San Antonio Express-News

Lifting the mask mandate a cop-out

- Deborah Beck Deborah Beck is an associate professor of classics at The University of Texas at Austin.

Texans prize their self-image as rugged individual­ists. But to get through a year of sheltering in place from the pandemic and a week of subfreezin­g temperatur­es both indoors and out, we have needed more help than ever from one another and our government. Meanwhile, our state leaders are riding through what seems to be a fantasy Texas landscape, where only weaklings or socialists need help from the government.

If that was ever true, it isn’t now. Individual­ism and personal responsibi­lity are important values. But an equally powerful strength consists not in going it alone but leading the way for people to come together for help and support. Laws that require mask-wearing do just that. By revoking our mask mandate, Gov. Greg Abbott shows he lacks the strength this moment requires.

Texas needs leaders with strengths that are up to the challenges we face today. But that’s not what we have. And some Texans will die needlessly as a result.

Last summer, Abbott refused to institute a mask requiremen­t until the state was overrun by COVID-19 infections. Last month, the state power grid was less than five minutes away from a collapse that would have taken weeks, if not months, to repair. Texans were harmed because our leadership refuses to enact commonsens­e public safety regulation­s widely used in the rest of the country.

Now, the governor has once again put Texans in harm’s way by prematurel­y lifting the statewide mask mandate.

There is no scientific justificat­ion for this action. National experts have discourage­d any weakening of mask mandates, one of the easiest and most powerful ways to combat the coronaviru­s. One of Abbott’s former advisers criticized the move as premature.

And what is so bad about masks, anyway? Sure, they are annoying. But anyone who has put on a too-snug necktie or high-heeled shoes has chosen to wear clothing significan­tly more restrictiv­e and uncomforta­ble than a mask. Why, then, do people get upset about wearing a mask? Just because someone tells us to wear it?

Do we really value the lives of our fellow Texans so cheaply?

When we wear a mask, we show we care more about keeping others safe than our own minor discomfort. Where some see a mask as an abridgemen­t of personal freedom, others proudly wear their masks as an expression of solidarity at a difficult time.

Revoking the mask mandate takes away one of the few defenses of front-line supermarke­t and food service workers against customers who endanger others by refusing to wear masks. Without the mandate, such workers are at even greater risk.

On the heels of revoking the mask mandate, our state leadership has omitted these front-line workers from the most recent expansion of vaccine eligibilit­y. Together, the mask mandate and inclusion in vaccine eligibilit­y group 1C could have done a great deal to protect the workers who have kept our state afloat the past year. Instead, we will continue to send these courageous and hardworkin­g Texans into unsafe environmen­ts.

That is the choice our leaders have made. It is the wrong choice.

Laws make a statement about our values. Abbott could have made mask-wearing a symbol of Texas’ can-do spirit. Instead, he has appealed to our “personal responsibi­lity.”

When Abbott revoked the mask mandate, what some people heard was “we don’t need to wear masks anymore.” His appeal to personal responsibi­lity instead of state regulation­s during a pandemic is not a policy. It’s a cop-out.

Personal responsibi­lity right now means that we not only wear a mask, we call out our public officials who abdicate their responsibi­lity to ensure that everyone wears one.

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