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The Masked Face and the Public Square
Illinois Review ^ | July 8, 2020 A.D. | John F Di Leo

Posted on 07/08/2020 6:35:26 PM PDT by jfd1776

In the fall of 1951, Galaxy Science Fiction serialized one of Robert A. Heinlein’s tales, which was eventually published as The Puppet Masters. The story concerned an invasion of earth by small, flat, incredibly-fast-breeding aliens that could attach themselves to a human’s back and take over his mind completely.

Though humanity eventually eradicates the threat, the book closes with the decision that life will never be the same. Due to the risk that these creatures might return, mankind must change the way it lives.

We must forever change the way we dress and greet each other; clothing must expose the back, and greetings must include turning around to show the other person that you’re not controlled, much as the modern handshake developed from the medieval display of an open hand to show you weren’t brandishing a weapon.

Now, this was fiction. No such aliens have landed on earth, and, like some of Heinlein’s other stories, its premises may be far-fetched. A decent movie was finally made, 40 years later, starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Warner, but it omitted that final warning of societal transformation, which this writer admits was one of the most interesting aspects of the tale, though it was only mentioned briefly at the end of the book.

Today, we find the world in the grip of a pandemic, of sorts.

The coronavirus known as COVID-19, also called the CCP Virus or Wuhan Flu, because of where it first appeared, has been used as an excuse to mandate countless policy choices, from the very reasonable to the most outrageous overreactions.

It’s not fictional, and it’s not extra-terrestrial, so it should bear no resemblance to the Heinlein tale I mention... or does it?

When the virus was new on the scene – with China and Italy reporting huge contagion and fatality rates – many countries tried everything they could think of to contain its spread, while doctors and scientists dove into the challenge of finding treatments or cures.

We have seen factories shut down, the entire retail world at a standstill, restaurants barred from dine-in service, sports seasons cancelled, theatres shuttered. First for a week or two, then for a couple of months... all while those scientists and doctors found the right ways to address the challenge.

We now know much more about it than we did at the beginning. We know that the contagion and fatality rates are nowhere near what were believed at first. We know that the virus itself isn’t usually what directly causes the sicknesses, but that the virus opens up the body to other infections that are more easily treated. We know that the hospital system will not be overrun by it, so all the measures taken to avoid that particular fear can thankfully be drawn down.

And yet...

We see people continuing to demand that everyone wear masks... despite the risk to people with asthma or other breathing challenges, despite the disturbance to cultural norms, despite even the severe damage to law enforcement.

Let’s think about that a moment. In a free country, we count on a criminal justice system that can identify and remove the criminal element from our midst. This depends on facial recognition – by security cameras, by cellphone photos, by human witnesses. The wearing of masks compromises, if not completely upends, this very system.

To require a mask in a medical environment while performing surgery or dental work, or while dealing with dangerous chemicals at the workplace, such as sealing a driveway or stripping woodwork, all makes sense. These are not environments in which crimes normally occur; personal protection for certain risk outranks a need for witnesses for a crime that’s unlikely to occur.

But it’s the opposite in a retail environment or a normal workplace. Crime is likely in convenience stores and boutiques, jewelry stores and gift shops. We have security cameras in our malls, banks, and gas stations because, sadly, crime is a common occurrence. We need to be able to see people’s faces, to perform government’s fundamental obligation: the protection of free people from hostile forces.

Human interaction itself – from gatherings with friends to meetings with coworkers, from family dinners at a restaurant to the salesman-customer relationship in the store or office – depends on seeing each other’s faces. There is a good reason why sane societies have always banned face coverings from driver’s license and passport photos – a society of free people is a society of individuals. Our distinct faces are the tangible reminders that we are not like everybody else, that each one of us is a free citizen, a distinct human being, not just a part of some great voting block or ethnic demographic. The mask robs us of more than oxygen; it buries our very selves.

Similarly, the bans on large gatherings threaten to rob us of our culture. The United States is a melting pot; it was conceived as a place where everyone belongs to so many different factions, they have to learn to live together; they have to get along.

Even in the days of the Founding – when our demographics were almost homogenous (being primarily White Anglo-Saxon Protestants) - our society was designed to have multiple groupings that overlapped each other. We were Anglican, Presbyterian, Lutheran and Calvinist, we were northerners and southerners, urbanites and country folks, farmers and lawyers, distillers and shopkeepers, soldiers and sailors.

Because we belonged to so many different groups, we were forced to get along with each other. The farmer, lawyer, distiller and shopkeeper who might all have different positions on a tax bill or zoning ordinance wouldn’t see each other only at the state legislature, while arguing on the issue of the day; they would encounter each other in church or at the theater, at their civic group’s board meeting and at a ball game.

Look at the people in the stands of a ball game, or standing in line for cocktails at the intermission in a theatre. You see mechanics and lawyers, entrepreneurs and schoolteachers – old and young, wealthy and not – making small talk, chatting or arguing as equals about the relative merits of the Cubs’ batting lineup this season or the Bears’ defense or the sound quality at the theatre.

In public places, we are all equals. Individuals, distinct, and equal. This is an imperative element of the American experiment.

And to be equal individuals in public places, by definition, there must BE public places.

This brings us to the other terrifying aspect of the COVID-19 lockdowns. We have cancelled whole seasons of all forms of entertainment, from stage to stadium, from concert to state fair. We are not interacting with each other at all outside of the workplace and the family unit.

This is not tenable.

It’s not just the loss of a year’s wages for those whose careers are dependent on entertainment – the concert center staffs, the actors and musicians, the athletes and motivational speakers. It’s also the lack of human contact with strangers... the usually smooth, usually safe human contact that enables us to work together, to cooperate, to come together on Election Day without the feeling that it’s “Me vs. Them.”

Our Founding Fathers designed this system. They proved that all these different groups could get along politically because they also got along at church, at the theatre, at restaurants and in the public market. Take that away, and we can no longer expect them to get along on Election Day.

As we have seen the numbers disprove the need for massive lockdowns – as it has been demonstrated that the mask-wearing and the avoidance of public events was an overreaction – we can see society collapsing. Riots in our cities, political polarization at an unprecedented level. Can these be related? Of course they are!

We hear people talking about another year – or even two – of school being online, another year of office staffs working from home, another year without theater, church, sports, or concert tours. All to avoid an illness that is certainly real, and can in very rare instances be fatal, but is also nowhere near as contagious as originally thought, and is now treatable in almost all cases. And still they propose taking these temporary, cataclysmic changes to our society and making them permanent!

What does this mean? We’ve seen it already, a sampling of it, in the past few months: Such a change means the death of retail, the death of schooling, the death of entertainment, the death of sports, the death of conventions, the death of state fairs, the death of churches and synagogues, the death of so much more of what makes America.

Heinlein’s The Puppet Masters closed with a warning – that one brush with danger might cause society to overreact, and to change forever.

That’s what we risk today. A permanent change to our society – destructive of our health, our interpersonal relationships, our economy, our very culture.

What is America without work and play, church and school? We live for the things we do, the friends we make, the time spent together in shared experiences.

It’s not about watching a singer on television; it’s about taking a date or a spouse, or a group of friends, to go to dinner and see our favorite performers together. It’s the shared experience of watching each other laugh or cry at a comedy club or play, of watching our fellow fans cheer as our hitter hits that home run, standing up together to sing the National Anthem and Take Me Out to the Ball Game.

We are a social people; this we have always been. The United States of America cannot – and should not – try to function with masks and stay-at-home orders.

We must reopen America now, or be forever transformed for the worst.

Copyright 2020 John F. Di Leo

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based trade compliance trainer and transportation manager, writer and actor. A former county chairman of the Milwaukee County Republican Party, his columns have been run in Illinois Review since 2009.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Health/Medicine; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: covid19; facediapers; masks; pandemic; scamdemic; sciencefiction; shamdemic
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To: jfd1776

To me everybody just looks like they’re in preop


21 posted on 07/08/2020 9:53:53 PM PDT by Truthoverpower (The guv-mint you get is the Trump winning express ! Yea haw ! Trump pence II!)
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To: steve86

Now I know that you’re full of baloney.


22 posted on 07/08/2020 9:59:46 PM PDT by kiryandil (Chris Wallace: Because someone has to drive the Clown Car)
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To: kiryandil

I didn’t think you’d comprehend it.

For anyone else, preferably with a GED or above, look up “zinc ionophore”.


23 posted on 07/08/2020 10:03:17 PM PDT by steve86 (Prophecies of Maelmhaedhoc O'Morgair (Latin form: Malachy))
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To: tellw

tellw wrote:

“I am a school teacher and I am relieved to learn that face shields will be allowed instead of face masks. I think masks are both dehumanizing and less protective. I want students to be able to see my face.”

What impact have masks on teachers had on the hearing disabled students that must rely on lip-reading?


24 posted on 07/08/2020 10:03:40 PM PDT by WildHighlander57 ((WildHighlander57 returning after lurking since 2000)
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To: steve86
National Merit scholar here, child.

Plaese stop posting to me and bringing my IQ down.

I'm not interested in your bafflegab.

25 posted on 07/08/2020 10:06:39 PM PDT by kiryandil (Chris Wallace: Because someone has to drive the Clown Car)
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To: jfd1776

You should include the impact of mask wearing on severely hearing disabled folks that must rely on lip-reading.


26 posted on 07/08/2020 10:06:49 PM PDT by WildHighlander57 ((WildHighlander57 returning after lurking since 2000)
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To: kiryandil; steve86

Here...you can listen for yourself, straight from the Dr who designed the protocol...

#ZelenkoProtocol

Dr. Vladimir Zelenko Treats Covid-19 With Hydroxychloroquine & Zinc - Dose Of Dr. Drew

https://youtu.be/3ywj-PZTt4g

Dr Z explains how the HCQ is the ‘gun’ and the zinc is the ‘bullet’ that kills the virus. The azithromycin is added to prevent secondary infection....AND it also has antiviral properties, of it’s own.


27 posted on 07/08/2020 10:22:27 PM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: jfd1776

Thanks for posting!


28 posted on 07/08/2020 10:23:15 PM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: Jane Long
Thanks for that post, Jane!

Been a fan of Doc Z for a long time during the Covid.

29 posted on 07/08/2020 11:01:48 PM PDT by kiryandil (Chris Wallace: Because someone has to drive the Clown Car)
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To: jfd1776

I was waiting in line at Chipotle yesterday. In front of me were a father and mother, both very fat, and their young child. They were very careful about standing precisely on the marked spots on the floor and they gleefully pointed out the social distancing requirements to their daughter. They actually seemed very excited by the whole thing. I was laughing at them to myself when the fat mother with warts on her face turned to me and said, “Excuse me, Sir, but your mask is not entirely covering your nose.” I ignored her so she complained to the Chipotle worker, who asked me to pull it up, at which point I complied. I felt like saying to her, “Hey, bitch, I know you’re at severe risk from this because you’re grossly overweight and likely have heart problems and diabetes. Stay the hell home and let the rest of us live our lives!” I didn’t because the little girl was there. It actually sickens me that there are so many people like that in this country - and they get to vote!


30 posted on 07/09/2020 12:37:11 AM PDT by KevinB (Quite literally, whatever the Left touches it ruins.)
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To: steve86

Many deaths (before this bug ever came around) are from a virus that weakens the body’s resources and opens the door for bacterial infections...add the fact that comorbidity seems to be a huge factor and I wouldn’t be so quick to condemn the concept.


31 posted on 07/09/2020 3:14:12 AM PDT by trebb (Don't howl about illegal leeches, or Trump in general, while not donating to FR - it's hypocritical.)
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To: steve86
“We know that the virus itself isn’t usually what directly causes the sicknesses, but that the virus opens up the body to other infections that are more easily treated. “

What the hell is he talking about?

HIV?
32 posted on 07/09/2020 7:37:34 AM PDT by Svartalfiar
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To: kiryandil

I have a National Merit Scholar in the family. So thousands of erudite and peer reviewed articles are false news based on your hurt feelings?


33 posted on 07/09/2020 12:11:47 PM PDT by steve86 (Prophecies of Maelmhaedhoc O'Morgair (Latin form: Malachy))
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To: kiryandil; Jane Long
How much clearer can it be? The two particular antibiotics (not any others) help eliminate the virus. Nothing to do with coresident bacteria. Why do other antibiotics not work if it is a bacterial thing?

. There was just a subgroup of hydroxychloroquine patients that also got azithromycin in combination, there was actually only 6 patients. However, at study days 6—remember that was the primary end point that they were looking at—all 6 of those patients had cleared the virus from their nasopharyngeal sample again, so they've eradicated the virus, compared to 8 out of 14 or 57% of those who are on hydroxychloroquine alone.

That Zorrococco guy is an empiricist, not a theoretician.

34 posted on 07/09/2020 12:21:00 PM PDT by steve86 (Prophecies of Maelmhaedhoc O'Morgair (Latin form: Malachy))
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To: livius
I thought the mask-wearing addiction/fad/craze would die off as the temperature rose into the 90s and 100s, but although it has died down out here in "the sticks" (despite Nancy Pelosi's nephew's emotional rantings and protestations), face diaper-wearing remains extremely popular -- and I do mean extremely -- among the many more timid and acquescient souls who live in the SF Bay Area and in smaller college towns throughout the state who remain frightened to the point of irrationality over the Chinese germs.
35 posted on 07/09/2020 12:36:51 PM PDT by glennaro (Mask-wearing maintains the illusion of a "health crisis", but it does spread the virus/herd immunity)
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To: steve86; kiryandil; Jane Long; jfd1776
Interesting.

You start out by being a Free Republic jerk to the author of a very good opinion article.

Someone rightly calls you out for being a jerk, so then you're a jerk to him or her.

Then, that person asks you to stop posting to them, so you double and triple down on being a jerk.

I think I would advise both kiryandil and jfd1776 to hit the Abuse button on you.

BTW - The Jerk Store called.

They're all out of you. You might want to touch base with them... ;-)

36 posted on 07/09/2020 12:53:17 PM PDT by an amused spectator (Mitt Romney, Chuck Schumer's p*ssboy)
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To: Mom MD

Yes the face shield is still a physical barrier but being able to see faces is a dramatic advantage.


37 posted on 07/10/2020 5:31:01 AM PDT by tellw (ed)
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