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Masks voluntary_Amanda MacGillivray
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From: Amanda MacGillivray <myvoice@oneclickpolitics.com> <br />Sent: Friday, January 15, 2021 12:49 AM <br />To: Edwards, Erin <EEdwards@riversideca.gov> <br />Subject: [External] I URGEyou to make sure masks are voluntary, not mandatory! <br />Re: I URGEyou to make sure masks are voluntary, not mandatory! <br />Dear Council Member Edwards, <br />I am writing to urge you to do your part to make sure that mask -wearing is voluntary, not mandatory. <br />Many jurisdictions are basing their face mask policies on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention <br />(CDC). The CDC has flip-flopped its position on face coverings several times since March but is now recommending that <br />everyone wear a mask in public. This recommendation is not supported by strong empirical evidence. Though there is <br />science to support mask -wearing, there's also a preponderance of science showing that masks can cause considerable <br />harm and are ineffective in preventing the spread of coronavirus. There is also no science supporting the use of masks <br />by healthy individuals. So emergency orders that are being issued to help protect public health are actually hurting <br />individuals' physical and emotional well being — and violating their basic human rights, constitutional rights and <br />religious rights. <br />Evidence that masks reduce the transmission of viral respiratory infections within community settings is equivocal at <br />best. A recent meta-analysis (bit.ly/2VHaubd) that included nearly a dozen randomized, controlled trials and 10 <br />observational studies found that there was no clear clinical or laboratory -confirmed evidence that masks prevent <br />infection. Even the U.S. Surgeon General has noted that masks "are not effective in preventing the general public from <br />catching the coronavirus." (bit.ly/31Dgdm5) <br />In terms of harm, studies show that wearing a face covering reduces blood and tissue oxygenation — which can be <br />deadly — while increasing carbon dioxide levels. The use of masks can also increase the risk of infection and the spread <br />of viral illness (particularly cloth masks), hinder detoxification that occurs through exhalation, impair the immune <br />system, and cause a wide range of other physical and psychological issues. (bit.ly/31Epv1e). Moreover, some masks have <br />been found to contain known carcinogens, which put people at risk from inhaling toxic chemicals and having them come <br />into contact with their skin. <br />There is no science to support the use of masks by healthy individuals, and the World Health Organization backed this up <br />when it said, "WHO stands by recommendations to not wear masks if you are not sick or caring for someone who is <br />sick." Forcing healthy individuals to wear face coverings is a completely unnecessary intervention that dehumanizes <br />their interactions with others. More important, it eliminates their right to make informed decisions about what risks and <br />precautions they are willing to take. <br />It is unethical and unconstitutional to subject healthy, law-abiding citizens to measures that can result in physical and <br />emotional harm and that impinge on their ability to move freely throughout society. For those with deeply held religious <br />beliefs, mask mandates violate their ability to abide by natural law and follow their convictions to walk in faith, not fear. <br />As such, the decision to wear a mask is a highly personal one and should not be universally mandated; measures that are <br />meant to protect the community as a whole are not effective if they hurt individuals in that community. <br />1 <br />
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