I
wrote the following column for the Claremont Courier, published yesterday,
based on my recent post on the politics of wearing masks. I have heard some say that the current
protests and angst won’t lead to much real change, but maybe this toned-down
July 4th is a chance to reflect on how to make this change
happen.
IN A TIME OF PANDEMICS, AN OPPORTUNITY FOR
REBIRTH
Sometimes, it’s
the little things that count. Sometimes, the little things are what bring
joy and pleasure. That’s especially true during this pandemic and the
recent uprising over police brutality and racial inequality, as overdue and as hope-inspiring
as it is. (Did they have to happen at the same time, especially as protesting
could be dangerous, even lethal, with COVID-19 in the air?)
After an
unusually chilly early Spring (at least for me now with my neuropathy after my
spinal surgery three years ago), I have ventured out on my own in my
wheelchair. I have delighted in these independent excursions around my
neighborhood and a bit beyond (during the stay-at-home orders, we are allowed
to go out for walks).
But I have
to say that, when I forget to have my mask put on when I go out, I feel naked,
even when masks aren’t mandatory.
Perhaps it’s
weird that this is how I feel. They say we are to wear mask to protect
others, to not spread germs to others, not to protect ourselves. Not only
is it highly unlikely that I have the coronavirus, as isolated and careful as
I’ve been, I often do not encounter many people on my outings and do not get
close to those I come across.
But, as
superficial and shallow as it sounds, when I don’t wear a mask on my strolls, I
feel I’m sending the wrong message (I can hear my dad saying I was making a
statement in what I wore or with my hair). In short, and again at the risk of
sounding shallow and superficial, when I don’t wear a mask when out, I’m
reminded of President Trump, who never wears a mask when on television, saying
that those who wear a mask don’t support or like him.
This isn’t
as ridiculous as it sounds. The sad, crazy fact is that wearing a mask –
or not wearing a mask – has, as with way too many things these days, become
political. Indeed, as my dad might say, wearing or not wearing a mask is
now a statement.
It is
reported that, in general, most Democrats wear a mask when out, and most
Republicans don’t wear a mask, or don’t support wearing a mask, when out,
perhaps following their leader’s example. But this is apparently more
than a simple red state/blue state thing.
It’s also
said that men are more unlikely to wear masks, likely thinking that it’s
unmanly to do so. (I have seen families out walking, with all but the
father wearing a mask.) Furthermore, evangelical Christians are also reported
as less supportive of mask-wearing, probably with the belief that their faith
will protect or save them.
It kind of
makes sense that a man thinking he can tough it out or an evangelical Christian
believing that their faith will pull him/her through (or Heaven awaits them) or
a person like Trump, who clearly just thinks of himself, would think that
wearing a mask is stupid, wrong, humiliating, even if it protects or saves
others. This was pretty much the subliminal or not so subliminal message from
those anti-stay-at-home protesters with their guns and confederate flags and
even those gathering to have fun and a good time, despite all, in large crowds
at the beaches.
As at least
someone with a severe disability which may be an underlying condition making me
more endangered by COVID-19, I don’t want to be a part of this. I want to be
seen doing the right thing and to encourage others to do the right
thing. I want to be part of the solution, not part of the problem.
This in why I feel naked, in a bad, shameful way, when I find myself out
without a mask.
(Now, as for
the mask that I wear, I am making a statement, as my dad would say, and I
encourage others to do so as well. I currently wear a rainbow (gay pride) mask,
and I’m trying to get other cool – colorful, perhaps tye-dye or batik) –
masks. If we have to wear masks, and we probably will have to for a while,
I figure, why not have fun with them?)
But what has
been going on is far more, a bigger thing, than whether we can go for a walk in
the neighborhood and even whether we wear masks or not. And what has been
going on is not just out there on the news.
Indeed, we
Claremonters have been subject to the stay-at-home rules and mask-wearing
mandates. Furthermore, there have been COVID-19 cases here in town, and,
in this community in which small businesses and restaurants are very much a part
of its well-known identity, the shut-down and nervous reopening have been very
much felt.
And
Claremonters have been touched by the outcry against police brutality and
racial injustice in the wake of the video showing George Floyd, an unarmed
Black man, being slowly, casually crushed to death by a white Minneapolis
police officer. There have been peaceful marches in town, joining with
the many across the nation and even the world, with thousands putting
themselves in danger of contracting and spreading the virus. Even the
residents of Mount San Antonio Gardens had a march of their own in their
locked-down grounds.
What’s more,
when I drove by a demonstration nearby in Pomona, there was a sign mentioning
Irwin Landrum, a Black man, and that he was killed by Claremont police during a
traffic stop some years ago. In the wake of the fatal shootings, City officials
made some gross missteps, leading to various reforms, significant shake-ups at
City Hall (including on the City Council) and serious community discussions and
reckoning.
This has
been a remarkable, extraordinary combination of events – a pandemic that
requires us, or should require us, to stay home and is proving to be
controversial and a brutal police killing that has demanded a vociferous response
out in the streets despite what is now required to be safe. No doubt, the
country and this town have been put through the wringer in these last few
months.
Hopefully,
all this angst hasn’t been for naught. Hopefully, we’ll learn from
it. There is talk of major police reform, talk of finally making Black
lives matter, talk of providing better healthcare to all, talk of being better
prepared for the new infections that are sure to come. Hopefully, this is
all more than talk.
I can’t help
but think that it is significant that all this has been happening in the weeks
and months leading up to July 4. The holiday celebrating our nation’s birth has
been very much changed this year, thanks again to the pandemic. The
Fourth has always been an uniquely special day in Claremont, and it will be a
shadow of itself this year.
But perhaps this Fourth can
also be different in another, brighter, hopeful way. There is the
opportunity, the hope, for this Independence Day to be a rebirth of sorts.
Maybe, just maybe, we can learn from the pandemic and the civil unrest and take
this opportunity to make this community and this country a safer, healthier and
fairer place for all who are here.