The Missouri Board of Law Examiners required law students to wear masks while taking the bar exam last month but at least one doctor believes the rule is political.
“Masks do no good when it comes to viruses unless they are wearing a hazmat suit,” said Dr. Bradley Jones, a general practitioner physician in Lake Ozark. “Masks are strictly a Democrat talking point. It's certainly not science.”
Jones is among the Missouri doctors who treats COVID-19 infection with Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine.
“Studies now show that wearing a mask increases your risk of catching COVID because it helps you retain CO2, to which apparently the COVID virus attaches better in an acidic environment than it does in a normal environment,” Jones told the St. Louis Record. “When you retain CO2, the tissue in your lungs becomes more acidic therefore allowing COVID to attach more easily.”
The board imposed the mask rule based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics that showed an increase in COVID-19 transmission in Boone County, according to media reports.
“They can cite all the statistics they want,” Jones said. “The virus is now endemic. It's been around the world a couple of times. The flu virus and the COVID virus are no different in transmission. Actually, the flu virus is even more widespread than the COVID virus but once again, this is all political manipulation.”
In order to take the bar exam, applicants were required to sign a code of conduct that required wearing a mask.
“Medicine has become politicized,” Jones added. “Fauci is the biggest liar I have ever seen in my life.”
The Missouri Board of Law Examiners did not immediately respond to requests for comment.