Guess what a new mask study says?

You and I know the truth about masks, which is why we find it so annoying to see people still wearing them.

How, after all this time, can they still not know?

A brand new peer-reviewed study, published not even two weeks ago by Beny Spira in Cureus adds still more support for our position: “Correlation Between Mask Compliance and COVID-19 Outcomes in Europe.”

This sentence from the abstract says it all:

“These findings indicate that countries with high levels of mask compliance did not perform better than those with low mask usage.”

On numerous occasions lockdowns have been given credit for declines in hospitalizations and deaths, even though those metrics were already declining before the lockdowns were instituted.

This study shows that the same has been true for masks. For example, “the peak of cases in Germany’s first wave occurred in the first week of April 2020, while masks became mandatory in all of Germany’s federal states between the 20th and 29th of April, at a time when the propagation of COVID-19 was already declining.”

By the same token, existing mask mandates did not prevent further outbreaks:

“The mask mandate was still in place in the subsequent autumn-winter wave of 2020-2021, but it did not help preventing the outburst of cases and deaths in Germany that was several-fold more severe than in the first wave.”

The paper’s conclusion:

“While no cause-effect conclusions could be inferred from this observational analysis, the lack of negative correlations between mask usage and COVID-19 cases and deaths suggest that the widespread use of masks at a time when an effective intervention was most needed, i.e., during the strong 2020-2021 autumn-winter peak, was not able to reduce COVID-19 transmission.

Moreover, the moderate positive correlation between mask usage and deaths in Western Europe also suggests that the universal use of masks may have had harmful unintended consequences.

See more here: mailchi.mp/tomwoods

Bold emphasis added

Header image: news.eu

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    Greg Spinolae

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    Why get annoyed?
    I just consider it to be “Natural Selection” at work.
    ↓ O₂ → dementia, early death, ↓ reproductivity
    ↑ CO₂ → ↑ infection, ↓ immunity, early death
    inhaled fibres → ↓ lung function, ↑ lung disease, early death
    Masks on children → euthenasia of a dysfunctional gene-line.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Greg Spinolae

    |

    HaHa: “harmful ★unintended★ consequences”?
    That IS generous.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Alcheminister

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    “Masks on children → euthenasia of a dysfunctional gene-line.”

    But that’s why I take offense. You misspelled.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    itsme

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    I just ignore them, if they want to breath in thier own toxic breath – then let them
    just don’t make me wear one

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Tom O

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    The only time mask wearers bother me anymore – I feel sad that they can’t find comfort and are perpetually afraid – is when I see them driving in their cars. Reaction time IS important at that point, but come to think of it, they aren’t as dangerous – yet – as those with their cell phones in their hands. Of course, the combination of mask AND cell phone usage IS a lot scarier!

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Kevin Doyle

    |

    The simple reason masks do not stop a virus is because of the size of the particle.
    No sane person would spray paint a car or boat wearing a surgical mask.
    Surgical masks are only effective at stopping the movement of bacteria. On a relative scale, bacteria are the size of an elephant. Mask mesh are the size of a cargo net, or fishing net. Virus (viron) are the size of a mouse. Mouse walks right through net.

    Reply

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