- Joined
- Apr 25, 2014
- Messages
- 8,225
It could be argued that politicisation works both ways - it has also become difficult for people who don't wear masks to just go about their day without disapproving stares and actual verbal confrontation, regardless of the reason they are not wearing masks.Kenny, with all due respect I am a grown woman who doesn't need a lecture from you on how to post. Like it or not, mask wearing has been politicized to the point that it has become dangerous for those who choose to wear masks for health and the safety of others, as this thread so aptly demonstrates.And up is down, and black is white, and nothing makes sense anymore.
Post what you want and I shall do the same.
For example:

Mask exemptions must be clearer, rape campaigner says
Georgina Fallows is asking government to protect from harassment people who can't wear face coverings.

A rape survivor is calling for government to "educate" the public about face-covering exemptions, as England moves into a second lockdown.
Having her mouth covered still prompts traumatic flashbacks for Georgina Fallows, who was attacked some years ago.
And now, she feels re-traumatised by being verbally abused in public when she doesn't wear a mask.
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"My attacker literally pulled me off the street and raped me," Ms Fallows says.
"Having something in front of my mouth feels like his hand."
She has severe post-traumatic stress disorder and flashbacks, sometimes so extreme she has been sedated by paramedics.
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People who cannot wear a mask because of a physical or mental illness or disability are also exempt.
There is a note that can be downloaded from the government website.
But Ms Fallows is concerned it is not viewed as "official".
And when she has shown her exemption pass after being challenged, people will often not accept it.
The 30-year-old solicitor has been "screamed at" for not wearing a mask.
And one woman accused "people like me of killing her father".
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For now, though, she avoids shops and transport wherever possible for fear of being verbally abused.
"People think it's just a bit uncomfortable," wearing a mask.
But for Ms Fallows, it can be a "medical emergency", resulting in three- or four-hour flashbacks that end with her being restrained and unconscious.
And it is a problem shared by people with a range of other mental-health conditions, disabilities, autism, and Alzheimer's disease.
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A Disability Rights UK survey of 350 people uncovered reports of people fearing hate crimes and feeling like prisoners in their own homes.
Difficulties wearing face coverings particularly affect people with mental-health conditions, sensory disorders and hidden disabilities such as autism, its research suggests.
It is this sort of thing that informs my position of accepting whatever people want to do WRT masks without judgement.
A person commenting along the lines of 'they obviously should be wearing a mask' implies that one can 'tell' what someone's physical and mental health situation is from a distance without even interacting with them - which is plainly impossible.
Are some people not wearing a mask being obnoxious? Sure. But then 'disabled' people can be obnoxious too