The Strangely Unscientific Masking Of America

Authored by Jenin Younes via The American Institute for Economic Research,

I remember vividly the day, at the tail end of March, when facemasks suddenly became synonymous with morality: either one cared about the lives of others and donned a mask, or one was selfish and refused to do so. The shift occurred virtually overnight. 

Only a day or two before, I had associated this attire solely with surgeons and people living in heavily polluted regions. Now, my friends’ favorite pastime during our weekly Zoom sessions was excoriating people for running or socializing without masks in Prospect Park. I was mystified by their certitude that bits of cloth were the only thing standing between us and mass death, particularly when mere weeks prior, the message from medical experts contradicted this new doctrine.

On February 29, the U.S. surgeon general infamously tweeted:

“Seriously people – STOP BUYING MASKS. . . They are NOT effective in preventing general public from catching #Coronavirus.”

Anthony Fauci, the best-known member of the coronavirus task force, advised Americans not to wear masks around this time.

Similarly, in the earliest weeks of the pandemic, the CDC maintained that masks should be worn only by individuals who were symptomatic or caring for a sick person, a position that the WHO stood by even longer.

As rapidly as mask use became a matter of ethics, the issue transformed into a political one, exemplified by an article printed on March 27 in the New York Times, entitled “More Americans Should Probably Wear Masks for Protection.” The piece was heavy on fear-mongering and light on evidence.  While acknowledging that “[t]here is very little data showing that flat surgical masks, in particular, have a protective effect for the general public,” the author went on to argue that they “may be better than nothing,” and cited a couple of studies in which surgical masks ostensibly reduced influenza transmission rates.  

One report reached its conclusion based on observations of a “dummy head attached to a breathing simulator.”  Another analyzed use of surgical masks on people experiencing at least two symptoms of acute respiratory illness. Incidentally, not one of these studies involved cloth masks or accounted for real-world mask usage (or misusage) among lay people, and none established efficacy of widespread mask-wearing by people not exhibiting symptoms.  There was simply no evidence whatsoever that healthy people ought to wear masks when going about their lives, especially outdoors.  Yet by April, to walk the streets of Brooklyn with one’s nose and mouth exposed evoked the sort of reaction that in February would have been reserved for the appearance of a machine gun.

In short order, the politicization intensified. President Trump refused to wear a mask relatively early on, so resistance to them was equated with support for him. By the same token, Democratic politicians across the board eagerly adopted the garb; accordingly, all good liberals were wearing masks religiously by the beginning of April. Likewise, left-leaning newspapers such as the New York Times and the Washington Post unequivocally promoted mask-wearing after that March 27 article, with no real analysis or consideration of opposing views and evidence.

The speed with which mask-wearing among the general public transitioned from unheard of to a moral necessity struck me as suspicious. After all, if the science was as airtight as those around me claimed, surely masks would have been recommended by January or February, not to mention during prior infectious disease outbreaks such as the 2009 swine flu. It seemed unlikely that the scientific proof became incontrovertible sometime between late February and late March, particularly in the absence of any new evidence surfacing during that time period.

Perhaps none of this is particularly surprising in this hyper-political era. What is shocking is the scientific community’s participation in subverting evidence that does not comport with the consensus. A prime example is the Institute of Health Metrics Evaluation’s (“IHME”) rather astounding claim, published in the journal Nature-Medicine and echoed in countless articles afterward, that the lives of 130,000 people could be saved with a nationwide mask mandate.

As my colleague Phil Magness pointed out in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, the IHME model was predicated upon faulty data:  it assumed that 49% of Americans were wearing masks based on a survey conducted between April and June, while claiming that statistic represented the number of Americans wearing masks as of September 21.  In fact, by the summer, around 80% of Americans were regularly wearing them.  (Ironically, had Dr. Fauci and the Surgeon General not bungled the message in March, mask use probably would have reached much higher rates much earlier on).

This called into question the accuracy of the 130,000 figure, since many more people habitually used masks than the study presumed.

Although Magness contacted Nature-Medicine to point out the problem, after stalling for nearly two weeks, the journal declined to address it.  Needless to say, the damage had been done:  newspapers such as the New York Times undoubtedly would fail to correct the error and any retractions certainly would be placed far from the front page, where the initial article touting the IHME figure appeared. Thus, as expected, the unfounded claim that 130,000 lives could be saved with a nationwide mask-mandate continues to be repeated, including by president-elect Joe Biden and National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins.

That the science behind mask-wearing is questionable at best is further exemplified by a letter to the editor written in response to Magness’s article. Dr. Christopher Murray acknowledged that rates of mask-wearing have steadily increased, but then concluded that masks should be used because they are “our first line of defense against the pandemic” and current IHME modeling indicates that “if 95% of U.S. residents were to wear masks when leaving home, we could prevent the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans” because “masks work,” and “much deeper pain is ahead if we refuse to wear them.” 

None of this accounts for the failure of either Nature-Medicine or the IHME modelers to recognize and correct the error.  Moreover, neither the IHME modelers nor Dr. Murray provide any evidence that masks work. They assume masks are extremely effective at preventing spread of the coronavirus, and then claim that the model is correct for that reason. This sort of circular reasoning is all-too typical of those who so vociferously insist that masks are effective without going to the trouble of substantiating that contention – or differentiating what is likely a modest benefit from mask-wearing in specific indoor locations and around high-risk individuals from the media-driven tendency to depict masks as a silver bullet for stopping the virus in all circumstances.

Coverage of a recent mask study conducted in Denmark likewise epitomizes the failure of the scientific community to rigorously engage with results that do not fit the prevailing masks-as-a-panacea narrative. The first randomized and controlled study of its kind, it found an absence of empirical evidence that masks provide protection to people wearing them, although it apparently did not assess whether they prevent infection of those who encounter the wearer.  The report was covered in a New York Times article bearing the patronizing headline, “A New Study Questions Whether Masks Protect Wearers. You Need to Wear Them Anyway.”

Noting that the results “conflict with those from a number of other studies,” primarily “laboratory examinations of the particles blocked by materials of various types,” the author remarked that, therefore, this research “is not likely to alter public health recommendations in the United States.” Notably, laboratory examinations, as opposed to the Danish study, do not account for the realities of everyday mask usage by non-medical professionals.

The author then quotes Susan Ellenberg, a biostatistician at the University of Pennsylvania, who claims that the study indicates a trend: “‘in the direction of benefit’ even if the results were not statistically significant. ‘Nothing in this study suggests . . . that it is useless to wear a mask,’” according to Dr. Ellenberg.

Nor does anything in this study suggest that it is useful to wear a mask, a fact that Dr. Ellenberg (and the headline) conveniently ignores. Furthermore, if a result is statistically insignificant, it should not be used to make the case for any proposition — as even I, a layperson, know.

Scientists ought to dispassionately analyze data that contradicts their biases and assumptions, and be open to changing their beliefs accordingly. That the results of the only randomized, controlled study were and continue to be automatically discounted demonstrates that, when it comes to the subject of masks, anything approximating the scientific method has gone out the window. That is all the more evident given the lack of interest that mask proponents have shown in conducting a randomized, controlled study themselves.

An article in the Los Angeles Times went even further: it twisted the findings of the Danish study to argue, incomprehensibly, that the research demonstrated more mask-wearing is warranted.  The author cited, as supposedly compelling evidence that masks work, the low Covid-19 death rates in Singapore, Vietnam, and Taiwan.  Indeed, according to the latest YouGov poll, administered in mid-November, 83% of Americans now wear masks in public, higher rates than Vietnam (77%) and Taiwan (82%).

Furthermore, there are other explanations, apart from widespread mask usage, for the remarkably low death rates in these countries.   Some scientists believe that previous exposure to other coronaviruses in these regions may confer partial or total immunity to SARS-CoV-2. Others have speculated that obesity, environment or genetics could be the reason that Europe and the United States have substantially higher death rates than many Asian and African countries; after all, obesity is one of the most significant risk factors for severe illness.

To conclude on the basis of low death rates in several countries that masks prevent coronavirus transmission is patently absurd, illogical, and unscientific. A casual observer might also note that coronavirus cases (albeit not necessarily deaths) are rising in many parts of the world, regardless of mask mandates or rates of implementation. While not a controlled experiment, this fact at least ought to be addressed when making such sweeping claims.

Ultimately, I do not have the credentials to determine whether or not –or to what extent — masks work. But it is obvious that the issue has become so politicized that mainstream media outlets, politicians, and even scientists seize upon the slightest bit of favorable evidence, dismiss out of hand anything that conflicts with their theory, and most egregiously of all misrepresent the data, to support the conclusion that masks worn by asymptomatic people prevent coronavirus transmission.  

And masks are only one part of this story: school closures, lockdowns, and social distancing all have been dogmatically embraced as a means of controlling infection. The substantial evidence that these mechanisms are not effective, particularly beyond their duration, has been automatically rejected for too long. This is not science: it is politics, and those within the profession who have refused to examine their confirmation biases, or manipulated the evidence to score political points, are utterly unqualified for the job.

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16 Comments
Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
November 28, 2020 10:28 pm

Someone please tell me…

1) how is this constitutional?
The 1st, 8th and 9th.
2) how this is not Trump’s fault?
If I understand correctly, he is the one who enacted a state of emergency
which, evidently, gives these governors, mayors etc license to mandate
the masks.

Also, if I understand correctly, a mandate is not a law and private citizens cannot be forced to oblige a mandate.

Gen X Nomad
Gen X Nomad
November 28, 2020 10:30 pm

“It isn’t national totalitarianism, because we’re living in a global capitalist empire, which isn’t ruled by nation-states, but rather, by supranational entities and the global capitalist system itself. And thus, the cult/culture paradigm has been inverted. Instead of the cult existing as an island within the dominant culture, the cult has become the dominant culture, and those of us who have not joined the cult have become the isolated islands within it.”

The Covidian Cult

yahright
yahright
  Gen X Nomad
November 29, 2020 11:01 am

Just say no to stupidity.

TLate
TLate
November 28, 2020 10:34 pm

First! Sorry I had to do it. Another article about masks??? In some states masks are NOT required. Like Florida I think, so what is it like there??? TBPers want to know. Masks do not stop a microscopic virus, end of story. The rest is Kabuki theater for the sheeple. The vaccine looms large, do you wear a mask??? Will you take the vaccine??? Enquiring minds want to know!

yahright
yahright
  TLate
November 29, 2020 11:04 am

No mask and no to a vaccine. I question the long term plan that few talk about. The reset.
It needs fear so people will play along.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TLate
November 29, 2020 1:05 pm

You will be forced to take the vaccine. People still refuse to wrap their skills around that fact. Normalcy Bias of having a choice about certain things will not carry over about taking the vaccine. Several posts have already been made on here on how they will do this.

niebo
niebo
November 28, 2020 11:45 pm

So, my brother and I have been playing phone-tag for a week or so, and, a few hours ago, I finally got him. He sounded awful. Stuffy. Snotty. Hoarse. When i said as much, he informed me, “yeah, i tested positive yesterday.”

So, he’s the first person I KNOW who has tested positive.

Anyway, he attended a gathering on Wednesday and another on Thursday, so , depending on how his “red” (non-lockdown) state decides to pursue “con tact tracing” (illegal surveillance), he may have just splashed mud on everybody he knows, but this is what surprised me most: because he was scheduled to work yesterday and because the testing center is close to his shop, he stopped by (the place was empty aside from his boss) to tell his boss that he was out for the next ten days. Shortly after he got home, his boss called him and told him that, because they had a positive case back in May, for which they had to close for 1 (one) day to disinfect . . . the county health dept closed them down for 7 days, apparently as a PUNITIVE measure.

This business, which subcontracts for several municipal and state departments, is considered essential . . . so they were open through the initial lockdown in March/April, but, since they got 2 cases in 7 months, everybody on staff just got screwed.

And yes, he knows it’s all BS; so far he knows no one (except for the coworker in May who has since left) who has tested positive, knows no one who is sick or has been, but even red states have blue counties; can only imagine what the “penalties” might be for a non-essential biz in the same county . . . for a freaking LIE:

https://web.archive.org/web/20201126223119/https://www.jhunewsletter.com/article/2020/11/a-closer-look-at-u-s-deaths-due-to-covid-19

yahright
yahright
  niebo
November 29, 2020 11:07 am

Imagine the results from you refusing the vaccine.

Chemist46
Chemist46
November 29, 2020 7:05 am

I was trained as a chemist. A large part of my professional career was working in various parts of the filtration industry. I developed a line of mixed esters of cellulose membrane filters. Millipore type filters, that were used to sterilize flu vaccines for Merck Sharp and Dohme as well as other medical products companies. I developed respiratory protection products for Wilson Safety Products used in the mining industry. I worked for Baxter developing medical / IV filters. I have patents on three IV filters I invented. Baxter sold more than 5 million of one of those every year for most of a decade. I know a little bit about filters.
Surgical masks were not designed as filters and were not intended to be used as filters. Surgical masks were designed to be used by surgeons standing face down over an operating table holding a patient with an open wound. The surgeon wearing the mask would be able to talk to others in the room without discharging spittle droplets into the patient’s wound. Spittle droplets are large and can cause infection.
I witnessed a test of surgical masks. Small plaster particles were generated in a room. They were visible as a white dust in the air. A man was properly fitted with a surgical mask and spent a short time in the room. When he came out the mask was removed. A camera was focused on the man’s face. The entire area that had been covered by the mask was coated by the white dust. The camera showed that his nostrils and his mouth had been penetrated by the white dust. The dust particles were measured and found to be around 40 micrometers in diameter. The particles that penetrated the mask were the same diameter.
Covid-19 virus molecules are about 0.1 micrometers in diameter. That is 400 times smaller than the plaster particles that penetrated the mask.
Surgical masks will not prevent the wearer from inhaling or exhaling viruses or bacteria. They provide absolutely no protection for either the wearer or anyone nearby. They create a very dangerous false sense of security for everyone. They also force the wearer to rebreath carbon dioxide. Which will over time reduce the wearers blood oxygen level. That can become very dangerous especially for older people.
This farce is being promoted by sleazy politicians who believe that if they can convince people that they are protecting them or creating a safe environment for them by pushing this mask farce those people will re-elect them.
All politicians pushing this dangerous mask farce should be voted out of office as soon as possible.

very old white guy
very old white guy
November 29, 2020 7:56 am

Masks don’t and can’t work, a physical impossibility.

Kid Jupiter
Kid Jupiter
November 29, 2020 10:14 am

I stopped reading after “president-elect Joe Biden.”

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 29, 2020 11:07 am

Thanks AIER.

It’s always good to hear from think tanks in ultraliberal Massachusetts.

Bot
Bot
  Anonymous
November 29, 2020 5:43 pm

Chemist 46,
Just have to say, whoever it was that gave you the downvote…well, he’s probably a covidiot.
I’m in PA, am 68, don’t wear a mask, never got a flu shot, never will. Never had the flu. I maintain a healthy immune system through diet, exercise and proper supplements. Haven’t feared this virus since day 1.
Works for me.

Mangld
Mangld
November 30, 2020 11:41 pm

I have a toddler and got shamed at the doctors office at his last visit for not getting him the flu vaccine. Apparently if he gets Covid and hasn’t had the flu vaccine he could be subjected to multiple unpleasant tests so they can determine what he has.

Never mind the fact that the flu vaccine has a crazy low efficacy rate, or that kids are unlikely to have severe Covid symptoms or transmit to others, or that kids need to get sick to build strong immune systems.

No, I’m just a bad mom for refusing to get the mfing flu vaccine when we aren’t interacting with hardly anyone thanks to these draconian quarantine mandates. He can’t build his social skills or bond with family or peers because of this bullshit, but I’m the bad guy for not giving him a piss-poor vaccine.

It pisses me off that kids are going to grow up thinking masks are necessary for going outside, that they can’t hug their friends or risk getting them sick, that grandparents won’t get to know their grandkids because everyone’s so damned scared of getting covid. The economic and financial losses are already hitting us hard, but the next generation will be suckerpunched socio-emotionally thanks to this whole scam, and I’m disgusted by the entire thing.