The inordinate focus on beaches is unscientific, counter-productive (scaring people away from safe outdoor activities) and, worse, hides the true dangers and real victims of this pandemic. Such a big failure, and there seem to be no way to stop it.https://twitter.com/RanuDhillon/status/1284883221289689089 …
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Yes, let’s illustrate the crisis with widely-spaced people outdoors in a vast and sunny beach,
@business. Very, very informative.pic.twitter.com/RrxmtrwkAs
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Doctors report that many of those infected with COVID are essential workers, many people of color, living in crowded housing. What does media fixate on? Young people doing safe and good things (outdoors, distanced exercise.) Triple whammy: erase victims, moralize, misinform.pic.twitter.com/HAzUaZ7XxP
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Good one,
@sfchronicle. Story is about *contact-tracing*. The photo is ::drumroll:: a telephoto beach picture from *two-months ago* where the caption even says what everyone can see: people are spread apart. These visuals are misinformation. h/t@sethjbermanpic.twitter.com/N5qxZrbZOk
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zeynep tufekci Retweeted
Answering not to dunk, but to show the detrimental effects of misinformation. Months of research shows prolonged close contact (many minutes) in poorly-ventilated, indoor settings is driving the pandemic. Not a single known superspreader event in beaches. https://twitter.com/goobisgoofy/status/1285261006848110592 …
zeynep tufekci added,
This Tweet is unavailable.10 replies 42 retweets 151 likesShow this thread -
This is a Pareto Pandemic. A small category of events in specific settings—indoors, crowded, close-quarters, talking/breathing—are driving most of it, along with later household spread. Being misinformed with the non-stop beach/park photos makes it hard to do the right thing.
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I'm just trying to imagine a less appropriate picture to indicate the need for and the struggle over masks and failing! WTH
@washingtonpost? Seriously, this obsession with beach pictures has moved beyond misinformation into something pathological. h/t@makingarecordpic.twitter.com/bT9sBkQjDX
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Replying to @zeynep
just going to send you screen caps from the la times every day now hahapic.twitter.com/cmZhBU31vB
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Replying to @zeynep
well this is literally about beaches so they get a pass today hahapic.twitter.com/oquoYxbNW3
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But they don't! People not wearing masks in beaches is item number zillion on the list of public health crisis worth putting on the front page! I am not sure if it would be worth a single sentence in a history book about the pandemic except as example of media/public pathology.
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