Dear Anti-maskers:
Congratulations! You and our inept president have helped the United States reach a milestone.
(Ironic how your battle cry is the co-opted “My body, my choice.”)
I understand your desire for personal freedom. But with personal freedom comes personal responsibility. But often, though, people do not do the right thing for themselves or others.
Let’s look at some past freedom vs. personal/public safety issues:
- Motorcycle helmets. Despite the fact that many people
wanted to bemore likely to diein a motorcycle crashdid not want a helmet law, Georgia makes it mandatory to wear a helmet. (Incidentally, Georgia had the first helmet law in the United States.) - Seatbelt laws. Despite the fact that many people
wanted to bemore likely to diein a car crashdid not want a seatbelt law, Georgia (and 48 other states) makes it mandatory to wear seatbelts. - Speed limits. Despite the fact that many people
wanted to bemore likely to diein a high-speed crashdid not want speed limits, the federal government and state governments passed speed limit laws. - Smoking in public places. Despite the fact that many people
wanted todie from various cancers and cause others to diedid not want smoking bans in public places, many states passed smokefree air laws.
Those four legislative efforts save roughly 723,000 lives every year.* The first three save nearly 30,000. That’s a large enough number to warrant legislation, apparently.
You see where I’m going with this?
246,083 Americans have died of the Coronavirus.
246,083 mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, grandparents.
It’s more deadly and prevalent than the flu.
Americans make up just 4.25 percent of the world population, but have contracted 20 percent of total Coronavirus cases. Americans deaths make up 18.6 percent of the 1.32 million deaths worldwide.
Clearly, we are not managing the spread effectively.
Clearly, lives are at stake.
Clearly, we need to do something.
I’m not a huge fan of personally intrusive legislation like a national mask mandate, but if y’all keep up your shenanigans, that is EXACTLY what we are going to need.
So wear a damn mask, and stay away from people not in your household.
Kthxbye,
Beth
*I’m happy to give you my sources for those stats, but I know you don’t trust scientific or news sources. (In case you do, and I’m being unfair, visit the links in the post plus this one and this one and this one.)
If I’m repetitively whacking your shin with a dowel and you complain, the analogous reply: “My body, my choice.”
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Hahaha!
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Here’s the epiphany I had today on the subject of masks. I’ve copied it from my Facebook timeline…
On the subject of masks — Today I went to my friend’s house to give her something she’d asked me to buy for her and to give her the Christmas cards she had ordered. She gave me a gift that I will be giving a friend for Christmas, something she made. We were wearing masks. I was with a lot of people Saturday and not my usual four or five people I see, and though they were all being careful on Saturday, I feel it’s better to be safe than sorry. At one point my friend said, “We’re OK, aren’t we?” and I said, “I don’t know. I was with a lot of people Saturday,” so we left our masks on.
This woman is incredible. She’s kind, feisty, generous, has a zest for life, deep spiritual center, enthusiasm for the people she knows, courage — I like her very much. When I insisted we stay masked up because we were inside and I’d been with a lot of people, I realized, I’d just said “I care about you and I want you around.”
People fight wearing masks and, honestly, with my asthma, it’s hard to breathe. Still, I CAN breathe.
I realized that we have the opportunity right now to show care for our fellow human beings in a very simple act. We don’t always have that opportunity.
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Yes. This is lovely and true. Such a simple, easy thing to do.
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❤
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