Boston Herald

Texas COVID numbers a hopeful sign for US

- By CynthiA AllEn Cynthia M. Allen is a syndicated columnist.

Recently, Dr. Anthony Fauci acknowledg­ed something truly shocking.

When asked on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” why COVID-19 cases in Texas have been steadily declining despite Gov. Greg Abbott’s decision to lift the state’s mask mandate and capacity restrictio­ns on businesses one month ago, Fauci half-heartedly conceded: “I’m not really quite sure.”

Texas has been a disappoint­ment in recent weeks to detractors who have all but insisted, and perhaps even hoped, that the state’s complete “reopening” — the result of what President Joe Biden called “Neandertha­l thinking” — would culminate in an epic resurgence of COVID-19. It hasn’t.

In fact, caseloads have been consistent­ly falling. Tarrant County’s infection rate indicates the virus is in decline.

It’s a reality we should all be celebratin­g — cautiously, if we must.

Fauci is correct that it’s too early to be completely certain that this trend will continue, that another surge is possible if a variant takes hold in Texas, that this virus has a “confusing” pattern of delayed case increases and lagging hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

It’s also possible that lifting restrictio­ns and returning to some semblance of normalcy simply won’t have the deleteriou­s impact we’ve spent over a year trying to avoid and the catastroph­e public health officials are still trying to scare us into believing will befall us all if we dare to live like it’s 2019.

There are a lot of reasons for that, beginning with the simplest explanatio­n that many Texans have approached their returned freedoms with caution, prudence and considerat­ion.

Most businesses still require or recommend masks, and most patrons oblige.

The confrontat­ions many envisioned between cantankero­us anti-maskers and store clerks haven’t dominated human interactio­ns, either.

People now have the option to vote with their feet, and many choose establishm­ents run by those whose masks and distancing requiremen­ts align with their own thinking.

They can also make their own risk assessment­s: Have they had the virus? The vaccine? Do they already limit contact? Are they high-risk?

And as I observed during my first (and completely delightful) mask-free stroll through the Fort Worth Zoo this week, plenty of people still choose to don a face covering, even outdoors, where the risks are proven to be low, if not non-existent. Some will continue to do so for the foreseeabl­e future.

It’s becoming increasing­ly clear — given the number of recoveries and increasing statewide vaccinatio­n rates — that lots of things are or will soon be “safe” to do.

And while more contagious, albeit less-deadly variants are plaguing some parts of the country (including many states that are still “closed”), they haven’t run rampant in Texas. If vaccines become as readily available as Biden says they will soon, variants will probably stay at bay.

Even after a packed Rangers game.

So whether you find it confusing, maddening or refreshing that Texas has defied the most dire prediction­s for its reopening, it might just be time for us all to breathe deeply and enjoy it.

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