The noble lie about masks and coronavirus should never have been told
https://www.yahoo.com/news/noble-lie...104001181.html
Matthew Walther
,
The Week•April 4, 2020
Those of you of a certain age will doubtless remember a time when it   was universally acknowledged that wearing masks would not protect you or   anyone else from the coronavirus pandemic. By "certain age" here I  mean  all living Americans born on or before April 1, 2020, which  according  to my notes is when it became possible to express a contrary  position in  polite society.
This was always nonsense. The White House is now  suggesting that all of  us should wear masks whenever we leave our  houses. We are even  stealing vast stockpiles of them from the Germans,  who have been  wearing them in public for around a month on the rather  more numerous  occasions when their leaders exempt them from house  arrest. People who  can't get proper masks (apparently the kind people  wear when they spray  for bugs) are being encouraged to make their own.  If nothing else,  this has given tedious DIY addicts something else to be  self satisfied  about. No one cares how quaint and interesting you think  the piece of  cloth meant to protect you from a disease is, okay?
Whether  the journalists and other apparent experts who enthusiastically  spread  this apparent lie about masks knew it was false is very much an  open  question. Some of us found it odd that the same people were also  saying  that masks should be reserved for use by medical professionals.  If masks  don't do anything, why do doctors and nurses need them? Are  they an  ornamental part of a dress uniform? The mind reels.
Regardless of  the personal honesty of those involved in it, this  propaganda campaign  should never have been conducted in the first  place. It is one thing to  debate what should be empirical questions,  such as the efficacy of  wearing protective equipment in an attempt to  forestall the spread of  viral infections; it is another for people to  bang on about whatever the  latest current corona wisdom is with the  same tedious certainty that  not long ago made us a nation of Logan Act  scholars and experts on the  non-existent criminal law implications of  the emoluments clause. These  manias do roughly as much for public  health as those kids — there was at  least one in every first-grade  class — who relentlessly ssshh everyone  else in line do to improve  schoolyard behavior.
The 180-degree  shift in acceptable public opinion about masks is in  line with how the  rest of this crisis has unfolded. Masks won't help.  Everyone needs a  mask. It's not worth shutting down travel to and from  China over the  virus, and Trump is just being a xenophobe here. Trump  should have done  more to prevent the virus from coming to these shores.  It's less  dangerous than the flu; calling it less dangerous than the  flu is a  right-wing meme, perhaps even (one shudders) "misinformation."  Human  beings can't even transmit the virus directly to one another; it   originated with animals in Chinese open-air "wet" food markets.  Talking  about the wet markets is racist, except when Dr. Fauci does it.
Can we please stop talking this way? As I write this our paper of record is all but 
publicly rooting   for the failure of anti-malarial drugs that appear to have been   successful in treating some coronavirus patients. It is not against   "science," whatever that may be, for the president or anyone else to   observe that certain medicines or treatments have worked. It is not for   science, either. It's just a fact that may or may not have limited   application depending upon what happens over the next few months. A bit   more epistemic humility would be welcome all around.
As would more  of I will bluntly call adult behavior. We must put an end  to the idea  that the best way to get through this crisis is to say  things we know  are not true in the hope of getting people to behave a  certain way. This  means not saying masks are useless when what you  really mean is, "Masks  are in short supply, please consider before you  start hoarding them  whether you really need them at present and if so  how many." Ditto the  painfully relentless attempts to give young people  the impression that  they are horribly likely to die from the new  virus. Even in Italy, the  country with the worst measured fatality rate  so far, around 86 percent  of all the deceased have been aged 70 or  older, and 50 percent were at  least 80. We do not need to zero in on  statistical anomalies or  otherwise engage in scaremongering. It should  be enough to say, "Even  though you are very unlikely to die from  coronavirus, remember that you  could contract the disease and spread it  to more vulnerable people  without even experiencing symptoms, so  please don't revel with 5000  strangers at the beach and then run home  to give Grandma a hug."
This is how grown-ups talk to one another.
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