The global march of face masks: A mirror on humanity

Update: 2020-07-24 17:30 GMT

Saint-Germain-en-Laye (France): House keys, wallet or purse, mobile phone and .... oh, yes: face mask.

Reluctantly for many, but also inexorably in the face of a deadly invisible enemy, small rectangles of flimsy yet live-saving tissue have in mere months joined the list of don't-leave-home-without-them items for billions around the world.

Not since humans invented shoes or underwear has a single item of dress caught on so widely and quickly from Melbourne to Mexico City, Beijing to Bordeaux, spanning borders, cultures, generations and sexes with almost the same Earth-shaking speed as the Coronavirus that has killed more than 600,000 and infected more than 15 million. There has, perhaps, never been such a rapid and dramatic change in global human behaviour," says Jeremy Howard, co-founder of #Masks4All, a pro-mask lobbying group.

Humanity should be patting itself on the back. But rarely, also maybe never, has anything else worn by humans sparked such furious discord and politicking, most notably in the United States.

Did anyone on an American beach ever pull a gun on someone for wearing a bikini, as an unmasked man did on a masked shopper this month at a Florida Walmart?

As such, like other human habits, the mask has become a mirror on humanity. That so many people, with varying degrees of zeal, have adapted to the discomfort of masking their airways and facial expressions is powerful medicine for the belief that people are fundamentally caring, capable of sacrifice for the common good.

From Marsha Dita, a social media freelancer in Jakarta, Indonesia, comes a view succinctly put, and increasingly widely shared: "This is not the time to be selfish.

Yet also apparent from outbreaks of fierce resistance to masks, especially in democracies, is this: Plenty of people don't like being told what to do and distrust the scientific evidence that masks curb contamination.

Cries that masks muzzle freedom have been vociferously aired at rallies in the United States, Canada and, last Sunday, in London.

There, a speaker at a protest against the introduction this Friday of mandatory mask-wearing in Britain's stores argued: People die every year. This is nothing new." 

Similar News