Anonymous wrote:For about 3-4 months you could not buy disposable masks here. They are on the shelves now, but, pretty much everyone had already made or bought cloth masks by the time they reappeared. I have a box of disposable masks in my car in case someone forgets to bring a cloth one, but, we haven't had to use many of them. I feel safe enough in my homemade masks and am irritated AF with the disposable masks littering parking lots and streets where inconsiderate people toss them.
Yes, this is why. We were also actively discouraged from buying disposable medical masks for months, and told that doing so was selfish because medical professionals needed them. So we made masks and bought fabric masks on Etsy because that was all that was available. Many of the fabric masks have pockets for filters.
I don't love the waste produced by disposable masks (or the litter) but I do actually think we should have produced more of them and distributed them widely starting in March. I think in places where disposable masks are common, you also have better mask compliance and people view it as a normal thing to do, like clearing your table in a food court or throwing away your trash at the park. Instead, the attitude in the US is that masks are about individuals -- you are individually responsible for procuring them, they are an individual choice or fashion statement, etc.
Masks are not about individuals. It's a public health measure, like seatbelts.