The Texas Progressive Alliance -- most of it, anyway -- waits patiently for some cooler weather here at the fall equinox.
Meanwhile the upper Texas Gulf Coast is drying out after a tropical system named Imelda quickly formed, moved inland, and parked itself, dumping a torrent of water on places previously flooded two years ago by Harvey as well as some that were not.
American Independent News Network, via ShareBlue, reported that 4 Texas Republicans -- Brian Babin, Dan Crenshaw, Pete Olson, and Randy Weber -- all voted against a bipartisan temporary funding bill for FEMA's flood insurance program just as TS Imelda hit SE Texas.
Against the backdrop of Imelda's flooding, the #YouthClimateStrike on Friday underscored the urgency of immediate action.
David Collins was on the scene at H-Town's city hall; Austin rallied at the Capitol.
Before we move on, let's close a long climate lead-in with a few additional items.
Downwinders at Risk says that LafargeHolcim, a multinational European cement manufacturer, is a 'conscientious corporate citizen' everywhere except Midlothian, Texas.
There is some good news ...
Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India visited Houston on Sunday, and Trump was at NRG Stadium to greet him, along with 50,000 of Modi's devotees and a few thousand protestors.
In election related developments:
Annie's List has endorsed Lorraine Birabil for Texas House District 100 and Dr. Eliz Markowitz for Texas House District 28 in advance of the November 5 special election, and TXElects reports that the the Harris County Republican Party endorsed Luis LaRotta for HD-148.
Also from TXElects regarding the HD-100 special election:
Kuff looked at Crystal Mason's illegal voting conviction, which just had its appellate hearing.
In 2020 Democratic presidential developments last week ...
SocraticGadfly ranked some of the candidates by cult level of their following. PDiddie at Brains and Eggs had two of his usual weekly Updates; the first focusing on MSNBC's #ClimateForum and the second with news about the #LGBTQforum, the US Green Party's Black Caucus debate, and the piece from the Chron/SAEN's Marina Kormbaki about the Texas Green Party.
At the Lege, the TexTrib's Ross Ramsey compared Speaker Dennis Bonnen and redistricting to a haunted house story, while Stephen Young at the Dallas Observer is just enjoying the Dan Patrick/MQS fight.
With an update on Space City elections, PDiddie here in this space posted about the city council and mayoral favorites, his and the most likely, while Above the Law had a laugh at Tony Buzbee.
As we come to the end of another Wrangle, there are some historical papers to view ...
... and some history to review.
Glasstire announces the Houston Cardboard Art Parade.
The Texanist addresses the question of whether one can be a liberal and a Texan at the same time.
And Nicholas Frank at the Rivard Report posted a eulogy for San Antonio media titan and philanthropist Houston Harriman Harte.
Autumn is a second spring where every leaf is a flowerπ— Camilleπ» (@wildflower501) September 23, 2019
~Albert Camus#AutumnEquinox ππ pic.twitter.com/sBORfbypSe
Meanwhile the upper Texas Gulf Coast is drying out after a tropical system named Imelda quickly formed, moved inland, and parked itself, dumping a torrent of water on places previously flooded two years ago by Harvey as well as some that were not.
12 hour loop of the relentless rain in southeast Texas.— Avery Tomasco (@averytomascowx) September 19, 2019
1-3 feet of rain has fallen overnight/this morning near Beaumont. 6"/hour rainfall rates now over Houston. Yet another disaster unfolding for Southeast Texas. #txwx pic.twitter.com/NDqFk8D0IJ
WATCH: A Beaumont, Texas, hotel is flooded as heavy rain from #Imelda inundates parts of the state Thursday; workers visiting the city tell CBS News they lost their trucks in the hotel parking lot due to fast rising waters https://t.co/g3t3dabrp9 pic.twitter.com/cXRmQ1jMgS— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) September 19, 2019
When people say adaptation to climate change will be easy, watch how hard it will be for the East Texas to recover. Now recognize that this is going to happen more and more frequently and you'll get a feel for how hard adaptation is going to be.https://t.co/Eg4NKfmR6K— Andrew Dessler (@AndrewDessler) September 20, 2019
American Independent News Network, via ShareBlue, reported that 4 Texas Republicans -- Brian Babin, Dan Crenshaw, Pete Olson, and Randy Weber -- all voted against a bipartisan temporary funding bill for FEMA's flood insurance program just as TS Imelda hit SE Texas.
Against the backdrop of Imelda's flooding, the #YouthClimateStrike on Friday underscored the urgency of immediate action.
Houston’s youth movement just had a #ClimateStrike in the middle of Tropical Depression Imelda— Jacob Castillo π (@Jacob__Castillo) September 20, 2019
Over 1,000 people showed up to make history together
The Oil and Gas capital of the world is ready for a Green New Deal#GlobalClimateStrike #ClimateStrikes #YouthClimateStrikeHTX pic.twitter.com/v6L5cvwuzt
David Collins was on the scene at H-Town's city hall; Austin rallied at the Capitol.
Climate change is a crisis.— autumn πΉ (@autumnskyelann) September 20, 2019
Indigenous lands are stolen, factories are placed in low income communities, we crack the earth apart.
We must stand up to the fossil fuel and military industries that are killing the planet. And those who stand by and do nothing.
π#ClimateStrike pic.twitter.com/5ZvATFL7M2
Before we move on, let's close a long climate lead-in with a few additional items.
Downwinders at Risk says that LafargeHolcim, a multinational European cement manufacturer, is a 'conscientious corporate citizen' everywhere except Midlothian, Texas.
There is some good news ...
Texas gets nearly a fifth of its power from wind.— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) September 23, 2019
According to the Department of Energy, Texas has the potential to produce 1.3 million megawatts of electricity from wind—more than any other state in the country.https://t.co/LZ8MppuL33
Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India visited Houston on Sunday, and Trump was at NRG Stadium to greet him, along with 50,000 of Modi's devotees and a few thousand protestors.
"Indians in the U.S. skew strongly Democratic, with 77% of Indian-Americans voting for Hillary Clinton in 2016. But they also overwhelmingly support Modi...who echoes Trump’s populist brand of personality politics." Hence Trump's political opp. #HowdyModi https://t.co/0dHc2mZDJM— Michael Kugelman (@MichaelKugelman) September 22, 2019
"We have a very special person with us. He needs no introduction. His name is familiar to every person on the planet," says PM @narendramodi as he addresses #HowdyModi event— Hindustan Times (@htTweets) September 22, 2019
Follow LIVE updates here: https://t.co/EdRD82zzvD#ModiInHouston pic.twitter.com/Sw8DgGr8Xv
#GoBackModi #Kashmir2Khalistan— SandeepKaur2020 (@SKaur2020) September 22, 2019
Thousands of Sikhs & Kashmiris took to the Streets of Houston. pic.twitter.com/vJUTU0T3Sf
In election related developments:
Annie's List has endorsed Lorraine Birabil for Texas House District 100 and Dr. Eliz Markowitz for Texas House District 28 in advance of the November 5 special election, and TXElects reports that the the Harris County Republican Party endorsed Luis LaRotta for HD-148.
Republicans constitute a little over a third of (HD-148)'s electorate. If they unite behind LaRotta, it would be very difficult for any two of the 12 Democrats running to qualify for the runoff ahead of him.
Also from TXElects regarding the HD-100 special election:
In an email to supporters, Democratic candidate Paul Stafford announced he was ending his special election campaign because his “ballot application, which was originally accepted by the Secretary of State, was rescinded” because he had not lived in the district for at least 12 months. Stafford voted in the May mayoral election from an address outside of the district. Stafford said he would run for the seat in the March primary. Nonprofit executive James Armstrong III, attorney Lorraine Birabil (as referenced above), business owner Daniel Clayton, and former Dallas council member Sandra Crenshaw remain on the ballot.
Kuff looked at Crystal Mason's illegal voting conviction, which just had its appellate hearing.
In 2020 Democratic presidential developments last week ...
SocraticGadfly ranked some of the candidates by cult level of their following. PDiddie at Brains and Eggs had two of his usual weekly Updates; the first focusing on MSNBC's #ClimateForum and the second with news about the #LGBTQforum, the US Green Party's Black Caucus debate, and the piece from the Chron/SAEN's Marina Kormbaki about the Texas Green Party.
At the Lege, the TexTrib's Ross Ramsey compared Speaker Dennis Bonnen and redistricting to a haunted house story, while Stephen Young at the Dallas Observer is just enjoying the Dan Patrick/MQS fight.
With an update on Space City elections, PDiddie here in this space posted about the city council and mayoral favorites, his and the most likely, while Above the Law had a laugh at Tony Buzbee.
In mayoral forum on environment, @SylvesterTurner argues Houston is moving in right direction, challengers say he isn’t doing enough to address “existential threat” — via @dylmcguinness https://t.co/qwKO8hOzYt— Jasper Scherer (@jaspscherer) September 21, 2019
As we come to the end of another Wrangle, there are some historical papers to view ...
Confidential documents I pored over in the University of Texas archives reveal how officials once plotted to stymie federal de-segregation orders — including by adopting standardized tests. https://t.co/ISkdTT1ioR— Asher Price (@asherprice) September 19, 2019
... and some history to review.
.@ErikLoomis of @lefarkins blog visits the grave of TX Governor "Big Jim" Hogg at the Texas State Cemetery. https://t.co/Pbd1m14UUL #TXLege— Generic Old White Guy (@PDiddie) September 22, 2019
Glasstire announces the Houston Cardboard Art Parade.
For the Angry TΓas y Abuelas, an initial act of kindness toward migrants blossomed into an organized act of resistance. @catrcardenas spent time with the women who are feeding, clothing, and fighting for asylum seekers at the border. https://t.co/XwOm2VcEYg— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) September 22, 2019
The Texanist addresses the question of whether one can be a liberal and a Texan at the same time.
The MOB continued its great tradition of trolling, this time to support Baylor’s LGBTQ students. ππ³️ππ https://t.co/xyjFbRYinm
— Equality Texas (@EqualityTexas) September 22, 2019
And Nicholas Frank at the Rivard Report posted a eulogy for San Antonio media titan and philanthropist Houston Harriman Harte.