You could not write a better script for the epic disaster that is Greg Abbott's gubernatorial campaign if your name was Wendy Davis.
I thought it was bad enough when Abbott said that spending money on pre-K was a waste. This is quite obviously a much more serious problem.
What GOP war on women? LMAO. Can you believe Abbott is going to be in San Antonio today promoting Murray's bigoted drivel?
I didn't think anything could top palling around with Ted Nugent, child predator, for bad decisions. This is is still in second place but it's closing fast.
None of this is really breaking news, though. As mentioned previously, Republicans just aren't trying to conceal their racism, misogyny, and hatred of the disadvantaged any longer.
I don't have any better idea than anybody else about what might motivate the prototypical Democratic voter to drag themselves to the polls this November, but if they are paying attention and manage to do so, this race -- and others down the ballot -- would simply be no contest (and not the kind of sweep the GOP usually enjoys in off-presidential cycles, either). When I said that Greg Abbott needed to make a few mistakes in order for Davis to win... well, he's certainly holding up his end of the bargain.
Christy Hoppe at Trailblazers has more on this week's unfolding nightmare for Abbott.
In his pre-Kindergarten education plan released this week, Texas Republican gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott cites the work of a man who believes that women and minorities are intellectually inferior to white men.
Abbott's plan explains how he'd reform pre-K through third grade in the state. Instead of expanding access to state-funded programs, as his Democratic opponent Wendy Davis has proposed, the attorney general proposes offering additional funds to only those programs that meet a certain standard of achievement.
In the second paragraph of his introduction, Abbott cites Charles Murray, a conservative social scientist and fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
"Family background has the most decisive effect on student achievement, contributing to a large performance gap between children from economically disadvantaged families and those from middle class homes," Abbott writes, citing Murray's book Real Education in the footnote. (Abbott's plan misspells the book's title as "Read Education.")
I thought it was bad enough when Abbott said that spending money on pre-K was a waste. This is quite obviously a much more serious problem.
In 2005, when economist and then-Harvard President Larry Summers said that women are underrepresented in science programs at elite universities because of their "innate" intellectual differences from men, Murray expanded on Summers' point.
"No woman has been a significant original thinker in any of the world's great philosophical traditions," he wrote. "Women have produced a smaller number of important visual artists, and none that is clearly in the first rank. No female composer is even close to the first rank. Social restrictions undoubtedly damped down women’s contributions in all of the arts, but the pattern of accomplishment that did break through is strikingly consistent with what we know about the respective strengths of male and female cognitive repertoires."
What GOP war on women? LMAO. Can you believe Abbott is going to be in San Antonio today promoting Murray's bigoted drivel?
Murray is a very problematic source of inspiration for an education plan. The Southern Poverty Law Center describes him as "one of the most influential social scientists in America, using racist pseudoscience and misleading statistics to argue that social inequality is caused by the genetic inferiority of the black and Latino communities, women and the poor."
"In Murray’s world, wealth and social power naturally accrue towards a 'cognitive elite' made up of high-IQ individuals (who are overwhelmingly white, male, and from well-to-do families), while those on the lower end of the eponymous bell curve form an 'underclass' whose misfortunes stem from their low intelligence," the Southern Poverty Law Center, which describes Murray as a "white nationalist," writes.
I didn't think anything could top palling around with Ted Nugent, child predator, for bad decisions. This is is still in second place but it's closing fast.
None of this is really breaking news, though. As mentioned previously, Republicans just aren't trying to conceal their racism, misogyny, and hatred of the disadvantaged any longer.
Murray's 2008 book that Abbott cites, Real Education, argues that students with lower IQ's are not as educable as smarter children and should be siphoned off to vocational programs instead of sent to college. He estimates that only 10 to 20 percent of young adults are capable of doing college-level work.
Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) recently cited Murray in his controversial and racially-charged assertion that poverty is caused by lazy, "inner city" men.
I don't have any better idea than anybody else about what might motivate the prototypical Democratic voter to drag themselves to the polls this November, but if they are paying attention and manage to do so, this race -- and others down the ballot -- would simply be no contest (and not the kind of sweep the GOP usually enjoys in off-presidential cycles, either). When I said that Greg Abbott needed to make a few mistakes in order for Davis to win... well, he's certainly holding up his end of the bargain.
Christy Hoppe at Trailblazers has more on this week's unfolding nightmare for Abbott.
You've inspired me. I'm working on a blog post for tomorrow about the Greg Abbott Pal of the Month Club.
ReplyDeleteYou are one busy mf'er. I'm just trying to think of something original to say about McCutcheon.
ReplyDeleteHey, I'm a writer. I learn how to update and recycle. Like that "Texas GOP leaders ..." that could easily become a series.
ReplyDeleteOh, and on McCutcheon, I used it in part to kick Glenn Greenwald in the ass. He's great on the NSA, but he ain't the liberal he claims he is.
ReplyDelete