what is the benefit of wearing a mask if you re in the minority. it only prevents it from sprending it to someone, not preventing you have contracting it. you re right that the main function of the mass is source control. they prevent infected people have expelling large doses of the virus but that have some effect in protecting you from other people. the answer here is simple. if everyone masks we can have much better control the spread of covid-19. we know from studies that masking of any kind is helpful, and surgical masks outperform cloth masks, and kn 95 are best. the most important thing is the fit and you to be comfortable
or the vaccine mandate, so it makes me nervous about how serious they will take covid down the line. online school is not my thing. there is a ton of questions about heading back to school, so i want to turn now to some experts. dr. natalie azar, and dr. shasanna. thank you for bying here. we have a question, are vaccinated child is moving into his college dorm soon, what protocols should he use in his dorm and cafeteria? kudos to you have very ving a vaccinated child nap offers them the best protection. the second part of the answer is really that whatever rules and
moment of conception. i don t agree, but i respect that. what i was told and i must tell you, i m not is your honor, i was told that there is possibilities within the existing law to have the justice department look and see whether or not there are thing that s can be done that can limit the independent ax enforcing a state law. i don t know enough to give you an answer yet. i asked that to be checked. thank you very much. mr. president what about booster shots. good morning, everybody. we have been listening to plt biden on today s underwhelming jobs in your opinions. we gained 235,000 jobs. half a million fewer than experts hoped. the president admitted they were not as high as he would like but he insists that it is working
organization can decide npr for example is going through great hand wringing over these wikileaks disclosures and yet the reality is whether npr does or doesn t report on some of the more mundane and private aspects that you re talking about, it s out there. i know it s a cop out answer, right, to say you know what, it s out there any way so what are we going to do, but it s also the reality. the reality is the minute in this day and age that wikileaks is releasing it, everyone is going to have it. if a handful of media organizations say, you know, we re not going to disclose this piece of information or that piece of information, i get it. that s a nice principled position to take, but it s also living in an alternate universe where the media sort of leaders had the power to decide what the public got to see. those days are over. dan abrams, thank you for
i want to ask you this and then another question. it seems like, the president has put a lot, has he backed himself into a corner here? you know, we ll know the answer to that after we see the votes. i know that sounds like a cop out answer, but that s the truth of the matter. this is very risky. he s stunned a lot of people. just a couple of days ago i was reporting based on conversations i was having with senior people that part of the reason they felt the president was not coming to congress is because it wouldn t pass. that was before great britain. it really is still an open question. he s putting his faith, in many ways, the u.s. credibility in the hands of congress that s not been reluctant to go their own way even when this whole issue of the president saying there s