It's not just Greg Abbott's unfortunate developments today, though he does bat leadoff.
If Texas were any other state, if this much relentless corrupt behavior was coming to light about anybody else other than Abbott... that candidate would be electoral toast.
-- Rick Perry, on his way out the door to California in retirement, is doing his best to see that Lone Star Democrats have a fighting chance in November. The headline: "Why Rick Perry's remarks on gays could sour Texas on Tesla"...
Republicans really don't get how backward and ignorant this sort of thing looks to people elsewhere. The rest of the article "devil-advocates' that it's not so bad, but that isn't at all the case. People outside of Texas who aren't conservative -- that is to say, the vast majority of Americans -- are completely appalled at these social developments. And that's before the topic changes to guns, or women's reproductive rights.
The Texas economy will bust again as soon as oil does. Don't think it won't. And the extended opportunities to diversify it will have been squandered by two decades of religious conservative dominance. Casino gambling, marijuana decriminalization and then legalization... all blocked by the fundies. Texas has managed alternate energy diversification to the extent that even the oil barons are making a play, which is how you can tell that Big Oil doesn't rule here like you think.
It's Big God that's the problem. And that's exclusively a Republican problem (that they in turn make a problem for all of the rest of Texas).
-- Another right-wing talking point explodes in their faces: it was, in fact, a YouTube that prompted the Benghazi attack.
-- Last, our local conservo-blogmeister Big Jolly seems distressed about the seeming inevitability (I warned you about that) of GOP electoral shoe-ins while he advocates a vote for Leticia Van de Putte in this post.
I suppose he's going to have to spend a lot of time denying that's what he meant.
I'm willing to keep this "Bad News Pachyderms" series going as long as they do.
In May 2009, a former assistant attorney general in Greg Abbott’s office sued the Office of the Attorney General in Dallas County court, claiming she’d been fired for refusing to lie under oath about a Dallas County judge. Five years later, the Dallas-based Fifth Court of Appeals has ruled that Ginger Weatherspoon can go forward with her lawsuit.
The AG’s office has spent years trying to get the suit tossed, claiming, among other things, that Weatherspoon didn’t make a “good faith” effort to blow the whistle to the right links in the chain of command. A three-justice panel disagreed, and issued an opinion Monday written by Justice David Evans that said Dallas County Judge Martin Hoffman did the right thing last year when he refused to grant the AG’s office its request for summary judgment.
Weatherspoon’s initial filing in 2009 garnered media attention because of its explosive content: She claimed she refused to sign a “false affidavit” filled with “a number of misrepresentations and mischaracterizations” about David Hanschen, who, at the time, was a Dallas County family court judge involved in a pretty nasty tussle with the Abbott’s office over child support.
If Texas were any other state, if this much relentless corrupt behavior was coming to light about anybody else other than Abbott... that candidate would be electoral toast.
-- Rick Perry, on his way out the door to California in retirement, is doing his best to see that Lone Star Democrats have a fighting chance in November. The headline: "Why Rick Perry's remarks on gays could sour Texas on Tesla"...
Texas Gov. Rick Perry has made a career out of visiting, recruiting, and relocating businesses from California to Texas. But as the state’s GOP continues to push further and further to the right of the political spectrum, could the state’s ultra-conservative stance hurt recruitment from a progressive state?
First came the Texas Republican Party platform that said homosexuality is a choice and endorsed therapy aimed at “curing” people of being gay – a therapy banned in California.
Then, while on a company recruitment trip – one specifically aimed at enticing California based car maker Tesla to build a factory in Texas – Gov. Perry told a group of businesspeople that homosexuality was like alcoholism: whether or not you feel compelled to do something, you have the ability not to act on your urges.
“I may have the genetic coding that I’m inclined to be an alcoholic. But I have the desire not to do that. And I look at homosexual issue as the same way,” Perry said. (Watch a video of Perry’s response.)
Reporters in the room for the event say people in the crowd gasped after hearing Perry’s statement. The governor took plenty of criticism over the weekend for his comparison, leading up to a testy exchange with CNBC “Squawk Box” co-anchor Joe Kernen Monday morning.
Republicans really don't get how backward and ignorant this sort of thing looks to people elsewhere. The rest of the article "devil-advocates' that it's not so bad, but that isn't at all the case. People outside of Texas who aren't conservative -- that is to say, the vast majority of Americans -- are completely appalled at these social developments. And that's before the topic changes to guns, or women's reproductive rights.
The Texas economy will bust again as soon as oil does. Don't think it won't. And the extended opportunities to diversify it will have been squandered by two decades of religious conservative dominance. Casino gambling, marijuana decriminalization and then legalization... all blocked by the fundies. Texas has managed alternate energy diversification to the extent that even the oil barons are making a play, which is how you can tell that Big Oil doesn't rule here like you think.
It's Big God that's the problem. And that's exclusively a Republican problem (that they in turn make a problem for all of the rest of Texas).
-- Another right-wing talking point explodes in their faces: it was, in fact, a YouTube that prompted the Benghazi attack.
-- Last, our local conservo-blogmeister Big Jolly seems distressed about the seeming inevitability (I warned you about that) of GOP electoral shoe-ins while he advocates a vote for Leticia Van de Putte in this post.
Folks, get ready for Lt. Gov. Patrick. This is how he operates, throwing money and government at the “crisis” of the day. No long term planning because he has no core belief in small government conservatism. No collaboration with the Feds to find out what they are doing. Just Dan being Dan. Of course, he does have an opponent in November.
I suppose he's going to have to spend a lot of time denying that's what he meant.
I'm willing to keep this "Bad News Pachyderms" series going as long as they do.