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Have recent events dented your Texas pride? If so, you re not alone

Have recent events dented your Texas pride? If so, you re not alone. FacebookTwitterEmail 1of6 Texas has taken a beating on social media after the power grid failure, water fiasco and rescinding of the mask mandate.Vernon Bryant, THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS / Staff PhotographerShow MoreShow Less 2of6 Walt Handelsman’s editorial cartoon for the New Orleans Times Picayune.Walt HandelsmanShow MoreShow Less 3of6 Some Texans will still show their pride no matter what the rest of the country thinks.Jason Fochtman, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographerShow MoreShow Less 4of6 Texas Gov. Greg Abbott delivers an announcement, broadcasted on the TV in the background, as a crowd watches him make it at Montelongo s Mexican Restaurant on Tuesday, March 2, 2021, in Lubbock, Texas. Governor Abbott announced that he is rescinding executive orders that limit capacities for businesses and the statewide mask mandate. (Justin Rex/Lubbock Avalanche-Journal via AP)Justin Rex, MBR / Associated Pre

Clack: Abbott the presidential candidate is calling the shots

White House COVID task force urges residents to remain cautious as things improve

The CDC director stressed that there is a light at the end of the tunnel, but the road to get this might not be smooth. How rough the road will be depends on the actions of all of us in the weeks ahead.

Tennessee panel deemed vaccinating inmates a PR nightmare

Tennessee panel deemed vaccinating inmates a PR nightmare KIMBERLEE KRUESI and JONATHAN MATTISE, Associated Press March 6, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail FILE - In this Monday, Jan. 4, 2021, file photo, a red tag hangs on a cell door, signifying an active COVID-19 case for its inhabitants at Faribault Prison, in Faribault, Minn. A Tennessee advisory panel tasked with determining eligibility for the COVID-19 vaccine acknowledged that prison inmates in the state were high risk, but concluded that prioritizing them for inoculation could be a “public relations nightmare.” (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP, File)Aaron Lavinsky/AP NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) A Tennessee advisory panel tasked with deciding in what order residents should receive the COVID-19 vaccine acknowledged that prison inmates in the state were high-risk, but concluded that prioritizing them for inoculation could be a “public relations nightmare.”

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