Combat soldiers wear masks. You? Who is the Wuss? You?



“You are risking your life and that of others if you only covering your face with a flimsy piece of cloth or nothing. Get real. Join the the tough guys and wear a proper N95 mask and wear it like a pro if you are away from your home,” says Beverley Baldock, a soldier in Syria fighting for our side.

If you learn how to properly wear a mask you can prevent 95% of all airborne pathogens from entering your respiratory system. Mixed with the other precautions you will learn here, and doing them properly, you can assure yourself 100% you will never get an infectious respiratory disease.


by Sharon Santiago (while wearing an N95 mask)


Frontliners (Heroes) wear masks. (A combat arms soldier is a frontliner.)

Stop disrespecting them and wear an N95 mask. If you do not have one, stay home and make one. Three pieces of different weave cloth materials are the minimum requirement.

Some people, even politicians and other leaders, have told stupid lies about wearing masks.

For one, the habit of properly wearing masks is not just for seniors. A huge percentage of our older seniors, those most vulnerable because of comorbid underlying health issues are already dead.

“They are among the more than two million people, including the yet-unreported deaths, who directly or indirectly have already died from COVID-19 disease,” says Fred Harris who is a biostatistician who studies and reports on the progress of the COVID-19 Pandemic.


Those older seniors are dead now. SARS2 killed the easiest, most vulnerable  first. Who is next? The novel-coronavirus is not stopping.



The truth: The mask should be worn in conjunction with constant hand hygiene, avoiding hand-to-face contact, social distancing 2 to 5 meters, and staying at home as much as possible. This recipe for safety is indicated for most people, not just seniors.

Here is the 1860-N95 which works for street-wear: read  1860S N95 Particulate Respirator Spec Sheet

Here are some pictures taken of some of all of our hero friends by some of all of our hero friends, frontliners all.

Feminine-Perspective Magazine

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

Kuwait 07.15.2020

Photo by Staff Sgt. Luke Wilson, U.S. Army Central
Spc. Zachary Fossum, a military working dog handler with the 16th Military Police Brigade, Fort Bragg, NC, and Capt. Jon Drake, officer in charge of Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, Veterinary Services with the 994th MDVSS (Medical Detachment Veterinary Services Support), assist Maj. Tiffany Kimbrell, a veterinary surgeon with the 994th MDVS, during a video call to Iraq for a virtual check-up, on July 15, 2020. This telemedical check-up is the first of its kind for veterinary services between separate bases in a deployed environment opening new windows to better assist deployed personnel. (Photo by US Army Reserve Staff Sgt. Luke Wilson) Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine]

Feminine-Perspective Magazine

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

Winners wear masks in Diego Garcia 07.17.2020

Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Carlos Hopper, U.S. Navy Support Facility Diego Garcia
British service members pose for a photo with Captain Blake Tornga, commanding officer onboard U.S. Navy Support Facility Diego Garcia after winning Captain’s Cup on Diego Garcia July 17, 2020. U.S. Navy Support Facility Diego Garcia hosts a monthly Captain’s Cup competition to bring together tenant commands and their British partners.

NSF Diego Garcia provides logistic, service, recreational and administrative support to U.S. and Allied Forces forward deployed to the Indian Ocean and Arabian Gulf. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Carlos W. Hopper/ released. Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine]

Feminine-Perspective Magazine

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

Georgetown, Delaware USA 07.16.2020

Photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie Delaware National Guard Public Affairs
U.S. Army Spc. Benedicta Kyeremeh, an electrician with the Delaware Army National Guard’s 160th Engineer Company, directs traffic at a drive-thru testing site for COVID-19 at Delaware Technical Community College in Georgetown, Delaware, July 16, 2020.

About 25 soldiers and airmen of the National Guard supported saliva-based testing for 1,035 people at the location. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie) — Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine]

Always wear an N95 mask. 3 layers of different weave cloth is a minimum alternative.

  1. You protect yourself from a lot of particulate matter plus the moisture droplets from the sneezing man who just bumped you. (COVID-19, cold and flu viruses and various bacteria and even some parasites in moisture droplets expelled from one person can infect another person within a meter and sometimes more. Try keeping 20 cm of separation from other people in a Manila Jeepney, let alone a meter. Hmmm? You can’t.Wear the best possible mask you can afford. Learn how to wear and reuse that good mask.)
  2. You send a protest message to everyone who sees you that you are conscious of exhaust gases from factories, cars and other fossil fuel burners and that you do not wish to breathe over 12µg/m³ of toxic particulate.
  3. In most cities of the world, your life expectancy will be longer with healthier enjoyment. See the report: World-air-quality-Report.
  4. In most cities of the world you will join many climate-conscious people.
  5. The argument that a citizen wearing a respirator takes one from a health care worker is a lie and an epic failure of governments. What protecting ones respiratory system takes away from health care workers is a desperately sick patient.
  6. Readers are encouraged to choose wisely and buy their respirator masks then learn how to fit test and use them.
  7. The demand for product will drive a bigger market. 3M and Kimberley-Clark both say they are always at user’s service and produce ample instructional material.
  8. This is the way of the future. Protect your respiratory system from pollution and more and more viruses as climate control and habitat encroachment forces pathogens to find new mammal hosts. That is the honest truth and best advice for the ordinary person.

From February 6, 2020, Yes. Wear a mask. Wear a NIOSH N95

SITKA, AK, UNITED STATES 07.17.2020 Courtesy Photo U.S. Coast Guard District 17 Subscribe33 Capt. Michael Frawley (left), Capt. Gregory T. Fuller (middle), 17th Coast Guard District Chief of Staff, and Cmdr. Brian McLaughlin (right) pose for a photo during a change of command ceremony held at Coast Guard Air Station Sitka, Alaska, July 17, 2020. McLaughlin relieved Frawley as commanding officer of Air Station Sitka. U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo.

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

Sitka, Alaska, USA 07.17.2020

U.S. Coast Guard District 17 wears masks.
Capt. Michael Frawley (left), Capt. Gregory T. Fuller (middle), 17th Coast Guard District Chief of Staff, and Cmdr. Brian McLaughlin (right) pose for a photo during a change of command ceremony held at Coast Guard Air Station Sitka, Alaska, July 17, 2020. McLaughlin relieved Frawley as commanding officer of Air Station Sitka. U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo USCG. — Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine]

Feminine-Perspective Magazine

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

Naval Base Guam, Guam 04.10.2020

Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Christopher Liaghat
USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) (now home in San Diego)
200410-N-CH038-2029 APRA, Guam (April 10, 2020)
Lt. Cmdr. Adam Cowan, administration officer for the “Gray Wolves” of Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 142, is wearing a mask. He manages the movement of Sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) across Guam from the ship’s Emergency Command Center (ECC) April 10, 2020.

Upon arriving in Guam 27 March, Theodore Roosevelt established an ECC, initiated a roving and deep cleaning team, and continually educated the crew on social distancing and proper protective procedures and behaviors, to assist the crew in mitigating and controlling the spread of COVID. Theodore Roosevelt was then in Guam for a scheduled port visit for resupply and crew rest during their scheduled deployment to the Indo-Pacific. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Chris Liaghat) — Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine]

The best politicians and their many friends and supporters in America wear masks.

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

The best politicians in America are women. Even beautiful politicians like Gretchen Whitmer wear masks.

They and their many friends and supporters in America wear masks. Look. In May 2020, Governor Whitmer signed Executive Order 2020-91 requiring businesses to adhere to strict safety guidelines to protect workers, patrons and their communities from infection. Right now, retailers and restaurants are open as part of phase 4 of the governor’s MI Safe Start Plan. They are wearing masks. Photo Credit: Official Photo Office of the Governor of Michigan — Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine]

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask. Canadian Medical Practitioner demonstrates handwashing technique in a jungle clinic.


Watch: Pretty Asian Nurses Demonstrate How to Do It. (Will you watch and learn how to do it, NOW? It’s good for children too.)

 

Yes, humanitarians and mask wearers also include the Number One Google Search Terms:Pretty Asian Nurses Demonstrate How to Do It

 

The RINJ Foundation

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.


The RINJ Foundation says its mission is fighting for the safety of women and children.  The global civil society women’s group is asking everyone to wear a mask and join the fight for the safety of children and their families around the world. Photo  by Melissa Hemingway Courtesy: RINJ.


Feminine-Perspective MagazineFrontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

6 February 2020 GMT

Li Wenliang, 34, was declared dead from coronavirus on 6 February (GMT), after emergency treatment at a hospital in Wuhan.

“He was a hero and friend of some of our workers,” says nurse Kathy Poon with The Nurses Without Borders who has since relocated to Taiwan.

Dr. Li was a hero,
a whistleblower who took note of a local outbreak of a novel coronavirus in Wuhan, Hubei province in China.

Also From February 6, 2020: Yes. Wear a mask. Wear a NIOSH N95

Feminine-Perspective Magazine


Yes, children too must wear masks.


Students from the Peltier Aerosol lab at the University of Massachusetts are wearing the types of masks tested. From left: a paper surgical mask, two American-made N-95 masks, two of the most common types of washable cloth masks, and a face-fitting cloth mask with exhalation vents.


University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Photo Credit: Richard Peltier—Photo Art/Cropping: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective Magazine


 

Hand Washing is a big part of fighting the SARS-CoV-2 says the World Health Organization

“So too is Vaccination. Please upkeep all vaccinations for yourself and your family during this new pandemic,” says Michele Francis who operates 3 clinics and a small hospital in Venezuela.

Hand Sanitizer Procedure Courtesy The Nurses Without Borders

1. Apply enough sanitizer to completely cover both hands.
2. Rub hands together, palm to palm.
3. Rub back of each hand with palm of other hand.
4. Spread sanitizer over and under fingernails
5. Spread sanitizer between fingers
6. Keep rubbing hands together until they are dry. Do not dry
with a towel

Read: Vaccinate! A 2020 View on Health Threats and an in-depth Healthy Women and Families Feature

Please help cure the ignorance about immunization. AntiVaxxers are a serious threat to global health.  Please share this information.

Endemic smallpox, polio, measles, pertussis & rubella are vaccine-preventable disease only if all humans maintain the resistance. Some disease are spreading because of never-established or waning immunity. That's the case for universal immunization and keeping the human race alive.


Text in Image: Endemic smallpox, polio, measles, pertussis & rubella are vaccine-preventable disease only if all humans maintain the resistance. Some disease are spreading because of never-established or waning immunity. That’s the case for universal immunization and keeping the human race alive. Photo Credit: Melissa Hemingway/Feminine-Perspective Magazine


 

Wearing a medical mask does not take one away from a frontliner it keeps you off their dying patient list.


This model says she has a three-year-old brother “who always wears a fit-tested Kimberley-Clark high quality, heavy fluid safe NIOSH N95 mask. He wears this all day long when out with his family.”  … One of many types of medical masks.

COVID-19 is a respiratory illness hence one must protect their respiratory system. Wear a NIOSH N95 mask outside your home & near anyone in your home who has symptoms or who is quarantined.

This is true for all humans without exception. Learn to fit check & wear these masks. It’s your future. Wearing a medical mask does not take one away from a frontliner it keeps you off their dying patient list. Photo Credit: Melissa Hemingway.


Some people wear a mask to protect themselves, protect others while at the same time show endless compassion for their fellow humans.

Frontliners wear masks. Protect them as they protect you by wearing your mask.

Some people wear a mask to protect themselves, protect others while at the same time show their endless compassion for the safety of children and their families. FPMag suggests a more selfish reason: STAY ALIVE—WEAR AN N95 MASK or REASONABLE FACSIMILE]

The leader of the Philippines would shoot to kill citizens who refuse to wear a mask and make trouble.

The leader of the Philippines would shoot to kill citizens who refuse to where a mask and make trouble. His officers have done exactly that. His argument is that by not wearing a mask, a person is a POTENTIAL lethal threat to anyone near them.

This model has a three-year-old brother who always wears a fit-tested Kimberley-Clark high quality, heavy fluid safe NIOSH N95 mask.

This type of mask protects against the area contamination by the wearer of the air and objects around the wearer. It protects other people.

This is the least you can do but FPM.news research sources suggests that all readers should learn to wear an N95 mask that protects you from particles of the size of .3 microns and less.

That is what the future holds. Today the number of toxic particles in the air in some places even outweighs COVID-19.  The future is not a vision of clean air. The present day air we breathe is already toxic.

Add the SARS2-CoV-19 virus and a person looks crazy to be outside their home unmasked.

Next thing you know, the unmasked rogue has breathed near a baby who then becomes extremely sick with COVID-19?

Feminine-Perspective Magazine

It is true. Somebody didn’t wear a mask and the baby became very sick with COVID-19. Please protect yourself with an N95 mask and at the same time contribute to the safety of children and their families.

Look: These people do not agree with each other about any thing but one! Wearing a mask. Watch. It’s a sad story but the one thing all these angry people have in common is wearing a mask and fighting COVID-19.


 

Additional science-based reading.

From:

“Following the emergence of the novel respiratory virus SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), many environmental health experts quickly identified the potentially disastrous public health ramifications of concurrent infectious and air pollution-mediated disease [1].

“However, much of this discussion has focused on the outdoors. Annually, 3.8 million people worldwide prematurely die from illnesses attributable to household air pollution [2].

“In the United States, radon, a major indoor air pollutant, is the second leading cause of lung cancer and is responsible for 15,000–20,000 deaths each year [3].

“Although stay-at-home orders and remote working/learning have increased the relevance of home indoor exposures to all persons, there are still certain vulnerable populations that bear a disparate burden of avoiding the virus outdoors and being exposed to nontrivial pollutants indoors.

“These populations include children, the elderly, individuals with preexisting conditions, Native American tribal nations, and households of low socioeconomic status—particularly those in multifamily buildings [4,5,6,7].

“To be explicit, this is not a call for ignoring social distancing and other public health orders.

“Rather, similar to efforts drawing attention to increases in domestic abuse and the mental health consequences of isolation [89], it is an opportunity to name poor household indoor air quality as a long-standing public health issue with increased relevance during the present pandemic.”