes in the masks are larger than viruses. I heard an analogy like looking at a building under construction and having a large scaffolding set up, it’s like throwing a marble at the building and expecting the scaffolding to stop the marble.
yes. the cognitive dissonance about the supposed lethality/danger of the virus -- so dangerous that we need to stand 6 feet apart and sanitize our groceries before putting them in the house, but we can toss these supposedly dangerous items anywhere on the ground was insane.
The information about the size of the particles fitting through the holes in the mask -- that information was a bit more "advanced," and I think fewer people were able to grasp how ridiculous the masks were. But I would have thought that there would have been some alarmist guidance coming from our public health authorities about the importance of "safely" disposing of the germ-riddled personal protective gear.
All it took was fogging glasses or needing gaps in the sides to be able to breathe, or watching the doctor vape while wearing various masks to realize it was all nonsense.