THE NEURO-SEMANTICS
BEHIND MASKING
Behind every experience, every 
activity, every event—there are meanings and where there are meanings there are 
elicitations of neurology.  So now that the governments which forced us to wear 
masks have ended “the mask mandate,” what have we learned?  What meanings have 
we discovered?  Do masks work?  Did the masks that we were forced to wear 
actually prevented the spread of Covid?  The evidence that is now coming in 
suggests a strong negative answer.  No, they did not actually work to 
limit the spread.
A lot of the confusion was and 
still is caused by the inept way governments attempted to communicate about 
covid.  Most governments did an extremely poor job.  For one thing, they 
over-promised.  “Get the vaccine and you will not get covid.”  That proved 
false.  “Wear a mask and substantially reduce the spread of covid.”  Again, that 
proved incorrect.  Further, many governments took a very heavy-handed approach 
by punishing anyone who did not wear a mask, including firing them or jailing 
them.  Then there was the man swimming in the ocean under a sunshine sky who was 
arrested for not wearing a mask—while swimming of all 
things!
What’s ironic here in the US is 
that the first recommendation from Dr. Fauci was to stop wearing masks.  
Remember?  
“When you’re in the middle of an 
outbreak, wearing a mask might make people feel a little bit better, and it 
might even block a droplet, but it’s not providing the perfect protection that 
people think it is.”  
That’s what he said in the 
early days of the epidemic.  Then he explained further: 
“Often, there are unintended 
consequences.  People keep fiddling with the mask, and they keep touching their 
faces.” (Video of Fauci saying ‘There’s no Reason to be Walking around with a 
Mask’ Rueters, Oct. 8, 2020).
For medical questions like 
this, a UK-based non-profit organization known as Cochrane has long provided a 
major source of high quality, reputable meta-analyses.  They have published 
comprehensive meta-analyses on medical and therapeutic interventions.  The 
result:
“Our analysis confirms the effectiveness of medical 
masks and respiratory against SARS.  Disposable, cotton, or paper masks are 
not recommended.”
“Single-use 
medical masks are preferable to cloth masks, for which there is no evidence of 
protection and which might facilitate transmission of pathogens when used 
repeatedly without adequate sterilization.”  
“Wearing masks in the community probably makes little or 
no difference to the outcome of laboratory-confirmed influenza/ SARS-CoV2 
compared to not wearing masks.”
Then there is the issue about 
how to wear a mask consistently and correctly.  Studies have shown that 
“if you have properly fitted N95 masks you do have some protection.”  Yet as one 
doctor said, “Outside of hospital I have never seen a properly fitted mask.  The 
observation I’m sharing is this, if you can smell wood smoke while wearing your 
face covering of choice, you’re probably not at all protected from 
Covid.”
Accordingly, taking a mask off 
to get a drink or eat radically reduces the effectiveness of the mask and does 
so to such an extent that the mask becomes essentially worthless.  This was what 
struck me as completely ridiculous on the numerous airlines I have flown in the 
past year.  “You have to wear a mask, you can take it off when you are eating or 
drinking.  Then you have to put it back on.”  And this is a context where the 
air is conditioned and filtered so it is as “clean” as a surgery 
room!
What we have found is that what 
a mask mostly protects is you from projecting the virus into the 
area immediately around you if you have Covid.  That means that the only persons 
who should wear a mask is someone with covid!  If you have the flu, wear 
a mask.  Then a mask would warn the rest of us who to avoid.  Only in 
that way would a mask slow the spread.
One of the problems with 
wearing a mask is that it creates a false confidence.  For many people, wearing 
a mask makes them feel that they are doing something that effectively reduces 
the chance of getting the flu or covid.  But because that is not really the 
case, it’s a false confidence.  It may deceive you into thinking you are doing 
something useful.  But it may be satisfying a person’s paranoia without actually 
contributing to one’s well-being. 
              For more: https://www.city-journal.org/the-mask-of-ignorance 
 
                                                                                                     
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
ISNS Executive Director
 
No comments:
Post a Comment