Following on yesterday's post about the need to stop wearing masks, is Eric Utter's post today at the American Thinker entitled A Nation Behind Masks. Utter starts his post by describing a mask as a device for hiding who you are. Then he writes:
Masks can’t cover up, disguise, or conceal the real, grotesque reasons why we have been forced to wear them. They can’t hide the fact that our rulers and “experts” enjoy the power they have over those they make don them. Nor can they cloak the disdain our rulers and “experts” have for us, as continually proven by their almost universal refusal to wear masks. In the very same places and situations, and at the very same times, that they mandate we wear them. How many elegant soirées have we seen at which maskless Democratic politicians are being feted by uniformly masked servants?
And that is how they think of us. As servants. This is the reverse of what was intended by the Founders. We pay them via our taxes. They are public servants. They are supposed to serve us.
Instead, they wear expensive dresses saying, “Tax the Rich.” Instead, they screw us.
And yet we genuflect to them, don our masks and treat our fellow human beings as if they are nothing more than carriers of disease, bringers of sickness and death. We shy away from social interaction and human touch. Some of our kids wear two diapers, one on their bottoms and one on their faces. Older children are now socially and emotionally stunted, their growth retarded by the masks that make it impossible to discern others’ feelings and harder to hear their words. Are they smiling or frowning?That is probably the worst of it. That everyone looks at everyone else not as a friend, a colleague, but as the potential carrier of disease. The elites are training us to hate each other the way they hate us. We can not let them do this to us. Humans are social creatures, and masks destroy social opportunities, making us less human.
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