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Gags are forbidden … stores venture with their customers “in the name of freedom”

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In the past few days, a series of American stores have made headlines and the media, after they put up banners that prevent customers from entering if they insist on wearing protective masks.

Those who oppose the closures and prevention measures imposed by many US states are considered an infringement of individual freedoms and a violation of personal rights.

“I work for Costco and I ask a customer to wear a muzzle out of respect for company policy,” says a Costco employee, in comments reported by the British newspaper, The Guardian, to respond to the man who appears in a video: “I will not do it because I was born in a free country” .

There were videos of shoppers coughing in the faces of sellers “in the name of freedom”, in protest against what they see as restricting individual rights in light of the “Coffed 19” crisis.

To satisfy this wild desire for “emancipation,” a Kentucky retail chain put up banners saying “Gags not allowed in our stores, take them off your face or go somewhere else, stop listening to the governor’s advice. He’s a stupid person.”

Earlier in May, another California store posted another sign that encouraged hugs, not wearing robe.

In Illinois, gas station retailer defended similar signs, saying wearing a muzzle makes it difficult to distinguish between adults and children when selling alcoholic beverages and cigarettes.

Health experts, as well as the World Health Organization, recommend wearing masks, especially while in closed places such as shops, to stop the spread of the Corona virus, which has infected more than 5 million people around the world.

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In the past few days, a series of American stores have made headlines and the media, after they put up banners that prevent customers from entering if they insist on wearing protective masks.

Those who oppose the closures and prevention measures imposed by many US states are considered an infringement of individual freedoms and a violation of personal rights.

“I work for Costco and I ask a customer to wear a muzzle out of respect for company policy,” says a Costco employee, in comments reported by the British newspaper, The Guardian, to respond to the man who appears in a video: “I will not do it because I was born in a free country” .

There were videos of shoppers coughing in the faces of sellers “in the name of freedom”, in protest against what they see as restricting individual rights in light of the “Coffed 19” crisis.

To satisfy this wild desire for “emancipation,” a Kentucky retail chain put up banners saying “Gags not allowed in our stores, take them off your face or go somewhere else, stop listening to the governor’s advice. He’s a stupid person.”

Earlier in May, another California store posted another sign that encouraged hugs, not wearing robe.

In Illinois, gas station retailer defended similar signs, saying wearing a muzzle makes it difficult to distinguish between adults and children when selling alcoholic beverages and cigarettes.

Health experts, as well as the World Health Organization, recommend wearing masks, especially while in closed places such as shops, to stop the spread of the Corona virus, which has infected more than 5 million people around the world.

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