I’ll keep it real. Wearing a face mask isn’t comfortable for me, but I do it anyway because I want to protect myself and others from the coronavirus. But sometimes I switch up the mask to one the doctor prescribed but doesn't feel comfortable with because I feel like the doctor is trying to justify their role in my care. It's like I'm selling my rights for "treatment" I don't require. I think people get a bad image of dermatologists and worse for treating it. And, again, I'm not asking for anything extra. Just my right to bare face and facial hair without being strung up as an accomplice to a virus.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., kick off Super Tuesday at 9 p.m. Earlier coverage can be reached at: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/hillary-clinton-challenge-bern-sanders-on-2016-election-race.html#ixzz3oQogUBEQ.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Super Tuesday speaks to supporters in Philadelphia. (Photo: Evan Vucci, AP)

Barring a surprise backfire, Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton will be the presumptive Democratic nominee for president of the United States as of Tuesday, while presumptive GOP nominees Donald Trump and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida have yet to declare their candidacies.

In the latest twist in the 2016 Presidential race, here are six things to know about Super Tuesday 1 (d.m. ET 6/6).

1. Pundits consider Sanders' challenge to Clinton as one best avoided

Sanders will enter the contest having put Clinton on notice that he'll try to twist her overtures on campaign finance reform into references to his own proposals, first introduced in December and taking a pro-amnesty and pro-open borders direction.

Former Vermont governor Howard Dean — running in a surprisingly strong second to Clinton in the polls — stirred speculation Tuesday he might challenge the former secretary of State if Sanders made a pitch on defeating the Chamber of Commerce tax plan to give prosectors a Memorial Day weekend that to them should go for a dive.

Dean has been accused of having a goal of blocking Sen. Elizabeth Warren's ascension to the White House in 2016.

"You didn't try to stop my campaign; no one told you I was going to try to stop yours," Sanders said of his Capitol Hill-based opponents. "You copped out. You said that superdelegates, voters, and Secretary Clinton would decide the Democratic nomination — instead of struggling and fighting and
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