So true story, my cousin almost died years ago in a car crash.....he had drove up to the local community college that day for class, but was feeling under the weather, after his first class he felt so bad he decided to go home, while sitting at a stop sign he passed out from the high fever he was running and this caused him to take his foot off the brake and roll out in front of a car going 60 mph that hit him right in the driver door. Turned out he had a really bad case of pneumonia.....he died 3 times that day but luckily 30 yrs later he is still with us. So how would you classify that death had he died.....what caused the wreck? Witnesses say they saw him slump over in the seat before the car moved into traffic and the fact he was unconscious was what probably saved his life.....not saying that happened here in this case but just giving a actual example of how things like Covid and driving can lead to death.....
The cause of death should be a car crash. If you go to sleep behind the wheel, they don't classify the cause of death as sleep.
This is basic stuff that they are monkeying with and why misinformation is so easily sown and conspiracy theories so easily flourish these days.
Most of this stuff is really common sense:
If you die from a car crash, the cause of death should be car crash. Mask wearing reduces the chance of expelling or inhaling droplets, the primary mode of Covid/virus transmission. Do they stop people from touching an infected droplet and touching their eyes? No. Do the eliminate the risk of infection completely? No. Do mask mandates make a difference? I guess that depends on the people's adherence to it.
The truth is, all of this discussion about masks gets so murky that common sense gets lost. Masks ABSOLUTELY reduce the risk of infection. 100% true. You simply cannot argue otherwise. But it is not the be all end all of the solution. Nowhere close.
As we all can easily see, mandatory mask wearing isn't effective because there are other ways to catch this easily transmissible virus and because not everyone will comply.
In no way can you coherently argue that wearing a mask isn't helpful. The degree to which it is helpful can be debated. In the end, it's a smart thing to do, along with good hand hygiene, good social distancing practices, and being smart about where you go and what you do.