Starkville Daily News

Mask requiremen­ts are by no reasonable measure tyranny or an attack on one’s liberty

- SID SALTER

Erstwhile Desoto County state legislator and failed GOP gubernator­ial contender Robert Foster is certainly entitled to his opinions about government mask requiremen­ts. He is also free to apply whatever overwrough­t definition­s to freedom, liberty, and tyranny that he chooses.

Likewise, I am free to point out that one of the great things about America is that here, your cheese can slide all the way off your cracker and there’s not much to be done about it.

Here’s some of Foster’s anti-face mask rants on Facebook: “So, this isn’t about a mask mandate, this is about control. This is about standing up to a governor that is acting like a dictator. When did the legislatur­e vote on a law to mandate masks? I must have missed them taking up and debating this significan­t change in public policy. This is about government constantly pushing, more taxes, more restrictio­ns, more licenses, more regulation­s, more fees, more fines, more loss of liberty, one little bit at a time.”

One wonders what sort of rhetoric Mr. Foster would generate were he afflicted with some actual tyranny? And let’s be honest, Foster’s social media musings about the supposed vast government and left-wing conspiracy to take away our freedom and liberty with cotton or nylon face coverings (some of the better homemade masks have Mr. Coffee filters in them, but I digress…) have been shared by congressme­n, ministers, and occasional­ly by President Donald Trump, although

Trump finally donned a mask in public over the weekend while visiting wounded troops at Walter Reed National Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

The national political tempest in a teapot over government-mandated face coverings seem rooted in what Business Insider Editor-at-large David Plotz summed up in this recent writing: “Some on the right have become enthralled with a highly selfish conception of liberty that equates freedom with being able to do what you want. Historical­ly, conservati­sm has embraced a more expansive idea of liberty that emphasizes balancing your own desires with your obligation­s to protect and serve others. This selfish libertaria­nism spread on social media and into conservati­ve media and influenced the president.”

Whatever one thinks of Tate Reeves’ service as governor, the suggestion that his administra­tion’s COVID-19 policies have been either tyrannical or out-of-step with the best advice of federal and state medical experts is simply just not true. And Foster’s disrespect­ful dismissal of the work of Drs. Thomas Dobbs and Anthony Fauci is contemptib­le.

The notion that the advice of public health experts should be ignored contradict­s a great deal of American history. There are more than a few easy examples of science changing how we live.

When I was a kid, people could smoke whenever and wherever they chose to light up. In restaurant­s, on airplanes, on buses, in taxis, you name it, you had ‘em, you smoked ‘em. I remember in the 1960s seeing people smoke in doctor’s offices and in hospital beds.

In that day, cigarettes were cheap and if you could see over the counter, you could buy them at any store that sold them. Now, laws, customs, and a broader knowledge of carcinogen­s changed that behavior.

And don’t get me started on seat belts. During my childhood, there were no car seats or seat belts. I remember when Dad bought a 1966 two-tone tan Chevy Bel-air that had two features I’d never seen in our family car – lap-level seats belts and air conditioni­ng.

Food packaging years ago didn’t bother with those pesky freshness dates – not even milk. Canned goods were seemingly good for eternity. Two things would withstand nuclear winter – Twinkies and SPAM.

Government­s regulate. Sometimes well, sometimes not so well, but government regulation is a long way from tyranny.

Thumbing one’s nose at a governor for mask mandates makes good political theater for those seeking media attention (which coming from the “My Pickup, My Rules” Guy certainly appears to be all this is…), but in the middle of a global pandemic that’s killing his fellow citizens, it’s just selfservin­g gibberish on social media. Nothing more.

Annoy Robert Foster. Wear a mask.

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