By Andy Brack, editor and publisher | You wouldn’t walk barefoot and bare-chested into a shop, especially if it had a sign on a door that said, “No shoes. No shirt. No service.” To do so would be gross and rude.
So why in the world are people getting all bent out of shape when “No mask” becomes the same kind of societal no-no? At a time when more than 1,000 people in our state are picking up coronavirus every day, not wearing a mask in public is about as smart as walking barefoot on sun-baked pavement on a 100-degree day.
No one likes wearing masks. They’re not comfortable, just as pants are uncomfortable to some people. But we don’t shop in panties or boxer shorts.
Because of the highly infectious nature of the virus through airborne transmission, health officials say wearing masks protects you from getting microscoping droplets that can infect you. But just as importantly, they keep vapor emanating from you from getting to those around you. Not only does wearing a mask protect you, but it protects others. And that’s why it helps curb its spread.
If you’re getting hot and bothered about masks taking away your constitutional rights, wake up. That’s hogwash. A mask is a temporary measure to protect people throughout our communities from contracting the virus and dying — which they are. Almost twice as many people have died in the U.S. since March as did soldiers in Vietnam in years of war.
So suck it up and mask it up, South Carolina, just like mayors and city councils are doing across the state.
“Sometimes emergency circumstances are so overwhelming we must think of ourselves as a collective first and as individuals second,” Columbia Mayor Steve Benjamin wrote in a Thursday email. “And because of the COVID-19 pandemic and its continued accelerated spread through our Midlands communities, there is no doubt or discussion that we are in such overwhelming emergency circumstances.”
Two in five cases reported in the Midlands since March have been reported in the last week, state epidemiologist Linda Bell told Columbia City Council on Tuesday.
Columbia, like Greenville, Charleston and other communities, has passed a local, temporary mask ordinance for when people are in public.
“This decision was not taken lightly by members of our city council or myself,” Benjamin wrote. “As we watched other major municipalities enact their own mandatory mask policies throughout the last few weeks, we have been in touch with our Midlands community to gain a thorough understanding of how they felt on this issue. For myself, the overwhelming response from the public has been in support of requiring everyone to wear masks to reduce the spread of the virus.”
So now it’s time for Gov. Henry McMaster to buck up and mandate statewide mask use in public places for at least four weeks to try to stop community spread of the virus. To do otherwise is the height of irresponsibility and a prescription for more cases, overwhelmed hospitals and death.
State Sen. Mia McLeod, D-Richland, emphatically called for a statewide mask mandate earlier this week.
“Our state is in a public health crisis of epic proportions,” she wrote in an open letter to McMaster. “And your refusal to mandate face masks in public is wrong. Dead wrong. We’ve long since passed our initial projections. In the last 3 months, nearly 26,000 South Carolinians have tested positive for COVID-19 and about 660 people have died because of this deadly virus….
“Now is certainly not the time for partisan politics or pandering to certain demographics. We don’t need divisive rhetoric or leaders who openly mock and deliberately defy their administrations’ own safety guidelines. Our citizens need leadership because slowing the spread of this virus is as much about leadership as it is personal responsibility.”
Yes, governor, now is the time. If we want life to return more quickly to normal, our state needs to stop taking the virus lightly and mask up now. Don’t you think it’s pretty sad that we are actually yearning for the good old days of April when there were about 1,000 cases of coronavirus for the whole month, compared to 1,000 a day now because the virus is spreading?”
- Andy Brack is editor and publisher of Statehouse Report. Have a comment? Send to: feedback@statehousereport.com.
Thank you again for another well-written article. Also, please know that you are not alone. Some others of us are thinking along the same lines. See the letters-to-the-editor in today’s (6/26) State newspaper.
Your premise is flawed, because there is actually NO state law regarding customers having to wear shirts or shoes in order to enter any establishment. Don’t believe me? I defy you to find such a statute! “Societal norms” is not the law, and they are subject to interpretation and change.
Good stuff.
Ordering masking permits social and peer pressure’s soft enforcement to get agreement on the policy expression and social behaviors we need to protect our family. The Mcmaster claim that the requirement is unenforceable is a dodge.
The absence of a clear SC state policy also establishes the opposite expectation. The absence of a coherent SC mask requirement gives license to ill-advised behaviors of casual or non-adoption of masks that we are advised to not do. The absence of a mask becomes the burden on the majority who know better and will be wearing masks. Those not wearing masks spread the disease and constitute a mortal threat. Even if we, by our exercise of an individual right can that lack of exercise is irresponsible and not reinforced. Not wearing a mask is the behavior to be sanctioned. It is rewarded by Governor McMaster.
Individual rights have a component of social obligation or duty to others as part of the social contract in their expression. The single right is never absolute as each right is constrained by the other bundle of rights. The courts settle these conflicts of inalienable rights and the other permissions established by law or ordinance. Wearing a mask no matter the current requirement is needed for the common good.