Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Responsibi­lity to the whole

- John Brummett John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a member of the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. Email him at jbrummett@arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

Dozens of Arkansas school boards have approved mask mandates despite protests from parents saying their children’s faces are nobody else’s business.

That’s heartening to one who had expected the right thing only from Fayettevil­le and Little Rock, the progressiv­e islands, and Marion, which started school two weeks early and is awash already in the reality of 1,194 kids quarantine­d.

State Sen. Clarke Tucker of Little Rock put it well, posting on social media: “If you were dejected, dishearten­ed, demoralize­d by the [Arkansas Legislatur­e] session, please take heart. Courageous school boards all over Arkansas are showing us that there’s much more political leadership in this state, present and future, than only what’s happening at the state Capitol.”

And there is a much greater sense of responsibi­lity among the people than in the Legislatur­e, it would seem.

The Northwest Arkansas Council commission­ed a survey that engaged in concerted screening to make sure it had a representa­tive sample of unvaccinat­ed people. The poll showed that 66 percent of respondent­s in that historical­ly conservati­ve area said they favored allowing local school districts to decide on masking.

State Rep. Robin Lundstrom of Springdale, the Trent Garner of the House, said that’s not at all what she was hearing from her constituen­ts.

Polls tend to capture passive and general views. Anti-maskers seem to be more … specific and emotional and loud, let us say … than the reticent and rational.

On one hand you have often-disengaged people answering the telephone and replying to questions in a vague and conceptual way. On the other hand you have people shouting and carrying signs saying “my kids, my choice” when school boards meet to consider mask mandates for students as recommende­d by health experts and now permitted by a court injunction against the legislativ­e ban on mandates.

Notably, Bentonvill­e School Board members walked past protesters Wednesday night to vote 5-to-2 for a mandate. They listened to bountiful testimony, including the following from a woman whose sincerity and partial thoughtful­ness I do not doubt.

She said: “I am not anti-mask, but I am pro-parental choice. This meeting is not about arguing about whether a piece of cloth works. This, to me, is about the right parents have to choose our own children’s health. Parenting is very personal, and I have made the decision about what is best for my children physically, emotionall­y and academical­ly for 18 years. We are teaching our children how to build up their immune system and use wisdom concerning the virus, but also not to be ruled by fear and miss out on really living because of fear of getting sick.”

Her obvious thoughtful­ness is only partial because it stops with her personal situation and short of the public interest.

A highly contagious virus variant that strains hospitals and causes deaths represents the very essence of our human interconne­ction. It simply cannot be treated as a household-to-household matter when it comes to essential mass public gatherings such as for educating children.

This mother is fully entitled to make health decisions for her children except in regard to masks during a public health crisis in which one child’s covid case is not just that, but likely an infector of other children, and from there into the community.

New cases lead inevitably to more people in the hospital, and more on ventilator­s, and more waiting for ICU care that may not exist.

There is a severe nursing shortage for the caseload caused by those whose idea of virtue is personal independen­ce instead of responsibi­lity to others. Nurses-for-hire chasing the pandemic’s pay bonuses might choose, say, Maine, with 80-degree temperatur­es and 149 new cases the other day, over Arkansas with 90-degree temperatur­es and 2,900 cases the other day.

And, by the way, ask any parent of an immunocomp­romised child about the intimation that it might be better simply to let kids go unmasked and catch the virus. I know of one such parent who just about lost it when he heard that breathtaki­ngly insensitiv­e nonsense at a legislativ­e committee meeting two weeks ago.

The very concept of protective masking during a pandemic is that individual responsibi­lity means responsibi­lity to the group.

A mask is more efficient at blocking the spreading of the masked person’s emissions than blocking that masked person’s receipt of a nonmasked person’s emissions.

The point, then, is for everyone to wear masks. Together we build a wall. The masks are bricks in that wall.

It’s true that bricks and mortar can crack or chip. They also can lock down pretty solidly when packed fully and properly.

To cite the supposed virtue of personal responsibi­lity in saying you’ll keep your brick at home because home knows best … that leaves a hole in the wall guarding everyone, the protection of whom ought to be a greater virtue, at least during a health crisis.

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