Don’t Play the Mask Shame Game

Even though it feels good

Yasmin Tayag
Medium Coronavirus Blog

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Photo: Emilija Manevska/Getty Images

The ferocious surge in new coronavirus cases across the United States has thrust the importance of mask-wearing back into the spotlight. States, counties, and cities have made masks mandatory again. Doing so has increased tensions between those who support mask-wearing and those who don’t.

It isn’t correct to frame the question of whether we should be wearing masks as a debate because there’s no question that masks work. The question we’re actually debating is whether people should have to wear masks. The controversy is ideological, not scientific, and that’s why it’s so hard to manage. It doesn’t matter that masks are scientifically proven to be protective if some “knucklehead” (New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy’s words, not mine), or the president, has decided that wearing a mask is just “not for me.

Many factors underpin this divide, including the argument that mask mandates violate civil liberty and the perverse idea that wearing a mask is emasculating. Some people who don’t agree with these arguments have taken to “mask-shaming” — publicly humiliating people for their belief that they don’t have to wear a mask. While it’s clear that mask-wearing should be enforced to curb the spread of Covid-19, experts caution that doing so by shaming people may actually be counterproductive.

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Yasmin Tayag
Medium Coronavirus Blog

Editor, Medium Coronavirus Blog. Senior editor at Future Human by OneZero. Previously: science at Inverse, genetics at NYU.