Sunday, October 24, 2021
Thursday, October 21, 2021
Sine Died, Autopsied Wrangle
The executive summary, in case you've been taking some time off from the creepshow that the Texas Lege has been for the past ten months.
The Texas Legislature has adjourned from its third special session after a final flurry of activity, including approving new political maps. But lawmakers didn’t pass bills about vaccine mandates or the criminal penalty for illegal voting. #txlege https://t.co/UocIPIdl02
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 19, 2021
Lt. Dan has decided he wants a fourth special, but Governor Fish Lips says "not now, asshole". Maybe later. We have a few wieners and loosers ranked.
Winners & Losers of the Third Special Session of the Texas Legislature https://t.co/tf3L4vBIKf via @RANewsTX #txlege
— RA News (@RANewsTX) October 20, 2021
Republicans and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick are among the winners, and Democrats and Hispanics among the losers, as the Texas Legislature wraps its third special session of the year. The jury's still out on Gov. Greg Abbott and Speaker Dade Phelan.#txlege https://t.co/V70rdr9VjW
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) October 19, 2021
And sightless gerrymandering being the hottest topic ...
Republicans say Texas’ new political maps are “race blind.” To some voters of color, that translates as political invisibility. https://t.co/iEegJrEfY8
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 20, 2021
Cartoon: "Race-Blind" Redistricting by @Nick_Anderson_ for @RANewsTX
— RA News (@RANewsTX) October 20, 2021
To see more political cartoons:https://t.co/J0Pb5tD3yU#txlege #redistricting pic.twitter.com/O54jbonji4
It wouldn't be the silly boundary season without some litigation.
Before they’ve even been signed into law, Texas’ new maps for Congress and the statehouse are being challenged in court for allegedly discriminating against Latino voters. | via @TexasTribune https://t.co/nFtQzOGMAT
— KUT Austin (@KUT) October 18, 2021
Attention finally turns to 2022.
The controversial issues you’ve heard Texas lawmakers debate for most of the year aren’t going away, @rossramsey writes. Many of them will be argued all over again during the 2022 elections. https://t.co/qACRSavLid
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 20, 2021
Kuffner has all the Donkey shuffling covered, and TXElects -- and his Tweet feed of the usual suspects, appearing to the right on his blog's landing page -- covers the Pachyderm dances. I'll wait until after the filing deadline in December to muse about primary challenges. I will say that I like the idea of Julie Oliver taking on Lloyd Doggett, whose reputation far exceeds his current value.
I'm looking forward to blogging on the regular about some things besides our state lawmaker goons, so praise the Lawd for small blessings. First: some housing news, broken out from the criminal and social justice headlines.
Everything that's happened since Mayor Turner was accused of corruption over a housing deal: https://t.co/d2KOg2JcxU
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) October 21, 2021
Here's Kuff's catchup. I note he still hasn't mentioned anything about it.
The Harris County District Attorney confirms a "pending criminal investigation" connected to Houston City Hall. In a letter obtained by 13 Investigates, the DA denies access to documents related to the probe, because in their words, "this investigation has yet to be resolved" and is "in the course of preparing for criminal litigation."
13 Investigates requested documents from the city weeks ago when the City of Houston's now-former Housing Director shocked City Hall with allegations of a "charade of a competitive process" to award millions in housing subsidies. According to sources and documents at that point, the DA was asking about specific payments made to specific individuals starting in 2018.
Landlords filed 1,453 eviction cases last week in Houston, easily the most since the start of the pandemic. (2/6) pic.twitter.com/FRULM5vdcT
— Peter Hepburn (@ps_hepburn) October 19, 2021
In 1940, Black families, displaced by the Dallas Housing Authority housing project in the Hall/Thomas area, began purchasing homes in predominantly White sections of southern Dallas. pic.twitter.com/92xjgu5nGP
— Nathaniel Barrett (@ncoxbarrett) October 19, 2021
It's not all bad news.
Sunrise Lofts is being constructed in Houston's East End, and when it's done, will provide housing for youths aging out of the foster care system. https://t.co/12M9x806x6 #khou11
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) October 19, 2021
Here's more criminal and social justice and injustice news from around the state.
"...while [SB6] was called bail reform, it did little to nothing to reform Texas’ unfair use of cash bail to decide who must stay behind bars until their day in court... this new law will do next to nothing to improve community safety." #txlege https://t.co/3lx5UiucVk
— Nick Hudson (@NickCHudson) October 18, 2021
"What I didn’t know was that prisons treat books as restricted commodities, a privilege—not a right—less essential than the right to bear arms, but in the eyes of the state, somehow just as dangerous." https://t.co/Pr0lEQHFrk
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) October 17, 2021
As Texans grapple with issues of race and privilege, the 'Southlake' podcast is a must-listen, writes @iandille, who attended Carroll High School, the setting of the series. https://t.co/RhoLKBjVKj+
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) October 20, 2021
WalletHub's 'best small city' in Texas is same problematic town making headlines last week https://t.co/Cy9nw7rTXw
— Laredo Morning Times (@lmtnews) October 19, 2021
#CorpusChristi I still want the @TxHistComm to remove this plaque, supposed "historical" marker, that disparages the #Karankawa people and says,
— Adán Medrano (@AdanMMedrano) October 19, 2021
wrongly,--"1858 marked the disappearance of the Karankawa Indians." @TexasTribune @erinmdouglas23 pic.twitter.com/EY8QSV9ITb
Can adding four lanes to a downtown interstate solve a city's traffic congestion? https://t.co/9nadG289AZ
— Slate (@Slate) October 21, 2021
And here are a few items specific to the border region of Texas.
(content warning: verbal discussion of racially motivated violence)
— Texas Civil Rights Project (@TXCivilRights) October 17, 2021
Our REJ director Laura Peña laid out the real-life consequences of Trump's hateful rhetoric for the people of the Rio Grande Valley. Watch this clip with @mmckinnon for @SHO_TheCircus. pic.twitter.com/rN6I7i8h4w
Shawna Chen: RNC targets Texas Latinos https://t.co/keJHWJijln via @axios #Election2022 #txlege
— Rob Parham (@rparham) October 17, 2021
I'm starting to wake up to the fact that Republican Latino/as in the RGV (and elsewhere) don't consider themselves Hispanic. They call themselves Tejanos; they praise themselves for their good fortune based on hard work and Jeebus and not on luck or cronyism, just like whites; and they hate immigrants, 'gobermint handouts', and worship the flag and the military. Sounds like any other MAGAt to me.
ICYMI: Asylum groups on the border sent a strong message to @POTUS this past Saturday: there is no improved version of the 'Remain in Mexico' program. https://t.co/VfYoessYkh
— Texas Civil Rights Project (@TXCivilRights) October 19, 2021
Since 2017, advocacy orgs have filed dozens of complaints with U.S. Customs and Border Protection on behalf of hundreds of migrants whose medical needs have gone unaddressed.
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) October 14, 2021
From @pubhealthwatch: https://t.co/RX5f5nmdOj
A few environmental updates.
It is "impossible for @txrrc & @TCEQ to argue that they have a handle on flaring or that they have taken reasonable steps to reduce it," pens former TCEQ air quality regulator for @statesman.
— EDF Texas (@EDFtx) October 18, 2021
TX urgently needs @EPA to do the job regulators won't. #txlege https://t.co/vTADcpNf2P
NEW: LyondellBasell has agreed to pay $3.4 million in civil penalties after the EPA accused its subsidiaries of operating flares with too much steam and releasing thousands of tons of air pollution.
— Emily Foxhall (@emfoxhall) October 14, 2021
This includes flares at four Harris County facilities.https://t.co/PYpMf0qhS6
Arsonist who is burning down your house:
— Rebecca Parson for Congress, WA-06 (@RebeccaforWA) October 19, 2021
“I can help you reach your goal of being flame-neutral by 2050. Excited to announce my interest in advancing flame capture & storage in your area. In a year, my technology captures 0.00001290323% of annual flame emissions.” pic.twitter.com/w7JUxHo2EP
Texas natural gas industry showing limited progress in winter storm prep, experts say https://t.co/XtiLRbWSVX
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) October 19, 2021
A guest column penned jointly by environmentalists Xandra Treviño, Michelle Serrano, Patricia Rubio, Juan Mancias, Dave Cortez, and Freddy Jimenez. https://t.co/OVM7KzQHKc via @RioGGuardian
— Rio Grande Guardian (@RioGGuardian) October 18, 2021
A canal system designed more than a century ago for agriculture still delivers water to the Rio Grande Valley's fast-growing towns and cities. Experts say it could contribute to steep water shortages in coming decades. #txlege #txwater #RGVhttps://t.co/GdSpArlDQR
— Texas 2036 (@Texas2036) October 19, 2021
And the soothers.
The South Texas Music Festival is this Saturday, October 23, in San Benito.
T'is the spooky season, so get out there and get scared of something beside the Texas GOP.
Driskill Hotel named most haunted spot in Texas according to Yelp's list of Top 20 Most Haunted Spots in Texas.
— CBS Austin (@cbsaustin) October 19, 2021
Austin-based Moonshine Patio Bar & Grill, Clay Pit, 1886 Cafe & Bakery, and The Tavern, follow close behind.https://t.co/qBUWiTQH8h
A horror show broke out last night at Fenway 😱@markdero7 | @astros | #ForTheH | #MLBCentral pic.twitter.com/YXw7TQIuSH
— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) October 20, 2021
Texan Steve Martin (center) with the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia (right) and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's John McEuen jamming at a bluegrass festival in 1974. Many Texans don't realize that Steve Martin was born in Waco. Really cool shot. pic.twitter.com/MvN7UeAfAQ
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) October 19, 2021
Monday, October 18, 2021
The Monday Wrangle from Far Left Texas
#texas #redistricting #texasgop pic.twitter.com/SH9DzfhJbt
— John Branch (@Branchtoon) October 4, 2021
ICYMI: It was a busy weekend for the #txlege. The Texas House approved a Senate amendment to #HB25, a bill that restricts transgender athletes participation in school sports. The bill is now headed for governor approval https://t.co/QOK87EwDGG
— Allyson Waller (@allyson_renee7) October 18, 2021
Social workers warn Texas' abortion ban is causing psychological harm to sexual assault survivors.
— Rebecca Marques (@_RebeccaMarques) October 18, 2021
Thinking about this and the fact that #hb25 also passed this session. All the harm that lawmakers in #txlege knowingly inflicted on folks this year. https://t.co/538Q9RDWis
“Shortly before Texas' new abortion law went into effect, the SAFE Alliance, a nonprofit that supports survivors of sexual abuse, was counseling a 12-year-old girl who had been repeatedly raped by her father.”
Any minute now, Governor Strangelove is going to eliminate all rape in Texas. He told us so. And he always speaks the truth.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issues an executive order banning vaccine mandates by private businesses for employees and customers.https://t.co/Cs2j9eYy5V pic.twitter.com/DnbuWrvqM1
— Ann Telnaes (@AnnTelnaes) October 13, 2021
Current Status of #txlege bills.
— Mark P. Jones (@MarkPJonesTX) October 18, 2021
39 hours until the end of the 3rd Special Session.
Passed H & S#HB25 Transgender UIL Athletes
In Conf. Comm.#SB1 Property Tax Relief#SB8 Federal COVID $ Distribution
Passed by H w/Amends, Now In S#SB5 Dog Tethering#SB52 Higher Ed Rev Bonds
After taking a General Strike break at the end of last week, I have more than enough for a very long post. I'd rather not subject either you or me to that, so let's just hit the highlights. Or lowlights and lowlifes, if you prefer.
Early voting begins today in #Texas for eight constitutional amendments, multiple local elections, and a special runoff in #HD118. Check out ATPE's @TeachTheVote guide to the constitutional amendments: https://t.co/5OjcAU2JUR #txed #txlege #txedvote pic.twitter.com/UXaMawx1yL
— ATPE (@OfficialATPE) October 18, 2021
Conference cmte report for the proposed map for Texas' 38 Congressional Districts, #SB6, is out. It was signed by all 9 Rs on the cmte & wasn't signed by the 1 D on it, @Senfronia4Texas.
— RA News (@RANewsTX) October 18, 2021
Here's an interactive viewer of the map: https://t.co/c0iSNsCZre #txlege (h/t @by_jmiller) pic.twitter.com/GZOwe9gg5b
Conference committee report for congressional map keeps @RepAlGreen and @JacksonLeeTX18 unpaired, also keeps @RepGonzalez in #TX34 (open Vela seat) instead of his current #TX15 https://t.co/5yCLmGpCEo #SB6 #txlege
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) October 18, 2021
NEW from @rossramsey: You won’t hear much about turning Texas blue in 2022. Thanks to redistricting, it’s pretty much impossible https://t.co/xnkXaBLOt1 #txlege
— Evan Smith (@evanasmith) October 18, 2021
Yes. Well, Texas Democrats in the Lege could have honored the general strike, or perhaps thrown some other wrench in the gears, but I feel certain they did not have the stomach for a fourth special session. They all -- mostly -- want you to re-elect them next year anyway. To keep fighting. Something.
My personal general strike extends to voting in this current election. I see no point in weighing in on constitutional amendments. Similarly, I won't be voting n next spring's Democratic primary. They can choose who they like and I'll choose whether to vote for any of them in the fall.
There is -- as I have come to understand -- a messsage being sent to government's leaders in not voting. And that message ranges from "FU" to "IDGAF".
Ted Cruz pitches Rockets job to Kyrie Irving over vaccines; Twitter responds with ridicule https://t.co/fHYjOo1jof
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) October 16, 2021
I'll move on while I still have the will, or the interest, to provide these news updates. Documenting the atrocities is hard.NEW: Texas Republicans want to use billions in federal pandemic relief to send checks to homeowners just ahead of next year’s November elections.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 15, 2021
Not all households would benefit. Excluded from that relief are millions of renters. https://t.co/5gEw2AN3FQ #TXlege
Environmental developments:
To Address The City’s Wildfire Risk, Austin Firefighters Look To California https://t.co/7ZJ1FgV5rZ 8/8
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) October 16, 2021
In the Rio Grande Valley, a century-old, leaky canal system delivers water to a $500 million farm industry and low-slung, growing cities.
— Suman Naishadham (@SumanNaishadham) October 16, 2021
Texas water planners expect the losses to worsen shortages expected in coming decades. My dispatch from McAllen: https://t.co/1NvZGgglYP
Must read #txwater reading for today. @H2OWonk makes the case on why state policymakers need to focus on water infrastructure. The key equation: population growth + infrastructure decay + extreme weather = need for infrastructure investment. #txlegehttps://t.co/DGhJYfU94f
— Jeremy B. Mazur (@jeremybmazur) October 18, 2021
“Despite the pandemic, the United States built more utility-scale solar power plants in 2020 than any other year, with Texas leading the way.” #txlege #txclimate https://t.co/gP19HHtIH1
— SPEER (@EEpartnership) October 18, 2021
Texans want to reduce methane pollution: 72% support requiring oil and gas companies to slow methane leaks, and 59% are more likely to back a candidate who supports stronger methane regulations. —@ClimateNexus @YaleClimateComm @mason4c #txlege #txenergy https://t.co/p0oFoPQ7Uk
— Public Citizen Texas (@PublicCitizenTX) October 18, 2021
The Axios Dallas newsletter (subscribe here) says that illegal emissions were lower across the state in 2020. But...
... but North Texas saw an increase in unauthorized pollutants, according to a report from the Environmental Integrity Project and Environment Texas.
Why it matters: 2020's pollutant decline was mostly due to pandemic shutdowns of manufacturing and oil and gas production and not due to increased enforcement of environmental protections, the report says.
The Dallas Observer's Jacob Vaughn writes about a west Dallas neighborhood's concerns about yet another concrete plant's pollution. HPM says that Galveston Bay researchers are literally fishing for data on chemical runoff. And the Statesman's op-ed board says that the EPA must save Texas from itself. In more newspaper news, D Magazine says that the DMN should retire its editorial board, and El Paso Matters reports that the El Paso News is now printing the paper in Cuidad Juarez.
A few too many criminal and social injustice updates.
Days ago a migrant was found hanging from a tree in Brooks County. Many have died on the border, but this heinous incident is now a homicide investigation. I spoke with Sheriff Martinez for @TPRNews for an update. https://t.co/YrOePALTFe
— Pablo De La Rosa (@pblodlr) October 9, 2021
Think it's rare that sexual abuse of children results in pregnancy? Seven pregnant 12-year-olds and their caregivers sought help in a recent month at Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center, which handles the county's most serious criminal sexual abuse cases. https://t.co/k7tzp8Hbne
— Sharon Grigsby (@SharonFGrigsby) October 15, 2021
What would you do if your ancestors were murdered, buried in the courthouse lawn, and then a confederate statue was built over their bodies? (Thread) /1 @TonyCra13323593 #txlege #BlackLivesMatter #Justice4Weatherford4 #ScarsOfAmerica #DoTheRightThing pic.twitter.com/rPCCLYzW7q
— Shell_Seas (@LivingBlueTX) October 16, 2021
Thank you to @NBCDFW for covering the Texas House hearing on the state's foster care crisis.
— Texans Care for Children (@putkids1st) October 18, 2021
Watch the story here:https://t.co/ecjcZXYcPx #TXlege pic.twitter.com/kQqU05gjdi
Court schedules sentencing for December 9 in US Capitol case of former Houston police officer Tam Pham.
— Scott MacFarlane (@MacFarlaneNews) October 17, 2021
Background here: https://t.co/kydztac0NH
BREAKING: Border groups, including RAICES attorneys, just walked out of a meeting with the Biden administration in protest of their recent plans to resume the inhumane #MPP program.
— RAICES (@RAICESTEXAS) October 16, 2021
We will not work with the administration to resume this cruelty against migrants.#EndMPP
A Century Ago, 1 Lawmaker Went After the Most Powerful Cops in #Texas Then They Went After Him https://t.co/xm0um1PsIC #txlege #BLM #BrownLivesMatter #TxEd @esntx2 @AztecMuse @MotherJones #TexasRangers @TXlege #RazaStudies @EthnicStudiesCA @utexascoe @UT_DDCE @LatinoUSA @TxTLEEC pic.twitter.com/wHf34qjQiU
— Angela Valenzuela (@vlnzl) October 16, 2021
One spot of good news here.
Yesterday, a bad bail bill died. SJR 1 would have allowed judges to deny bail in more cases, forcing people to stay in jail for weeks or months before their day in court. Read this statement from Liyah Brown, our Director of Law and Policy for the Criminal Injustice Program. pic.twitter.com/7Nm2k7D9Tm
— Texas Civil Rights Project (@TXCivilRights) October 15, 2021
And a few calm-me-downs.
The wait is over. An all-new Top 50 list, featuring an all-new generation of pitmasters, is here. https://t.co/vP5Uqc0JIE pic.twitter.com/oBBlJyt4LE
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) October 18, 2021
Houston's Billy Preston is the answer to a cool trivia question: who is the only non-Beatle to be credited on a Beatles record? The ‘Get Back’ single was credited to “The Beatles with Billy Preston”, as was its b-side, ‘Don’t Let Me Down’. He later became a star in his own right. pic.twitter.com/wFa3G4Usdu
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) October 17, 2021
Sunday, October 17, 2021
Saturday, October 16, 2021
The Weekend Wrangle from Far Left Texas
A very antiseptic take on the end of the week's election-related Lege actions from TXElects.
The House passed Senate Bill 4, the Senate’s redistricting plan for itself, without adopting any amendments.
Both plans head to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk in plenty of time to keep the filing period and primary elections on schedule.
The House will take up Senate Bill 6, the congressional redistricting plan, (today).
Early voting begins Monday for the November 2 constitutional, general and special elections.
Let's go elsewhere for some analysis.
Houston and San Antonio, here are the takeaways from the latest Texas House map that passed the lower chamber this morning -->https://t.co/aDYHTDCemU #txlege #redistricting
— Taylor Goldenstein (@taygoldenstein) October 13, 2021
How a doughnut-shaped district breaks up voters of color near Fort Hood and helps Texas House Republicans: https://t.co/xOwoYOOV83 #TXlege pic.twitter.com/UGyMFqijm2
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 15, 2021
Redistricting in Texas
— RA News (@RANewsTX) October 15, 2021
Cartoon by @Nick_Anderson_ for @RANewsTX #txlege #Texas #redistricting #Doughnut pic.twitter.com/6GUYmtIiq3
A frat house #txlege https://t.co/j3Jlf6Iinp
— Rebecca Marques (@_RebeccaMarques) October 15, 2021
As mentioned, Congress maps later today.
The Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs capture the intensity w/ which Texas Republicans are struggling against demographic change.
— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) October 15, 2021
W/ surgical precision, Hispanic & Asian neighborhoods are being grafted onto new massive districts dominated by white voters: https://t.co/7EjBHVQf8F #txlege pic.twitter.com/tk1Gf7RzCK
Texas lawmakers advanced a redistricting plan that shatters the 18th Congressional District Democratic U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee represents and shuffles thousands of mostly Black residents in the Third Ward out of it. https://t.co/8r2KS277dj
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) October 15, 2021
This Turner/Green exchange points out a major flaw in the Senate Congressional map. Huffman included map feedback provided by Congressional Republicans. Before releasing map. But told Dems (who didn't participate) they were on their own with their proposed amendments. #txlege
— Kimberly Reeves (@edwonkkimmy) October 13, 2021
In contrast to the treatment of Congresswoman Jackson Lee, note the land bridge in TX-10 to West Austin to make sure Mike McCaul’s house remains in his district. #txlege https://t.co/3yHGJKf5g1 pic.twitter.com/qWdS1PJHvw
— Michael Li 李之樸 (@mcpli) October 15, 2021
Redistricitng/gerrymandering wasn't the only debacle.
JUST IN: The Texas House on Thursday evening passed a bill banning transgender students from playing on public school sports teams aligned with their gender identity. https://t.co/toQJoSFXzO
— KENS 5 (@KENS5) October 15, 2021
There was too much ugliness in the deliberations (sic) on this bill to be repeated here.
if there is a god, she does not approve. #txlege #TransRightsAreHumanRights #TransIsBeautiful #TexasDeservesBetter https://t.co/VkDDuVflOW
— Lyndsey Marie Rodriguez (@lyn13191) October 15, 2021
The repercussions of previously-passed bad laws are quickly being felt.
We knew this day would come. The day that teachers would be asked to have books with OPPOSING VIEWS OF THE HOLOCAUST to comply with SB 3. Texans can thank conservative elites/state leadership for the perpetuation of hate in our classrooms #txlege #txed https://t.co/iLwdKKsqEW
— Ana “not in the TEKS” Ramon (@Ana_Ramon89) October 14, 2021
“What is the other side of the Holocaust?” he asked rhetorically. “Are you going to assign fourth graders Mein Kampf? Are you going to make them listen to Seb Gorka’s radio show? I just don’t know what she actually had in mind. But again, this is exactly what you get when you have politicians playing culture war and then trying to ram that into badly thought out draconian legislation.”
He added, “Republicans in Texas have been conservative for a long time, but there was a time when conservative Republicans in Texas were not absolutely batshit crazy.”
Here’s another Texas law that relies on lawsuits to enforce it. It might also shut down hospitals? https://t.co/aQuxqIrqyK
— Matt Largey (@mattlargey) October 15, 2021
A group of Texas physicians are ramping up their calls for Gov. Abbott to rescind his executive order banning vaccine requirements, saying the government needs to stay out of health care.https://t.co/BzCX8JB1Mb
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) October 16, 2021
In recent months, Abbott has signed laws that require certain companies to play the national anthem before events, dictate how social media platforms can operate, & prohibit state contractors from divesting from fossil fuels https://t.co/FdB289HWVj
— Justin Miller (@by_jmiller) October 11, 2021
No real ideology behind “conservative” or “Republican” anymore beyond “whatever gets me elected this cycle” | @business #TxLege https://t.co/YT1SH7o1gy
— Rudy England (@RudyEngland) October 13, 2021
Moving on to criminal and social injustice news.
The Justice Department has launched an investigation into allegations of widespread mistreatment at Texas' embattled youth lockups, where at least 11 staffers have been arrested on sexual abuse charges in recent years. https://t.co/H5hU5XQKfT
— FOX 4 NEWS (@FOX4) October 14, 2021
Thread. This story of rampant physical and sexual attacks against children inside Texas's prisons for children is not an isolated incident of "bad guards." This is what child cages look like in every state. We must draw a few lessons: https://t.co/aDIQOpeyA3
— Alec Karakatsanis (@equalityAlec) October 15, 2021
“That means the cash bond system itself is serving a danger to the community,” state District Judge Chris Morton said. “Any time there’s a for-profit aspect to criminal justice, that creates the opportunity for oppression and inconsistencies in justice.” https://t.co/838KttsGWh
— Spooky Evan (@evan7257) October 14, 2021
#BREAKING - Hundreds of students at John H. Guyer High School in Denton have walked out of the classroom, supposedly to protest the school’s handling of sexual assault cases. https://t.co/ekW8hYoimx pic.twitter.com/jJxr3UtrVh
— CBSDFW (@CBSDFW) October 15, 2021
And there will be some justice.
Y’all thought we were going to sit by while TAG and TxDOT spew lies about the “State of TxDOT”? Absolutely not.
— Stop TxDOT I45 (@StopTxDOTi45) October 15, 2021
Thursday, October 21st
10am at Weiss Park (300 N Post Oak)
We will use our voices to set the record straight. #hounews #stoptxdoti45 pic.twitter.com/UdaM00tXNU
Katy ISD reinstates banned books, reschedules author visit after critical race theory allegations refuted https://t.co/USc6XIsGGa
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) October 14, 2021
A few climate items.
Dying oil and gas wells are a climate menace.
— Bloomberg Green (@climate) October 14, 2021
One company — Diversified Energy — has amassed about 69,000 wells across the U.S.
Our reporters went to some of those sites and found that many were emitting methane. [THREAD] https://t.co/QH3mk7nwed
Twice as many 100-degree days in 15 years?! Greater hurricane intensity, drought severity, and wildfire risk?! Polls show Texans know the climate is changing and Texas isn’t prepared. #txlege #txenergy https://t.co/dpGoDsEZdY
— Changing TX Climate (@TX_Climate) October 14, 2021
And some updates to news that haven't been made here recently.
COVID-19 hospitalizations in Texas are at their lowest level since July 29https://t.co/I3bk6MLxM8
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) October 13, 2021
It's been a long and winding road: Forming a development company to build rail stations for a Dallas-to-Houston #bullettrain is the latest step in a decade-old effort to push the plan down the tracks. @paul_o_donnell has 4 things to know about it. #txlege https://t.co/UzV9BGKSZV
— John Gravois (@Grav1) October 13, 2021
One snarky bit: "Brain Flakes". They need to be eating more of those in rural Texas, but Mr. Hart needs to be paying his people more to move those boxes.
In rural Texas we posted a $14/hour part-time cash container unloading job.
— Molson Hart (@Molson_Hart) October 12, 2021
No one showed up.
Now our team of 2 is unloading 35,000 pounds of Brain Flakes themselves.
Wild that $14 isn’t enough these days.
Pictures are old and for plush but it gives you an idea. pic.twitter.com/iVxFa2z7qI
And a soother.
Three exhibitions at Plush Gallery: Narong Tintamusik: Red Oblivion, Dwayne Carter: The End of Madness, and Favio Moreno: When It’s All Said. Dates: September 25 – November 13, 2021.
— Glasstire (@Glasstire) October 15, 2021
Part of Glasstire’s series of short videos, Five-Minute Tourshttps://t.co/nYSlnCd1eW pic.twitter.com/8yqG4O5K4z
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Hump Day Wrangle from Far Left Texas
Humpin' it to the finish line.
New: With an eye toward fortifying the GOP’s majority in the Texas House, state representatives early Wednesday passed a proposed new map for the chamber’s 150 districts. Some of the biggest last-minute changes focused on Dallas and Harris counties. https://t.co/wWQDsbYuOd
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 13, 2021
I just don't have the will to post the play-by-play from late last night. Scott Braddock, Michael Li, and a few other regulars on the #txlege timeline are your go-to for the micro.
Governor Fish Lips gets exposed again as feckless. All that bragging about the steel in his spine, and it turns out it's jelly.
.@rossramsey writes: Gov. Greg Abbott’s latest executive order contradicts what he's been saying for months about mandates and the personal choices of Texans and their businesses during the pandemic.https://t.co/fC1VMeywtT
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 12, 2021
(Abbott is) so overwhelmed by politics that he’s become a Random Policy Generator, throwing out edicts that make sense only if you forget everything he said before.
[...]
When the former president -- whose political favor Abbott craves -- expresses some disappointment, the Texas governor snaps into line. That disappointment often parallels the views of Donald Trump’s favorite Texas politician, (Lt. Gov. Dan) Patrick.
[...]
This is straight-up schoolyard politics. Trump is a bully. Patrick is egging him on. Abbott is the target, doing everything they want to avoid an electoral wedgie.
An executive order from the governor in August barred cities, counties and other local governments from requiring vaccines. Another one, in May, barred those local governments from requiring people to wear masks.
Now there’s a new executive order that tosses aside some of that “decide for themselves” business.
Abbott wanted a show of strength here, but settled for a sign of weakness. He didn’t hold his ground, instead caving in to demands from conservatives like former state Sen. Don Huffines of Dallas, who’s challenging the governor in next year’s party primary. Huffines is trying to label Abbott a moderate and himself as a Trump-style Republican -- what he calls in his advertising “an actual Republican.” Trump has already endorsed Abbott, but that’s not necessarily his final answer: The former president has shown a willingness to change his preferences in other campaigns.
In terms of his political chances, Huffines is more light breeze than hurricane. But like his former superior in the state Senate, Patrick, he’s a conduit for Trumphobia -- a contagious affliction marked by its conservative victims’ obsession with the goodwill of the former president and of the multitude of voters devoted to him. Abbott has no reason to fear Huffines, but the idea of getting on the former president’s naughty list gives him the shivers.
He’s not alone in that. Dozens of other Republicans have fallen into this particular personality cult. Abbott is seeking reelection next year amid talk that he -- like a small mob of other Republican wannabes -- might be contending for president in 2024.
They want to be in line with Trump’s voters. And in the meantime, that means staying in line with Trump himself. That, for Republicans with ambitions for higher office, is imperative -- almost a mandate.
Weak. As. Rainwater.
Prompted by Abbott primary challenger, Texas agency removed webpage with suicide hotline, other resources for LGBTQ youth https://t.co/EjUUSwuujn
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) October 13, 2021
In late August, one of Gov. Greg Abbott’s primary challengers, Don Huffines, accused Texas’ child welfare agency of “promoting transgender sexual policies to Texas youth” under a section of its website titled “Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation.”
“These are not Texas values, these are not Republican Party values, but these are obviously Greg Abbott’s values,” Huffines said in a widely circulated video on Twitter. The webpage published by the Department of Family and Protective Services linked to a suicide prevention hotline and other resources “dedicated to helping empower and celebrate” young LGBTQ people.
Within hours, the webpage was gone.
To the going question: who's the boss of @GregAbbott_TX? #txlege
— EricaGrieder (@EricaGrieder) October 12, 2021
He may have more than one, ofc, but note that @jaspscherer got the docs showing that in this case, @DonHuffines was effectively calling the shots:
https://t.co/Yc1IyGgQgS via @houstonchron pic.twitter.com/Vinwu590Nn
I have said it now about six times, but it's worth repeating: if Governor Strangelove loses, it will be next spring, in his primary. It won't be a year from now, no matter who's on the ballot.
EXCLUSIVE: Last night I told Governor Greg Abbott I was concerned about birth control and the morning after pill incentivizing women to be promiscuous.
— Lauren Windsor (@lawindsor) October 12, 2021
Abbott appeared to support outlawing both contraceptives, and said that “basically, we’ve outlawed abortion in Texas.” pic.twitter.com/cWWnnIP9wz
Some Texans aren't taking his crap any more.
The man tears into Abbott over Texas' near-total abortion ban while shaking his hand outside a restaurant. #GregAbbott #TexasAbortionLaw #TexasWarOnWomen #ViralVideo #GregAbbottVideo #TikTokhttps://t.co/R3tJzkkqiy
— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) October 12, 2021
And the corporations supporting the bad actors are getting their comeuppance as well.
The latest AT&T ad.
AT&T, the largest communications provider on the planet, not only connects families and friends, it also "helps fund One America News Network," the ad's narrator boasts. "OANN is a streaming channel that hires radical white nationalists as hosts, cheers the Capitol attacks, and promotes Covid-19 conspiracy theories."
The ad lets us in on what we pay for when we sign up for AT&T, including "OANN host Pearson Sharp to call for mass executions," and "funding politicians like Texas governor Greg Abbott, who pushes radical new laws against voting rights and women's rights."
Wrapping up with its tagline, "AT&T, funding sedition, suppression, and of course, One America News Network," the ad parodies AT&T's false altruism to such a tee, I almost missed it on the first view, mistaking it for a real AT&T ad -- which it might as well be.
This is what happens to your stock @ATT when the world learns you founded & bankrolled an extremist TV network that touts white nationalists, #COVID19 disinformation, and vaccine conspiracies— and now has pandemic blood 🩸 on their hands. #BoycottATT pic.twitter.com/Vaf4SZcZrd
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) October 12, 2021
Still something funny going on with SWA.
TUESDAY: #SouthwestAirlines again tops the list on flight delays at 1,155 or 34% of their flights. FAA air traffic control system again shows no major delays at 40 major U.S. hubs. pic.twitter.com/PhQFMlMXbs
— Jefferey Jaxen (@JeffereyJaxen) October 13, 2021
A few more "Texas Capitalists Behaving Badly" updates.
Exxon Mobil Corp. said on Tuesday that a vote to remove the United Steelworkers union (USW) from representing locked-out workers at its Beaumont, Texas, refinery would go forward no matter the outcome of a contract ratification vote next week by those same workers.
USW Local 13-243 announced on Monday night that Beaumont refinery and lubricant oil plant workers would take their first vote on an Exxon contract offer on Oct. 19, six months after they were locked out of their jobs and 10 months after negotiations began.
If you're in the market for a new or used car ... get out. Those thieves have gone full batshit.
.@jasonwheelertv has a follow-up story on how some car dealers are refusing to take checks when car buyers secure their own financing with outside lenders. Here's what regulators are now sayinghttps://t.co/W1X5s63X00
— WFAA (@wfaa) October 12, 2021
The TADA has always owned the Lege, and now they seem to be pressing their greed to extreme levels, like everybody else.
@Fishcreek1269 Frack Master’ Christopher Faulkner Of Dallas Sentenced To 15 Years For Bilking Oil And Gas Investors Out Of Millions – CBS Dallas / Fort Worth https://t.co/1Z0o8NPuAi
— 🦋 Char (@gardencatlady) October 12, 2021
Within the next half-decade, about a third of the housing stock in Galveston, Texas, might be turned into vacation rentals. https://t.co/6PVt6rDp64
— Slate (@Slate) October 13, 2021
Texas Monthly also had a story about this.
In some ways, the latest forces to descend upon Galveston feel more powerful, and potentially permanent, than anything that originates in the Gulf of Mexico. https://t.co/o0dLWycL4A
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) October 4, 2021
Moving on to the environment.
Climate data shows Texas is experiencing extreme rainfall — especially in eastern Texas — bigger storm surges as seas rise along the Gulf Coast and more flooding from hurricanes strengthened by a warming ocean, according to the state climatologist. https://t.co/XHKyEcQlZA
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 13, 2021
Quarries have proliferated in recent years in the Texas Hill Country. Residents living nearby say that they've brought with increased noise and pollution.
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) October 12, 2021
But an investigation by @ExpressNews found that frequent violators rarely face consequences. https://t.co/8rh3DlAmRl
Not even a pandemic can stop solar’s epic growth https://t.co/hmxZwBuHWQ
— Salon (@Salon) October 12, 2021
And the criminal and social justice news.
Fort Hood soldier found dead behind barracks amid rash of deaths and disappearances: report https://t.co/7Ja9fzHBvi pic.twitter.com/4Owx96XVmJ
— Andy Vermaut (@AndyVermaut) October 13, 2021
Sorry about the FOX news link.
“We are at an inflection point,” said Morris Denton, CEO of Texas Original. “Patient populations are increasing and we need to take a hard look at the rules.” #TexasOriginal #MedicalCannabis #MedicalMarijuana #Texas #CompassionateUseProgram #txlege https://t.co/4YD7nJn8Ry
— Texas Original Compassionate Cultivation (@TexasOriginalCC) October 12, 2021
Together, the Karankawa Kadla are fighting to protect their ancestors' land on the Texas coast and finding pieces of their language, traditions and knowledge that many of them thought were lost. https://t.co/KUyMMyQ8we
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) October 12, 2021
And the soothers.
HEADS UP #WESTERNSWING MUSIC LOVERS:@aatw1969 celebrates their half-century-long career w/a Oct 15 show at @Moody_Amp, ft reunited original members & long-standing alumni, as well as @KatEdmonson, @BrennenLeigh, & a very special secret guest!😉
— Texas Music Office (@txmusicoffice) October 12, 2021
🎟: https://t.co/G5GNS95lee pic.twitter.com/8dEWmbtxb6
Today, hip-hop is one of our state's greatest cultural exports. But how did Texas rap come into its own?
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) October 12, 2021
From "Bounce Rap" to "Mo City Don" to "Savage (Remix)," these twenty songs tell the story: https://t.co/EiXOJ7kJmW


















