I’ve worked in schools. This does not happen. They can take it off for lunch. They can take a breather in the bathroom. It takes only a few breaths to remove excess CO2.
Which is why you don’t die immediately when CO2 builds up in your system when you hold your breath while swimming and you immediately feel better when you come up for air.
I also have not known any school to force an N95 over some other mask.
You’re attempting to create a situation which doesn’t happen and claim that’s why we should be avoiding all masks. Anyone who is using that specific mask for that long without taking a five minute break every now and again has far bigger problems than a mask.
So... am I to conclude that you find breathing air while in a bathroom to be... dangerous? You hold your breath for the entirety of every bathroom visit? While eating lunch?
Let's not start making stuff up here. If you're worried about people breathing while eating and pooping, then you're in a far different area of concern than I'm talking about.
I am also curious, because it's entirely possible I'm missing it, but where are you getting the calculation that 3 MET can be translated directly into one hour of work? I see the CDC stuff on what it COULD mean, but not what it actually DOES mean in this study.
Also, the claim you made was very specific: that damage would set in after this amount of time. The study does not seem to indicate that these individuals were in any way damaged. Only that their blood content changed slightly. That isn't necessarily damaging, and the study doesn't indicate that it is. That's just you making that claim.
If you could support your claim that damage had occurred with a citation from this study, that would be appreciated.
I would be interested in you doing a way deeper written research analysis of the article you cited and demonstrating exactly which part of it supports the claim you just made.
I’ve worked in schools. This does not happen. They can take it off for lunch. They can take a breather in the bathroom. It takes only a few breaths to remove excess CO2.
Which is why you don’t die immediately when CO2 builds up in your system when you hold your breath while swimming and you immediately feel better when you come up for air.
I also have not known any school to force an N95 over some other mask.
You’re attempting to create a situation which doesn’t happen and claim that’s why we should be avoiding all masks. Anyone who is using that specific mask for that long without taking a five minute break every now and again has far bigger problems than a mask.
So... am I to conclude that you find breathing air while in a bathroom to be... dangerous? You hold your breath for the entirety of every bathroom visit? While eating lunch?
Let's not start making stuff up here. If you're worried about people breathing while eating and pooping, then you're in a far different area of concern than I'm talking about.
I am also curious, because it's entirely possible I'm missing it, but where are you getting the calculation that 3 MET can be translated directly into one hour of work? I see the CDC stuff on what it COULD mean, but not what it actually DOES mean in this study.
Also, the claim you made was very specific: that damage would set in after this amount of time. The study does not seem to indicate that these individuals were in any way damaged. Only that their blood content changed slightly. That isn't necessarily damaging, and the study doesn't indicate that it is. That's just you making that claim.
If you could support your claim that damage had occurred with a citation from this study, that would be appreciated.
I would be interested in you doing a way deeper written research analysis of the article you cited and demonstrating exactly which part of it supports the claim you just made.