If you can't take a position on the mandates, then why are we even discussing this? The fundamental issue is whether or not the mask policies are grounded in science or a total lack of it. Surely you can make a comment about your feelings on that as it relates to good science versus bad psuedo-science.
You might not want to admit it, but if people are still contracting COVID wearing masks properly and having been vaccinated and boosted, and a study shows no real difference in the rate of infection between that protected group and unmasked, unvaccinated people, are you really unable to concede that maybe masks really are useless?
If i told you rubbers prevented 98.2% of disease, and not using one avoids 97.8% of disease, are you really going to take the position that rubbers are better than nothing at all?
#Statistically_insignificant
I keep discussing it because people keep spreading information that isn’t backed up by any logic or real evidence that can seriously mislead people. Maybe somebody’s considering getting vaccinated, and then they hear that there’s a mass die-off caused by the vaccine, so they don’t. Then maybe they get COVID and have a really bad outcome because they didn’t get vaccinated because were influenced by some garbage information, for which there’s no evidence, that’s being peddled by fear-mongers to drive eyeballs to their bitchute channel. I think on the whole good/bad scale, that’s on the bad side.
If a single study “shows” that the rate of infection between masked and/or vaccinated and unmasked and/or unvaccinated is not significantly different, I’m not going to take the position based on that one single study that masks are useless… because, once again, protecting the wearer is only part of the reason for wearing a mask. There’s also a protective factor to those you come into contact with. But every time I bring that up, somebody comes back with a study concluding that masks don’t do much to protect the person wearing them. And then I say again that that’s only half of the point, and around and around we go.
If something makes a 0.4% difference in infection rates, yes, I’m going to take the position that using whatever it is will reduce your risk of infection by 0.4%. Whether or not it’s “better than nothing” depends on a lot of other factors. If a rubber reduces risk of disease by 0.4%, but increases risk of dying from rubber poisoning by 75%, no, I don’t think it’s better than nothing. If it reduces risk by 0.4% and there’s no downside whatsoever, then yes, I’m going to say it’s better than nothing.