Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At this point I’d assume any child still masking will mask for the rest of their lives. I do not want to socialize or spend a significant amount of time with someone masking. I would not include them. I realize that these people will say they have immune compromised family members but the truth is I never once came across a masked person pre-Covid. These same people lived perfectly normal lives pre-Covid. Now all of a sudden they feel the need to mask forever.
I guess you’ve never seen an Asian before then
I went to a college with a large Asian population, worked at a large bank in NYC and traveled frequently between NY and LA. I truly never came across people, including Asians, wearing masks.
My husband went to a Chinese prep school as a kid and he does not remember anyone wearing a mask.
If I google street photos of Tokyo in 2018, I do not see people wearing masks.
The only one odd is you boo. in Japan and china it was very common
SARS, over 20 years ago, made it common for Asian people to wear masks when in large public settings, on public transport, or when feeling any symptoms of. Your anecdotes don't change that fact.
It’s not just anecdotes. Google photos of sporting events in Asia, photos of the Tokyo metro, street photos in large Asian cities pre-Covid… I don’t see people wearing masks. Also, Asian movies and tv shows do not have people wearing masks pre-Covid. I get there are people on the internet who say Asians wore masks pre-Covid, but I simply don’t see the evidence.
My relative was treated for cancer in Japan and I asked her if she wore a mask at the hospital. She said no and doesn’t remember anything about masking.
My friend lived in Korea when her husband was stationed overseas. Does not remember any masking.
Surely if masking was common I would have seen someone masked?? I remember seeing a person masked for the first time at an international airport in December 2020. I found it odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn't really a way to participate in an indoor birthday party with a mask on. We haven't gone to one.
Huh?
Eating and drinking are kind of central to a birthday party, no? Can you do that with a mask on? lol You're a better eater than I am, perhaps.
Eating and drinking are like 15-20 minutes of the party. That’s insane to skip the party; clearly your kid isn’t still masking because your answer is nonsensical.
You are mistaken! However, I do know that COVID does not care if we are eating. So we don’t eat indoors with others.
If you kids are in person school, they are eating unmasked indoors. Be real.
If your kids are in person school, at that point, what is the drama with a party?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At this point I’d assume any child still masking will mask for the rest of their lives. I do not want to socialize or spend a significant amount of time with someone masking. I would not include them. I realize that these people will say they have immune compromised family members but the truth is I never once came across a masked person pre-Covid. These same people lived perfectly normal lives pre-Covid. Now all of a sudden they feel the need to mask forever.
I guess you’ve never seen an Asian before then
I went to a college with a large Asian population, worked at a large bank in NYC and traveled frequently between NY and LA. I truly never came across people, including Asians, wearing masks.
My husband went to a Chinese prep school as a kid and he does not remember anyone wearing a mask.
If I google street photos of Tokyo in 2018, I do not see people wearing masks.
SARS, over 20 years ago, made it common for Asian people to wear masks when in large public settings, on public transport, or when feeling any symptoms of. Your anecdotes don't change that fact.
It’s not just anecdotes. Google photos of sporting events in Asia, photos of the Tokyo metro, street photos in large Asian cities pre-Covid… I don’t see people wearing masks. Also, Asian movies and tv shows do not have people wearing masks pre-Covid. I get there are people on the internet who say Asians wore masks pre-Covid, but I simply don’t see the evidence.
My relative was treated for cancer in Japan and I asked her if she wore a mask at the hospital. She said no and doesn’t remember anything about masking.
My friend lived in Korea when her husband was stationed overseas. Does not remember any masking.
Surely if masking was common I would have seen someone masked?? I remember seeing a person masked for the first time at an international airport in December 2020. I found it odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn't really a way to participate in an indoor birthday party with a mask on. We haven't gone to one.
Huh?
Eating and drinking are kind of central to a birthday party, no? Can you do that with a mask on? lol You're a better eater than I am, perhaps.
Eating and drinking are like 15-20 minutes of the party. That’s insane to skip the party; clearly your kid isn’t still masking because your answer is nonsensical.
You are mistaken! However, I do know that COVID does not care if we are eating. So we don’t eat indoors with others.
You are covering up all your kid’s expressions at every turn. I hope it’s worth it to ya.Anonymous wrote:My DD masks at school. Yes, she masks at birthday parties. Also at play dates at someone’s house. She takes off for 5 minutes to eat a piece of cake and then puts back on. I realize she could get covid in those 5 minutes but this isn’t about perfection, it’s about mitigation. And it’s 5 minutes, not one quarter of the party. But she’s 6. Maybe they eat more slowly when they get older!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At this point I’d assume any child still masking will mask for the rest of their lives. I do not want to socialize or spend a significant amount of time with someone masking. I would not include them. I realize that these people will say they have immune compromised family members but the truth is I never once came across a masked person pre-Covid. These same people lived perfectly normal lives pre-Covid. Now all of a sudden they feel the need to mask forever.
I guess you’ve never seen an Asian before then
I went to a college with a large Asian population, worked at a large bank in NYC and traveled frequently between NY and LA. I truly never came across people, including Asians, wearing masks.
My husband went to a Chinese prep school as a kid and he does not remember anyone wearing a mask.
If I google street photos of Tokyo in 2018, I do not see people wearing masks.
SARS, over 20 years ago, made it common for Asian people to wear masks when in large public settings, on public transport, or when feeling any symptoms of. Your anecdotes don't change that fact.
It’s not just anecdotes. Google photos of sporting events in Asia, photos of the Tokyo metro, street photos in large Asian cities pre-Covid… I don’t see people wearing masks. Also, Asian movies and tv shows do not have people wearing masks pre-Covid. I get there are people on the internet who say Asians wore masks pre-Covid, but I simply don’t see the evidence.
My relative was treated for cancer in Japan and I asked her if she wore a mask at the hospital. She said no and doesn’t remember anything about masking.
My friend lived in Korea when her husband was stationed overseas. Does not remember any masking.
Surely if masking was common I would have seen someone masked?? I remember seeing a person masked for the first time at an international airport in December 2020. I found it odd.
Anonymous wrote:If you and your kid showed up wearing a mask I would immediately think you and your child were sick and likely had tested positive for covid very recently. So if you didn’t explain, yes, I would be offended that you sent your sick kid to a bday party.
But even after you explained I would immediately ask if the people in questions live with you. If the answer was no, I would just smile and say ohh ok sure np. And then immediately write you off as a drama queen and avoid you bc I wouldn’t want to listen to your medical info quoted from twitter experts
So that is the absolute truth and people telling you otherwise - yeah they are lying
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At this point I’d assume any child still masking will mask for the rest of their lives. I do not want to socialize or spend a significant amount of time with someone masking. I would not include them. I realize that these people will say they have immune compromised family members but the truth is I never once came across a masked person pre-Covid. These same people lived perfectly normal lives pre-Covid. Now all of a sudden they feel the need to mask forever.
I guess you’ve never seen an Asian before then
I went to a college with a large Asian population, worked at a large bank in NYC and traveled frequently between NY and LA. I truly never came across people, including Asians, wearing masks.
My husband went to a Chinese prep school as a kid and he does not remember anyone wearing a mask.
If I google street photos of Tokyo in 2018, I do not see people wearing masks.
SARS, over 20 years ago, made it common for Asian people to wear masks when in large public settings, on public transport, or when feeling any symptoms of. Your anecdotes don't change that fact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At this point I’d assume any child still masking will mask for the rest of their lives. I do not want to socialize or spend a significant amount of time with someone masking. I would not include them. I realize that these people will say they have immune compromised family members but the truth is I never once came across a masked person pre-Covid. These same people lived perfectly normal lives pre-Covid. Now all of a sudden they feel the need to mask forever.
I guess you’ve never seen an Asian before then
I went to a college with a large Asian population, worked at a large bank in NYC and traveled frequently between NY and LA. I truly never came across people, including Asians, wearing masks.
My husband went to a Chinese prep school as a kid and he does not remember anyone wearing a mask.
If I google street photos of Tokyo in 2018, I do not see people wearing masks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At this point I’d assume any child still masking will mask for the rest of their lives. I do not want to socialize or spend a significant amount of time with someone masking. I would not include them. I realize that these people will say they have immune compromised family members but the truth is I never once came across a masked person pre-Covid. These same people lived perfectly normal lives pre-Covid. Now all of a sudden they feel the need to mask forever.
I guess you’ve never seen an Asian before then
I went to a college with a large Asian population, worked at a large bank in NYC and traveled frequently between NY and LA. I truly never came across people, including Asians, wearing masks.
My husband went to a Chinese prep school as a kid and he does not remember anyone wearing a mask.
If I google street photos of Tokyo in 2018, I do not see people wearing masks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn't really a way to participate in an indoor birthday party with a mask on. We haven't gone to one.
Huh?
Eating and drinking are kind of central to a birthday party, no? Can you do that with a mask on? lol You're a better eater than I am, perhaps.
Eating and drinking are like 15-20 minutes of the party. That’s insane to skip the party; clearly your kid isn’t still masking because your answer is nonsensical.