US Texas, Mississippi to lift mask mandatory allow all businesses to reopen at full capacity - Open the stores up for normalacy

https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/02/texas-to-lift-mask-mandate-472690 (archive)


Texas and Mississippi on Tuesday issued separate executive orders to lift their states' mask mandates and give all businesses the green light to reopen at full capacity, casting off restrictions meant to curb the Covid-19 pandemic.
“We must now do more to restore livelihoods and normalcy for Texans by opening Texas 100 percent,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said in a statement announcing the executive order, which will take effect March 10.
“Make no mistake, COVID-19 has not disappeared, but it is clear from the recoveries, vaccinations, reduced hospitalizations, and safe practices that Texans are using that state mandates are no longer needed,” he said.

The announcements from the Republican governors come at a time when coronavirus cases and deaths have plateaued in the U.S., after hitting record numbers in January, and on the heels of good news for vaccination supply and distribution.
“Starting tomorrow, we are lifting all of our county mask mandates and businesses will be able to operate at full capacity without any state-imposed rules,” Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves wrote on Twitter. “Our hospitalizations and case numbers have plummeted, and the vaccine is being rapidly distributed. It is time!”
Over the weekend, a third vaccine manufactured by Johnson & Johnson joined the U.S.’s stable of vaccines authorized for emergency use, as vaccination rates are expected to well exceed President Joe Biden’s goal of 100 million shots in his first 100 days. Several states across the country have taken these signs as justification to accelerate their reopening plans.
Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker announced Monday that restaurants in the state will no longer have to adhere to capacity restrictions. Other states, including Montana and Iowa, have also lifted their mask mandates.
However, health officials warned against states taking too much action to loosen their restrictions or eliminate them altogether, as coronavirus variants continue to spread globally.
Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said on Monday that she was "deeply concerned" that the recent decline in cases had seemed to stall as daily cases are still around the 70,000 mark.
"Seventy thousand cases a day seemed good compared to where we were just a few months ago," she said at a press briefing. "But we cannot be resigned to 70,000 cases a day, 2,000 daily deaths."


“Please hear me clearly: At this level of cases, with variants spreading, we stand to completely lose the hard-earned ground we have gained,” she continued. “These variants are a very real threat to our people and our progress. Now is not the time to relax the critical safeguards that we know can stop the spread of Covid-19 in our communities, not when we are so close.”
Abbott, who has served as governor of the nation's second-largest state for the past six years, has long harbored national ambitions. But mask mandates and other coronavirus restrictions have become less popular among GOP base voters as cases have plummeted, and Abbott could end up competing with smaller-state governors who have championed a laissez-faire approach to the pandemic.
This past weekend at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Fla., the crowd of activists cheered Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem — two governors staking out possible 2024 presidential lanes — for the more limited restrictions they have implemented over the past year.
DeSantis, whose state hosted the conference, described Florida as "an oasis of freedom" compared to other states during the pandemic.
But while Abbott has taken a backseat to those governors in Fox News Channel appearances, he has broader political experience. Outside of former President Donald Trump, he's the Republican Party's strongest fundraiser: He had $38 million in cash on hand for his bid for a third term next year as of the end of 2020.
A former state attorney general for 12 years before ascending to the governorship, Abbott has been a statewide elected official in populous Texas since 2002 — compared to DeSantis and Noem, who had brief, less remarkable careers in Congress before winning elections for governor in 2018.
Steven Shepard contributed to this report.
 
Learn some new words, goddamn. Plus, you're getting a little enthusiastic about genetics and alpha-beta toxic huwhite male behavior, you MAGAtard Nazi ™®

Also, lol at the fag who can't even fight off a little virus calling others physically inferior. Protip: masks aren't physically debilitating. That doesn't annul the fact that most people are fucking sick of them, and they're basically worthless anyway, given mask mandates have bupkis for measurable effects on infection rates.
You retards that came over from /pol/ use the same insults over and over again, so I can do the same
 
It still makes me laugh, especially when other states like, I dont know, Florida loosened their restrictions months ago, but since its Texas it's a big deal for some reason.

Well, they DO have more people and more borders to police if neighboring states take issue..... by some basic objective facts, it IS a bigger deal.

Like, there's a difference between corner garage mechanic Joe saying hybrid cars are the future and General Motors saying it....
 
Remember when everyone was panicking when Georgia was reopening? I wonder what became of that.

People ran to the polls to elect Biden and get their $2K stimulus checks before the lack of a death spike encouraged everyone to start thinking it was over, gotta keep the money printer going until my college loans are paid off....
 
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You retards that came over from /pol/ use the same insults over and over again, so I can do the same
Again with the collectivism, you alt-right chud. Not that you'd probably care or believe me, but I've been here in one form or another since the Ahuviya subforum got hidden from guests.

And yeah, that about fits your level of effort. I still remember you crying about trusting the experts, only for someone with a background in molecular genetics to come along and tell you why, in exact data points, you were wrong, and you just ignored them to slapfight with laymen about it.
 
Again with the collectivism, you alt-right chud. Not that you'd probably care or believe me, but I've been here in one form or another since the Ahuviya subforum got hidden from guests.

And yeah, that about fits your level of effort. I still remember you crying about trusting the experts, only for someone with a background in molecular genetics to come along and tell you why, in exact data points, you were wrong, and you just ignored them to slapfight with laymen about it.
Ahh, so you are a sock account. What was your other accounts that got banned?

Lol that didn't happen, but keep telling yourself that if it makes you feel better. Although if you think you know more about a subject than someone who devoted their lives to studying it, you're either a retard or a narcissist. Which are you?
 
Also if you read the 5 page bill on the official Texas government site its simply lifting the ban on business operating capacity restrictions and allowing them to operate at one hundred percent and eliminating federally mandated masks. Abbot himself even says in the bill he still recommends business follow proper COVID protocols and allows businesses to institute their own mask requirements without the government stepping in.
If it's federally mandated, wouldn't it be illegal for Texas to do?

That said, that's what we should've done a month or so after the initial lockdown.
 
Because gas pipes freezing and bursting is much worse. Prove that it was green's fault when Texas has refused green dependence due to conservatives not wanting it.
Regulations requires that residences are prioritized over other sources of demand, this caused initially for housing to have power but many parts of the infrastructure to not have power. Once those gas compressors began to fail because power was being idiotically diverted away, that's when those began to fail. Allowed to operate sanely, people would have had much less time without power and planned rolling black outs. That's not even including how Texas wasn't allowed to run their coal plants in a timely manner but was forced to sit on its hands. Texas had it's arms tied behind it's back for that event which is now quickly behind us. Weather is now pleasant and people have power. Whoop dee doo.
 
>Texas has a quarter of their grid working green
>this quarter freezes up
>a quarter of all power generation in the state vanishes
>b-but the gas lines froze too!
>Texas isnt even green dependent! the morons!

If they were green dependent they'd have lost 100% of their grid in that storm, just like if they were a 100% natural gas state. Maybe the Texan storm is a fucking argument for not relying on either shitty green energy or fossil fuels and putting all that wasted money into nuclear like any other sane civilization would.
The windmills froze and took a quarter of the grid down with it.
This is a fact you cannot deny. Stop trying to.
Its like both the wind and the gas pipes failed because there was no fucking way anyone could have predicted a fucking blizzard in subtropical Texas.

Its like comparing the merits of either form of energy over a freak ice storm is useless, especially when they both failed in the freak ice storm.
It still makes me laugh, especially when other states like, I dont know, Florida loosened their restrictions months ago, but since its Texas it's a big deal for some reason.
Even Florida gets too much credit because Georgia did it first (AFAIK the only state where 2 weeks was just that), and even then South Dakota never opened up because they never locked down.
Both that and Georgia, too. Remember when everyone was panicking when Georgia was reopening? I wonder what became of that.
Memory-holed when the surge in deaths never happened.
Quickly forgotten about when Florida became the next state to open up despite Dudley Varus bringing the mega-doom apocalypse.
Now Florida's successful reopening will be memory-holed as Texas is the newest state for the doomers to hate on.
Hopefully, some more states will open up so Texas too can be memory-holed.
 
Its like both the wind and the gas pipes failed because there was no fucking way anyone could have predicted a fucking blizzard in subtropical Texas.

Its like comparing the merits of either form of energy over a freak ice storm is useless, especially when they both failed in the freak ice storm.
Curiously, the NOAA was predicting a warmer than usual winter this year for most of the US. Makes you wonder if ERCOT decided to skimp on winterization because Global Warming meant no more snow.
 
If it's federally mandated, wouldn't it be illegal for Texas to do?

That said, that's what we should've done a month or so after the initial lockdown.
Well weed is legalized in certain states despite it being illegal on the federal level. States like Colorado and California said “fuck it” and made it legal, so why can’t Texas say “fuck this” and not compel an article of clothing? I’m not a legal expert nor a constitutional scholar but from a layman such as myself yes it would be illegal for Texas to do, but what would the feds be able to do?
 
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Curiously, the NOAA was predicting a warmer than usual winter this year for most of the US. Makes you wonder if ERCOT decided to skimp on winterization because Global Warming meant no more snow.
Its also supposedly a La Nina year in the ENSO current, which means warm & dry for much of the southern US.
La Nina + Global Warming + it being 1/4 states under a Hadley Cell effect = exceptionally low chance of a fucking massive snowstorm event. Yet, the odds broke, and now people are pointing fingers because they just can't accept that shit happens.

Well weed is legalized in certain states as despite it being illegal on the federal level. States like Colorado and California said “fuck it” and made it legal, so why can’t Texas do it with an article of clothing? I’m not a legal expert nor a constitutional scholar but from a layman such as myself yes it would be illegal for Texas to do, but what would the feds be able to do?
IIRC there is no federal mask mandate outside of federal property, the mandate only applies to fed turf.
 
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