OF THE
TIMES
Smith, who said he did not believe that the virus poses a serious threat, wanted to stir the pot.Kevin Smith was a little more blunt about his sentiments on Twitter:
For years, he has run his 60-seat bar, which occupies a converted alleyway on Elgin's main drag, just as he pleases. Smoking is permitted during karaoke nights and performances by local talent, and beers are served in black-and-white koozies that say, "Come and drink it," playing off the Texan battle flag.
A two-month shutdown from Texas officials had forced him to cancel a benefit concert for veterans and close down during the busy rush of customers that fly into nearby Austin for South by Southwest. For three weeks, a Bastrop County rule required him to wear a face mask in public or face up to 180 days in jail.
"Why are we having to do this?" he asked. "We're not here to live in fear."
A town of about 10,000 people, Elgin has reported 53 coronavirus infections and one of the two deaths in the county. Even as numbers in Texas are on the rise and local officials continue to encourage residents to cover their faces, Smith said he does not believe masks are necessary.
Bartenders need to see their customers' faces to check IDs and make sure no one gets served too many drinks, he argued. Anyone with the virus, including those who are asymptomatic, should not be coming out to begin with. Besides, he asked: How are you supposed to down a beer with a bandanna stretched across your lips?
One regular at the Liberty Tree Tavern, 58-year old Charles Chamberlain, said he survived both stage 4 cancer and the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu. He spent a full year living out of a Houston hospital, he told the Austin American-Statesman, before becoming so frustrated at his isolation that he cut the cancer treatment short.
"This quarantine . . . That's not living, that's existing," he said. "Going to the bar, going to the lake, going swimming with your friends, barbecuing, fishing - that's living."
Smith, who also ranches cattle, said his customers have social distancing built into their rural lifestyle. For now, the regulars don't seem to mind his request. No one had been kicked out yet for disobeying the poster, and one customer's son, who has intellectual disabilities, was allowed to keep his mask on.
Chamberlain, who has been out to the Liberty Tree Tavern about three times since it reopened, plans to keep coming back.
"You should have a choice of what you want to do," he told the Statesman. "If I get it, I get it. If I do, I'll deal with that. You can't his sentiments clear:
Comment: And, needless to say, the airline industry has taken a very big hit leaving many working in that sector unemployed - or about to be: