Quote:
Originally Posted by jfman
Why would social pressure in favour of mask wearing be a bad thing?
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Social pressure in favour of anything whose downsides may outweigh their benefits is a bad thing. I’d have thought that obvious.
Doing something just because Something Must Be Done is not a good reason. Virtue signalling is not a good reason.
Even Nicola has accepted the reality that normal life trumps masks in cafes, nightclubs, crusty separatist marches and music festivals (where people are jammed together like sardines even if they are outdoors). All of those contexts encourage close social contact with strangers over prolonged periods - to a far greater extent than those places where you do still have to wear them, like shopping centres and, in my case, for the hour or so we’re together in a large, high-ceilinged building on Sunday morning.
And yet Scotland’s infection rate is plummeting and the death rate is as low now as it was at the end of last winter’s lockdown, in March. So yes, social pressure in favour of masks is a bad thing, because all it’s likely to achieve is to engender a culture of fear and suspicion. It clearly isn’t driving down infections because masks aren’t mandated in so many places where risk is highest (and because, as you may have observed yourself, the mandate is being routinely ignored in many places anyway).
---------- Post added at 21:37 ---------- Previous post was at 21:34 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by mrmistoffelees
Not cross at all. The point i believe is salient.
The stance you’re taking appears somewhat hypocritical
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Fine, I’ll bite …
I’m curious where you think I’m being hypocritical. I’ve stated I believe continued mask mandates risk more harm than good. I’ve stated we still wear masks in Sunday worship because that’s the law. I see no conflict in those two positions. There’s nothing hypocritical about observing the law whilst arguing that law is counterproductive.