Thursday, November 25, 2021
Wednesday, November 24, 2021
A Pre-Turkey Day Wrangle from Far Left Texas
Texas gained 4 million people between 2010 and 2020 but 56% of Texas counties saw a decline in population. Take a deeper look at some of the state's population changes found in the 2020 census in the new issue of @TexasCountymag: https://t.co/JBtIrzCjtM#254Strong #txlege pic.twitter.com/f8Lg0DFg5J
— Texas Counties (@TexasCounties) November 17, 2021
Who are these people, though? I mean besides Elon Musk and Joe Rogan. Are they people who want to be here for the jobs, the politics, the allegedly low taxes/cost of living?
My @nytopinion colleagues created an amazing database to look for places to live. I used it to figure out why everyone’s moving to Texas.
— farhad manjoo (@fmanjoo) November 23, 2021
Texas’ cities are affordable, full of jobs, racially and politically diverse, and Dallas faces lower climate risks https://t.co/d9rCpXWfAy
Pleeease California -- or New York -- our Texas, y'all. Just a little bit. More leftist than liberal, though, and since I'm wishing, more Green than Blue.
#TXLege #TX2022 @DelilahforTexas @CrowRailroad https://t.co/h6KKhj2Po7 pic.twitter.com/JbSVEqYSCt
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) November 19, 2021
According to the University of Houston and Texas Southern University poll, 51% of Republicans even favor legalizing the sale and use of recreational weed. #Texas #cannabis #marijuana #marijuanareform #CannabisCommunity #cannabisculture #CannabisMedicalhttps://t.co/C3EB3rDxD7
— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) November 23, 2021
If you're a Democrat running in 2022 and you're not advocating for weed, you might as well not waste your and everybody else's time and money. You should be running and voting Green, but a lot of you aren't ready for that conversation yet.
It may work out fine but make no mistake: Abbott is gambling with Texas' future #txlege https://t.co/i3xERaH1Bp
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) November 24, 2021
If you're a Democrat or a Green or a Libertarian and you're not running on keeping the power on, wake up and smell the coffee. Gambling is still illegal in Texas, but Governor Fish Lips has $55 million and his political future riding on no blackouts right before the primary elections next spring. Does that sound like a good bet to you? Maybe we won't get another Uri. Maybe the new guys at ERCOT who are telling him the grid is just fine will be right if we do. But if I were a betting man -- and I am -- I'm taking some of that action.
Notable: Taylor won the new Samsung plant in part by being in @Oncor territory -- https://t.co/9fFkynzkTK
— Bud Kennedy / #ReadLocal (@BudKennedy) November 24, 2021
Abbott kept quiet about 313 renewal while it was debated then killed in Dan Patrick's Senate this session. It's politically dicey & could just be hot air. But would be quite the holiday gift for Big Biz if he salvaged program with a late special session. #txlege https://t.co/OOEKTtxPIP
— Justin Miller (@by_jmiller) November 24, 2021
Seems like the odds for a fourth special session are getting better every day. We know the Repukes want one to ban employer vaccine mandates, and with all the Lege vacancies at the moment, who knows what the outcome of anything Abbott might put on the call could be?
It's a little early for the governor to be focused on November 2022 by lying about Beto, but that just goes to show you that you can't put anything beyond him.
Some Republicans are attacking Beto O’Rourke by highlighting his actual 2020 remarks on policing. But the initial attack ad from Gov. Greg Abbott’s campaign uses a significantly altered version of those O’Rourke remarks: https://t.co/Nd95ipiCUX
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) November 24, 2021
INBOX: Texas prison workers are NOT happy about @GovAbbott's decision to take another $4 million the prison budget for election audits.
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) November 23, 2021
The union president called it “irresponsible,” highlighting record-high staff shortages in prisons that he says are still COVID hot spots. pic.twitter.com/bC3QSn8ISN
The University of Austin's mascot is not going to be an elephant. Much too noble a creature. I'm thinking Leeches.
#txlege defunds real education to funnel taxpayer money to a "free market" institute. https://t.co/m0KvDWL3gS#highered #education #Texas #txed
— San Antonio Review (@SanAntoReview) November 24, 2021
And a Happy Thanksgiving to all the people that Mayor Turner screwed out of affordable housing in the years to come.
GLO review finds city Harvey housing program ‘undermines’ competitive process https://t.co/05nGPKYeXQ via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) November 23, 2021
The findings push pause on at least six apartment and multi-family projects the City of Houston wants to help build until Houston sends corrections to its plan. It puts at risk $91 million in taxpayer-funded housing subsidies and the future of 933 apartments, many for low-income Houstonians.
GLO reviewers say their overall conclusion is that, "The City of Houston does not have appropriate processes and the necessary controls in place to meet (the multi-family program contract requirements)."
The program is designed to provide affordable housing to low-income families using federal funds, but the GLO found multiple instances where the city didn't follow its own housing recommendations -- the ones developers were given before planning finding the city lifted lower scoring projects above those that scored higher.
The GLO said that "result(s) in a competitive process that is not fair and open."
Say whatever you like about Ted Oberg and Greg Groogan and even George Pee Bush at the GLO. It was Tom McCasland who first blew the whistle.
One more thing before I get off the corruption beat.
Regulations require banks to figure out how their clients earn their money. But court documents in recent Texas kleptocracy cases raise questions about whether U.S. banks are serious about stopping money laundering. https://t.co/rYRS0j9xFW
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) November 24, 2021
More hard news after the holiday. I need some soothers now.
The “coolest place in town” is now open!
— City of San Antonio 💪+💉= 💯 (@COSAGOV) November 22, 2021
The Rotary Club of San Antonio and Centro San Antonio present the 2021 Holiday Outdoor Ice Rink located in Travis Park adjacent to the annual Christmas tree.
For more information, visit https://t.co/JJQ9v8JzTK ⛸️⛸️ pic.twitter.com/re4AWXYQKi
RIP to the Astros' all-time winningest manager Bill Virdon. Here's my favorite photo of him. He didn't drink, so when the Astros won their first division title, Luis Pujols, Joaquin Andujar and Rafael Landestoy doused him with milk. https://t.co/3dkIks5h0m pic.twitter.com/tqdzRCUffc
— Matt Young (@Chron_MattYoung) November 23, 2021
Am I doing Thanksgiving right https://t.co/nz9WEi2AwP pic.twitter.com/rJ9byfWFwn
— El Arroyo (@ElArroyo_ATX) November 23, 2021
All My Xerxes Live in Texas. https://t.co/Ak1z1mGNs3
— Grey DeLisle-Griffin (@GreyDeLisle) November 24, 2021
Tuesday, November 23, 2021
Go, Go, Gohmert Wrangle from Far Left Texas
Watch him go, go, go.
Republican US Rep. Louie Gohmert Announces He's Running For Texas Attorney General https://t.co/y0iyApOWzp
— CBSDFW (@CBSDFW) November 23, 2021
We should all be entertained, at the very least. The other obvious 'Block Paxton' Republican in the TXAG GQP primary, Matt Krause, beat a hasty retreat.
.@RepMattKrause confirms that he’s ending AG campaign to run for Tarrant DA, says he intends to help @LouieGohmertTX1 for AG #txlege
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) November 23, 2021
We're all hoping he can do less damage there regarding school text censorship than anywhere else he might be elected.
Yesterday in Big D, the Q-nuts reassembled in Dealey Plaza to mark ... something.
At least 100 QAnon supporters convinced JFK is coming back are still in Dallas. Today they stood on a bridge over Dealey Plaza for the anniversary of the assassination, but JFK and JFK Jr. never showed. pic.twitter.com/fJTbc7p7iT
— Will Sommer (@willsommer) November 22, 2021
Steve Monacelli once again dove into the cesspool to bring us an on-the-scene account.
Today is the anniversary of the JFK assassination. I'm at Dealey Plaza for the fifth time this month for a ceremony capping off the 9th annual JFK Assassination Conference. Members of the JFK Jr. obsessed QAnon sect are also expected to be here, promising a clash of conspiracies. pic.twitter.com/3IBZOXIVgY
— steven monacelli (@stevanzetti) November 22, 2021
Whether to laugh or be scared, read the thread.
The QAnon JFK Cult in Dallas Is Tearing Families Apart https://t.co/TJfHxo18mt via @vicenews
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) November 22, 2021
In a less inflammatory recollection, Bud Kennedy at the Startlegram recounts a childhood memory of his wallet being returned by Lee Oswald's mother.
Shifting gears to catch up on our less-than-favorite Texans behaving badly.
The Texas border wall has never been a terribly smart idea. But leave it to Governor Greg Abbott to attempt to take over the wall-building crusade after President Biden halted Trump’s plans, to make a dumb idea dumber. https://t.co/ULQxVtgxiF
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) November 19, 2021
Man Charged With Assaulting Officers During US Capitol Riot Running for Texas House --> https://t.co/R7yfP8Y7kF
— NBC DFW (@NBCDFW) November 20, 2021
Just in: Trump endorses @RyanGuillen #HD31 #txlege pic.twitter.com/QOZod7nXwS
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) November 19, 2021
How about some business news?
#NEW Samsung to build $17B plant in Taylor, Wall Street Journal reports. Samsung previously indicated in its application filings that it wanted to start construction in January 2022.https://t.co/ZL2Ly267tG
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) November 23, 2021
The tax incentives for Samsung easily reaches more than $1B.
— RA News (@RANewsTX) November 23, 2021
In the first 10 years:
- @taylorisd would give $314M in property tax relief under approved Ch. 313 agreement.
- city of Taylor & Williamson Co. together would give a $354M property tax rebate. https://t.co/x1zc7rvGZS https://t.co/BYnJsAddTQ
I won't give either Greg Abbott or Joe Biden the credit. I'm all but certain Louie Mueller's barbecue closed the deal.
Now that's my kinda Q.
ICYMI: All of our 'SpaceX Effect' coverage in one place.
— Brian Curtis (@BrianCurtisNBC5) November 18, 2021
- What are they building in South Texas?
- How might it impact the environment?
- Is Brownsville the next TX boomtown?
WATCH: https://t.co/8iLnz6iM7s @NBCDFW #SpaceX #Starship
A few legal, criminal, and social justice updates.
New poll on #cjreform by UH shows 67% of Texans support legalizing marijuana.
— Jolie McCullough (@jsmccullou) November 22, 2021
A lot more in here: https://t.co/VcmpcWf2Oe #txlege
Texas @GovAbbott loses a round in legal fight over masks as appeals court affirms ruling that his order violates Dallas County @JudgeClayJ's ability to manage the pandemic. #txlege #masks #DallasCounty #pandemic #COVID19 #coronavirus https://t.co/up436lDd6w
— John Gravois (@Grav1) November 23, 2021
This Houston suburb is a case study in how the new Texas congressional maps weakened the voting strength of people of color.
— Rebekah Allen (@rebekahallen) November 22, 2021
This time it targets Asian Americans who were the fastest growing demographic in Texas in the past 10 years.
via @neelambohratx https://t.co/QFNe05zYWX
Last Friday, three federal judge panel in Texas redistricting case consolidated what are now *seven* legal challenges to the state's new political maps.
— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) November 22, 2021
Venue is El Paso but panel indicates it could hold hearings or trials elsewhere if necessary: https://t.co/tSngb3wlgH #txlege
As homeless camps around Houston are 'decommissioned,' other U.S. cities look to copy the strategy https://t.co/oi9hOVczmG via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) November 22, 2021
On Saturday, Dallas finally marked the location in downtown where Allen Brooks was lynched 111 years ago. “I hasten the day when the near constant stream of tragic Black death will cease and the need for such memorials with it," said @RevDrMikeWaters. https://t.co/HnOPGI8PV9
— D Magazine (@DMagazine) November 22, 2021
The Lake Highlands Advocate analyzed the racial housing wealth gap in Dallas. And the Dallas Observer found a gap in the prosecution's case against Crystal Mason.
Here's a few extra calm-me-downs headed into Turkey Day.
Salomon Torres at the Rio Grande Guardian has a blast from the past about 2nd Lt. Ulysses Grant and the US Army's occupation of Texas following annexation in 1846.
Second Lieutenant Grant intended to march on foot with the rest of the infantry brigade. Instead he rode on a wild mustang that he had purchased at the Corpus Christi camp from a commander’s servant for $5. (The servant had paid $3). Grant, a West Point graduate, had excellent horsemanship skills and was able to break the Mexican mustang quickly.
A few days march from Corpus Christi he described a massive herd of wild horses, similar to his new horse. Lieutenant Grant and other officers then rode out from the column of American troops. They rode two to three miles to the right of the Army column to see the size of the herd.
“As far as the eye could reach to our right, the herd extended. To the left, it extended equally,” wrote Grant. “There was no estimating the number of animals in it; I have no idea that they could all have been corralled in the State of Rhode Island, or Delaware, at one time. If they had been, they would have been so thick that the pasturage would have given out the first day.”
When the Army reached the Arroyo Colorado (which Grant called the “Colorado River”), it had to improvise on how to cross it. (The location of the crossing is in today’s Cameron County east of Harlingen.) Grant pointed out that the army did not bring a pontoon train that would have enabled ease in transporting wagons and supplies across. The soldiers also had no training in bridge building.
Grant lamented, “To add to the embarrassment of the situation, the army was here, for the first time, threatened with opposition. [Mexican] Buglers, concealed from our view by the brush on the opposite side, sounded the ‘assembly,’ and other military calls. ...[T]hey gave the impression that there was a large number of them and that, if the troops were in proportion to the noise, they were sufficient to devour General (Zachary) Taylor and his army.”
More at the link.
There's so much to do in Austin this season. Here's a list of a nearly two dozen events to check out in December and January. #TrueAustin https://t.co/DCNuG553Dg
— Austin Texas (@VisitAustinTX) November 22, 2021
Jonah Raskin at the Rag Blog reviews Exploring Space City! Houston's Historic Underground Newspaper.
Once upon a time it might have been necessary to keep all the facts about the 1960s in one’s own head. That’s no longer true. You can Google just about everything associated with what historian John McMillan has called “The Long Sixties,” the era that began in 1955 with the birth of the modern civil rights movement, and that lasted until 1975, when the War in Vietnam, once the longest in U.S. history, came to an end with a whimper, not a bang. ...
Everything and more that you could possibly want to know about Houston, Texas, including its politics, culture, and economics is contained in a dazzling and authoritative new book profusely illustrated and titled Exploring Space City! Edited by Thorne Dreyer, Alice Embree, Cam Duncan, and Sherwood Bishop -- designed by Carlos Lowry and with dozens of staff members -- the volume is a labor of love that honors “Houston’s Historic Underground Newspaper”, to borrow the subtitle.
It’s 361 pages, it’s published by the New Journalism Project in Austin, and it offers some of the original ads that graced the paper and enabled it to survive as long as it did. Exploring Space City! is a companion work to Celebrating The Rag: Austin’s Iconic Underground Newspaper, which was published in 2016.
Forty years after becoming the first—and only—all-female rock band to earn a number one album, the Go-Go's were finally inducted into @rockhall last month. @Kathy_Valentine takes us behind the scenes of the ceremony, which debuts on HBO this month. https://t.co/Q7T8Vx1GWn+
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) November 20, 2021
Monday, November 22, 2021
Remembering JFK Wrangle
On the 58th year marking the loss of the nation's 35th president, let's tip our hats in the general direction of conspiracy theorists everywhere for altering the minds of Americans for the worse.
On this date November 21 in 1963, a propaganda poster stating that U.S. President John F. Kennedy is "Wanted For Treason" was put up across Dallas by the John Birch Society. #JFKGuterman pic.twitter.com/vmEdO1EvNg
— Dr. Jeffrey Guterman (@JeffreyGuterman) November 21, 2021
"The US Airforce assures me that UFO's pose no threat to National Security."
— The Undead Gaucho 🎥 (@TheUndeadGaucho) November 15, 2021
-John F. Kennedy#ufotwitter #uaptwitter
I think the strangest part of the conversation on this topic...is that it seems like this record has been spinning on repeat for multiple decades. pic.twitter.com/fxzorfbpVU
Follow both threads for historical -- and entertaining -- reading. Oliver Stone wants the assassination history's archives opened (they were supposed to be last year).
(2/3) We’ve sent a letter dealing with #Trump & @JoeBiden’s postponements of the files to all the major newspapers, and not one has been accepted. Could there be a blackout on this subject? Has it become a memory hole? Not to judge from the thousands of responses we’re getting. pic.twitter.com/Oj6ekpCa0f
— Oliver Stone (@TheOliverStone) November 19, 2021
Okay then; on to the present. A new goobernatorial poll dropped yesterday.
New @dallasnews/@UTTyler poll:
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) November 21, 2021
Abbott 45
O’Rourke 39
Someone else 16
McConaughey 43
Abbott 35
Someone else 22
Abbott 37
McConaughey 27
O’Rourke 26
Someone else 10https://t.co/M7FIhMNKsX
I don't think Wooderson is going to make a go of it, but I said the same about Beto, so there you go. Speaking of repeating myself, it's 2006 all over again if he does. You decide if McConaghey will be playing Kinky or Grandma. This post will be long enough without opining more about this race today, so I'll save most of the rest for later.
Did the Tribune ever report on the other Dem candidates for TX Gov?
— Bystander In Texas 🛹 (@BystanderInTX) November 18, 2021
* Michael Cooper, @Cooper4txgov, Black man
* Yomi Hardison, Black woman
* Deirdre Gilbert, Black woman
Same old same old. Another point, via Hector Mendez:
“There is no real long-term investment in cultivating generations of voters because it takes time and money,” Navarro said. “It isn’t enough to just simply register voters and expect them to vote Democrat.”
This is the reason why polling separates registered voters from likely voters. All of this makes Kuffner's parlor musing a running joke. It's also why one of the country's A+ pollsters wants to (listen) get out (read) of the game/charade.
Of course that would make people like political consultants mostly obsolete, and if we could do that, Gawd forbid, we might even be able to ban corporate money in elections. Perish the thought. Maybe we could start by outlawing Congress critters from trading in the stock market. Is that too much also?
Alas, we won't have EBJ to kick around any more. Her announcement on Saturday, with "Re-Elect" in the graphic, was a head fake.
Updated: U.S. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson announces retirement after almost 3 decades in Congress https://t.co/aUqymWKEjC #TX30
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) November 20, 2021
Read down Svitek's other thread for a few of the would-be replacements. He fails to mention the progressive Democrat who's been in the race for several months, Jessica Mason. Typical.
The criminal and social justice headlines, after a weekend of national news that was as tragic as one could imagine.
The only gender clinic dedicated to transgender youth in the state of Texas has formally dissolved after far-right activists harassed doctors and called the services provided there child abuse https://t.co/Es1gRplHP6
— Gillian Branstetter (@GBBranstetter) November 21, 2021
(CW: Police violence)
— 🥀_Imposter_🕸️ (@Imposter_Edits) November 19, 2021
Police spray and tase students at Little Elm Highschool in Texas after a walk out for a girl who was sexually assaulted and put on suspension. this afternoon. pic.twitter.com/SEenszaAdD
Woman says off-duty Texas officer shot her when she confronted him in driving disputehttps://t.co/QOBS6kvR2g
— Petty Is Praxis (@rtyson82) May 26, 2021
In today’s Friday news dump…DPD got an arrest warrant for Melvin Williams, officer caught on video beating a man in Deep Ellum on July 18. He was already under 2 use-of-force investigations stemming from protests after the murder of George Floyd in 2020.https://t.co/26nwjjwrvr pic.twitter.com/gDF9PRFDN2
— Kelli Smith (@KelliSmithNews) November 20, 2021
Newly installed marker in downtown Dallas. pic.twitter.com/uYEqwL5aAi
— Krista Nightengale (@Knightengale) November 20, 2021
“This is not just lines. This is not just an election. This is people’s lives. They fought for this for years. And with a stroke of a pen you’re going to take it away.” https://t.co/wzM7Qo3fYm
— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) November 18, 2021
Invoking budget authority when the Lege is not in session, Greg Abbott et. al. took $4 million allocated to the state's prisons and gave it to the Texas secretary of state for county "election integrity" audits, as mandated by state law (SB1). Trump has been whining about an audit of 2020, and belittled the 4-county audit which the SoS announced on September 23 as 'weak.'
New: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, GOP leaders shift $4M to pay for election audits called for in new state law.#txlege #elections https://t.co/b3vzWrO71O
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) November 19, 2021
A week before the riot and killing earlier this month in Texas prisons, records show there were 2 suicides in 4 days at the same unit.
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) November 18, 2021
There's been an uptick in suicides in Texas prisons over the past year, but two in less than a week at the same unit is unusual. pic.twitter.com/n1X7MpEfI5
As D.C. dollars dry up and Texas continues to resist Medicaid expansion, millions of uninsured Texans see no signs of improvement. Read more in this week's cover story: https://t.co/1VC9ZalB2C pic.twitter.com/AqLlbq5uzj
— Austin Chronicle (@AustinChronicle) November 18, 2021
A pair of obscure state laws let city and county officials in Texas give away public money with no limits on how long the deals can last or how big the tax breaks can be.
— Mike Morris (@mmorris011) November 18, 2021
No one knows how many deals are out there or how much they’re costing taxpayers. https://t.co/hK1evpf2DQ pic.twitter.com/e4cRiOJI8v
This is the line that stopped me in my tracks. https://t.co/1PakOzcVLX pic.twitter.com/ruqSlAl9ky
— Jordan (@JRDNLTHMS) November 19, 2021
Watch This: Michael Williams -- the most conservative ed commish in the last 3 decades, takes a swing at the state's new Critical Race Theory law in Texas. https://t.co/e7fS62mAoO via @YouTube #txlege #txed @quorumreport
— Kimberly Reeves (@edwonkkimmy) November 19, 2021
V for Vendetta is on the list of banned books in TX.
— Mary Lou says: Biden should resign (@DELETETRUMP9) November 19, 2021
Still with me? Thank you. Let's do some environmental news.
As @emfoxhall writes, "The added pollution is one more issue for people to fight."https://t.co/KgMDA6TKi9
— One Breath Partnership (@OneBreathHOU) November 19, 2021
I've seen that look on Mayor Sylvester Turner's face before. It's his "Gosh that's terrible, I wish there was something I could do" face.
Harris County Attorney @CDMenefee joined EPA Administrator @EPAMichaelRegan and other local leaders today in Houston’s Fifth Ward to discuss solutions for environmental justice issues facing the community. pic.twitter.com/ESQtWUgtEt
— The Harris County Attorney, Christian D. Menefee (@HarrisCountyAO) November 19, 2021
Biden just quietly installed a coal guy at the Department of Energy. https://t.co/A3rZfeIQ7v
— David Sirota (@davidsirota) November 19, 2021
As power plants winterize in Texas, gas producers are getting a pass. https://t.co/SGdAD6V1ai
— KUT Austin (@KUT) November 19, 2021
It's a good thing that Beto and others plan on running next year on keeping the lights on. That's an issue they can win on, especially if there's another hard freeze.
Superb investigative story from @ScottNBC5. Sen. @loiskolkhorst (R) says gas supply is the "achilles heel" of the system, Sen. @whitmire_john (D) says the @txrrc rule sucks, & ERCOT CEO worries it's not enough to ensure gas flows. #winteriscoming #txlegehttps://t.co/x4h4p28f43
— Doug Lewin (@douglewinenergy) November 18, 2021
Investigators warn Texas needs to step it up and protect power-generating equipment from the cold and ice to ensure the state doesn't see another repeat of the February freeze. https://t.co/NZ2Zdw3glM
— KVUE News (@KVUE) November 19, 2021
More politics in the next Wrangle, before Turkey Day. The soothers:
🚨NOW OPEN🚨
— HMNS ❤️🦖🧠🌌 (@hmns) November 20, 2021
The world premiere exhibition 'Ramses the Great and the Gold of the Pharaohs' is now open in conjunction with the new Hall of Ancient Egypt.
Tickets to the Ramses exhibition allow guests exclusive access to the Egypt hall.
TICKETS: https://t.co/FmSVMJhSpv pic.twitter.com/ebwfsgVLjl
See photos from The Rolling Stones' Austin concert Saturday. https://t.co/S5Phpj3dkj
— Austin 360 (@austin360) November 21, 2021
Get your tickets for Lightscape at @sabotgarden before they are gone! Magical light displays will captivate attendees of all ages - plus there will be festive food options to enjoy.
— Visit San Antonio (@VisitSanAntonio) November 21, 2021
Find out more: https://t.co/Q0nDlePSMV pic.twitter.com/sctoOQTcYt