Sunday, April 19, 2020
Thursday, April 16, 2020
Race for the White House Update: All Aboard
-- Bernie went first ...
And following our refusals to get in line behind him, began the early recriminations.
That might appear to be more directed specifically at those who would be planning on not voting, as opposed to those of us who will be voting for someone other than Biden or Trump.
I'm rolling with the old Bernie anyway.
He built a movement for a political revolution and then, when it was sabotaged again by the establishment, trudged back to rejoin them. That is, after all, what he said he would do, repeatedly; support the nominee. A lot of people felt surprised, disappointed, let down by that (not me).
-- Obama came out second, with the best gaslighting ever.
Not that. This.
What refreshingcandor bullshit. I can't wait for the "I exerted no influence on the candidates who all quit their campaigns simultaneously just prior to Super Tuesday" tell-all interview/book.
-- And in a small plot twist, Elizabeth Warren -- coming in from her sabbatical -- makes it a three-for-three for Rapey Joe.
Was this orchestrated also by Maestro Obama? Does it presage Liz as VP? That's going to enrage the K-Hive if so. And perhaps miff Stacey Abrams, who's taking her campaign for the job public.
-- So ... keep revolting inside or outside?
Personally I have gotten the most satisfaction from doing both, strategically and each at the proper time. So for the moment, voting for Bernie in remaining primaries will give him delegates to go to the convention and influence DNC rules in the future (as in the past; restricting the votes of superdelegates to the second round, for example).
But after that, it's time to #DemExit.
Here are some of your options at the top of your November ballot.
Don't write Bernie's name in, please.
This is exactly what happens in Harris County; I've seen it. It may be what happens in every Texas county. Some states do allow write-ins, like California (I am told); you should check with your state's elections administrator and find out.
I'll post more later about other minor leftist parties that don't have a presidential candidate this cycle -- building the movement in-between presidential cycles is critical -- and how to address accusations of "privilege" from duopolists.
-- The Libertarians lost Lincoln Chafee last week, so Michigan Congressman Justin Amash is considering leaping in, and Jim Gray (former CA Superior Court judge and the party's 2012 vice-presidential nominee) has already taken the plunge, adding a little excitement to that primary.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden for president, pledging to help him defeat President Donald Trump in the general election as the two agreed to launch a series of task forces to work jointly on policy matters.
"We need you in the White House. I will do all that I can to see that that happens, Joe," Sanders said to Biden during a livestream broadcast by Biden's campaign on his website and on social media.
I’m not going to listen to Bernie tell me to vote for Biden because he’s not even a real democrat 🤣— Julie Smith 🌹 (@JulieSmithM) April 15, 2020
And following our refusals to get in line behind him, began the early recriminations.
Bernie Sanders said Tuesday that it would be “irresponsible” for his loyalists not to support Joe Biden, warning that progressives who “sit on their hands” in the months ahead would simply enable President Donald Trump’s reelection.
That might appear to be more directed specifically at those who would be planning on not voting, as opposed to those of us who will be voting for someone other than Biden or Trump.
I'm rolling with the old Bernie anyway.
"We are not a movement where I can snap my fingers and say to you or to anybody else what you should do, because you won't listen to me. You shouldn't. You'll make these decisions yourself." pic.twitter.com/4pkGmQIr5L— Mattie Washburn (@MattieWashburn) April 13, 2020
He built a movement for a political revolution and then, when it was sabotaged again by the establishment, trudged back to rejoin them. That is, after all, what he said he would do, repeatedly; support the nominee. A lot of people felt surprised, disappointed, let down by that (not me).
This is my favorite Bernie cartoon and seeing it is the straw that broke the camel's back and brought me to tears today. :(#ThankYouBernie pic.twitter.com/xcK63yD5UE— Colleen Feels the Bern 🌹 (@CYRFeelstheBern) April 8, 2020
Look, I love Bernie, but it's clear that we need a new leader of the movement. One who is not friends with some or anyone in the establishment and is more than willing to take all of them on, not just some or most.— De'Narde English🌹 (@DeNarde4MDDel) April 14, 2020
Bernie's done great work, but we'll take it from here.
-- Obama came out second, with the best gaslighting ever.
"The Democratic Party will have to be bold," he added, arguing that Biden has the "most progressive platform" of any Democratic nominee, even though many progressives who supported Sanders remain skeptical of Biden.
Not that. This.
It becomes more adorable with each passing day to reminisce about how we spent a year following the twists and turns and what-ifs of a Democratic presidential primary between 20-some candidates. After all the noise, Joe Biden just had to hold on to South Carolina to get Democratic voters to effectively nominate him by acclamation. Cool. So much of that time, too, was spent debating whether Democrats needed a return to the halcyon days of the Obama administration or a bolder agenda of structural overhaul. Did Barack Obama go far enough? was a fundamental question of the primary. It was mostly unspoken, as answering with the negative risked taking the most popular Democrat’s name in vain.
And then, the day after the last remaining competitor drops out and endorses the presumptive nominee, Obama himself comes out with the answer: Hell, I certainly wouldn’t run on the Obama platform.
“You know, I could not be prouder of the incredible progress that we made together during my presidency,” Obama said in a video released Tuesday morning, in which he endorsed Joe Biden. “But if I were running today, I wouldn’t run the same race or have the same platform as I did in 2008.”
What refreshing
While you were making hundreds of calls, knocking on hundreds of doors, and donating hundreds of dollars you didn't have, @BarackObama was waiting until just the right moment to cancel all of your work with a few choice calls of his own.— Kurt Hackbarth 🌹 (@KurtHackbarth) April 14, 2020
And you're expected to go along with it.
So, a collection of Moderate shitheads ran with no intention of winning, just to siphon delegates in key states, then collectively dropped out to consolidate support behind Biden, all to stop Sanders, now want us to believe they genuinely care about Sanders' policies & supporters pic.twitter.com/0gxlMyhigK— The Other Beth, who hates all of you (@BethLynch2020) April 14, 2020
Never forget who fought relentlessly behind the scenes to convince Beto O’Rourke, Amy Klobuchar, Pete Buttigieg and others to drop out /support Biden at once after it looked like Bernie would win.— Amir (@AmirAminiMD) April 12, 2020
Never forget whom to thank for another four years of Trump.
Thanks, @BarackObama.
-- And in a small plot twist, Elizabeth Warren -- coming in from her sabbatical -- makes it a three-for-three for Rapey Joe.
Was this orchestrated also by Maestro Obama? Does it presage Liz as VP? That's going to enrage the K-Hive if so. And perhaps miff Stacey Abrams, who's taking her campaign for the job public.
-- So ... keep revolting inside or outside?
Personally I have gotten the most satisfaction from doing both, strategically and each at the proper time. So for the moment, voting for Bernie in remaining primaries will give him delegates to go to the convention and influence DNC rules in the future (as in the past; restricting the votes of superdelegates to the second round, for example).
But after that, it's time to #DemExit.
"You MUST show them that you're capable of NOT voting for them.— Trisha (@Trisha_Tahmasbi) April 10, 2020
If you don't show them that you're capable of NOT voting for them, they DON'T have to listen to you. I promise you that."
- Lawrence O'Donnell
⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️pic.twitter.com/K8qeCEQDa0
To anyone being told that Green is a "wasted vote," I'd just point out that if Berners hadn't wasted their votes on loser Hillary in 2016 and instead got the Greens to 20% in the general, the DNC would never have crossed us by f*cking Bernie again like they did this time.— 🌹 Goody Weaver Cavorting With The Green Party 🌹 (@goodyweaver) April 12, 2020
Here are some of your options at the top of your November ballot.
Sanders is carrying out the final stage of his integration into the political system as events are demonstrating to millions the bankruptcy of capitalism and the need for real revolutionary change. https://t.co/zlockWsIrk— Joseph Kishore for President 2020 #socialism2020 (@jkishore) April 14, 2020
My vote is going to Green Party for President. pic.twitter.com/zi3tWV81BS— Wright for Congress (@WrightDistrict3) April 12, 2020
Berners, you know you don’t want Joe Biden. Join a truly progressive campaign, fighting for economic, environmental & racial justice. Med. for all, UBI, the Green Path Fwd, ending US imperialism, no rent no mortgage no evictions during COVID-19. For system change - #Hunter2020 pic.twitter.com/ppFIdVt6xn— Dario Hunter (@dario4america) April 13, 2020
Great open letter to Bernie supporters from the Socialist Party USA! I am honored to be their nominee, especially in 2020, 100 years since Debs' great run as the Socialist Party nominee. Let's repeat Debs' success and get a #MillionfVotesForSocialism !https://t.co/GqgdGDyD2y pic.twitter.com/He1ed5Jf81— Howie Hawkins (@HowieHawkins) April 14, 2020
Thanks Sema. Your link you shared above was incomplete (missed the first H in http). Here is the full link:https://t.co/bxOwMmCMn3— Mark Charles (@wirelesshogan) April 15, 2020
Don't write Bernie's name in, please.
Most write-in votes don't count.— Stephanie 🌻 Voltolin (@SAVoltolin) April 11, 2020
They don't even record it, just toss it.
It literally is the same as not voting.
Vote Green. Those will be viewed as protest votes by the Democrats, because they won't take us seriously at first.
It shows them we voted, but not for them. ✊
This is exactly what happens in Harris County; I've seen it. It may be what happens in every Texas county. Some states do allow write-ins, like California (I am told); you should check with your state's elections administrator and find out.
Bernie is still fighting for the progressive agenda, so I am still calling myself a Berner. However, I have no intention of voting for #StatusQuoJoe Biden in a state he cannot possibly win: Missouri. I am going to vote for the progressive @GreenPartyUS candidate instead.— PoliticalAnt🐜(a.k.a. @JazzLuvnAnt🎷)🔥 (@PoliticalAnt) April 14, 2020
I voted for Obama in 2008 but not 2012. In 2012 I voted Green Party cause I knew obama wouldn’t win Texas and I felt no loyalty to a party that had shown no loyalty to young people. I’ll vote Green Party for president in Texas again this year.— Hillcrest Card Company (@HillcrestCardCo) April 14, 2020
I'll post more later about other minor leftist parties that don't have a presidential candidate this cycle -- building the movement in-between presidential cycles is critical -- and how to address accusations of "privilege" from duopolists.
-- The Libertarians lost Lincoln Chafee last week, so Michigan Congressman Justin Amash is considering leaping in, and Jim Gray (former CA Superior Court judge and the party's 2012 vice-presidential nominee) has already taken the plunge, adding a little excitement to that primary.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
The TexProgBlog Wrangle, Part 2
Part 1 is here.
The COVID-19 pathogen will likely put off the US Census.
TXElects parses the meaning of the delay for us.
Update: Scott Braddock at Quorum Report has some thoughts about this. My best guess is that a special session to tackle redistricting in 2021, or waiting to do so until 2023, depends on whether the state's Republicans feel their opportunities to control the outcome are better sooner ... or later. Expect litigation aplenty either way.
With respect to legal action ...
Again, the only thing we can be sure of is more lawyers filing more lawsuits.
In spite of the shattered state (and national and global) economy, there are doubts as to whether restarting it now is the right idea.
Coronavirus grifters are gonna grift.
Update: A Texas Railroad Commission hearing yesterday was, in Trump's words, 'a ratings hit', but once again Texas Republican elected officials chose to do nothing. Quorum Report:
Kuff has an update to that weird "ghost candidate" story from the HD142 primary.
Housing news had several Texas bloggers' attention.
"A massive wave of evictions is coming":
The COVID-19 pathogen will likely put off the US Census.
U.S. House Oversight Committee says Trump admin will move to extend #2020Census counting to October & ask Congress to delay delivery of redistricting data from 3/31/21 to 7/31/21 — which would require a #txlege special session (!!) https://t.co/S2nmh9BZAD— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) April 13, 2020
TXElects parses the meaning of the delay for us.
The Trump Administration may be seeking to delay key Census deadlines as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Commerce Secretary Wilber Ross said in a call with several members of Congress that Census field operations would be suspended until June 1, according to a statement issued by U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), chair of the Committee on Oversight and Reform.
Maloney said Ross would seek federal legislation to delay the deadline to deliver apportionment counts to April 30, 2021, from December 31, 2020, and to deliver redistricting data to the states to July 31, 2021, from March 31, 2021. Those deadlines are set by federal law and would require congressional approval.
[...]
During the last redistricting cycle, the U.S. Census Bureau delivered its 2010 state population totals for apportionment on December 21, 2010, and the block level population data on February 17, 2011. In the prior redistricting cycle, the totals for apportionment were released on December 28, 2000, and the actual Census 2000 enumeration data was sent to the states on March 6, 2001. Only the first of those two events would occur during the 2021 regular session under the Administration’s proposed timeline.
If the total state population for apportionment is sufficient to trigger “publication” of the census, then the Legislature could take up redistricting in the regular session. If “publication” is triggered by the block-level detail, then the next regular session would be 2023.
Update: Scott Braddock at Quorum Report has some thoughts about this. My best guess is that a special session to tackle redistricting in 2021, or waiting to do so until 2023, depends on whether the state's Republicans feel their opportunities to control the outcome are better sooner ... or later. Expect litigation aplenty either way.
With respect to legal action ...
BREAKING: Gov. Abbott’s attempt to ban safe, legal abortion during the COVID-19 pandemic has experienced another significant defeat. #AbortionIsEssential https://t.co/iT5FrhDtbX— Planned Parenthood (@PPGreaterTX) April 14, 2020
The Lone Star State is indeed a loner in one regard, according to an April 11 filing by Planned Parenthood in the US Supreme Court.
Texas, like other states, has declared an emergency due to the coronavirus crisis, halting nonessential activities. But it’s gone further than any other locale in limiting family planning services, leaving women with no choice but to remain pregnant or travel out of state instead of sheltering in place, even to seek nonsurgical abortions that simply involve swallowing “two pills.”
Over the weekend, the healthcare providers turned to the highest court in the land for help, saying that “Texas has exploited the Covid-19 crisis as a pretext to target abortion.”
Again, the only thing we can be sure of is more lawyers filing more lawsuits.
In spite of the shattered state (and national and global) economy, there are doubts as to whether restarting it now is the right idea.
Many question whether @GovAbbott's plan to reopen Texas is a good idea just a few weeks after announcing his #StayAtHome order. #COVID19 #coronavirus #txlegehttps://t.co/fJMTynHmgf— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 14, 2020
Coronavirus grifters are gonna grift.
The @TXAG’s office has received more than 5,529 complaints from Texans over exploitative pricing on items like disinfectant wipes, toilet paper and hand sanitizer. #COVID19 #coronavirus #txlege https://t.co/n475QGGPhY— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 14, 2020
The cost of hand sanitizers and masks on Amazon have risen at least 50 percent higher than the 90-day average. https://t.co/AWdxXn89Lr— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) April 7, 2020
Update: A Texas Railroad Commission hearing yesterday was, in Trump's words, 'a ratings hit', but once again Texas Republican elected officials chose to do nothing. Quorum Report:
Texas energy sector appears to reject the idea of state intervention in production
All-day RRC hearing draws 20,000 viewers online; it became clear a Texas-only decision could lead the nation but without a national strategy the needle would only be moved marginally
Two of the state’s energy producers have proposed a return to a limitation on oil production in Texas for the first time in almost 50 years as a way to stem the economic hemorrhaging of the oil & gas industry.
The idea got a lot of attention.
Today’s virtual hearing of the Texas Railroad Commission – with only proration on the agenda – drew more than 20,000 viewers. Statistics were so startling that AdminTexas.com posted that the hearing -- still going (late last) evening -- had significant viewership from Korea, Canada and Russia.
The proposal, in short, would be to cut Texas energy production, by possibly as much as 20 percent, to push up the sagging price of oil. Pioneer Natural Resources and Parsley Energy want it. Marathon Oil Corp. and many others pressed against it even with the promise that the cuts on production would be limited to top pumpers.
“This crisis can be viewed as an opportunity to begin a responsible and managed decline of fossil fuel use,” says Public Citizen Texas office Director Adrian Shelley in testimony to @txrrc on cutting oil/gas production in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. #txenergy #txlege pic.twitter.com/YrdcJlmHX3— Public Citizen Texas (@PublicCitizenTX) April 14, 2020
tl;dr (but you should read it) - the regulators didn't really signal how they'd vote. Could take the issue up at their meeting next week. For @CourthouseNews: https://t.co/2eJPH3T8LR— Travis Bubenik (@travisbubenik) April 15, 2020
Kuff has an update to that weird "ghost candidate" story from the HD142 primary.
Nearly the entire Harris County Democratic legislative delegation is requesting a criminal investigation into the candidacy of a Texas House candidate whose existence was called into question after the March primary. #txlege https://t.co/HjOQy39ceY— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) April 14, 2020
Housing news had several Texas bloggers' attention.
Right now, statewide protections against eviction are set to expire at the end of the month. They don't go as far in Texas as in many states. https://t.co/esGabA8Nhk— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) April 11, 2020
"A massive wave of evictions is coming":
(The COVID-19) crisis has struck the United States at a moment when millions of people were already living perilously close to eviction. Because of stagnant wages and rising rents, one out of four renters spent over half of their income on housing. Among rent burdened households -- defined as those that spend more than one-third of their income on housing -- half have less than $10 in savings.
Nearly a third of the American workforce -- some 41.7 million people -- earns less than $12 per hour and has limited access to health care, paid sick days and paid family and medical leave. The mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced closing of business will force much of this population, even with the help of unemployment insurance, to choose between paying rent or buying groceries.
Some landlords have delayed eviction and even canceled rent for their tenants. Others, however, have been less sympathetic. The Daily Beast recently reported on the case of a Las Vegas nurse who was evicted because her landlord worried she might potentially spread covid-19.
The problem is simply too consequential to be left up to landlord discretion. And if evictions are merely delayed, not permanently stopped, that could lead to a resurgence of the virus, after stay-at-home measures "bend the curve" of infection. Evicted families end up in homeless shelters, where people eat and sleep next to each other -- the opposite of social distancing.
People experiencing homelessness are particularly vulnerable to upper respiratory illness including to covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Well before the pandemic, sprawling tent encampments had experienced outbreaks of medieval diseases like typhus and trench fever.
San Antonio’s West Side is in the embryonic stages of gentrification.— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 13, 2020
The Alazán-Apache Courts—the city's oldest and largest public housing development—are arguably the best defense against speculators.
The project could be demolished within two years.https://t.co/nuP2dVJpqm
Last year, the Current and the San Antonio Heron collaborated on a lengthy analysis of gentrification's sweep across the West Side, including the scheduled demolition of the Alazán-Apache Courts.
In a couple of follow-ups to postings from last week's Wrangle, Rice University's ventilator is all ready to go ...
The plans for Rice University’s ApolloBVM, an open-source emergency ventilator design that could help patients in treatment for COVID-19, are now online and freely available to everyone in the world: https://t.co/bf7tUXH55g pic.twitter.com/KknG9lXtvU— Rice University (@RiceUniversity) April 10, 2020
... and Half Price Books is about to go out.
Half Price Books furloughs or lays off 78 percent of employees https://t.co/9yBHAoSb6C— San Antonio Express-News (@ExpressNews) April 6, 2020
In the wake of furloughs ordered by parent company Gannett, and with print media facing a troubled future, the Austin American Statesman turns to ... radio.
.@statesman is bringing a familiar voice back to the city’s radio landscape with the Statesman News Network https://t.co/tBRYlpbeE7— Austin 360 (@austin360) April 6, 2020
And to conclude another week of the best of the left of Texas, here's few lighter-side pieces.
Released in 1978, “The Whole Shootin’ Match,” was directed by Eagle Pennell. It was the first film to gain national attention for the Austin film scene. https://t.co/toix5iBx9Q— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) April 9, 2020
Save Buffalo Bayou is enjoying tending their garden during this self-imposed spring exile.
Monday, April 13, 2020
The Weekly 'Flatten the Curve' Wrangle *updates
The Texas Progressive Alliance remains committed to flattening the curve as it brings you the best of the left of, about, and from around the Great State over the past week.
Gerald Parker, who served in the Bush administration and is now at Texas A&M, says that we are just at stage two of this five-stage pandemic.
It's not just the statistics that are lacking ...
Some of our so-called leaders are short on empathy.
Perhaps we should send him a copy of the newspaper.
COVID-19 is not an equal opportunity infection.
And the discrimination goes far beyond the numbers.
In a second Wrangle coming tomorrow, we'll have the latest on the legal developments regarding Ken Paxton's outlawing of women's reproductive freedoms.
Ross Ramsey of the TexTrib via Progrexas asks the right question: is in-person voting during a contagion really the best we can do?
Scott Henson of Grits for Breakfast, feeling better and back on a regular blogging schedule, has the latest on Abbott's court battle to stop prisoners from being released due to the pandemic.
SocraticGadfly notes that the Freedom from Religion Foundation had a court win over Greg Abbott upheld on appeal, and as with the original filing, it's a case he wishes both could have lost.
The Texas Signal worries about the rise of anti-Asian racism.
And the TO announces their new EIC.
One of Ahtone's last pieces of work at High Country News -- along with several others -- detailed the appropriation of indigenous peoples' lands for public colleges.
And closing out this Wrangle with the lighter side ...
The Lunch Tray deconstructs stress eating and "anxiety baking". It's Not Hou It's Me shows you where to pick up beer to go in Houston.
Gerald Parker, who served in the Bush administration and is now at Texas A&M, says that we are just at stage two of this five-stage pandemic.
"At least 18 months before there is a vaccine available" https://t.co/Pr23a1RHAS via @houstonchron— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 12, 2020
Phase Three would be (a second stage of) containment before we have a vaccine to deploy. I’m optimistic that in three to six months we’ll have (a better treatment for coronavirus symptoms), a therapeutic in our toolkit that can rescue those who become severely ill.
But it's going to be at least 18 months, I believe, before there's a vaccine available to deploy in any meaningful way.
While we wait for a vaccine, we’ll enter a second stage of containment. During this time, we need to restart our economy -- and we need to do it safely.
What's essential to go the next phase is greatly expanded lab testing -- both the antigen and the antibody lab testing -- so we can have a much better view of what's happening in our community. Despite the rapid advancement that's occurred in lab testing over the last month, we're still catching up. And without the lab testing, we're still almost blind to what's really happening in our community.
I think everybody is now familiar with the epidemiology curve -- the curve from “flattening the curve” -- and its peak. Once we’re on the other side of the peak, once we're seeing a decreasing number of cases, we'll be back in a position where we can attempt to contain the virus in our communities with surgically applied social distancing measures -- not community-wide social distancing measures.
We’re going to have to target new infections more aggressively. We’re going to have to isolate those and do contact tracing. It takes a lot of resources to do that.
Our public health authorities don't have the manpower to do this. We need a lot more public-health soldiers.
.@bjrottinghaus, political science professor at the @UHouston, put together this opinion piece highlighting questions Texas will confront in the next few weeks amid the #COVID19 outbreak. #coronavirus #txlege https://t.co/3l5CJrnAXB— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 13, 2020
Texas, like every state, is trying to flatten the curve. But when it comes to data about the disease, the state appears to be behind the curve. https://t.co/HJ6NxO2ByB via @TexasTribune #txlege #COVID19 #FlattenTheCuve— Dick Lavine (@dlavine) April 10, 2020
“Without robust testing we have no idea of our true numbers,” Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner has said. “You can look at the numbers we have (of confirmed cases) and multiply them by 10.”@mizzousundevil @alexdstuckey @nkhensley @jenny_deam https://t.co/MAIClpgTFV— Jerome Solomon (@JeromeSolomon) April 11, 2020
It's not just the statistics that are lacking ...
NEW: The safety net meant to support the second largest workforce in the country is using decades-old technology. The workforce agency was trying to replace it when the pandemic hit. The latest from @by_jmiller:https://t.co/eIX98IscbX— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 9, 2020
Some of our so-called leaders are short on empathy.
Tillman Fertitta tells Fox News he did his 45,000 employees a 'favor' by furloughing them so quickly https://t.co/xy6m9kHJFU #HouNews— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 11, 2020
Perhaps we should send him a copy of the newspaper.
Good gawd, this photo: Thousands lining up in their cars at a food bank in Texas. (H/t: @brianstelter, @ReliableSources): pic.twitter.com/m39yBCzYM4— Paul Farhi (@farhip) April 11, 2020
COVID-19 is not an equal opportunity infection.
The emerging national picture shows black Americans disproportionately getting sick and dying from COVID-19. The same trend may be playing out in Texas' black and Hispanic communities, but sparse data has been collected. https://t.co/nMBrgb3Iqt— Ayan Mittra (@ayanmittra) April 9, 2020
Black Houstonians 'suffering worst consequences' of virus, but lack of data obscures full picture across #HarrisCounty#coronavirus https://t.co/D1I78GEYap— Anna Núñez (@nunez_anna) April 9, 2020
Did not know this. Turns out Texas had an Office of Minority Health Statistics & Engagement that #txlege eliminated a couple years ago. A/t Rep. Howard, it was axed under the radar in a budget conference committee without debate/discussion from lawmakers https://t.co/zYU29YQE1B— Michael Barajas (@michaelsbarajas) April 9, 2020
And the discrimination goes far beyond the numbers.
"I wake up every day with the intention to live, but as a Black person I have to reconcile that I may not ever return to my home the way I left it." - @AshtonPWoods#BLM @BlackSocialistshttps://t.co/4AU0hz6hpj— Sema (@_SemaHernandez_) April 10, 2020
In a second Wrangle coming tomorrow, we'll have the latest on the legal developments regarding Ken Paxton's outlawing of women's reproductive freedoms.
Ross Ramsey of the TexTrib via Progrexas asks the right question: is in-person voting during a contagion really the best we can do?
It’s plainly ignorant to tell people to stay away from one another and then to require them to gather in their precincts to cast votes.
Jim Malewitz, a former Texas Tribune reporter who now works for Wisconsin Watch, was on hand this month when that state required many of its voters to line up or shut up. He tweeted a Kenosha News photo of a voter outfitted for the occasion. You should go look.
Voting by mail is well established in other states, but you don’t have to look far to find politicians -- Republicans in particular -- who think it’s a bad idea. Start right at the top, with President Donald Trump, who voted by mail in the last election: “Republicans should fight very hard when it comes to statewide mail-in voting. Democrats are clamoring for it,” he tweeted Wednesday. “Tremendous potential for voter fraud, and for whatever reason, doesn’t work out well for Republicans.”
[...]
There are arguments, debunked by election experts, that voting by mail is more vulnerable to fraud. And some argue, with some evidence, that it could be difficult to handle a vote-by-mail election without big investments in voting processes.
That last one is just a good reason to start early instead of waiting until September to make some decisions.
[...]
Maybe it’s not the IQ of voters we’re testing here.
It’s more important than ever that our leaders step up to protect Texans’ health, safety, and voting rights. In order to do that, our state must expand access to vote-by-mail for all Texans. #VoteByMail #txlege https://t.co/01SVknQpHl— Progress Texas (@ProgressTX) April 8, 2020
Scott Henson of Grits for Breakfast, feeling better and back on a regular blogging schedule, has the latest on Abbott's court battle to stop prisoners from being released due to the pandemic.
UPDATE: The Supreme Court of Texas on Saturday issued a temporary stay on Judge Livingston's temporary restraining order, meaning Abbott's order for now is back in effect. The court has requested briefings on the subject, with responses from the litigants due on Monday. See coverage from the Texas Tribune.
There are now 132 Texas prisoners who have tested positive for COVID, nearly double the total cases the prison system reported yesterday https://t.co/TPs2cmv4Vh https://t.co/RtDD8QOUoQ— Michael Barajas (@michaelsbarajas) April 10, 2020
SocraticGadfly notes that the Freedom from Religion Foundation had a court win over Greg Abbott upheld on appeal, and as with the original filing, it's a case he wishes both could have lost.
The Texas Signal worries about the rise of anti-Asian racism.
“It doesn’t even have to physically hurt anyone—which it already has. You have the Asian American population in the United States telling you this is hurtful, that this is painful for us, please don’t do this. That should be enough.” https://t.co/KOdYa6nQvl— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 10, 2020
And the TO announces their new EIC.
The Observer is very pleased to welcome @Tahtone as our next editor-in-chief. https://t.co/YFheKSk5Nr— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 10, 2020
One of Ahtone's last pieces of work at High Country News -- along with several others -- detailed the appropriation of indigenous peoples' lands for public colleges.
1/7 - Our investigation, "Land-Grab Universities," reveals how Indigenous land was turned into seed money for U.S. colleges: 10.7 million acres taken from nearly 250 tribes through over 160 violence-backed land cessions for the benefit of 52 universities. https://t.co/nR2xKiXgLr pic.twitter.com/A4JPryi2Sf— Tristan Ahtone (@Tahtone) April 8, 2020
And closing out this Wrangle with the lighter side ...
The Lunch Tray deconstructs stress eating and "anxiety baking". It's Not Hou It's Me shows you where to pick up beer to go in Houston.
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