• As Americans Shed Their Masks, Asia Largely Stays Covered Up

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 2 09:28:19 2022
    As Americans Shed Their Masks, Asia Largely Stays Covered Up
    By Miho Inada, Apr. 21, 2022, WSJ

    Chie Matsuda learned from a morning TV show here on Wednesday
    that passengers on U.S. airplanes had just been allowed to take
    off their masks. It was a moment of celebration for some
    Americans, but Ms. Matsuda didn’t like the sound of it.

    “I’d be uncomfortable if the person next to me on the plane
    was unmasked,” said the 64-year-old retiree as she ate a
    sandwich outside a Tokyo shopping mall. “We haven’t figured
    out yet how we could live with the coronavirus. At this phase,
    we’d better take a more conservative approach.”

    Pictures of maskless Americans packing sports stadiums, attending
    business meetings and now riding on airplanes look like they come
    from another planet for people in much of Asia, where masking is
    nearly universal and likely to stay that way for some time.

    Japan in particular offers a counterpart to the U.S. trend:
    Mask requests are generally voluntary, yet compliance is widespread.
    “I believe it’s a product of peer pressure,” said 22-year-old
    college student Ryo Takahashi, who was wearing a cloth mask
    Wednesday as he waited in line at a McDonald’s restaurant.
    Mr. Takahashi said he wasn’t worried much about getting infected
    because he is young and the current Omicron variant tends not to
    cause serious illness, but he said he was still wearing a mask
    so as not to stand out.

    Major U.S. airlines quickly dropped the mask mandate after a
    federal judge in Florida on Monday said a federal mandate
    exceeded the authority of the CDC. Many people responded by
    removing their masks, some in midflight as news of the ruling spread.

    Those scenes aren’t likely to be repeated in East Asia soon.
    From Thailand to South Korea, either Japanese-style social
    pressure or government mandates have kept people masked.

    In South Korea, where an Omicron wave has receded after peaking
    in March at a level that exceeded the worst U.S. outbreak,
    officials have lifted restrictions on the size of gatherings
    and business operating hours. But a mask mandate remains.

    Jeon Hae-cheol, minister of interior and safety, said Wednesday
    that the mandate might be lifted for outdoor settings in May.
    Officials said masks will have to be worn indoors for a
    considerable time. “The importance of mask-wearing remains
    formidable,” Mr. Jeon said.

    Hong Kong is set to relax social-distancing rules Thursday
    after its own Omicron wave eased, but it too is keeping its
    mask mandate in public places—even for those exercising
    outdoors. Violators are subject to a fine that is equivalent
    to more than $600.

    In Japan, mask-wearing was reasonably common even before
    Covid-19 when people had colds or allergies, and the custom
    has become ingrained in the last two years.

    Toshihiro Tajima, a 63-year-old engineer, said he planned to
    wear a mask for the rest of his life. “Given my age, I’m
    concerned, because corona won’t go extinct,” he said.

    Infection levels in Japan, South Korea and some other parts
    of Asia remain higher than in the U.S. as the Omicron BA.2
    subvariant continues spreading, although deaths and
    hospitalizations have fallen.

    Shops, restaurants and event halls in Japan ask visitors
    to keep their face coverings on except when they are eating.
    At school, students wear masks most of the time and eat lunch
    quietly. Signs are ubiquitous in train stations. For the
    moment, it doesn’t appear that people are annoyed with being
    nagged all the time.

    Koji Yoshimura, an official at the Japan Federation of
    Hire-Taxi Associations, said quarrels over mask requests
    erupted sometimes between taxi drivers and riders in the
    early days of the pandemic, when masks were in short supply,
    but “such disputes are hardly heard recently.”

    A survey in March by Planet Inc., a Tokyo data-services company,
    found that more than a third of respondents intended to keep
    wearing a mask all the time even after the coronavirus is under
    control, while half said they would wear a mask sometimes.

    In the wake of the U.S. court ruling, Japanese airlines said
    they would continue asking passengers on both domestic &
    international flights to wear face coverings onboard & at airports.

    While the rule isn’t mandatory, Tetsuya Hayano, a Japan Airlines
    spokesman, said, “we persuade passengers as much as possible” to
    wear masks. If they don’t comply, they may not be allowed to fly,
    the company’s website says. “This is to ease the concerns of other passengers,” Mr. Hayano said.

    Ms. Matsuda, the Tokyo retiree, said she was thinking of flying
    to Spain and Portugal after the pandemic dies down. After watching
    the news Wednesday, she said she might avoid U.S. carriers.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/maskless-on-planes-no-thank-you-say-many-asians-worried-about-covid-19-11650456116
    --

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon May 2 09:50:52 2022
    On Tuesday, May 3, 2022 at 12:28:20 AM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    As Americans Shed Their Masks, Asia Largely Stays Covered Up
    By Miho Inada, Apr. 21, 2022, WSJ

    Chie Matsuda learned from a morning TV show here on Wednesday
    that passengers on U.S. airplanes had just been allowed to take
    off their masks. It was a moment of celebration for some
    Americans, but Ms. Matsuda didn’t like the sound of it.

    “I’d be uncomfortable if the person next to me on the plane
    was unmasked,” said the 64-year-old retiree as she ate a
    sandwich outside a Tokyo shopping mall. “We haven’t figured
    out yet how we could live with the coronavirus. At this phase,
    we’d better take a more conservative approach.”

    Pictures of maskless Americans packing sports stadiums, attending
    business meetings and now riding on airplanes look like they come
    from another planet for people in much of Asia, where masking is
    nearly universal and likely to stay that way for some time.

    Japan in particular offers a counterpart to the U.S. trend:
    Mask requests are generally voluntary, yet compliance is widespread.
    “I believe it’s a product of peer pressure,” said 22-year-old
    college student Ryo Takahashi, who was wearing a cloth mask
    Wednesday as he waited in line at a McDonald’s restaurant.
    Mr. Takahashi said he wasn’t worried much about getting infected
    because he is young and the current Omicron variant tends not to
    cause serious illness, but he said he was still wearing a mask
    so as not to stand out.

    Major U.S. airlines quickly dropped the mask mandate after a
    federal judge in Florida on Monday said a federal mandate
    exceeded the authority of the CDC. Many people responded by
    removing their masks, some in midflight as news of the ruling spread.

    Those scenes aren’t likely to be repeated in East Asia soon.
    From Thailand to South Korea, either Japanese-style social
    pressure or government mandates have kept people masked.

    In South Korea, where an Omicron wave has receded after peaking
    in March at a level that exceeded the worst U.S. outbreak,
    officials have lifted restrictions on the size of gatherings
    and business operating hours. But a mask mandate remains.

    Jeon Hae-cheol, minister of interior and safety, said Wednesday
    that the mandate might be lifted for outdoor settings in May.
    Officials said masks will have to be worn indoors for a
    considerable time. “The importance of mask-wearing remains
    formidable,” Mr. Jeon said.

    Hong Kong is set to relax social-distancing rules Thursday
    after its own Omicron wave eased, but it too is keeping its
    mask mandate in public places—even for those exercising
    outdoors. Violators are subject to a fine that is equivalent
    to more than $600.

    In Japan, mask-wearing was reasonably common even before
    Covid-19 when people had colds or allergies, and the custom
    has become ingrained in the last two years.

    Toshihiro Tajima, a 63-year-old engineer, said he planned to
    wear a mask for the rest of his life. “Given my age, I’m
    concerned, because corona won’t go extinct,” he said.

    Infection levels in Japan, South Korea and some other parts
    of Asia remain higher than in the U.S. as the Omicron BA.2
    subvariant continues spreading, although deaths and
    hospitalizations have fallen.

    Shops, restaurants and event halls in Japan ask visitors
    to keep their face coverings on except when they are eating.
    At school, students wear masks most of the time and eat lunch
    quietly. Signs are ubiquitous in train stations. For the
    moment, it doesn’t appear that people are annoyed with being
    nagged all the time.

    Koji Yoshimura, an official at the Japan Federation of
    Hire-Taxi Associations, said quarrels over mask requests
    erupted sometimes between taxi drivers and riders in the
    early days of the pandemic, when masks were in short supply,
    but “such disputes are hardly heard recently.”

    A survey in March by Planet Inc., a Tokyo data-services company,
    found that more than a third of respondents intended to keep
    wearing a mask all the time even after the coronavirus is under
    control, while half said they would wear a mask sometimes.

    In the wake of the U.S. court ruling, Japanese airlines said
    they would continue asking passengers on both domestic &
    international flights to wear face coverings onboard & at airports.

    While the rule isn’t mandatory, Tetsuya Hayano, a Japan Airlines spokesman, said, “we persuade passengers as much as possible” to
    wear masks. If they don’t comply, they may not be allowed to fly,
    the company’s website says. “This is to ease the concerns of other passengers,” Mr. Hayano said.

    Ms. Matsuda, the Tokyo retiree, said she was thinking of flying
    to Spain and Portugal after the pandemic dies down. After watching
    the news Wednesday, she said she might avoid U.S. carriers.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/maskless-on-planes-no-thank-you-say-many-asians-worried-about-covid-19-11650456116
    --

    It is unsafe in the confined of the plane not to put on a mask to protect others from their infection, if any. Americans like to think about themselves and not think about others.

    They should know that their wearing of a mask is to protect from their own infection and not to protect the other persons from infecting them. If a person removes their mask, they are at risk of being infected from other unmasked persons, too.

    Hence, wearing a mask in a confined space in the plane should be the first line of defense for any person inside the plane. They can unmask or remove their mast when they are in the open air environment where if they kept with the gap of a distancing,
    there is no need to worry of infection.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)