And I know nothing about Simone Biles. . . .
Being one of the handful of Americans who isn’t an expert epidemiologist, I don’t have much to say about the merits of the Center for Disease Control’s recommendation that everyone, vaccinated or not, in most of the United States (63 percent of counties, including practically all of the most heavily populated) return to wearing masks (which magically ward off coronaviruses, even when worn loosely or without covering the nose). Instead, I leave the commentary to Rochelle Walensky, M.D., the CDC’s director:
Information from several states and other countries indicates that in rare occasions, some vaccinated people infected with the Delta variants after vaccination may be contagious and spread the virus to others. [emphasis added]
Does that sound like a really firm, much less urgent, reason why vaccinated individuals should go back to the uncomfortable, dubiously effective and sometimes unsanitary practice of covering their breathing apparatus with cloth?
Dr. Walensky would have made sense if she had continued, “These tentative findings are an additional reason why people who have put off being vaccinated should delay no longer, but they do not necessitate any change to the CDC’s guidance that those who have been vaccinated may resume their normal lives – unmasked.” It tells you much about our strange time that she didn’t.
Scheduling note: Owing to the press of other work and my aversion to letting chatter about current crises dominate my life, I anticipate posting to this blog on Wednesdays and Sundays. If the mood strikes me, I may say something on other days, but probably not very often.
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