Sunday, December 26, 2021
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Another Wrangle Before Christmas
Don't forget the tamales on Taco Tuesday.
A few items to update from yesterday:
Texas' Harris County on Monday reported its first death related to the Omicron COVID-19 variant, a man who was unvaccinated, the county health department said https://t.co/1S5GzE6nR5
— Reuters (@Reuters) December 21, 2021
Franklin Barbecue became the first high-profile Austin restaurant to be affected by the recent surge. https://t.co/zliFTHNb4u
— Austin 360 (@austin360) December 21, 2021
From Friday: Court sets Sept. 27 start date for trial in federal Texas redistricting case.
— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) December 20, 2021
The three-judge panel is blocking off two weeks.
Preliminary injunction hearing for SD10 claims still on for Jan. 25. #txlege
The push to ban books in Texas schools has now spread to public libraries
— Joshua Fechter π (@JoshuaFechter) December 20, 2021
From @allyson_renee7 & @Kevinreynolds30 https://t.co/BJ8TkNERBA @TexasTribune #txlege
The energy companies @GovAbbott met w/on Thursday to receive assurances the lights will stay on this winter have contributed $3.2M to his campaign since 2013, at least $1.09M of which came in June via its PACs, CEOs & lobbyists. #txlege #txenergyhttps://t.co/4sUc7oyhTM
— RA News (@RANewsTX) December 18, 2021
Some 'old business' I'm behind on.
Abortion rights supporters prepare for an elongated court fight with no clear path for a major victory following the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on Texas' law. https://t.co/oekC97kC1L
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 19, 2021
One piece of new business, from the border.
Down in Texas, @GovAbbott is touting the Texas Wall. They even distributed photos to the media to show the magnificent barrier behind them!
— Fr. Robert R. Ballecer, SJ (@padresj) December 20, 2021
... Of course, if you look at some of the non-official photos, you might see an issue with their "airtight security" π€£ pic.twitter.com/KvyljSsFka
.@GovAbbott funnels another nearly $40 million into his border security initiative, paying for police equipment, overtime for cops/courts/lawyers, radio towers and travel.
— Jolie McCullough (@jsmccullou) December 20, 2021
State lawmakers signed off on nearly $2B (yes, a B) for border security efforts this year. #txlege pic.twitter.com/XUMYcZ7Awv
And if you really want to know what lies Trump fed his rain-soaked lackeys in Houston and Dallas over the weekend, there you go.
Former President Donald Trump has revealed he received a booster shot of the COVID-19 vaccine, drawing boos from a crowd in Dallas. https://t.co/bSMePKDNZu
— CBSDFW (@CBSDFW) December 21, 2021
And the criminal and social justice developments, not all of them bad.
HERE is my *favorite* story this year. It came from a guy on death row, who told me how prisoners there started a radio station - and how it gave him a last chance to find community.
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) December 20, 2021
Here’s a THREAD about the power of words & the magic of 106.5 The Tank https://t.co/dGaly1tHMl
Earlier this year, the Texas Legislature passed the Bonton Farms Act, which helps former inmates wipe fines from their records upon release. This helps them find independence and avoid being saddled with debt upon release. https://t.co/m2KbbnHBSX
— D Magazine (@DMagazine) December 20, 2021
The court sided with us and REJECTED the teacher's request for an appeal! #atheist #Christians #Christianity #atheism #Atheists #God https://t.co/taXvo31fyR
— MrAYEtheist Clause π π·π (@MrAYEtheist) December 16, 2021
The @HoustonChron now has women in nearly all its top positions, including @mdougreeve as editor, @ChronFalkenberg as editor of opinion, and @lbeththomas as metro editor. πππ» https://t.co/bytIP61vfv
— lomikriel (@lomikriel) December 15, 2021
I was impressed that what might have been -- in an earlier time -- the lede regarding the Chron's new publisher was buried.
Meyer and her wife, Melissa Macri, plan to move to the Houston area from Miami in the coming months.
H-Town held it down this Saturday and mobilized on short notice against Neo-Nazis who showed up for the WLM national day of action. We outnumbered the Nazis two to one, took their signs, and stood ground until the Nazis left soaked in rain. Details here:https://t.co/a6cDCDsfQF pic.twitter.com/rRR0zp8Gcv
— Screwston Anti-Fascist Committee (@screwstonafc) December 19, 2021
Unfortunately that's it for the good news.
This flyer was distributed to homes in NW Austin. Now which celebrity and "news" stations have created the set up for this drivel #txlege pic.twitter.com/O99szkrfbC
— harvey kronberg (@HKronberg) December 20, 2021
"It was the most humiliating experience of my life." Haitian migrants pursued by Border Patrol agents on horseback in September have filed a lawsuit accusing the U.S. government of physical and verbal abuse, inhumane treatment and denial of due process. https://t.co/WORzF6s6jX
— The New York Times (@nytimes) December 21, 2021
San Antonio must help repair families’ houses, instead of demolishing them & sending the displaced former homeowners the bill.@210TeriCastillo is right: “These demolitions… are perpetuating racial and economic injustice.”#TX35 @ksatnews @KENS5 @News4SAhttps://t.co/QBtUev5yTf
— Greg Casar (@GregCasar) December 21, 2021
#Texas AG #KenPaxton launches investigation of drug companies for marketing hormone-blocking drugs for children with gender dysphoria @SpectrumNews1TX
— ChickenFriedPolitics (@ChkFriPolitics) December 16, 2021
-Southern politics are on the menu at ChickenFriedPolitics.com-https://t.co/SspSDWLM6j
Yeah it's totally normal in a democracy for 1/3 of the legislature to be reelected by default without a single vote being cast. https://t.co/lQG7bStd2o
— Bexar County Greens π»π (@BexarGreensTX) December 17, 2021
π¨Correction needed @HoustonChron @mo_unique_
— Anna NΓΊΓ±ez (@nunez_anna) December 20, 2021
“The name of the company has not been reported.”
Rogel Aguilera-Mederos was working for Castellano 03 Trucking LLC, based in Houston. 1st reported on 9/24 by NBC @9NEWS. Cited by NYT https://t.co/KL6qyCd65W
Currently working on a story detailing the uptick in drivers killing people on bicycles in Houston and Harris County. I can say none of them were in a bike lane, because there likely weren’t any for them to use https://t.co/X69iIyokrq pic.twitter.com/2yFMbW5nH5
— Jay R. Jordan (@jayrjordan) December 16, 2021
South Texas College of Law Houston, the local chapter of the NAACP and supporters are seeking clemency for 110 Black soldiers who were sentenced for inciting a riot and committing mutiny while stationed at a military camp in Houston in 1917. https://t.co/Bly14rw1qH
— Howard Henderson (@hhendersonphd) December 21, 2021
. @TxDot’s planned highway expansion in #Houston will demolish thousands of homes and businesses, and displace thousands of families. We partnered with @airallianceHOU, @LINK_Houston, @StopTxDOTi45, and @TexasHousers to file a complaint.
— Texas Appleseed (@TexasAppleseed) December 16, 2021
Read more: https://t.co/ZjUZUmQfvL pic.twitter.com/DZ67ruiHnw
Multiple people, all under the age of 30, have been indicted in a human trafficking conspiracy involving young runaway girls on what it known as the “Blade” or the infamous "Bissonnet Track," the U.S. Attorney's Office announced. https://t.co/TSMTikSIhT
— KPRC 2 Houston (@KPRC2) December 16, 2021
A new book illustrates how complaints are often suppressed—even in the case of a Galveston judge who sexually assaulted employees in his chambers. https://t.co/M2LYftvyZ0
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) December 16, 2021
And to segue to the soothers: Higher education at last.
Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have launched the Center for Psychedelic Research and Therapy. This center is the first of its kind in Texas, according to the university.https://t.co/qI0cb7CDOj
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) December 17, 2021
Chente Christmas carols on the San Antonio Riverwalk π pic.twitter.com/brgspJ2JMa
— Maddy Skye (@MaddySkye) December 21, 2021
Visit these steadfast institutions that have made their marks on Texas for 100-plus years. https://t.co/gxForyTk6O
— Texas Highways Magazine (@TexasHighways) December 19, 2021
The Dallas area—where members of Plains tribes and Five Civilized Tribes converged by the thousands after the Indian Relocation Act of 1956—has emerged as a fry-bread epicenter in Texas. https://t.co/IfvKiBIvou
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 10, 2021
Globe-trotting TV host Samantha Brown loves Houston in new season https://t.co/6gxCjbfIK5
— CultureMap Houston (@culturemap) December 16, 2021
Ending today with notable Texans who left us recently.
Very somber news:
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) December 20, 2021
Journalist, Dallas Morning News politics reporter, author Wayne Slater killed in car crash #txlege @dallasnews #Texashttps://t.co/KtwyWGmePh
On the barbecue life of John Mueller, including some of my favorite conversations with him and stories about him: https://t.co/3BXr7Gphm4
— Daniel Vaughn (@BBQsnob) December 18, 2021
HE HELPED MAKE AUSTIN INTO A RESEARCH POWERHOUSE: 'God of aerospace engineering': Hans Mark, former UT chancellor who fled Nazis, dies at 92 https://t.co/MI3c6QPWrx via @statesman
— Michael Barnes (@outandabout) December 20, 2021
Monday, December 20, 2021
A Wrangle Before Christmas
My God what a year in Texas: The deadly winter storm, 2 quorum breaks, redistricting, CRT, carrying handguns w/no license, the six-week abortion ban, Abbott vs business, Paxton at the insurrection & under FBI investigation, the pandemic, masks, Dowd, Musk, McConaughey. What else?
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) December 16, 2021
I'll be adding to that list, here in this post and in the coming days. Yes, there's lots of ground to cover; I'll open with the exploding omicron variant/COVID numbers.
December 19th, 2021
— Texas COVID-19 (@TexasCovid) December 20, 2021
New Cases: 5,958
New Fatalities: 25
Hospitalizations: 3,054 (-63 from prior day)
Available ICU Beds: 664
Positivity Rate: 11.4%
Vaccinated with 1 Dose: 19,063,039
Fully Vaccinated: 16,294,712
NEW: #Omicron variant showing "explosive growth" in #Houston area, now representing 45% of all cases at @MethodistHosp, doubling every 2 to 3 days. The hospital says "it is now poised to be the dominant cause of COVID-19" in patients. https://t.co/5MuBgkeENe @KPRC2 #hounews
— Aaron Fernandez-Wische (@KPRC2Aaron) December 17, 2021
COVID surge cancels large Houston events, including live theater, sports and more https://t.co/Jzx5efyMmX
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 20, 2021
Austin Regional Clinic is testing a COVID-19 vaccine designed to target variants. They are looking for people who have never been vaccinated and have never had COVID-19 between the ages of 18 to 85. https://t.co/QwXjpCklQQ via @statesman #atx
— Lauren McGaughy π (@lmcgaughy) December 19, 2021
Distressing news as we approach the holidays and planned gatherings.
Chris Britt, @chrisbritt01 #OmicronVarient pic.twitter.com/VsmpBNhcNY
— Editorial & Political Cartoons (@EandPCartoons) December 17, 2021
We are three times jabbed, with the Pfizer following two Moderna shots exactly on schedule (one month ago, 7 months ago, and the first last April). We are masked, KN95, every time we leave the house, and have recently stopped dining out again despite all these precautions. I support mask mandates, but I oppose vaccine mandates. People who don't want to get the shot shouldn't be forced to. Neither should their employers keep them on payroll, or their health insurers pay for their treatment if they contract the virus. These are the choices. Everybody should clearly understand by now what's at stake.
The greed of Big Pharma, the waiver of liability from damage, the federal government's refusal to share the vaccines with poorer nations, the patents being protected and all of that bullshit also extends the pandemic. For some reason we cannot compel people to do the right thing.
Today I put in my notice-I’ve been a frontline doc in EM for over 10 years. Taking a step back for a minute. The collapse of the acute care infrastructure in the US has taken a devastating toll on healthcare workers. It was take a step back or walk away entirely. #medtwitter https://t.co/n5VL6zokNz
— Kate W, MD (@katyw2004) December 13, 2021
This does not give me hope for resolving climate change or social inequality. Way down the list from there is worrying about whether the Democrats can figure out how to appease Joe Manchin in order to save their asses in the midterms. As Tony Soprano might say, "Whaddaya gonna do?"
Be of good cheer anyway. Mine comes from laughing at the foibles of the intellectually feeble, the terminally corrupt, and the uber-demagogues.
CNN reveals the most damning Mark Meadows text has been traced to Rick Perry's phone https://t.co/5QTZfmtSwx
— #TuckFrump (@realTuckFrumper) December 17, 2021
Poor Ted can't even win Bum Steer of the Year outright. This year he's second place. https://t.co/tB6yVYCdIB
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 18, 2021
After all, I'm just here to document the atrocities.
Steve Kelley, Creators Syndicate pic.twitter.com/5iwVwakSZM
— Editorial & Political Cartoons (@EandPCartoons) December 18, 2021
There have been some developments regarding redistricting -- or gerrymandering, if you prefer -- since my last Wrangle. Also the new SOS has been efforting to "clean up" (sic) the voter rolls.
It appears plaintiffs in federal Texas redistricting case won't pursue injunction/changes to maps ahead of March primaries (other than for SD10) "in the interest of allowing for a prompt resolution" on the merits.
— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) December 16, 2021
There is still a push for an injunction in state court. #txlege pic.twitter.com/9tB1mLFHQs
As federal redistricting lawsuits pile up, some Texas Democrats are focusing on a pair of state court cases, arguing this year’s GOP-led effort violated the Texas Constitution.
— Sami Sparber (@samisparber) December 20, 2021
Today on A1: https://t.co/a632RELFBi #txlege
Texas is at it again: “reviewing” its voter rolls in such a sloppy manner that they’re even flagging people because they were born in — I’m not kidding — New Mexico. https://t.co/VZMPz63zuH #txlege
— James Slattery (@jcslattery) December 17, 2021
Will Wilder and Elizabeth Hira for the Brennan Center show how the Freedom to Vote Act would defang Texas' voter suppression law. Too bad that's not going to happen. And Ken Paxton has a sad that he will not be able to go after these "criminals". If they should break the law, that is. His track record was poor anyway.
Last year, I found Texas AG Paxton’s voter fraud unit had closed 16 cases after working almost double the amount of hours as 2 yrs prior.
— Taylor Goldenstein (@taygoldenstein) December 17, 2021
In 2021, the office gained two staffers and saw a budget increase. Yet it still only closed three cases.https://t.co/97HfUWrgXI #txlege
The War on School Libraries is the new War on Christmas.
Kids, you *definitely* want to steer clear of the soon-to-be-banned books at this Austin-area school library. @GregAbbott_TX knows what’s best for you, and it for sure is not reading a book! Just say know. #txlege pic.twitter.com/tDH6XqsSfc
— John Bridges (@JohnBridges) December 16, 2021
UPDATED: Williamson County commissioners exclude Leander ISD, Round Rock ISD from coronavirus relief funds because of concerns over “inappropriate books in school libraries and critical race theory in the school curriculum.” https://t.co/tffnHvmTB7
— Evan (@evan7257) December 18, 2021
Our school board trustees do have other things to worry about. "Things" being legal problems of their own making.
Skillern-Jones resigns HCC trustee seat after alleged bribery scheme revealed by prosecutors https://t.co/t1ZgSrVzuU via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 18, 2021
A former HISD trustee and board president kept a "bribe ledger" listing $20,000 in illegal payoffs, according to a plea agreement.https://t.co/nSErRIjgCK
— Houston Public Media (@HoustonPubMedia) December 17, 2021
It's not as if potential school shootings are a concern, after all.
“Our police officers are investigating; we do not take these things lightly. We will be pursuing this to the fullest extent of the law. We ask parents to continue to talk with your children about inappropriate behaviors as they will not be tolerated.” https://t.co/qxhcyXYI2Z
— Shannon Watts (@shannonrwatts) December 18, 2021
The power grid has been in sharp focus recently. Let's round up the latest.
I missed this. The governor released the list of the companies he met with while the PUC moved fwd w/ changes to add billions to customer bills. Some of them stand to benefit from those changes. Not one is an upstream oil & gas company, the source of failure in Feb. #txlege https://t.co/s3dcDmMdN8
— Doug Lewin (@douglewinenergy) December 18, 2021
Beto O’Rourke and Allen West have something in common. No really. Both have upped their attacks on Greg Abbott about his failure to keep the power on last year.
— Jeremy Wallace (@JeremySWallace) December 17, 2021
https://t.co/YAVeZEmn7v via @houstonchron
Did you miss our @TwitterSpaces conversation last week on the Texas power grid and how to prepare for winter weather?
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 15, 2021
No problem. You can listen to the recording or read the transcription here: https://t.co/qpS39VEvbk
"All we really know is that there’s a great big bag full of market changes and it’s wriggling. But we don’t know if that bag contains a pig, or rattlesnakes or kittens," said energy consultant Alison Silverstein. https://t.co/WkQwcpMoe4
— KUT Austin (@KUT) December 18, 2021
I've run long here, so I'll put the criminal and social justice news in the next Wrangle. And more calm-me-downs. Here's one to close.
Congress Avenue in Austin, 1860s. Note the old capitol at the top. Roughly 30 years before this, Mirabeau B. Lamar had a very successful buffalo hunt right here. One of the oldest photos I have posted.
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 19, 2021
Courtesy the Austin History Center. pic.twitter.com/Sbs2AWqF8Z
Sunday, December 19, 2021
Thursday, December 16, 2021
As the Filing Dust Settles Wrangle
ICYMI: Here's our recap of the #tx2022 primary filings for the #txlege and statewide races. Bookmark this for the future. #txgov #txag #txed https://t.co/Y9N1VrUvSV
— RA News (@RANewsTX) December 15, 2021
Really am enjoying everything Nick Anderson and his gang are doing.
Beto's wave is building.
Midland’s Beto Meet & Greet was a great success. pic.twitter.com/UZAWfXMr6t
— Cathy Broadrick (@CathyBroadrick) December 15, 2021
My latest column for @thenation . Don't sleep on Texas and @BetoORourke. Not only is the race winnable, but just as is happening in Georgia, Beto's candidacy can accelerate flipping Texas, which will reorder US politics overall. https://t.co/PBmoOofAaH
— Steve Phillips (@StevePtweets) December 15, 2021
Candidly I've seen this before. First in 2006 when David Van Os went to every single county courthouse in the state in his bid against Abbott for attorney general. And nobody in my estimation had more momentum to defeat Governor Fish Lips than Wendy Davis in 2014, when she delivered a filibuster that shook the Capitol. Literally, some will recall.
A lot of things have changed in the Lone Star State since then, not the least of which is that it's gotten redder and more extreme. And now, of course, there's fresh gerrymandering and voter suppression to contend with. So you'll have to forgive me if I don't deem this early enthusiasm all that contagious.
2/ Our @dallasnews analysis shows that counting prisoners in their cells during redistricting inflates the political power of Republican districts and drains population from Democratic strongholds.https://t.co/Zebn1IEgKQ #txlege pic.twitter.com/dAt4SBsLav
— Lauren McGaughy π (@lmcgaughy) December 15, 2021
The marquee race remains, IMO, the state's attorney general contest, in both the GOP and Democratic primaries. Just yesterday K-Pax was rebuked by the appeals court for overstepping his authority in prosecuting alleged voter fraud charges.
An election code provision granting the Office of Attorney General the ability to prosecute criminal election fraud cases is unconstitutional, the Court of Criminal Appeals ruled in an 8-1 decision. The case arises from an alleged campaign finance violation by the Jefferson County sheriff, a case the county district attorney declined to prosecute.
Section 273.021 (of the Texas) Election Code provides that the “attorney general may prosecute a criminal offense prescribed by the election laws of this state.” The Court ruled that power properly resides with county and district attorneys, who are part of the judicial branch, and not the attorney general, which is part of the executive branch.
“Absent the consent and deputization order of a local prosecutor or the request of a district or county attorney for assistance, the Attorney General has no authority to independently prosecute criminal cases in trial courts,” wrote Judge Jesse McClure for the majority (PDF). “Any attempt to overlap the Attorney General’s constitutional duties with county and district attorneys’ constitutional duties in the sense of a Venn diagram of sorts is unconstitutional.”
The CCA is all Republicans. And none of them are moderates. They're death penalty freaks like Sharon Keller. (Sidebar: Regarding the death penalty, there's good news on that front.) So let's hope the TXGOP primary voter can scrounge around and find enough logic to follow their lead and rebuke Paxton themselves in March.
'During the winter storm, @KenPaxtonTX was off in a luxury resort in UT while the rest of us were freezing,' @georgepbush tells @KarinaKling.
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) December 14, 2021
But he's sitting on emails, texts, Bush said, referring to this exclusive by @lmcgaughy, @MorrisReports: https://t.co/JKi154XWvz 1/2
Eight Republicans run to replace George P. Bush as Texas land commissioner https://t.co/gVClDAbbkd via @HoustonChron #tx2022 #txlege
— Joshua M. Blank (@JoshuaMBlank) December 15, 2021
Without straight-ticket voting it might be easier than in the past to dislodge some of these squatters from office in November, but that's too far away to be concerned with just yet. Focus on spring turnout, Ds. Media will make hay if your numbers are lower than the Pachys'.
Stace reviews his favorites for the statewide Donkey races and also Harris County, linking to the Erik Manning spreadsheet. The San Antonio Report profiles the race for Bexar County judge, sure to be as spirited as the one in Harris.
I have some catch-all items.
Negative Partisanship in Texas Stifles Potential Crossover Voting in #Tx2022, w/ @JoshuaMBlank via @TxPolProject https://t.co/lWLfeab88M #txlege pic.twitter.com/8t6GDeFdI9
— Jim Henson (@jamesrhenson) December 13, 2021
Wow don’t see this every day in Texas — a joint statement from conservative @TPPF and liberal @EveryTxn slamming TX state comptroller’s proposal “to radically reduce the #transparency” of a multi billion dollar tax incentive (critics say ‘giveaway’) program. #txlege
— Jay Root (@byjayroot) December 10, 2021
Texas is close to becoming the job-quitting capital of the country https://t.co/mawQLPotu9 via @wfaa #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 15, 2021
Gerrymandering? Or should new Texas maps be called “Jerrymandering” for Jerry Garcia because of the psychedelic shapes some districts have. @toddgillman takes you on a redistricting trip. #txlege #redistricting #gerrymander #txcong #Congress #2022Elections https://t.co/3N64sS5c1j
— John Gravois (@Grav1) December 15, 2021
Thanks for interviewing me for this column @cltomlinson. The changes proposed are massive & there are few details w/ even less analysis. The @PUCTX needs to consider customer impacts more fully & listen to the general public before adding billions to bills
— Doug Lewin (@douglewinenergy) December 15, 2021
#energytwitter #txlege https://t.co/bUZvGCnYRi
A couple of environmental headlines:
In West Texas, an abandoned well is creating the "Dead Sea" — and no one thinks it is their job to fix it.https://t.co/L48PNLI4tT
— Russell Gold (@russellgold) December 8, 2021
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is revisiting the idea of building a massive tunnel to alleviate Houston's flooding https://t.co/O45VRepgFG via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 15, 2021
An expansive collation of border and immigration developments.
Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez was nominated to head ICE in April, and approved by a Senate committee in August.
— Houston Public Media (@HoustonPubMedia) December 14, 2021
But if he's not approved in the the full Senate by the end of December, it's back to square one.https://t.co/6B0mA19dXv
“I thought he was going to kill me”: Migrants say return of Trump-era border policy will put asylum seekers in danger.
— darlacameron (@darlacameron) December 15, 2021
Stunning, devastating story from @ujohnnyg about one woman who was sent to Ciudad JuΓ‘rez after seeking asylum in El Paso:https://t.co/f3zocwtTiO
"There were just staggering levels of misconduct...that just indicate top-to-bottom issues with the mission."https://t.co/npQ5kyVDyz
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) December 13, 2021
3rd of 4 new videos of Texas National Guard trespassing on our private property--a nature center open 7 days/wk to visitors. They have likely come off the levee at our place, where they have no authority to be either, b/c the IBWC has a tightly-prescribed nonpossessory easement. pic.twitter.com/kZLuQ2zOsZ
— National Butterfly (@NatButterflies) December 13, 2021
More than 100 civil rights groups ask feds to slash Texas funding over migrant trespassing arrests, @jsmccullou reports https://t.co/dd6K5fVUfT via @TexasTribune
— James BarragΓ‘n π (@James_Barragan) December 15, 2021
And the criminal and social justice news.
Aguirre, a licensed private investigator at the time, was hired to investigate fraud claims and paid about $266,400 by the Liberty Center for God and Country around the time of the incident. https://t.co/9yhMiMzgKr
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 14, 2021
Both men belonged to a militia group called the "Patriot Boys of North Texas," and appeared to use Facebook in the days leading up to the Jan. 6 attack to plan their role in the riots. https://t.co/4FFaGnzuyy
— KENS 5 (@KENS5) December 15, 2021
#BREAKING: Williamson County settles Javier Ambler wrongful death lawsuit for $5 million https://t.co/8owVhZeUps pic.twitter.com/7f2WaHli23
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) December 14, 2021
Two items regarding critical race theory.
Sen. Ted Cruz has released an eBook outlining how to "fight" against so-called critical race theory from being taught in K-12 education.https://t.co/hutliBOOx3
— Ariana Garcia π΅π· (@Ariana_noGrande) December 15, 2021
“What's happening in Fort Worth ISD is a reflection of a greater narrative that's going around nationally."
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 16, 2021
The parts of school board meetings devoted to public comment used to center on improving student success, but they've become venting sessions. https://t.co/5ju0MEKpUq
And today's soothers.
Our first female publisher: Nancy Meyer, Miami Herald president, named publisher of the Houston Chronicle https://t.co/czkVFgUBhW via @houstonchron
— Alison Cook (@alisoncook) December 15, 2021
Texas, and Austin in particular, played a key role in the birth of Gilbert Shelton's canonical comic 'The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers,' which is now an animated TV show. https://t.co/l12NkQ1tmd
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 9, 2021
DEVELOPING: Feral hogs take over Southeast Texas neighborhood and cause all sorts of problems in a short period of time.https://t.co/zlO1prpQmo pic.twitter.com/hdHRG5TlLr
— KFDM News (@kfdmnews) December 14, 2021
Members of the Cigar Makers Union Local No. 128, American Federation of Labor, in El Paso, September, 1909. This image is fantastic! El Paso was once the center of a thriving cigar industry, which provided work to hundreds of people in the early 20th century. Courtesy UTSA. pic.twitter.com/lUP297BU1g
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 14, 2021













