For the protest
December 6, 2021
An anti-mask group organized the protest in order to force schools to abandon their mask mandates. Dec. 6. Started by a student group, the protest quickly gained traction and spread to high schools across the county. Senior Ashley West sent a message to her peers to encourage them to participate as well.
“I shared something about Dec. 6, and I was just trying to get it out to bring awareness to it. I wasn’t trying to be pushy or anything like that, it was just to show what’s going on in our school,” West said. “After that, a lot of people got really mad and started saying cuss words. It was not a good moment. I had regrets after sending it, but I meant no harm in it, and I even apologized. I had no intentions of hurting people’s feelings, I was just trying to bring awareness. I wasn’t trying to do anything else.”
Among other arguments, West, who is hard of hearing, cites health concerns and communication concerns as prime reasons behind the anti-mask argument.
“There’s health risks that come from being forced to wear one. There’s not a lot of oxygen [when wearing masks],” West said. “[Masks] make it more difficult for me to be able to understand people as someone who’s hard of hearing, because masks muffled voices and I’m not able to read lips and understand facial expressions because everybody’s being forced to cover it up.”
Masks have been mandated at school since students returned to school in November of 2020, however, they have not been proven to reduce oxygen levels.
“At this point, [mask mandates are] getting a little ridiculous. On the drive to school, I dread coming to school because I know that I’m going to be wearing a mask that restricts my breathing,” West said.
West also believes that as burgeoning adults, her class should be allowed to make their own health decisions. She plans on participating in the Dec. 6 protest.
“I have no problem if someone wants to wear one, but people should not be forced to. We should be able to have our own health choice. We should be able to have an informed health choice. People should not make that for us. Because we are 16 to 18 year olds, we are becoming adults and it feels like they’re not really treating us as such by forcing us [to wear masks],” West said.
Senior Joey Grove is in agreement with West, and points towards possible mental health implications of wearing a mask as the primary negative consequence. Grove also believes that mask mandates prioritize the wrong focuses.
“The implications of wearing masks are real and I think it’s overlooked. I think that’s something people should consider when talking about this. It’s about social life,” Grove said. “We’re prioritizing the wrong thing. We’re prioritizing trying to stop the spread when we should really try to have a good immune reaction. We should be focusing on being healthy and going back to normal. We just need to learn how to get healthy and deal with the issue. We just need to learn how to deal with this new reality of the world.”
Grove feels that it should be up to each individual to decide whether or not they want to obey the mask mandates. For this reason, he will be participating in the Dec. 6 protest.
“I feel the need to say something because unless the students say something, then we’re gonna wear masks forever. It’s about time we stand up and do something. It’s been going on for too long. We can’t be wearing these masks the rest of our lives. I think that the more people that stand up, the more people will join,” Grove said. “I feel like a lot of people don’t want to wear masks, but they’re not going to take off their masks because they’re scared of the social implications. They don’t want people to look at them as bad people, but it’s bigger than that. We can’t just let society push us in this direction, even if we feel it’s wrong. I don’t think that anyone else should have the right to tell me what I can do with my body.”


![The narrow lens contrasts with a diverse reality; whitewashing means altering or concealing something to make it more appealing to white people. The word “whitewashed” as it is used today has caused identity crises for thousands, if not millions, of students. “I have been called whitewashed before, and it feels very sad. [It’s] just hard because it makes me not know who I am. You don’t get a lot of backlash for [saying it], so I think it’s a throwaway term for people who aren’t affected by it. When you are the person [who] is being called whitewashed, over time, it builds up,” sophomore Raaga Golla said.](https://pwestpathfinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/IMG_5740-1-300x200.jpg)
![There are more than 20 open cardio machines at Crunch Fitness. I enjoyed the spacious environment at Crunch, a sentiment that was shared by sophomore Sanjana Daggubati. “[Going to] Crunch Fitness was the right decision because [it] feels more professional. Crunch’s workers are laid back, but not to the point where they don't care,” Daggubati said.](https://pwestpathfinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/IMG_5242-1-300x225.jpg)
![Discarded to the side, Kansas City Chiefs and St. Louis Rams merchandise sits in a trash can after the two National Football League (NFL) teams left the state of Missouri. Both the National Hockey League’s (NHL) St.Louis Blues and Major League Baseball’s (MLB) St. Louis Cardinals, two other Missouri professional sports teams, have been in the city since their developments in 1967 and 1882, respectively. “St. Louis fans are incredibly loyal, judging by [the MLB’s] Cardinals and [the NHL’s] Blues. Team owners on the whole, not so much, judging by the [National Football League’s] Rams. This is more a function of ownership and profit than fan loyalty,” government teacher and football coach Melvin Trotier said.](https://pwestpathfinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/DSC5875-2-300x225.jpg)

![Setting up the activity for his first meeting, Financial Literacy Club founder and sophomore Yash Bandiananthaiah writes on the whiteboard. For the first meeting, Bandiananthaiah created an interactive experience for members to immerse themselves in. “To me, the most important thing during a meeting is to make sure we are all engaged and participating, and [I do this by] always making sure we have a hands-on activity,” Bandiananthaiah said.](https://pwestpathfinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/DSC5306-1200x798.jpg)
![Hand raised into the air, senior Lauren Anstrom watches as her graduation cap flies along with the caps of all her peers. Anstrom hopes to leave behind the legacy as someone who was kind, hardworking, and always supportive of others. “Tossing my graduation cap honestly felt surreal. In that moment, everything hit me at once with all the excitement, relief and a little sadness too. It felt really emotional [because] this was the end of such a big chapter of my life, but also exciting knowing that everyone was about to start a completely new journey,” Anstrom said.](https://pwestpathfinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/DSC_3031-Enhanced-NR-2-1200x800.jpg)
![French teacher Blair Hopkins enters City Coffee & Creperie in Clayton, Mo. for breakfast with her Honors French 4 students and AP French 5 students. Both classes went on a field trip to a fair trade chocolate factory in St. Louis to begin their unit on Côte D’Ivoire, a major producer of cocoa beans. “My ideal school would just be the Magic School Bus — you would always learn about things by going someplace and learning hands-on, being able to see it yourself and asking people questions. I think [learning is] always so much more memorable if you can experience it firsthand,” Hopkins said.](https://pwestpathfinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/DSC2795-1200x798.jpg)
Carl Barnhart • Dec 8, 2021 at 1:45 pm
Good for these kids that are standing up
for themselves and their constitutional right and the nee law making mandates illegal. The way these kids are being treated by the principles the bullying and threatening is absolutely wrong. Although when all those students walked out for racism awareness Marty supported them and said how brave they where for standing up for what they believe and the mistreatment of them. Now our kids are doing the same about mask and are threatened with suspension and putting something in their permanent record and it hurting their college chances. According to the attorney general these school can not do anything academically to these kids for not wearing a mask. It is all fear agenda, bullying and threats. This is all a power and control thing for Marty. Unfortunately our school board are all brain dead and non of them can think for themselves to help our kids they just agree with the terrible leadership of Marty. Allowing him to destroy our kids and this school district.