Texas suffers under many ailments, but one is not an overabundance of critical thinking. Big Lies over inconvenient truths rule, man.
An all-night ERCOT meeting is raising questions about @GregAbbott_TX's role in the power pricing debacle that created a multi-billion dollar mess. A top Abbott aide was at the previously undisclosed meeting #txlege 1/ https://t.co/zKpfUfmzB8
— Jay Root (@byjayroot) April 23, 2021
This was last Friday's news, which barely makes a ripple among the daily atrocities, it seems.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott dispatched a top aide to the ERCOT operations center on the night the grid operator made the controversial decision to leave electricity prices at maximum levels -- a move blamed for creating a multi-billion dollar mess.
Abbott has squarely placed the blame for the blackout boondoggle on ERCOT, which operates the power grid, and called for its CEO to resign right after the lights started coming back on across Texas on Thursday, Feb. 18. The ERCOT board eventually fired its CEO.
Unmentioned while Abbott was distancing himself from the power outage fiasco and railing against ERCOT on TV: a top energy policy adviser, Ryland Ramos, spent the previous night -- and into early Thursday morning -- at the agency’s operations center in Taylor, outside of Austin. That’s where ERCOT’s high-tech control room, handling the flow of power to most Texans, is located.
Also on hand at the previously undisclosed meeting were Public Utility Commission Chair DeAnn Walker, an Abbott appointee who later resigned under bipartisan pressure, along with representatives of four of the major electric transmission and distribution companies in Texas.
Ramos returned to the operations center Friday morning, February 19 -- right after the price cap was lifted -- and stayed there most of the day, according to ERCOT visitor logs obtained by Hearst Newspapers.
Abbott spokesman Mark Miner said neither the governor nor Ramos “were involved in any way” in the decision to keep prices at the maximum, which contributed to bankruptcies and billions in losses that will reverberate in the Texas economy for years to come. He said Abbott wanted Ramos at the operations center because he felt ERCOT was spewing “disinformation” about the crisis.
Just helping get the power back on. Keeping those price surges under control. Looking out for us while we froze, every step of the way. I'm sure nobody was scream-blaming anybody for anything, regardless of what the Guvnuh was saying publicly and nevermind those heads that tumbled off the chopping block a few days later.
One thing Abbott loves is his money. He likes to raise it, he likes to control it, he likes to hand it out to his friends and supporters. What he doesn't like to do is spend it on anything having to do with the public good. How would that help him at all?
Gov. Greg Abbott sought a waiver to reroute nearly $18 billion in federal COVID aid from public schools to other areas of the budget.
— Houston Public Media (@HoustonPubMedia) April 24, 2021
Abbott also requested a waiver in Feb. that would have allowed him to do the same with $17.9 billion in education funds.https://t.co/C7gheEYSxH
With all the money Abbott has collected over the years, you'd think we -- maybe I should say 'they', since it wasn't my money -- could have gotten a little better government for their investment. Wonder how Farris Wilks and Tim Dunn and Rich Kinder's heirs and some of those other billionaires are feeling these days about those millions wasted. Oh well, easy come easy go. As $60 oil reminds us, at their level money is fungible. Like people. Especially poor people, poor sick people, children, old folks, and Brown and Black people. And women. Besides, the Texas Freeze really didn't kill that many Texans, comparatively.
Maybe the greatest single tragedy in TX history?
— Prof Peter Hotez MD PhD (@PeterHotez) April 24, 2021
1. 50,000 deaths from COVID19
2. 22,000 Texans sacrificed their lives in WWII
3. 6,000-12,000 Galveston flood
4. 5,000 WWI
5. 3,417 Vietnam
6. 3,000 Civil War (some say higher)
7. 1,723 Korea
8. 700 TX Revolution
9. 600 TXCity1947
As long as none of our freedumbs get sacrificed, it's all good.
The #txlege's insistence on passing extreme, unpopular #PermitlessCarry bills is chilling.
— Katy N. (@Katy_Phelps) April 26, 2021
Related, at least two senators in Dan Patrick's hastily formed committee have terrible judgement (*cough @SenatorBobHall & @DrSchwertner cough*): https://t.co/xTBmlzLCSs via @TexasTribune
#HB1515 would:
— ACLU of Texas (@ACLUTx) April 26, 2021
- Ban abortion at 6 weeks
- Allow ANYONE to sue Texans for providing abortions
We’re only days away from it being voted out of the House and sent to Gov. Abbott’s desk. Find your rep and tell them you oppose this extreme bill: https://t.co/HZRFQGtfaW. #StopHB1515 pic.twitter.com/QCkKywVacC
TEXAS: Your voices are slowing the anti-voter omnibus bills HB 6 and SB 7, but we must not forget other bills with the same harmful provisions. One example: the TX House Elections Committee passed HB 4322, which would ban drive-thru voting. #txlege https://t.co/Nz6t56EUAQ
— Stacey Abrams (@staceyabrams) April 26, 2021
I'm far from Ms. Abrams' biggest fan, but when she speaks -- and acts -- on voter suppression, it comes from an unfortunate wealth of experience and knowledge. Pay attention, Texas.
Or don't, I suppose. Maybe that's a big part of the problem here.
Attention to the #Txlege Session (March 2021) https://t.co/QnWzD0YhR2 via @TxPolProject pic.twitter.com/9f9siOVHDk
— The Texas Politics Project (@TxPolProject) April 24, 2021
It's probably time for me to move on to another topic. More Republicans behaving badly? There's one we haven't had enough of lately.
DC riot arrest totals still rising as North Texas couple accused of assaulting officers during Capitol insurrection, FBI says. @KelliSmithNews has the story. #CapitolRiot #Trump #Congress #capitolinsurrection https://t.co/iqxFaniaiP
— John Gravois (@Grav1) April 24, 2021
In post-riot campaign ad, @DanRodimer holds assault rifle and vows to ‘strip power’ from @JoeBiden and @SpeakerPelosi#TX06 #2A #CapitolRiot
— Todd J. Gillman (@toddgillman) April 27, 2021
https://t.co/JXyGBbFBpH
I'm trying to care about the TX-6 election. It's just not registering. Mostly because there are 23 candidates, and the latest poll shows the wife of the deceased GOP incumbent and the lady Blue Dog with the Spanish surname leading. That sounds about right to me. *zzzz*
Here I will make space to add some Tweets that emphasize the real absurdity of what we are all going through with the Lege at the moment.
the crappy thing here is that Texas has laws requiring employers to give staff paid time off for voting on Election Days. Yet we know that many employers are violating these rules, disenfranchising their employees.
— Zenen Jaimes Perez 🎆 (@zenenjp) April 21, 2021
Why isn't this a Lege Priority @GregAbbott_TX? https://t.co/CHTDUightQ
Amber Briggle is the parent of a trans child.
I filed a police report today over threatening voice messages listing all the ways I should kill myself.
— Amber Briggle (she/her) (@mrsbriggle) April 20, 2021
I'm MAD.
“I know there are a lot of dry cleaning and car wash coupons, but uninsured people need those too,” one GOP lawmaker said. https://t.co/5L7V3QYMWG
— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) April 26, 2021
Yes, this one is satire, but I'd rather the first two were as well.
Two environmental updates; not at all greasy or smoky.
I don't understand why ATT and Kroger, two companies I subsidize entirely too much, keep showing up on my shit list.
Why is @ATT blocking legislation to #savethebees and other pollinators? HB 520 by @ForHD65 is supported by beekeepers, farmers, the North American Butterfly Association, environmentalists and many others. The only opponent? AT&T. #txlege https://t.co/RVBWEIVAYe
— Luke Metzger (@lukemetzger) April 21, 2021
But there's good news ...
Whooping cranes are laying eggs in Texas for the first time since the late 1800s. The animals are some of the rarest birds in North America.https://t.co/OPDFe7stLQ
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) April 26, 2021
I'm not through with Lege business yet. When they're not moving the bad bills as fast as they can, they're stalling the good ones.
One of 3 narrow police reform bills that made it out of Senate committee - restricting chokeholds - has been taken off the full chamber's intent calendar.
— Jolie McCullough (@jsmccullou) April 26, 2021
More on what's progressed and what's stalled in TX's George Floyd Act. https://t.co/3u7oQL1Cv6 #txlege
Dade Phelan is a Trump/Patrick/Abbott shithole conservative, and I will keep saying it until everybody gets it. But guess what? If you're wondering how bad we have it in Texas, just realize there are plenty of influential Texas conservatives who think he's too liberal.
If you’re wondering how bad we have it in Texas just realize that our Republican speaker knows CRT is being funded in our budget, and is defending that funding. #txlege https://t.co/sEzznbnLhT
— Luke Macias (@lukemaciastx) April 23, 2021
(Not familiar with critical race theory? It's not the boogeyman. Tangentially, expect some long and long-winded bloviating on this topic from Gadfly shortly, if he hasn't posted about it already. You know he's the expert on everything.)
Gerrymandering will be hot, but not until the special session, commencing sometime this summer (or perhaps fall), and it's worth boning up on now.
Can Ed Helms save Texas from GOP cracking and packing political districts?https://t.co/ikYxIZvWRv
— Dallas Observer (@Dallas_Observer) April 23, 2021
Prison gerrymandering: the practice of governments counting incarcerated persons as residents of their facilities when districts are drawn, instead of as residents of their last addresses.
— Texas Civil Rights Project (@TXCivilRights) April 26, 2021
Effect: power stolen from racially diverse communities. 👎#txlege can & should fix this. https://t.co/O8DRWUFGkM
Fun to look forward to. I've run long here again so I'll save the rest -- criminal and social justice posts and assorted what-not -- for tomorrow or the next day. Here's the "calm down" portion.
You a fan of beer and bicycle riding?
From the people who brought you award-winning bike pub crawls and the beer-to-go ride comes #Saint2Saint, a 3-day bike ride from @stelmobrewing to @SaintArnold rolling out this Thursday. Maybe we'll remember to update here, but probably better to find us on Insta. #norain pic.twitter.com/hq0HRfwvMk
— Austin Beer Guide (@AustinBeerGuide) April 26, 2021
ACL posted Denny Freeman's obituary.
Sending love to Denny Freeman’s family and countless friends and fans in the Austin area. Denny Freeman helped create the Austin scene as we know it & embodied its spirit for the last half century. He was a force of nature, and we’ll never see another like him again. pic.twitter.com/ajUGwyAYcy
— Paramount Theatre (@ParamountAustin) April 26, 2021
Joe Maudlin, Jerry Allison and Buddy Holly at Ray Miller Triumph Motorcycles in Dallas on May 13, 1958. Buddy bought that motorcycle. His father held onto the bike until 1970, then sold it. The two remaining Crickets found it & gave it to Waylon Jennings on his birthday in 1979. pic.twitter.com/H0bvlK63Q2
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) April 27, 2021
Starting Saturday at the San Antonio Museum of Art and venturing through downtown, the walk features stops at several colorful murals. https://t.co/4AqzgEnp7e
— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) April 22, 2021
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