The pandemic roar subsided, but mask wars rumble on

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Whenever a masked person approaches his Atlanta barbershop, Kobe Jones says he feels the tingle of his “spidey sense” – fictional superhero Spider-Man’s ability to detect trouble.

Masks, especially the ones covering the nose and mouth used during the COVID-19 pandemic, have taken on a new level of signaling and triggering both in America and abroad.

Why We Wrote This

The interplay of protest, identity, and surveillance has fueled a national debate over masks in the public square. At stake are competing interests of free expression and public safety.

This past weekend, armed neo-Nazis wearing all black with red face masks and carrying black flags with red swastikas marched in a Columbus, Ohio, neighborhood, using racial slurs toward people of color and shouting about Jewish people and white power. Just days before, two masked men assaulted Jewish protesters at DePaul University in Chicago.

Masks, meanwhile, have become the target of new laws. North Carolina, for example, joined a growing number of cities and states that have outlawed masks at public events for anything other than medical reasons.

To critics, mask-wearing has complicated a central tenet of democracy: that healthy debate requires speakers to know whom they are speaking to.

But Sarah Ludington, a First Amendment scholar at Duke University, says arresting those wearing masks at protests “could be a deterrent to showing up to protest at all.”

Whenever a masked person approaches the hand-painted sign of his Cleveland Ave Barber Shop, Kobe Jones says he feels the tingle of his “spidey sense” – fictional superhero Spider-Man’s ability to detect trouble.

The Atlanta barber visually assesses clients quickly – a critical skill in this tough city corner, he says. But masks, especially ones covering the nose and mouth used during the COVID-19 pandemic, have taken on a new level of signaling and triggering in the United States and abroad.

This past weekend, armed neo-Nazis wearing all black with red face masks and carrying black flags with red swastikas marched in a Columbus, Ohio, neighborhood, using racial slurs toward people of color and shouting about Jewish people and white power. Just days before, two masked men assaulted Jewish protesters at DePaul University in Chicago. Images of masked assailants attacking the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, recur in the news.

Why We Wrote This

The interplay of protest, identity, and surveillance has fueled a national debate over masks in the public square. At stake are competing interests of free expression and public safety.

But masks have meanwhile become the target of new laws. North Carolina has now joined several other states allowing police to arrest those who wear a mask for anything other than medical reasons. Thousands of miles away, Switzerland announced a ban on full-face coverings like ski masks, bandanas, and burqas, worn by some Middle Eastern women, with few exceptions, beginning in January. Belgium and France have enacted similar measures, saying face coverings – unless approved for cultural or medical reasons – can negatively affect public safety.

Others, citing health concerns and cultural self-expression, have continued to lean into wearing masks in public.

In America, the arguments both for and against masking touch the roots of democracy: that people have freedom of expression, including wearing masks, but also that healthy debate requires speakers to know whom they are speaking with and listening to.

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