Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kentuckyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:alot of parents in my area have simply stopped making their kids wear mask to school despite the mandates so non compliance is an option.
Where do you live that ALOT of people are getting away with this?
Most of us live in the DMV.
Shocking.
Kentucky is a festering boil on the a$$ of America.
You fell right into the troll trap….they want an excuse to complain about coastal elites…
Anonymous wrote:kentuckyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:alot of parents in my area have simply stopped making their kids wear mask to school despite the mandates so non compliance is an option.
Where do you live that ALOT of people are getting away with this?
Most of us live in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
^ Point is: you can fulfill BOTH comfort and safety requirements by getting a KF94 sized for kids, or similar.
Wearing a gauze mask clearly signals your rebellion against mask rules, and that you actively want to spread this supposedly innocuous virus.
BTW - schools always said masks would be worn for this coming year. Factoring in the news about the Delta variant, I wonder why you're acting so surprised and disappointed.
sorry, we are shopping 100% for comfort here at our house. i am going to buy the lightest, thinnest, masks I can find.
I think making a kid wear an N95 mask all day is child abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kentuckyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:alot of parents in my area have simply stopped making their kids wear mask to school despite the mandates so non compliance is an option.
Where do you live that ALOT of people are getting away with this?
Most of us live in the DMV.
Shocking.
Kentucky is a festering boil on the a$$ of America.
Anonymous wrote:You can make some out of cheesecloths OP. You can also order the cheesecloth ones off etsy but they are a little $$$.
Anonymous wrote:kentuckyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:alot of parents in my area have simply stopped making their kids wear mask to school despite the mandates so non compliance is an option.
Where do you live that ALOT of people are getting away with this?
Most of us live in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
^ Point is: you can fulfill BOTH comfort and safety requirements by getting a KF94 sized for kids, or similar.
Wearing a gauze mask clearly signals your rebellion against mask rules, and that you actively want to spread this supposedly innocuous virus.
BTW - schools always said masks would be worn for this coming year. Factoring in the news about the Delta variant, I wonder why you're acting so surprised and disappointed.
sorry, we are shopping 100% for comfort here at our house. i am going to buy the lightest, thinnest, masks I can find. I think making a kid wear an N95 mask all day is child abuse.
kentuckyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:alot of parents in my area have simply stopped making their kids wear mask to school despite the mandates so non compliance is an option.
Where do you live that ALOT of people are getting away with this?
Most of us live in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:alot of parents in my area have simply stopped making their kids wear mask to school despite the mandates so non compliance is an option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as case numbers remain low I plan to send my kid in a cotton muslin mask.
If we head up out of the CDC blue or hospitalizations spike or something I will go back to our regular multi layer masks.
The teachers at our school are vaccinated (they all told classes so proudly as they got the shot) and my kids are low risk.
You are really selfish. How about the other kids in the school not vaccinated? Their health doesn't matter because you want to pretend your kid are low risk. If you kids are in person, seeing friends and family they are high risk. And, you high risk behavior puts our kids at high risk. Wearing a good mask is the least you can do to keep all our kids safe.
On the contrary… check out the CDCs website regarding transmission rates in kids. They carry such a small viral load that they are not responsible for passing it to another person. Maybe do your research before making a fool of yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as case numbers remain low I plan to send my kid in a cotton muslin mask.
If we head up out of the CDC blue or hospitalizations spike or something I will go back to our regular multi layer masks.
The teachers at our school are vaccinated (they all told classes so proudly as they got the shot) and my kids are low risk.
You are really selfish. How about the other kids in the school not vaccinated? Their health doesn't matter because you want to pretend your kid are low risk. If you kids are in person, seeing friends and family they are high risk. And, you high risk behavior puts our kids at high risk. Wearing a good mask is the least you can do to keep all our kids safe.
On the contrary… check out the CDCs website regarding transmission rates in kids. They carry such a small viral load that they are not responsible for passing it to another person. Maybe do your research before making a fool of yourself.