Americans fearful of COVID-19 seize on lull to pay tribute at Lafayette Square
WASHINGTON — Virus-wary Americans ventured out of doors Tuesday and down to the newly christened Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington, D.C., donning face masks, keeping their distance and silently expressing their dismay at the police killing of George Floyd.
Thanks to thinner crowds and blazing sunshine, the threat of COVID-19 seemed less prevalent at the edge of Lafayette Square, which for nearly two weeks has been jammed daily with thousands of angry, shouting protesters, bellowing their rage at the White House.
Those two weeks almost seemed to make the United States forget it was in the grip of a global pandemic.
“I think people have already made a conscious decision that standing up for what they consider to be right is more important to them than the risk,” said one visitor to the scene, identifying himself only as Dadisi, for fear of suffering repercussions at work.

