Opinion The Mask Mandates Did Nothing. Will Any Lessons Be Learned? - The New York Times finally admits the truth

Feb. 21, 2023

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Benjamin Lowy

By Bret Stephens
Opinion Columnist

The most rigorous and comprehensive analysis of scientific studies conducted on the efficacy of masks for reducing the spread of respiratory illnesses — including Covid-19 — was published late last month. Its conclusions, said Tom Jefferson, the Oxford epidemiologist who is its lead author, were unambiguous.

“There is just no evidence that they” — masks — “make any difference,” he told the journalist Maryanne Demasi. “Full stop.”

But, wait, hold on. What about N-95 masks, as opposed to lower-quality surgical or cloth masks?

“Makes no difference — none of it,” said Jefferson.

What about the studies that initially persuaded policymakers to impose mask mandates?

“They were convinced by non-randomized studies, flawed observational studies.”

What about the utility of masks in conjunction with other preventive measures, such as hand hygiene, physical distancing or air filtration?

“There’s no evidence that many of these things make any difference.”

These observations don’t come from just anywhere. Jefferson and 11 colleagues conducted the study for Cochrane, a British nonprofit that is widely considered the gold standard for its reviews of health care data. The conclusions were based on 78 randomized controlled trials, six of them during the Covid pandemic, with a total of 610,872 participants in multiple countries. And they track what has been widely observed in the United States: States with mask mandates fared no better against Covid than those without.

No study — or study of studies — is ever perfect. Science is never absolutely settled. What’s more, the analysis does not prove that proper masks, properly worn, had no benefit at an individual level. People may have good personal reasons to wear masks, and they may have the discipline to wear them consistently. Their choices are their own.

But when it comes to the population-level benefits of masking, the verdict is in: Mask mandates were a bust. Those skeptics who were furiously mocked as cranks and occasionally censored as “misinformers” for opposing mandates were right. The mainstream experts and pundits who supported mandates were wrong. In a better world, it would behoove the latter group to acknowledge their error, along with its considerable physical, psychological, pedagogical and political costs.

Don’t count on it. In congressional testimony this month, Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called into question the Cochrane analysis’s reliance on a small number of Covid-specific randomized controlled trials and insisted that her agency’s guidance on masking in schools wouldn’t change. If she ever wonders why respect for the C.D.C. keeps falling, she could look to herself, and resign, and leave it to someone else to reorganize her agency.

That, too, probably won’t happen: We no longer live in a culture in which resignation is seen as the honorable course for public officials who fail in their jobs.

But the costs go deeper. When people say they “trust the science,” what they presumably mean is that science is rational, empirical, rigorous, receptive to new information, sensitive to competing concerns and risks. Also: humble, transparent, open to criticism, honest about what it doesn’t know, willing to admit error.

The C.D.C.’s increasingly mindless adherence to its masking guidance is none of those things. It isn’t merely undermining the trust it requires to operate as an effective public institution. It is turning itself into an unwitting accomplice to the genuine enemies of reason and science — conspiracy theorists and quack-cure peddlers — by so badly representing the values and practices that science is supposed to exemplify.

It also betrays the technocratic mind-set that has the unpleasant habit of assuming that nothing is ever wrong with the bureaucracy’s well-laid plans — provided nobody gets in its way, nobody has a dissenting point of view, everyone does exactly what it asks, and for as long as officialdom demands. This is the mentality that once believed that China provided a highly successful model for pandemic response.

Yet there was never a chance that mask mandates in the United States would get anywhere close to 100 percent compliance, or that people would or could wear masks in a way that would meaningfully reduce transmission. Part of the reason is specific to American habits and culture; part of it to constitutional limits on government power; part of it to human nature; part of it to competing social and economic necessities; part of it to the evolution of the virus itself.

But whatever the reason, mask mandates were a fool’s errand from the start. They may have created a false sense of safety — and thus permission to resume semi-normal life. They did almost nothing to advance safety itself. The Cochrane report ought to be the final nail in this particular coffin.

There’s a final lesson. The last justification for masks is that, even if they proved to be ineffective, they seemed like a relatively low-cost, intuitively effective way of doing something against the virus in the early days of the pandemic. But “do something” is not science, and it shouldn’t have been public policy. And the people who had the courage to say as much deserved to be listened to, not treated with contempt. They may not ever get the apology they deserve, but vindication ought to be enough.

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Man, slave morality is real. When the cattle cars come these people will happily and blissfully be the first ones aboard because very smart science man on TV told them to.

Those tweets are fantastic. It's all 'follow the science' until the most rigorous scientific studies give you answers that go against your carefully internalized narrative -- at which point, it's all 'fuck the science'.
 
This shit was obvious from the beginning.

I have worked in a BSL (Bio Safety Level) lab in college and it was difficult then doffing all the PPE properly as well was controlling your actions (hands mostly) not to contaminate yourself but we are to believe the vast majority of the population can do it 24/7?
 
It taught me one thing. Never trust or listen to a glowie or an 'expert' and to trust my own senses. They tend to be right more than the paid shills paid by the government.
I now have the same visceral disgust and repulsion from anyone labeled an "expert" that I once only reserved for those labeled " Senator" , and it's all thanks to the "Pandemic" showing that they are just as corrupt, as clueless, as out of touch and as vainglorious as your typical politician.

If not worse because they hide behind desks and business cards with fancy titles, glimpsed only for a few seconds at a presser and whisked away back into the bureaucratic maze just as quickly, with even LESS chance to hold them accountable for what they said than the politicians they serve.

If given any inch of importance, they claim 50 miles and rapidly substitute their own personal opinions as unassailable truth, "settled science", and seek to enforce it through law, while claiming an even higher authority than just being appointed by someone another state elected entitles it.

Namely - reality itself is whatever they say because they're somehow an "expert" on it. And when they goof up, and can't talk their way out of it, they just say it was all for your benefit in the end, and you can't hold them at fault in any way, less you "hate science".



If you see "expert(s) say" just replace it with "Official Government Cheerleader Says" - you'll be happier, saner and safer.
 
Última edición:
This shit was obvious from the beginning.

I have worked in a BSL (Bio Safety Level) lab in college and it was difficult then doffing all the PPE properly as well was controlling your actions (hands mostly) not to contaminate yourself but we are to believe the vast majority of the population can do it 24/7?
I now have the same visceral disgust and repulsion from anyone labeled an "expert" that I once only reserved for those labeled " Senator" , and it's all thanks to the "Pandemic" showing that they are just as corrupt, as clueless, as out of touch and as vainglorious as your typical politician.

If not worse because they hide unaccountably behind desks for 90% of their lives.

And when given the chance? They rapidly substitute their own personal opinions as unassailable truth and seek to enforce it through law, while claiming an even higher authority than just being elected entitles it.

Namely - reality itself.

If you see "expert(s) say" just replace it with "Official Government Cheerleader Says" - you'll be happier, saner and safer.
Like the scribes and Pharisees of the Bible, they heap heavy burdens upon other people, but will not lift a finger to practice what they preach.

I came of age in the GWOT era. The Experts™️ have been catastrophically wrong on nearly everything since I can remember.
 
Those plastic walls they made kids put on their school desks were pure clown-world. It's a comedy skit that was official policy.
 
Welcome to all studies on masking made pre 2019.
In early 2020 I was cautiously optimistic that masks might work, but when I actually looked into it it didn't actually make sense for a virus.
When the pro mask studies came out with the worst science I have seen I was 100% convinced they didn't work. I was labeled anti science and heartless by people I knew for trying to explain that.
 
Phrenology and ice pick lobotomies were one The Science too, and people who criticized them were shamed. So to answer the question presented in the title: fuck no.
 
This shit was obvious from the beginning.

I have worked in a BSL (Bio Safety Level) lab in college and it was difficult then doffing all the PPE properly as well was controlling your actions (hands mostly) not to contaminate yourself but we are to believe the vast majority of the population can do it 24/7?
It was always a joke. I remember trying to enter a restaurant, being told I couldn't come in without a mask, and then being allowed to take it off once I sat down.
 
I stopped wearing masks as soon as I no longer had too. But I have a feeling they are gonna be permanent at hospitals and doctor's offices.
And autism videogame speedrunning conventions, lol.

The one major good is that it normalized mask wearing in the US for other things like the common cold. Japan was already doing it, now it's not impossible to do in the states. Less people will do it than they should, but it's better than nothing.
 
I wouldn't be surprised if the reason that they didn't work was because the average person is too much of a retard to wear a mask properly.

Honestly, even if masks do work, they still represent the great American past time of applying non-functional quick-fixes instead of fundamentally altering one's behavior. The masks were often used as a way for someone to justify their unwillingness to behave barely any differently than they did before the pandemic, and feel like a good person for doing so. Fuck, the medical professionals even said that masks weren't going to help you if you spent an extended amount of time around other people in an enclosed space.

And that isn't even to mention some of the dumbest fucking coastal liberal elites who would apparently ostrasize people that got COVID, even though, again, no one ever said that masks were 100 percent effective.
 
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