Haha, no humour... reference to the science guy was satirical. Can't explain it if y'all didn't get it the first time around. ...
up in beer country, the hoosiers try to keep it simple... read this in the article this am. the artilcle is here
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/health/medical/coronavirus-can-be-airborne-but-thats-not-how-it-typically-spreads-experts/ar-BB16BKUO?li=AAggNb9 and a portion is below:
What this means for everyday life
When it comes to daily life, experts say Canadians shouldn't get tripped up on the word "airborne" and should continue doing what they're doing — namely, physical distancing, wearing a mask in enclosed spaces and practising good hand hygiene.
On the public health level, the goal is to make the masses aware of the "most common way that COVID-19 is going to be transmitted," Kaul said.
"Let's not focus on preventing the very occasional transmission event that may happen through aerosol spread — let's focus on the great majority that's going to be transmitted through droplets."
Chakrabarti agrees and says we do not need to be overly concerned about aerosol transmission at this time.
"We know that even if there is a theoretical possibility of there being aerosol that is in the air that has some COVID-19 particles in it, it's irrelevant because what we've been doing is not airborne precautions," Chakrabarti said.
"And it's working."