P
puer.dei
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Well, you know, those few seconds spent putting on/taking off masks could be spent SO much better by . . . um . . . well . . .They should be wearing a mask there too. It’s not an either/or requirement.
Well, you know, those few seconds spent putting on/taking off masks could be spent SO much better by . . . um . . . well . . .They should be wearing a mask there too. It’s not an either/or requirement.
No, it’s not. It’s that Starbucks and Walmart are not enforcing the requirement because selfish people who want to be free to infect others have gotten violent when store clerks have attempted to enforce the rules.Your missing the point. Right now it is an either or requirement . Total freedom everywhere ecept at mass. That’s the point.
That’s just plain bad math and the denial of well established statistics.That is why precautions must be universal to be totally effective.
As I looked at a couple today, it occurred to me that it might be wise to excludes those too small (or ill behaved, for that matter) to we are a facemask.The reality is there’s very few children at Mass.
Maybe, but that is akin to the antivaxesrs, flat earths, and such.Maybe some of us don’t buy in to the idea that any random piece of cloth is somehow going to stop the transmission of a microscopic virus.
Did you miss the word “totally”? Perhaps I should not have used an absolute, but I do not see the issue with using 100% to achieve 0%. It would be more accurate to say that the more universal appropriate precautions are taken the more the spread of infection approaches 0.That’s just plain bad math and the denial of well established statistics.
The more widespread measures are, the faster the clampdown, and it is likely (as in “near certain”) that will survive a bit longer in places that are sloppier, but it doesn’t take anywhere close to 100%.
From my personal observations (so, take this or leave it, as you wish), a wedding is far more likely to result in an outbreak – folks gather close to one another and tend not to take the precautions that they might otherwise take, in other situations.Any wedding is unlikely to result in an outbreak
…which leads to fewer people dying.No, the precautions are not designed to prevent people from dying. The precautions are supposed to “flatten the curve” which means we slow down the R0 enough so that hospitals and health care systems are not overwhelmed by acute cases.
The problem isn’t whether you feel well, but whether you transmit the virus while you’re asymptomatic.And I will stay home if I don’t feel well.
“Shopping” and “being stationary at an hour-long event” are two completely different sorts of activities. We see the uptick in cases from folks who are being unsafe at restaurants. That’s closer to the environment at a Mass than shopping is.They should just have mass at Walmart. Hundreds of people roam freely buying garden hose, and bbq grills no problems. Safest place in the country right now when it comes to freedom.
And it’s completely inaccurate.Total freedom everywhere ecept at mass. That’s the point.
No, not at all.Did you miss the word “totally”?
“flattening” is more “putting off” than “fewer”. It’s doing things to delay cases, so that resources aren’t overwhelmed, and, (hopefully) to be better able to treat the later cases. It allows more of the available resources to apply to each early case.…which leads to fewer people dying.![]()
Right – because, if you don’t, then those who cannot receive proper care are at risk of more extreme outcomes. Like death.“flattening” is more “putting off” than “fewer”. It’s doing things to delay cases, so that resources aren’t overwhelmed, and, (hopefully) to be better able to treat the later cases. It allows more of the available resources to apply to each early case.
Not the case I’m making. The case I’m making is that flattening leads to a reduction in the number of deaths, not infections.It’s “nice” if this also results in reducing the number of cases
Hmmm. Could it be that the “bosses” of the Church care more about their “employees” than the bosses of walmart, home depot care about their staff?Your missing the point. Right now it is an either or requirement . Total freedom everywhere ecept at mass. That’s the point.
I can sit in my car and have a conversation with the lady at the drive thru window at Starbucks , or McDonald’s all day any day. But I have to jump thru all kinds of hoops to get to a scocial distant conffesion. And that was only possible in the last few weeks , for a couple months cant even get to confession.
But Starbucks, home depot, Walmart, no problem all day every day. Its ridiculous!!!
Yes. Do you speak with your mouth in your elbow too ? Because if you talk for just one minute, that’s about 1000 droplets which will stay in the air during the next 10 minutes for the others to breathe in.The article says that masks are good for droplets, which I believe I have said. They said nothing about stopping the virus in a person’s breath.
To be honest, it seems like the pastors are scared to death that they will be cited for violations and closed down. There is a story in my parish about a Christmas Mass that was shut down by zoning officials because there were too many people in attendance, so it isn’t a completely baseless fear.Hmmm. Could it be that the “bosses” of the Church care more about their “employees” than the bosses of walmart, home depot care about their staff?
While not getting into every detail that each diocese has laid out, there are two sides to this - the tactical and the strategic. Yes, hearing this confession on this day is important to this soul and this time, we do not have an unlimited supply of priests. A priest who is sick is Mass that will not be said and confessions that will not be heard for weeks. A priest who gets sick and dies, in some cases, will be a parish that is shut down. Strategically, especially with an elderly priesthood, the salvation of souls need us to protect those priests.While (in some cases) preists are not allowed to risk getting sick to save souls,
That’s happened in our diocese as well —but are you suggesting churches are exempt from the fire codes (which are the normal sources of those shutdowns)?There is a story in my parish about a Christmas Mass that was shut down by zoning officials because there were too many people in attendance, so it isn’t a completely baseless fear.