We could all use a few more micro plastics in our lungs. Fresh air is dangerous but plastic masks provide the protection that humans were missing from the past million years. Now if we could only permanently block out the sun we will be safe.
Wearing the type of mask she had on is actually a good thing. The road she was on had "dirt" on it and in that dirt could have been "human" particulates that have not been washed away...She was playing safe and I DO NOT blame her for a second of wearing a mask...when one still smells human particulates it stays with one for awhile...
Also, let's keep the "wearing of masks on topic" about human remains and cadavers anything else like the above comment is just throwing dirty water!!!!
Alsoβ¦it does the primary thing it is intended for..,to protect your mouth and mucous membrane of your nose from getting splashed with fetid water and mud.
You're absolutely right in this case. I will probably end up adding a full face respirator and various different cartridges including P100s to my emergency kits.
Note that this wouldn't stop the smell though. It MAY inhibit it, I guess, in the same way that covering your mouth with your shirt after someone has a spicy salsa diarrhea in your bathroom.
She should have been wearing an N95. The surgical mask is good for one thing and one thing only - preventing liquid particulate from leaving the face of a medical professional and entering an open cavity. That's it. It does nothing else.
I hate to say I had to force myself to watch this because of the mask wearingπ«£
We could all use a few more micro plastics in our lungs. Fresh air is dangerous but plastic masks provide the protection that humans were missing from the past million years. Now if we could only permanently block out the sun we will be safe.
I think bodies rotting under the mud is not considered fresh air.
Nope, masks donβt block smells either. Does nothing.
If you sandwich a couple of strips of toothpaste in between two masks it cuts smells down considerably.
Wearing the type of mask she had on is actually a good thing. The road she was on had "dirt" on it and in that dirt could have been "human" particulates that have not been washed away...She was playing safe and I DO NOT blame her for a second of wearing a mask...when one still smells human particulates it stays with one for awhile...
Also, let's keep the "wearing of masks on topic" about human remains and cadavers anything else like the above comment is just throwing dirty water!!!!
'nough said!!!!
Alsoβ¦it does the primary thing it is intended for..,to protect your mouth and mucous membrane of your nose from getting splashed with fetid water and mud.
You're absolutely right in this case. I will probably end up adding a full face respirator and various different cartridges including P100s to my emergency kits.
Note that this wouldn't stop the smell though. It MAY inhibit it, I guess, in the same way that covering your mouth with your shirt after someone has a spicy salsa diarrhea in your bathroom.
She should have been wearing an N95. The surgical mask is good for one thing and one thing only - preventing liquid particulate from leaving the face of a medical professional and entering an open cavity. That's it. It does nothing else.