"Where there is no vision, the people perish." ~ Proverbs 29:18
In many versions of that passage it says with prophetic vision people cast off restraint, but I think vision works as well on its own and is more inclusive, and perish gives a clearer image of the end result. It doesn't mean we'll all be free without a vision guiding us, but that we'll all go haywire. The proverb actually goes on to say that we'll all still be happier if we follow the law - or moral restraint - despite a lack of vision, but I'm dubious about that part of it. It can be better for everyone if we're moral, but I'm not convinced it makes us all happier. All of Proverbs 29 is about turning away from evil motives and doing the right thing, but something that jumps out to me as vital is our need for a sense of where we're headed, especially during times of chaos, even while we pretend everything is normal.
This reddit post is making the rounds. It expresses the experiences many of us are having and asks some good questions about where we go from here:
I'm not convinced it's over. Death rates are not the only marker to look at. Many mild acute cases lead to longterm illness, and there are many people disabled by this virus. We appear to be at the start of another wave based on rising hospitalization rates, and, when people hear it said with confidence that it all ended, it might convince them to drop any precautions they had been using. Well-fitting, good quality masks (N95s or KN94) worn correctly and all the time when inside public buildings do work to prevent Covid transmission. It's not that complicated to wear them "perfectly." What's the end game of sowing seeds of doubt about masks? Reducing viral load can also reduce the chances of Long Covid. We need the NYTimes' articles and podcasts to remove the stigma and end this "tribalism" by clarifying that masks work and are really no big deal to wear.
"Thanks for this, but advocating targeted protection--masking based on risk to self (over 65, etc.)--is like telling only drivers in black cars to wear seatbelts because they are in far more accidents, so they're at greater risk. *Everybody* is affected, so everyone needs to mask and wear seatbelts!"
"One-way masking substantially reduces risk of contracting Covid regardless of what others are doing--as long as your mask is high quality, like an N95 that fits snugly. (Surgical masks with gaps that let air in from the sides are not, and were never, ideal.)"
Why are your wearing a mask?
- I'm going to a costume party as a human being whose self-preservation instincts are still intact.
- It says I have to in Leviticus 13:45: Anyone with such a defiling disease must wear torn clothes, let their hair be unkempt, cover the lower part of their face and cry out, 'Unclean!' Which is why my hair looks like shit too.
- Wow, that's a really personal question; don't you think we should get to know each other better first before we start talking about medical stuff?
- To block the smell of pumpkin spice; it's everywhere.
"Men suffer the worst evils for the sake of the most alien desires. . . . It is impossible to live pleasurably . . . without living prudently and honourable and justly."
2 comments:
Anecdotal, but I have been to a fair number of concerts, plays, and movies (cause I love them), always with a respirator mask on and, far as I know (given asymptomatic cases and testing limitations), never caught Covid (or any other respiratory illness) afterward.
I'm the same way. I do pretty much everything I did before except for restaurants, but I wear a mask, and so far no Covid (as far as I know).
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