Posted on 01/26/2021 6:04:27 PM PST by simpson96
A woman struck a sheriff’s deputy in St. Louis in the head with her own baton, leaving her with a concussion, after being told she could not enter a gas station without wearing a mask, according to a report.
After walking into the Shell station with her mask in hand late Christmas Day, the woman appeared to exchange words with the 59-year-old deputy, who was working security at the business, KSDK-TV reported.
Dramatic footage posted by a Twitter user shows the officer returning the favor — using the baton to pummel the woman in her car before she manages to drive off after kicking back at the cop.
Police said the woman “became belligerent” when the deputy told her she had to wear the mask before entering the station.
“My first response is to express concern for my deputy who suffered head injuries but is expected to recover,” Sheriff Vernon Betts said in a statement, according to KSDK.
“She performed admirably while injured and under duress. Secondly, this incident points to the danger law enforcement officers face every day,” Betts added.
“This individual made a serious mistake and we are working with the St. Louis Police Department to apprehend and bring charges against this attacker,” he said, adding that “this pandemic is not over and you must wear a mask when in public.”
The deputy declined medical attention when first responders arrived.
Police are on the hunt for the attacker.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Not to disagree with the main point of your post — that surgical masks and such are intended to reduce exhaled (or sneezed or coughed) virus transmission, but... Holey G’Moley. I’m a little smaller than average male in (I think) probably slightly better than average respiratory shape, mid-60’s, and I can’t blow out a candle (at least not one with a properly functioning wick) at 1 meter, much less two. I can make the flame dance pretty well at 1 meter, and a surgical mask cuts that distance relatively much as you say, but, dang! You have machined lips or something?
Well, granted, I can’t whistle worth a darn, either. (Eye roll.)
Anyway, I think the main purpose of a surgical mask is more to prevent droplets or (ahem) semi-solid material from being projected very far, as opposed to breath (even sneezed or coughed air movement) carrying “floaters”. Virions expelled are almost all going to initially be in significant droplets (or “ahem”). As I mentioned above there are vids on YouTube showing the effectiveness of masks on outgoing droplets. The surgical masks tested do well - somebody knows what they are doing. :-)
This is how you handle these jackbooted thug cops.
Thank you for such an intelligent yet understandable answer.
And thank you for such an intelligent yet understandable answer.
What happens to a virus particle after it gets stopped by a mask? Can it be inhaled? Can it get loose on a subsequent exhalation?
Do masks stop bacteria? Is a warm, moist environment good for bacterial growth?
If the virion is grabbed by an electret fiber, it is there permanently (and will degrade to harmless). This assumes one does not place the mask in a fluid or gas or strong “decharge” electric field that depolarizes the fibers, or wash it vigorously, blast it with compressed air, etc.
N95’s properly used* and handled (”mask etiquette”) will also greatly reduce bacterial loading of the wearer. Bacterial growth is not an issue with proper use.*
*The N95 mask DOES have to be sterilized after use, or replaced, as some virions will accumulate on the outer surfaces. Sanitizing of hands and anything else that might be handled that the mask comes in contact with is also essential. Since I have a vulnerable person I care for to protect, let’s say I go into a store. The procedure is (to be slightly modified if rainy, etc.) :
Sanitize hands. (Could happen at end of a prior stop.) (I use a small spray bottle.) Put bottle into pocket after making sure it was wetted too.
Credit card to be used goes in unused secure pocket.
Remove glasses. Remove “fresh” / sterilized mask from plastic bag. (I use a 1 gal. food storage bag.)
Don mask without touching inner surface. Add sterile surgical mask as dust prefilter. Replace glasses. Don baseball cap. (Hey, it’s winter!)
Exit vehicle touching left hand only to door latch / handle, right hand does not touch vehicle further at all until my return.
Acquire cart and sanitize likely to be touched surfaces. (This is more for the next user than me, since all stores around here have stopped sanitizing carts themselves. But most supply sanitizing wipes, etc.)
Get goodies. Maintain social distancing, esp. around those with no masks or improperly wearing them. Check out. Credit card used goes back in pocket, not back in wallet.
Walk to car. Sanitize hands, open car, key goes inside car 1st. Place purchases in rear of car. Sanitize any car door outer handles touched, re-sanitize hands @ same time, hop in car w/o touching anything. Remove cap & glasses. Remove masks contacting only the straps and drop in bag, seal. Re-sanitize hands. Replace glasses. Curse China and drive home.
(If multiple stops close together, leave mask on between stops. Reduces mask handling risks. May or may not reduce cursing.)
Once home, quarantine or sterilize purchases, sanitize hands etc., after handling new purchases. Sterilize masks as needed or discard. Sanitize credit card.
I probably left out a step or two. When making these trips, I just think pretty much the same way I do if fishing with catfish stink bait, except for not using gloves for COVID mitigation. It is not quite autopilot by now, but close. (Said fishing is good training - it makes this stuff almost (almost!) come naturally.
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Surgical masks must be sterilized or discarded after use. Cloth masks must be washed, sterilized, or discarded after use.
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Is it a PITA? Absolutely! Time consuming? Definitely. But if I get COVID-19, the risk of me giving it to my Mom before I realize I have it is just too great, and the odds of a bad outcome are then just too high. Plus some others I’m around would be at moderate risks (including myself.)
These mitigations reduce viral load and therefor risk of a successful infection. But they do not reduce it to zero.
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