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Title : Is he taking off the mask or putting it on? That's not like asking whether a glass is half full or half empty. Do you see why?
link : Is he taking off the mask or putting it on? That's not like asking whether a glass is half full or half empty. Do you see why?
Is he taking off the mask or putting it on? That's not like asking whether a glass is half full or half empty. Do you see why?
That's a sidebar teaser that gets you to this column by the WaPo editorial board — "What America would be like under a President Biden." The text isn't particularly interesting. We're told Biden will impose environmentalist regulations, defend Obamacare, protect "dreamers," accomplish a "project of racial healing," and rejoin the "good guys" in foreign affairs.I just want to talk about the mask. Is he taking it off, so that it symbolizes an eagerness to get us back to normal life, or is he putting it on, which would represent a more cautious approach, prioritizing safety over economic and social activity? I guess you can see it either way. The text noncommittally informs us that he would "release evidence-based national coronavirus guidance."
The photo caption says it's a picture of Biden removing the mask, but why choose that photo? Isn't Biden the one who would impose a national mask requirement? I'm not sure. The column is only telling me that he'll do what "evidence" supports... and not even that he'll do anything — he'll just "release... guidance."
But I'd like to know "What America would be like"! I see the picture and it stimulates hopefulness that we're about to rip off the masks and move forward. But I'm more of an optimist. I'd see the glass as half full, not half empty. But this legendary glass has always had a set amount of water in it and half empty or half full was always only about the observer's state of mind.
A man with the mask half on or half off is in the middle of an action that he controls. He's either in the process of getting fully into the mask or getting fully out of the mask. It's not a test of the observer's state of mind. My optimism might lead me to see him as taking off the mask, and I am actually right if that caption is true, but the issue is "What America would be like under a President Biden," and I think Biden is the candidate who wants to err on the side of shutting us down.
When it comes to coronavirus, Trump seems to be the optimist and Biden the pessimist. I'm not convinced the 2 are really that different. Differences are exaggerated in the lead-up to the election. Once the votes are counted and the outcome of the election is known, we'll get something more like a rational discussion of what to do about the pandemic. Until then, I'm not trusting any half-masked grins.
That's a sidebar teaser that gets you to this column by the WaPo editorial board — "What America would be like under a President Biden." The text isn't particularly interesting. We're told Biden will impose environmentalist regulations, defend Obamacare, protect "dreamers," accomplish a "project of racial healing," and rejoin the "good guys" in foreign affairs.
I just want to talk about the mask. Is he taking it off, so that it symbolizes an eagerness to get us back to normal life, or is he putting it on, which would represent a more cautious approach, prioritizing safety over economic and social activity? I guess you can see it either way. The text noncommittally informs us that he would "release evidence-based national coronavirus guidance."
The photo caption says it's a picture of Biden removing the mask, but why choose that photo? Isn't Biden
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the one who would impose a national mask requirement? I'm not sure. The column is only telling me that he'll do what "evidence" supports... and not even that he'll do anything — he'll just "release... guidance."
But I'd like to know "What America would be like"! I see the picture and it stimulates hopefulness that we're about to rip off the masks and move forward. But I'm more of an optimist. I'd see the glass as half full, not half empty. But this legendary glass has always had a set amount of water in it and half empty or half full was always only about the observer's state of mind.
A man with the mask half on or half off is in the middle of an action that he controls. He's either in the process of getting fully into the mask or getting fully out of the mask. It's not a test of the observer's state of mind. My optimism might lead me to see him as taking off the mask, and I am actually right if that caption is true, but the issue is "What America would be like under a President Biden," and I think Biden is the candidate who wants to err on the side of shutting us down.
When it comes to coronavirus, Trump seems to be the optimist and Biden the pessimist. I'm not convinced the 2 are really that different. Differences are exaggerated in the lead-up to the election. Once the votes are counted and the outcome of the election is known, we'll get something more like a rational discussion of what to do about the pandemic. Until then, I'm not trusting any half-masked grins.
Thus articles Is he taking off the mask or putting it on? That's not like asking whether a glass is half full or half empty. Do you see why?
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