And, scene https://t.co/pvGYM2TykJ— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) July 15, 2020
AHEM! Texas would like a word:
.@rossramsey: “Texas is a laboratory for the rest of the country, offering a look at voters’ reaction to government responses to disease, to economic turbulence, to justice and public education. Change Texas, and you change the United States.” https://t.co/2THopZ7AN5— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) July 15, 2020
U.S. Rep Joaquin Castro and former presidential candidate Julián Castro criticized @GovAbbott today for reopening the state too soon.— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) July 15, 2020
"Essentially this is an issue of policymakers choosing an ideology over public health and science," Julián Castro said. https://t.co/aXrhjOQHdX
Ya think?
Ambulances are waiting up to 10 hrs to deliver patients to packed Hidalgo County hospitals. The "longer [the patients are] with us, the longer it takes to get them the care they need," said the head of a local EMS company.https://t.co/HsWnc7zX8T (w/ @ewaltersTX & @emmaplatoff )— Shannon (@ShannonNajma) July 15, 2020
Sadly, this is all too real. Texas hospitals are running out of drugs, beds, ventilators and even staff https://t.co/46r9zAmrE4 via @TexasTribune— Charles Ornstein (@charlesornstein) July 15, 2020
Many Texas hospitals are no longer accepting transfer patients in order to maintain space for a surge that’s expected to come.— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) July 15, 2020
In some parts of the state, it’s already here. https://t.co/1qiJoOGsdR
Texas classrooms can stay closed this fall without losing state funding if local health officials order it, @AliyyaSwaby writes. https://t.co/5RHqdgm7Ra— Ayan Mittra (@ayanmittra) July 15, 2020
Trump who? Is he on the school board? No? Don't care what he says, then.
A University of Texas and Texas Politics Project poll showed recently that 65% of Texans felt it was unsafe for children to go back to school. https://t.co/Xx7V3MZuzU— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) July 15, 2020
Meanwhile, teachers unions are encouraging their members to look for legal avenues to stay home, including resigning or retiring early, instead of being forced back into classrooms while cases are rising. https://t.co/Xx7V3MZuzU— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) July 15, 2020
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