Governors across the United States have either ended their states’ COVID-19 mask mandate or are considering ending it soon—and have ordered rollbacks on capacity limits and restrictions on businesses.
In one example, Utah’s statewide mask order is scheduled to end April 10 under a law that was approved on March 5, and Gov. Spencer Cox, a Republican, told Fox News on March 6 that he won’t veto it.
“We anticipate that by April 1, every adult in the state of Utah will be eligible for the vaccine,” Cox said. Utah, he said will “have about 1.5 million vaccines in the state by April 10, when that mandate goes away.”
Meanwhile, Texas, Mississippi, Iowa, Montana, and North Dakota have now ended, or soon will end, statewide face coverings amid the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus pandemic. The governors of Alaska, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Tennessee never required face coverings.
Most are encouraging personal responsibility (wearing masks as a personal precaution, not because you are being ordered to do so). Blue States will likely continue these requirements until every small business has been bankrupted and most POCs are back in a dependent state on government.
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