They don't even have proof that the virus exists. They must have been using legitimate pcr tests which haven't been jacked up to over 30 cycles on "asymptomatic" people, in other words they tested people who haven't caught a cold, and well no shit there is nothing.
The people who argue for mandatory masking know this and don't care, they are well past the point where holding self contradictory viewpoints is a problem for them.
Send them a study that shows that 10 out of 10 government officials and media outlets say they won't catch COVID if they take their mask off for 5 minutes to let their bare faces feel sunlight and MAYBE they'll listen, but they're probably so used to hiding in shame that they can't bring themselves to do even that.
If you have a 0.7% chance of transmitting to people you live with, I imagine asymptomatic transmission in brief public interactions would be fairly negligible.
When I’ve told people that asymptomatic spread was never proven (now deboonked) they didn’t believe me. Will they believe me now? Probably not.
They don't even have proof that the virus exists. They must have been using legitimate pcr tests which haven't been jacked up to over 30 cycles on "asymptomatic" people, in other words they tested people who haven't caught a cold, and well no shit there is nothing.
One thing to keep in mind here: this is assuming we trust the data coming out of wuhan from China.
The people who argue for mandatory masking know this and don't care, they are well past the point where holding self contradictory viewpoints is a problem for them.
Send them a study that shows that 10 out of 10 government officials and media outlets say they won't catch COVID if they take their mask off for 5 minutes to let their bare faces feel sunlight and MAYBE they'll listen, but they're probably so used to hiding in shame that they can't bring themselves to do even that.
Seems to corroborate what this review found, showing about a 0.7% chance of asymptomatic transmission while living in the same household: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2774102
If you have a 0.7% chance of transmitting to people you live with, I imagine asymptomatic transmission in brief public interactions would be fairly negligible.