Avoid crowds, or wear a mask
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Friday she won’t be wearing a mask at the president’s rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Saturday, calling it a “personal choice.”
So what if it’s a personal choice? What’s that got to do with anything? It’s a personal choice for people to cough in people’s faces on purpose, too, so what?
She said not wearing a mask still complies with guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control, telling reporters Friday that masks are recommended but not required.
But since they are recommended (and I don’t think the CDC has the power to require people to wear things anyway), why not wear one? What is the purpose of the “personal choice” not to? The CDC recommends them for reasons, so why decide “Oh well I just won’t, it’s personal”?
That recommendation from the CDC reads, “Everyone should wear a cloth face cover when they have to go out in public.” And the CDC also “recommends wearing cloth face coverings in public settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain.”
The nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, told CBS News in an interview Friday that the best way to avoid spreading the virus “is to avoid crowds.” But for those who will not be heeding that piece of advice, he counseled, “wear a mask at all times.”
And that’s not just to protect the wearer, it’s to protect everyone else too – so what right does Kayleigh McEneny have to make a “choice” not to wear one and thus increase the risk of everyone near her? What right does Trump have to do that?
Asked why not, McEnany emphasized it’s a “personal decision,” even though an indoor rally without much social distancing would qualify as a highest-risk gathering, according to the CDC.
“It’s a personal decision. I am tested regularly. I feel that it is safe for me not to be wearing a mask. I’m in compliance with CDC guidelines, which are recommended but not required,” McEnany said.
But recommended. Why just ignore the recommendation? Why substitute her judgement for theirs?
But the rate of daily coronavirus cases has been on the rise in Oklahoma. Attendees had to agree when they signed up for the rally that they bear responsibility if they fall ill from COVID-19 as a result of attending the event. In other words, they have to agree not to sue the campaign or any other entity.
Even Kayleigh McEnany.
There was a lot of “personal choice” on display at the grocery store today. We had to go out, but we put on our face masks. I wore gloves. But lots of unmasked bandits, and they did have the most annoying habit of running right up next to you. I held my breath a lot, not a good situation for an asthmatic.
It looks very much like we are in for a second wave, despite wishful thinkers and hope in high places that the C-19 virus will take note of the career needs of politicians.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2020/jun/20/coronavirus-live-news-brazil-passes-1-million-cases-as-australia-seeks-to-prevent-second-wave
Of course it is not only those who attend the rally who put themselves at risk. They are putting a very great number of other people at risk, including of course members of their own families. Frankly, I wish Fauci & Bryx or whatever her name is would simply hand in their resignations and say very publicly why they are doing so. Nobody at the White House is listening to them – as so many others have discovered, Trump just goes ahead and does what he wants and it is folly to hang on in the hope that they might get him to listen to reason or restrain him in any way.
I think it’s good that Fauci stays, though, and has an office and government position when he speaks the truth.