A concerned friend asked me last week: "Yes, you seem to know it all so well, but why don't those scientists know that? It can't be that everyone supposedly knows better than the advisors of the government!? You don't believe that yourself, do you?"
Then I don't know what to say; The aerosol denial is so incredibly shameful that it is unbelievable. For the interlocutors in my bubble, this is all a piece of cake. From now on, I will show the first few minutes of the video below with that question, "how is that possible". There are professors speaking, who both argue their points of view so that everyone can take sides themselves.
Who not chooses the infection via large droplets, must realize that he/she is rejecting the RIVM. All OMT measures are drenched in large droplets. According to the RIVM, they bring the virus from one person to another. Not breath, vapor, air or floating droplets, the so-called aerosols.

You have to be a kind of Machiavelli to lie your way out of that.
Small droplets, big consequences
This conviction has enormous consequences for the measures, for lockdowns, for outdoor activities, for the "models", for the hospitality industry, for estimating seasonal effects and basically everything that has to do with infecting – and therefore with the decline of society. So if you see that completely wrong, you will soon do everything wrong. And if even a little bit seems to be going well, it is bycatch, such as stopping group meetings and events in poorly ventilated rooms.
Now that the RIVM is building the seasonal effect into the models, I strongly wonder how they can continue to deny contamination via aerosols. I'm guessing on:
"We always knew it, but aerosols only play a slightly bigger role than we thought. That is advancing insight, science is constantly changing".
Presumed explanation in recognizing aerosol transmission
Aerosols are highly dependent on humidity and outside air ventilation – seasonal factors that the measures have never addressed. The measures have done nothing at all about the indoor climate, where aerosols have free rein, whether you sit one and a half meters apart, wash your hands or wear a face mask. If you don't provide fresh or clean air, the virus is simply transmitted by the breath you share with each other. Especially if you sit together in a classroom or office space all day.
If you ensure that a room is well ventilated and cleaned (think building code), you can do with much fewer restrictions.
Don't take my word for it, watch the video.
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