How to spot the falang!
How to spot the falang!
To be honest I am quite shocked by the number of farang walking the streets of Pattaya with no mask on at all, or with the mask hanging off their faces. I don't understand why the police are not fining them the 20,000 Baht that Chonburi province has stated for failure to wear a mask.
The problem with such public health orders is that they have to be “broad brush” to cater for the basically stupid (ie. 50%+ of the population). Masks don’t serve much purpose if you’re by yourself in the open air. This is a virus caught by extended contact in confined areas, and that’s where masks are of most benefit. But that’s generally too subtle an option to form the basis of a public health ruling for most people.
I like underwear worn like that in go go bars.
Usually with more visible excitement.
I do wish I could find these on the local mask market.
I wonder where you get the fact that "this is a virus caught by EXTENDED contact in confined areas ..." I'd like to see your source please. I have always been informed that inhaling just one droplet from an infected person is enough to give you the virus.
Those not wearing masks are endangering not just their own health but that of others should they have somehow caught the virus but not yet show symptoms.
Patanawet (January 19th, 2021)
You're confusing two different things - "how the virus is caught" with "probability of catching the virus"
Try some technical reading such as https://www.bmj.com/content/370/bmj.m3223
No I am not! As for your BMJ article, given the disastrous rates of infection and death in that country, I would not place much emphasis on an incredibly long article that is almost 5 months old. And if you are not prepared to quote specifically from it, then I am not going to waste a great deal of time reading it.
A January 5 report from the CDC in British Columbia states " Droplets come in a wide range of sizes, from smaller than the width of a hair to larger than a grain of sand. A few large droplets or many small droplets can contain enough virus to infect another person." This guideline is common in the advice of many countries' Disease Control Centres.
Patanawet (January 19th, 2021), StevieWonders (January 18th, 2021)
Patanawet (January 19th, 2021)