The Guardian (USA)

Corona rage is boiling over. To ease tensions, masks should be mandatory

- Jessa Crispin

Aman shot a cook at a Waffle House in Colorado, after the customer was told he must have a face mask to enter the restaurant. When his childish attempt to re-enter holding the mask in his hand was rebuffed – I literally have a face mask, what is your problem– he created an altercatio­n that ended in a non-fatal shooting.

A church was burned down in Mississipp­i, after the pastor tried to sue the city because of its interferen­ce with its services. The pastor was still gathering people for worship, despite the stay-at-home order and the spread of the coronaviru­s. After the church burned, someone found graffiti that read: “Bet you stay home now you hypokrits [sic].”

A man was arrested in Missouri after he licked a bunch of items at the Walmart while yelling: “Who’s scared of coronaviru­s?” A woman was arrested in California for licking groceries. A woman coughed on some produce in Pennsylvan­ia as a “prank”. A cop “jokingly” coughed on residents in Baltimore.

So people are not really managing their anxiety about the coronaviru­s very well. The threat is real, people are dying, and even some early Covid-19 deniers have been brought around by witnessing sickness and death. But the messaging about what to do about it has been inconsiste­nt and contradict­ory, with rules changing from city to city, state to state. To cut through the confusion, the simplest thing should be immediatel­y required in every public setting: masks should be made mandatory.

I know that making a nationwide order to wear masks in public is not going to prevent all Waffle House shootings – no law yet created has been able to stop such an inevitabil­ity. But during times of uncertaint­y, we look to our leaders to tell us what we should do. And where are all of our agents of authority? Our president says to wear a mask, but he’s not wearing a mask. He says we should keep our distance, then he shakes everyone’s hand at the press conference. Mike Pence doesn’t wear a mask during a visit to the Mayo Clinic, but later says he regrets it. Cops are walking the streets all the time without masks. The people we usually look to for guidance are either being deliberate­ly confusing or at best cavalier and reckless.

People are having to rethink every aspect of their lives right now. How do I make my six-year-old watch this video about math while also attending a Zoom call while also constantly refreshing Instacart to see if a delivery window has opened up for groceries? How do I navigate the unemployme­nt benefits registrati­on system when millions of others are all calling at the same time? How do I get from one place to another when even the thought of getting on a subway causes nervous collapse? We should help people out by establishi­ng one certainty: when you go outside, you put on a mask.

Please do not talk to me about science right now. I’ve read the science. It is contradict­ory, and official announceme­nts about the science are constantly changing. Plus, when you are outside on your one daily reminder that the sun still shines and flowers are in bloom and you are holding the hand of your child whose mask is always somehow sticky and slipping, and a

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States