I wrote a post last year about some of the things my students (I’m a teacher) and colleagues said to me as the only COVID conscious person in our building. One of my students told me, “Y’all still acting like it’s COVID,” because I mask and follow basic hygiene. I made a comment on another post last night that was similar, so I thought I’d do it again.

When I tell my students how I don’t want to get COVID or other illnesses and they look at me like I have two heads. It’s like COVID has destroyed basic hygiene knowledge. So this time around, I’ve decided to write down some of the things I have said to students and staff so far this school year.

To a student, “Cover your mouth with your shirt or a tissue when you cough. No, not like that. You have to catch the germs. Yes, you actually have to trap them.”

To a teacher, “Yeah I noticed a bunch of your class is sick too. Just saying, nothing’s stopping you from masking again. There’s not just effective against COVID. I’ve got extras.”

To a student, “Take it out of your mouth. See, now there’s spit on your pencil. And you use your hand to write with that pencil. And you’re touching the tables where your friends sit. Do you think they want your spit on them?”

To a teacher, “I don’t think they’re faking it. If a kid feels sick I make a nurse appointment for them. They’re not going to be effective learners if their body needs rest.”

To a student, “You’re right, I did get COVID last year even though I mask all the time. I would have probably gotten it a lot more if I didn’t. Where do you think I got it from? My house?”

To the principal, “Thanks, we practice hygiene a lot in my room. It’s not that hard. You just have to model how to do these things for them. I honestly think we should have a hygiene clinic/assembly at least at the beginning of the year.”

To a student, “Okay why in the world is your used tissue lying on your worksheet rather than in the trashcan? Yes, you have to do it again. I’m not grading your snot.”

To a special education teacher, “I know some of my students on your case load need fidgets and other manipulatives. I don’t want to step on your toes, but maybe these chew toy things aren’t the best choice for this student who struggles with motor function anyway. He’s literally covered in saliva by 10am.”

To a student, “You still have to wash your hands after using the free-draw markers. 20 seconds. Warm water. Soap. Get your finger nails.”

To a teacher, “They’ve been empty for weeks? The custodians have thousands of refills for the soap and hand sanitizer dispensers. Just ask them for a few boxes at a time and change them as needed. You don’t have to just live with them being empty.”

To a student, “Hand sanitizer doesn’t clean off your hands. You literally just rubbed snot all over the your hands. No, you can’t just use more hand sanitizer.”

I could go on and on. But I think you get the picture. Kids have always been gross. Apparently more and more adults are too. You’d think a pandemic would make some of these basic hygiene practices common knowledge. Why the hell am I teaching 11-year-olds how to blow their noses and wash their hands? Why am I the only one on staff who actively tries to not get sick.

25 points

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6 points

I still don’t know how to do the emoji things because of early onset boomerism. Maybe someone can do a salute rat thing for me. But pointing the other direction.

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6 points

You just type a colon : and then a word, it should produce a list of emoji somewhat close to that to pick from.

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23 points

I’ve worked in a lot of different schools since the start of the pandemic. I think I’ve seen fewer than 5 masked teachers in the past year. I’m trying to specifically remember but I can’t.

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44 points

The campaign by the bourgeoisie to “end” the pandemic ideologically and sociologically is terrifying and deserving of more examination by leftists of all stripes but especially Marxists.

Keep doing the right thing. It’s fucking hard out there.

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26 points

I think the Death Panel podcast has some great episodes already out (or that are upcoming) about the social-cultural-production of the “end” of COVID, that I’ve been meaning to listen to

The lead hosts wrote “Health Communism” which is a fucking banger

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15 points
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There’s an episode they unlocked in like… May? I think. It was about that woman who wrote an article about how her husband won’t compromise on things like eating out, because he’s at-risk and had a very bad go with his covid infection. I think it’s a very good episode for deconstructing the “end” of the pandemic and the consequences. Let me go see if I can find the episode again…

Yeah, May 29th 2024: On NPR’s “Wrestling with my husbands fear of getting COVID again” (Unlocked).

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14 points

Absolutely! I really wish this was taken more seriously as a whole by the broader movement. COVID has absolutely devastated all of our lives. Why aren’t we speaking more about it and the ruling class’s culpability in it?

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10 points

This is a good question and the unfortunate answer I’ve come to is that ableism is the ur-ism among us all. It is horrifying in its complete grasp on pretty much everyone alive. Ableism and health supremacist attitudes make even the lowest among us see even lower, and it keeps us complacent. “I got covid and I’m fine. It sucks if you’re disabled but the world has to go on.” - every person on the left I’ve tried to agitate this point to.

It is a deprogramming within a deprogramming, and I don’t even know where to begin to fight it with the urgency it requires.

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18 points
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Thanks. At this point I’m no longer simply motivated by public health and my family’s safety. I’m motivated by righteous hatred of the owner class.

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Based. The reason the capitalists decided to prematurely declare the pandemic solved was they didn’t want to pay the price of restructuring society to deal with it. They’d rather offload the price in blood onto the working class.

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The wildest to me is how far some people have swung back.
The person who, back in 2021/22, would walk out of their way in the hallway to keep 6 feet of distance between us, who has two kids at home both younger than 3, doesn’t take any precautions anymore. Or the guy who wore aura respirators before anyone else and did everything on zoom until 2023, I never see wearing a mask anymore. Or people I organize with who actively refuse to wear a mask, even at actions. It’s just so strange.

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17 points
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I think those kind of people just get tired of/overwhelmed by it all and completely give up at some point. It’s not that they don’t care or even think COVID is over, they just don’t have the effort to keep it up. I know I’ve felt like that on occasion.

Of course that will ultimately just make things worse, but it’s hard.

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Yeah, I think it has to be that. Just sucks that people who cared so much get overwhelmed to the point of giving up.

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13 points

Understandable, but not a good excuse in my opinion. I am extremely overwhelmed by all of this, but at no point did I ever let up or give in.

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10 points

Let that blame fall on the 24 hour news media and CDC for making COVID precautions about as simple to understand as quantum physics. We could have had simple guidance, but you gotta fill the airways.

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It’s not that they don’t care or even think COVID is over, they just don’t have the effort to keep it up.

gonna be honest, I fall into this cyclically at this point. when nobody else cares, it really sucks to be the one person in 100 who’s bothering to mask, especially bc the primary benefits of masking are seen when the infector is wearing one, not the infectee.

like, it’s disheartening, uncomfortable, and potentially not even protecting me that much; I’m still masking when I go to places where I’ll be breathing a lot of others’ air, but it sucks to feel like it’s not actually helping me much.

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8 points

If you’re wearing an N95 (you should be), then it’s protecting you fairly well. And you could always go with something better like a P100.

The reason it’s better for the infected person to wear a mask is less because it makes another individual less likely to catch it than the other way around and more because it makes everyone around them less likely to catch it.

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6 points

It is. A good quality mask will help protect you very, very, very much. You mentioned they’re uncomfortable. What kind of masks have you tried? It’s ok if you don’t know what brands or product names. There’s loads of different types for different faces.

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16 points

Ugh, I have friends who were leaving Amazon packages in their front porch for a week before even bringing them inside. Now those same friends are at night clubs on weekends… It’s so wild to me know the swing back to “normal” was so extreme and borderline malicious.

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6 points
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Honestly I feel like the people who did stuff like this at the beginning of lockdowns were some of the first to ditch masks. Just very reactionary to every news story. As soon as news coverage waned in the slightest they went back to business as usual. Except now they’d talk about those darn BLM rioters at the water cooler.

Edit: This is kinda a halfbaked take.

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28 points
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To a student, “Take it out of your mouth. See, now there’s spit on your pencil. And you use your hand to write with that pencil. And you’re touching the tables where your friends sit. Do you think they want your spit on them?”

Please tell me you teach kindergarten.

Why the hell am I teaching 11-year-olds how to blow their noses and wash their hands?

:agony:

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Unfortunately, this kind of stuff is normal among kids at that age. Not washing their hands after using the bathroom, snot everywhere, etc. Pre teens can be vile with their lack of hygiene.

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13 points

Not that I was paying attention as much as I do now, but I remember in 2018 kids being better about hygiene.

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