Monday, November 15, 2021

The Filing Wrangle from Far Left Texas


Please stand by while this morning's breaking news sucks all the oxygen out of the 2022 statewide races for the next few days.


At the very end of the TexTrib's piece they catalog a few of the failures of O'Rourke, Texas Dems, and their inept D.C. counterparts.

For the rest of the 2020 election cycle, O’Rourke and his group focused mainly on Democrats’ fight to capture the state House majority. They came up woefully short, failing to net a single seat.

[...]

Over the summer, O’Rourke became a leading figure in Texas Democrats’ push for federal voting rights legislation. While Democrats in the Texas House broke quorum over Abbott’s priority elections bill and went to Washington, D.C., to lobby Congress for help, O’Rourke crisscrossed Texas to build public pressure for federal legislation.

However, Democrats were not successful on either the state or federal levels. The state House Democrats eventually returned to Austin to allow Republicans to pass their restrictive elections legislation, while Congress still has not sent a voting rights bill to Biden’s desk.

There will be plenty of ink spilled and pixels scattered about fundraising, polling, guns, the grid, and other various and sundry issues that arise over the course of the next 11.75 months.  I feel pretty sure that our ability to -- and our interest in -- casting our ballots next year will determine who wins and who loses.  Not to be simplistic about it, but the negatives for both these losers are too high and will only go higher once the mud starts flying.  That depresses what is certain to be the more historical pattern of low voter turnout here.  And that's my marker.

Other candidate filings from over the weekend appear on Patrick Svitek's spreadsheet, and Reform Austin has compiled a grid that is difficult at best to determine party affiliation without a scorecard or knowledge from elsewhere.  It looks like they lumped the third-party challengers into a category called 'potential candidates'.  (Do better, y'all.)

Moving on ...


The tragedy at Travis Scott's AstroworldFest claimed two more victims over the weekend, and everybody with a conscience is reassessing the rapper's prior good works for the city and even his contributions to music and the festival scene.  Not Kuffner, though.  Firefighter logs, lawsuits, and business insurance.  One of the more appallingly tone-deaf posts I've read on that blog in recent years.  He had nothing to say about Scott in the years before, and has turned into his predictable scold after, same as with the Astros' cheating, the Texans being owned by the McNairs, and other items often "seen in the background" that demonstrate how much he doesn't actually care about the people of Houston.  What would you expect from a Yankees fan, after all?  Wait and see how happy he is when Carlos Correa signs with the Bombers; that'll tell you.

Disgusting.

Continuing with a few more items of note that revulse me:


Of all the reasons I have not to fly, rude-ass conservatives starting fights with airline employees is moving rapidly up the list.


I was mad enough about the possibility of freezing in the dark this winter without being reminded that I'm paying for Kelcey Warren's million-dollar contribution to Greg Abbott out of his $2.4 billion profits from last winter.  If the power goes out for days once more, maybe Beto's got a shot after all (as long as the Texans who rarely vote don't all die of hypothermia, that is).


I'll stop here for now -- lots more to come -- with these calm-me-downs.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Sunday "Big Bird, Little Bird" Funnies

That time a cartoon preempted the Cuban Missile Crisis

In his column looking back at past interviews, veteran journalist A. Craig Copetas remembers a time when The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Friends offered an alternative version of US-Soviet history.

Support a disappearing craft and give a Christmas gift subscription to your loved ones from your favorite cartoonist(s).