Monday, August 31, 2009

Sam Houston did not support secession from the U.S.

Just sayin'. It's one thing if you're making an argument, a very specific argument, that he supported secession from Mexico, which is true. But Sam Houston, who was governor of Texas when Abraham Lincoln was elected president of the United States, was emphatically opposed to Texas seceding from the Union. In fact, if you know anything about Houston at all, you know he was a prime advocate of Texas' annexation into the United States (on the condition of border security, but that's a different discussion) and he was deeply grieved when Texas left the Union.

When Abraham Lincoln was elected president of the United States, the clamor of discontent in Texas prompted Houston to call a special session of the state legislature. Adamantly opposed to secession, Houston warned Texans that civil war would result in a Northern victory and destruction of the South, a prophecy that was borne out by future events. The Secession Convention, however, convened a week later and began a series of actions that withdrew Texas from the Union; Houston acquiesced to these events rather than bring civil strife and bloodshed to his beloved state. But when he refused to take the oath of loyalty to the newly formed Confederate States of America, the Texas convention removed him from office on March 16 and replaced him with Lieutenant Governor Edward Clark two days later. Reportedly, during these traumatic days President Lincoln twice offered Houston the use of federal troops to keep him in office and Texas in the Union, offers that Houston declined, again to avoid making Texas a scene of violence. Instead, the Raven-now sixty-eight years of age, weary, with a family of small children, and recognizing the inevitable-again chose exile.


"To secede from the Union and set up another government would cause war. If you go to war with the United States, you will never conquer her, as she has the money and the men. If she does not whip you by guns, powder, and steel, she will starve you to death. It will take the flower of the country-the young men."

"In the name of the constitution of Texas, which has been trampled upon, I refuse to take this oath. I love Texas too well to bring civil strife and bloodshed upon her."

"I declare that civil war is inevitable and is near at hand. When it comes the descendants of the heros of Lexington and Bunker Hill will be found equal in patriotism, courage and heroic endurance with the descendants of the heroes of Cowpens and Yorktown. For this reason I predict the civil war which is now at hand will be stubborn and of long duration."

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Tuition Deregulation could blow a $1.5 billion hole in Texas budget

From LSR's Will Lutz, via Facebook:

At today's Texas Public Policy Foundation event, [Comptroller] Susan Combs said the following on how tuition deregulation will blow a $1.5-2 billion hole in the state's constitutionally mandated guaranteed tuition program: “The deregulation of both fees and tuition over the last 10 years, I think, netted out to an average of 11 percent a year extra tuition in cost. There’s no way anybody can match that with a return ..."

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Straus is right to worry about Rick vs KBH

Speaker Joe Straus has spoken out, about the dogfight gubernatorial primary shaping up in the Republican Party. He's concerned that this already ugly race is going to chase away "marginal" Republican voters. I have to say, I think he's dead on.

It's entirely likely that Republicans will spend a lot of effort fighting amongst themselves over Rick Perry and Kay Bailey Hutchison (and Debra Medina, too), forgetting important down-ballot primaries, and also forgetting to focus on bringing in new Republican voters. So much money is going to be spent here that by the time we get to March 3, the victor may emerge penniless and/or wasted. Certainly, beaten up. And the collateral damage will be the Republican voter, who may decide flat-out to stay home in November.

A plea for sanity to the grassroots getting involved - remember, on March 3, to bind your wounds and stand behind the victor. I don't think we can count on a relatively bloodless primary. It's already ugly, and there are several months to go yet. The candidates (all of them) are in it to rise above the others, and will end up doing so at the cost of voter support. Don't let the battle be the only fight you engage in; don't let the primary take away all of your energy.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

The sad state of things in the Justice Department

Seth Leibsohn chimes in at NRO with an insightful post about the Justice Department's latest manuever to punish intelligence operatives for the way they gather intelligence.

A snippet:
Back in 2001, without naming names, there were serious, intellectual people in Washington who spoke among themselves of doing things far worse than this to prevent another attack. There were learned moralists and foreign-policy experts who privately discussed schemes like threatening to target Mecca if another attack took place. Of course that never became policy, and it wasn’t the administration, but that was the mindset of an awful lot of serious people.

Did we intern thousands of Arab citizens in this country, as FDR did with the Japanese? Did we execute saboteurs once we found them, as FDR authorized? Did we use weapons of mass destruction, as Harry Truman did? Did we suspend habeas corpus on U.S. citizens, as Abraham Lincoln did? No. We did not, and terrorists like KSM and Al-Nashiri, who has 17 dead U.S. sailors from the USS Cole on his hands, are given three squares a day, Korans, and prayer mats in our custody.
He also quotes Krauthammer, who had this to say about the Justice Dept. and Holder's move happening at the exact time that it did:
All of a sudden, this issue explodes on a Monday. Friday, the administration met at 5:00 after hours, releases a $2 trillion error in estimates of deficits, and on bright Monday, you get this re-litigation of the Bush administration all of a sudden exploding upon us.

Look, I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but I’m not a child. It’s not a coincidence.

Of course, this was just a bone thrown to the liberals who have been erupting in a fit of pique over Obama, who is apparently not the man they thought he was. And it's a highly dangerous bone to throw. It's clear to anyone paying attention that not only have we forgotten 9/11, we've forgotten that we're at war. Obama's one tactic seems to be lobbing our troops at Afghanistan, and paying no attention to the whys and wherefores.

Sad state of things, in the Justice Department, but also the White House.

Gingrich backing Michael Williams for US Senate

While we wait on KBH to decide on exactly when/if she'll resign her seat, the declared candidates for that seat aren't exactly resting on their laurels. Case in point today is Railroad Commissioner Michael L. Williams, who got the backing of one of the more influential conservative leaders in the nation this morning.

Newt Gingrich had the following to say in his email to supporters this morning:

We do not need to change our ideas, we need to live up to them. And when I talk about modernizing the Republican brand, I mean using tried and true Republicans principles in new ways to solve new problems.

The key to building a new Republican Majority is not simply branding Democrat policies as the destructive and discredited ideas of the past…but offering real alternatives that meet Americans where they are. And offering new leaders not bogged down by the old fights of the last decade.

We need conservatives willing to engage the Democrats on the field of ideas…willing to speak of a 21st Century conservatism…willing to stand and fight on principle. We need leaders like Michael Williams.

Well, then.

Game on.

New traffic laws go into effect Tuesday, Sept. 1

Drivers beware! A bunch of new laws that will directly affect you go into effect in the state of Texas next Tuesday. A list of new traffic laws, and some others, can be found here. Some examples:

HB 55 makes it illegal to use a wireless communication device in a school zone unless the vehicle is stopped or a hands-free device is used. Cities or counties wanting to enforce this law must post a sign at the beginning of each school zone to inform drivers that using a wireless communications device is prohibited and the operator is subject to a fine. It is a defense to prosecution if the operator was making an emergency call.

SB 61 amends the existing statute regarding child passenger safety seats. The bill requires that any child younger than 8 years of age be restrained in an approved child passenger safety seat unless the child is at least 4 feet, 9 inches in height. The fine is no more than $25 for a first offense and $250 for a second offense. The law also creates a new court cost for conviction of an offense under this section to be collected and used by TxDOT to buy safety seats for low income families. The law becomes effective on Sept. 1, 2009, but tickets for this offense cannot be issued until June 1, 2010. Police officers are allowed to issue a warning before that date.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Astroturf: The spectre of the "local option" still haunting us

I really wish government officials would be intellectually honest with constituents and call tax increases by their name. We've got Obama and his ilk referring to their government-option health care initiative as a "public" option, and tax-and-spenders in the Legislature, cities, and counties in Texas clamoring for a "local" option tax increase. The "local" option is dead, thank goodness - or is it?

Tax-and-spenders in the city of Denton have decided to keep pushing for the "local option" tax increase transportation bill, which failed during the 81st session despite best efforts of taxpayer-funded lobbyists and power-hungry legislators.

Unsurprisingly, it is not a citizen's group that wants this tax increase at all, but Denton Mayor Pro Tem Pete Kemp. Clearly, the lesson wasn't driven home when the citizens of Denton County joined protests against the legislation during session. Hopefully it will come back to bite officials during elections.

For more on why the TLOTA bill was a bad idea last session, and why it's still a bad idea, check out the following:

Lutz: Astroturf, anyone?
(Lone Star Report)

Sullivan: Paying Lobbyists to Oppose You, Again (Empower Texans)

The High Cost of High-Speed Rail by Randal O'Toole, August 2009 (TPPF)

The Effect of Higher Gas Taxes on Texas Motorists by The Honorable Talmadge Heflin and James Quintero, May 2009 (TPPF)

House member challenges local option petition
(Lone Star Report)

The Existing Local Option for Transportation
(Heflin, Quintero: TPPF)

Testimony on Local Option Transportation Legislation
(Heflin, Quintero, Keener: TPPF)

Senators who stood up for fiscal responsibility

Health Administration Bureau

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

This is different - Medina Rap

Okay, seriously, this is just fun.

Generation "M"

One day, I will get into a big rant about what I think the "old" generation on my side of the political aisle needs to hear (most of the time, I think this blog is about that, but I realize I'm yelling in an echo chamber made of kryptonite). And I think, by the time I get around to writing it, I will BE one of the dreaded "old" people.

It's not a great time for meta-ranting on this scale. But give me a few months more of this primary season and believe me, the time will come.

In the meantime, someone I'm pretty sure isn't on my political side did a great rant here at the Harvard Business School blog It starts off with "Dear Old People Who Run the World: My generation would like to break up with you."

Interesting reading.

Lutz: Questions for Senator Hutchison

Will Lutz over at the Lone Star Report has some fantastic questions for Senator Hutchison, directly related to issues facing the state of Texas.

For instance, what is the Senator's stance on tuition deregulation, the 2003 policy that bankrupted the Texas Tomorrow Fund and "equalized the playing field" for higher ed (meaning it's just as likely to drive you into serious debt to attend Texas State University as it would Texas A&M University)? I'd like to know the answer to this myself. Governor Perry has been a proponent of dereg, and hasn't backed off that position that I'm aware of. In fact, I had to listen to his son Griffin defend the policy to a room full of college students who were directly impacted by that failed policy. So as the governor race wears on, I'd love to hear KBH's take on it.

Lutz also wants to know where Hutchison is on requiring cities and counties to obtain voter approval before raising property taxes faster than inflation. Another fantastic question, which I'll take further. Where is KBH on stopping taxpayer-funded lobbying?

Just questions that ought to be thrown in the mix. Hutchison has, since her announcement, tried to make Governor Perry out to be a tax-and-spend fraud. It would help us understand where she's coming from if we knew her exact position on the minute issues facing our state, such as those given above.

(Perry doesn't get an out here. I would love to know where he is on abolishing taxpayer-funded lobbying, which I don't recall him taking a stance on recently, and there are things he has done/said that need clarification and/or explanation.)

Helen Gurley Brown - not the feminist you remember

Caitlin Flanagan of The Atlantic magazine has a great review of feminist Jennifer Scanlon's Bad Girls Go Everywhere up right now, that is almost more important in itself than the book it is talking about. In "Sex and the Married Man," Flanagan takes to task the somewhat new theory that Sex and the Single Girl author Helen Gurley Brown was and is a great and neglected feminist icon. She also takes critique of sex-kitten feminism to a new level by accusing it flat-out of playing homewrecker - specifically, in the household of former vice presidential hopeful John Edwards.

It's nice to see someone do this in a prominent publication. This brand of feminism is the most insidious and the most responsible for tearing down femininity. Helen Gurley Brown's book spurred on a generation and more of sexual "liberation," giving us the bitter non-glamour of Sex and the City and other pop culture icons, and, according to Flanagan, creating the world in which Elizabeth Edwards and women like her could be brought down by a single floozy with a good hairdo and shaved nether regions.

Now, I do think, from a purely historical perspective, that Gurley Brown can hardly be blamed for what ambitious, sexually predatory young women have done literally since the dawn of time. And one can't forget that men like John Edwards (or, to appease the salivating contrarians, Mark Sanford, or countless others, both famous and infamous) are to blame in those situations as well. After all, men have the power to say no, just as the women do (or hey, just not start in the first place). But Flanagan's point is a good one, because Sex and the Single Girl certainly didn't discourage behavior like that.

A good article, definitely worth a read. Especially in women's studies classes.




I thought it was cute right up until.....

I admit ahead of time, I'm a bit tired of flicks about "city folk" having to "rough it" in the wilds of rural America. It was funny - on Northern Exposure. Now it's old.

That being said, I thought the new Hugh Grant movie, Did You Hear About the Morgans?, had a unique premise and I loved the trailer. Except for one line. Which kinda killed it for me.

Watch the trailer, you'll see what I mean.

Not only am I tired of the "roughing it" story lines, I'm tired of Sarah Palin jokes.

Lame, annoying, and if you make a movie about Chicago and a black woman with a law degree walks by in one scene, will the lead say "Wow, I just saw Michelle Obama"?

Sigh.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The Importance of Social Media

As always, the revolution will not be televised.


Ronnie Earle at Scholz' tonight - announcement coming?

Texans for Obama sent out an email today letting supporters know about an appearance by former Travis County D.A. Ronnie Earle at Scholz Garten at their regular meeting. The email trumped up Earle's grassroots support for a gubernatorial run.

Is there an announcement coming from Earle? He's listed as a "possible candidate" by the Texans for Obama group. Makes you wonder what to expect. There should at least be some more information about whether he's considering a run.

More on the presumptive race for Texas A.G.

Rumors have been bouncing around that TX Supreme Court Justice Dale Wainwright has been approached to run for attorney general, and that he will make a formal decision sometime in the next couple of weeks.

Remember, Labor Day is considered an unofficial kick-off date for most campaigns, especially the big ones, and the A.G. race is definitely a big one. Wainwright, should he get in the A.G. race, would bring some unique credentials, being the only rumored candidate so far with any statewide ballot experience. In fact, Justice Wainwright has been on the statewide ballot five times, all successful, in his time with the TX Supreme Court.

This gives him an edge of sorts in the hunt for cash - Cruz and Branch have proven themselves capable fundraisers, but to date, neither have been terribly fantastic statewide fundraisers. This is probably because this isn't, as I've said, an actual race yet. It's just a lot of rumor and conjecture until there are announcements made in certain camps. And while yes, guys like Cruz and Branch and Wainwright have to play the game differently than the multi-million dollar candidates at the top, Dewhurst and Abbott still have to make clear what their intentions are before too much longer.

Wainwright is definitely an intriguing candidate for A.G. He's well-respected in the Texas legal community, his endorsement list includes heavy-hitters and ordinary folks, and he's done well on the Court. That whole statewide ballot credential will mean a lot, too, in a down-ballot race that garners less attention than the battle for the governor's mansion. He obviously doesn't have an A.G. site up yet, but you can read more about him at his Supreme Court reelection site.

There's one more thing to note here. If Wainwright jumps in the A.G.'s race, that leaves yet another seat open on the TX Supreme Court. Brister's early resignation and O'Neill's scheduled departure left two seats in play already. Three is quite a lot, and that's a crowded ballot that will certainly worry the remaining justices, all of whom are hyper-aware that their positions are some of the most neglected by voters. Struggling for media market share is at the top of the problems here - again, that governor's race is the biggie, and there are a lot of things going on all over the ballot.

The rumor mill is also churning out the idea that David Dewhurst will make his decision about the U.S. Senate race within the next couple of weeks.

For better or worse, the Texas election season is well under way.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Sparks uphold's UT's use of race in admissions

Well, hell.

The case will be appealed, but I'm getting a bit tired of this whole "it's perfectly okay to be racist, so long as you're discriminating against the right people" double standard.

Reading material for Monday

Time for another recommended reading list, of pieces around the blogosphere and beyond.

The Next Right on the '05 social security debate and the '09 health care debate
. Is health care reform the new third rail in politics? You decide.

Mark Krikorian asks: is baseball another job Americans won't do?

Michelle Malkin says don't be hasty - the Internet Snitch Brigade may be disabled, but the party is still happenin' at the White House.

The Fairness Doctrine may be dead, but the spirit behind it is alive and well at the FCC.

WashingtonKay.com.

Color-coding the suburbs. The Obama administration begins to interfere at the local level and the WSJ takes them to task.

With school starting in a matter of days for most students, I'm in the mood for scholarship myself. As anyone read Phyllis Lee Levin's book on Edith and Woodrow Wilson? Or H.W. Brands' book on Wilson?

Election news in abundance

As we edge closer to Labor Day, expect plenty of announcements flooding the Texas political news cycle.

TX Supreme Court Justice Scott Brister has submitted a letter of resignation. I'll keep an eye for more on this as it comes down the pike, but this makes two upcoming vacancies on the TX Supreme Court, as Harriett O'Neill has announced she isn't running for re-election. Also, 4th Court of Appeals judge Rebecca Simmons has announced that she is running for O'Neill's open spot.

State Rep. Joe Crabb announced last week that he is not seeking reelection, opening up a free-for-all GOP primary in the Humble area in Harris County. To date, there are three potential candidates: Dr. Martin Basaldua (former Higher Ed Coordinating Board), Addie Wiseman (former Houston City Council), and Humble ISD board member Dan Huberty.

State Rep. Al Edwards has drawn a primary challenger in lawyer Billy Briscoe.

And it keeps on a-rollin'.....

KBH and the chain reaction

KBH has made it official - she's running for governor. No word on whether she'll resign her Senate seat and open up all those down-ballot races that the grassroots are getting desperate to decipher.

She made her announcement in La Marque this morning (down near Galveston) and has a schedule of stops on her "announcement" tour. She'll be in Austin at 3:30, at the Etter-Harbin Alumni Center at the University of Texas at Austin (in case you want to go, the address is 2110 San Jacinto Blvd.).

Fun tidbits about Kay Bailey Hutchison, who this morning made it sound like she's all for term limits:

Hutchison won a special election to the Senate in 1993 and then won a full six-year terms in 1994, 2000 and 2006. She previously had been elected state treasurer in 1990, and she served in the Texas House from 1973 to 1976. Her only losing election was a Dallas race for the U.S. House in 1982.

Hutchison's husband, Ray, also is a former member of the Texas House. Ray Hutchison lost the 1978 GOP primary for governor to oilman Bill Clements.
She's been an elected official in Texas for the better part of the last 35 years. Yes, yes, I know that Perry's been around awhile himself. All I'm saying is, neither of them really get to play the "term limit" card - it sounds disingenuous at best.

Back to down-ballot races. The Republicans have four announced candidates for the U.S. Senate seat held by KBH, and the Democrats have two. Trouble is, unless she resigns (or until she's sworn in as governor), there is no Senate race. KBH's term isn't up until 2012. If there is no Senate race, presumably the four Republicans, all incumbents in their own offices except for Roger Williams, don't leave their seats.

A lot depends on KBH leaving her seat vacant. Such as:

  • David Dewhurst, long rumored to either be interested in running for KBH's Senate seat or waiting on her resignation so he can be Rick Perry's appointee, is the sitting lieutenant governor. If he doesn't leave that seat by some means, then any Republican wishing to run would be challenging him in a primary, such as....
  • Greg Abbott, who has possibly the largest cash-on-hand report ($9.3 million) and could scare people out of running against him for any position just by flashing his TEC filings. Abbott is the sitting attorney general, though it is generally assumed that he's running for higher office - probably lt. gov., but don't rule out U.S. Senate or even governor. No matter what, though, his leaving the AG's office is crucial for.....
  • Ted Cruz, former solicitor general who arguably has the most momentum of all Republican candidates in Texas right now. Ted's campaign for attorney general is in full swing, and he's got the endorsements of practically every prominent conservative in the state. But would he run against an incumbent Greg Abbott? Scuttlebutt claims he won't have to, but this still is not a race at all unless we know what exactly Abbott's plans are. Right now, Abbott's website says he is running for AG. That's not what you get from political insiders who swear Abbott's out and Ted Cruz is running for an open seat. Well, Ted Cruz, and.....
  • Dan Branch. The Dallas area state rep. is fundraising like mad, all on the assumption that he, too, is running for attorney general. It's very clear that if there IS a race for A.G. at all, it will come down to Branch and Cruz. Presumably, the reason Cruz has so many endorsements right now is because conservatives don't want Branch to run, and they're trying to scare him out of it. And speaking of Dallas....
  • John Carona sent out a letter to his Senate colleagues last week asking them to refrain from backing any specific candidates for lt. governor, in the event that the Senate has to replace Dewhurst. This could happen - the stars have to align, or rather KBH has to time her exit perfectly to force an appointment, and Perry appoints the Dew. So what does Carona's letter mean? Probably that he's got his eye on that spot. Which puts him at odds most specifically with....
  • Florence Shapiro. She's running hard for in a U.S. Senate race that isn't even happening yet, but
  • say that race doesn't happen. What now? A good deal of Flo's colleagues in the TX Senate are supporting her run for US Senate, and that begs the question of whether they'd carry their support back to the Senate chambers. And if the U.S. Senate race happens without her....
  • Michael Williams is arguably the forerunner for conservatives in the presumptive U.S. Senate race. But he'd be giving up his seat on the Railroad Commission, just like.....
  • Elizabeth Ames Jones, also running hard for a race that isn't yet, makes fairly clear that she's ready to move up, and she would also have to leave the Railroad Commission. Making it so the only person who isn't running a race AND a public office right now on the Republican side is.....
  • Roger Williams, former secretary of state under Perry and another person who is not a totally unlikely choice for an appointment in the event of a Senate vacancy. This would ball things up altogether, because if the Dew ain't goin' nowhere, a lot of people ain't going at all.

You have to assume that unless a bunch of powerful Republican incumbents decide that they want to give up their seats to run in races that aren't yet happening, there really isn't much political intrigue at the moment outside the drama that is Perry v. KBH. Of course, other things COULD happen. Ted Cruz and/or Dan Branch could challenge Greg Abbott in a primary. Abbott could challenge the Dew in a primary. John Carona could announce he's running for Dallas mayor and Dan Branch could run for Senate. Florence Shapiro could resign altogether and leave an open seat ripe for battle.

But the point I'm making is that until KBH announces she is resigning and when, there are no hot races except the gubernatorial primary.

Friday, August 14, 2009

BREAKING: Watson NOT running for governor

Senator Watson put an end to speculation that he's running for any office other than state senator today.

So that's one less Democrat in the 2010 primary. Ronnie Earle, do you care to chime in?

Weekend reads and must-sees

There are still plenty of political things to speak of, but I needed a mental break and I'm sure some of you do as well.

With that in mind:

Relatively Entertaining gives their Top 10 B&W Classic Films list here. I'm not as enamored with a couple of those as they are, and my list would have to include some Judy Garland, but the list is a great "introductory" list if you're just dipping your toe into old-school Hollywood.

And speaking of classics, today is Sidney Poitier day for TCM's Summer Under the Stars. There's a great sampling of Poitier's work through the '50s and '60s, including the inimitable Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Tomorrow, Deborah Kerr (yes, ladies, this is a good chance to catch An Affair to Remember, and the original The End of the Affair! The whole list is a treat, really), and Elvis Presley on Sunday. Next Wednesday they've got John Wayne, and the list includes a really rare pre-Code flick of his with Barbara Stanwyck, Baby Face (and of course, the predictable line-up of war movies and Westerns).

Starwars.com has posted the original trailer for The Empire Strikes Back, which turns 30 next year.

This post may be updated later.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

MoveOn and Obama websites creating town hall hoaxes

Yesterday afternoon, a storm of activity hit my inbox and telephone, a whole bunch of people wanting to know if we were going to do anything to counter a MoveOn protest of Senators Cornyn and Hutchison in downtown Austin. I got a copy of a MoveOn email saying that the senators would be at the Texas Medical Association health care listening session this evening. So, wanting to make sure what was going on, I called their offices to verify. And sure enough, neither John Cornyn nor Kay Bailey Hutchison were planning to be in Austin today - neither had a townhall event, and neither were planning to be at the TMA.

Travis Monitor did a great job of exposing what happened here.

I thought this was an isolated incident, but Ace of Spades is reporting (from Fox News) that two Illinois Republicans had the same thing happen to them. Democrat operatives advertised and recruited for townhall meetings that were never scheduled.

This is some serious nerve on their part, y'all. Don't fall victim to it, and make sure you're talking about it when it happens. We can't expose them if we don't have the information - you know the MSM, other than Fox, ain't going to do it, and bloggers can't be everywhere at once, so if you hear about something like this, please please please let me or the folks at Travis Monitor or your local political blogger know about it.

Advice to activists and constituents:

1 - Whether your congressman or senator is a Republican or Democrat, be sure to call their offices and confirm their schedule before going to a townhall or other event advertised by ANYONE. (edited: Call the D.C. office and ask for a scheduler!)

2 - If you're not sure that the elected official in question will be present, DON'T SHOW UP.

3 - Take a friend or family member with you to every event you attend. Safety in numbers!

4 - Keep in touch with your political party offices locally. Trust me, when a Republican is going to be somewhere, the local party probably knows about it.

5 - If you want reliable information on those appearances, sign up for e-mail lists with reliable sources. Don't trust everything MoveOn or MyBarackObama are putting out - they have an agenda, and believe me, they know you're watching.

Via Malkin: Finance Cmte to drop end-of-life provisions

Courtesy of the always-on-top-of-things Michelle Malkin:

http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/finance-committee-to-drop-end-of-life-provision-2009-08-13.html

The Senate Finance Committee will drop a controversial provision on consultations for end-of-life care from its proposed healthcare bill, its top Republican member said Thursday.

The committee, which has worked on putting together a bipartisan healthcare reform bill, will drop the controversial provision after it was derided by conservatives as “death panels” to encourage euthanasia.

“On the Finance Committee, we are working very hard to avoid unintended consequences by methodically working through the complexities of all of these issues and policy options,” Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said in a statement. “We dropped end-of-life provisions from consideration entirely because of the way they could be misinterpreted and implemented incorrectly.”

The Finance Committee is the only congressional committee not to report out a preliminary healthcare bill before the August congressional recess, but is expected to unveil its proposal shortly after Labor Day.

Let's support Whole Foods

After reading Whole Foods CEO John Mackey's op-ed in the Wall Street Journal (The Whole Foods Alternative to Obamacare), seeing some angry blogger reax from the left, and hearing about a leftist boycott, I am pretty well convinced: conservatives need to support Whole Foods.

Now, I hear the grumblings, but come on already. We're supposed to like innovation and good free-market capitalists - Whole Foods is a great example of those things. I think I can get over the hyper-environmentalism. Of course, the prices may a bit much - again, free market, I can always go over to the liberal-owned-and-operated HEB - but I think I can cough up the cash for the occasional splurge.

Apparently, Mackey's also a "union-buster." Who knew?

Fake doctor shows up at Jackson Lee townhall

I managed to get a few pictures from last night's Sheila Jackson-Lee townhall meeting, but apparently there was a lot more to it than just SEIU thugs in the crowd!

Patterico's Pontifications (h/t Gateway Pundit) has the scoop: "Dr. Roxana Meyer," who claimed to be a general practitioner (a "dying breed" as she put it) is no doctor at all - but she was an Obama delegate! Surely that counts for something, right.

It gets better. Michelle Malkin is reporting that the cute little girl who asked about the "mean posters" at Obama's own townhall has some interesting political connections of her own.

I think I'm running out of astonishment, really.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Photos: Sheila Jackson Lee townhall 8/12/09

Courtesy of a Facebook friend, mobile pics from tonight's townhall meeting with Congressman Sheila Jackson Lee. Check out the professionally printed signs in support of SJL, and also the SEIU members in the crowd:











Gene Green requires photo i.d. for town hall attendees

Oh, this is rich. TheHill.com is reporting that Texas Congressman Gene Green is going to require photo identification for anyone who wants to attend his town hall meetings.

Has anyone told Congressman Green that his constituents don't need photo i.d. to vote for him?

That obvious piece of tragic irony aside, who does Congressman Green think will show up at his town hall, exactly? What good will it do to have people show identification - are they being accused of not being who they say they are? Oh, wait, I know. He's like Congressman Doggett, and can't fathom that people from his entire district would show up at one town hall, and mistakes them for other congressional constituents.

Utter foolishness. Green is attempting to dissuade folks from showing up at his town halls. But everyone knows, Grandma, Uncle Alphie, and Aunt Sophie all have legal identification (after all, they have to DRIVE to get to the town hall meeting, and one assumes that to DRIVE they have state-issued DRIVERS LICENSES with PHOTO identification on them). What will having legal identification prove to Congressman Green about these people? Really nothing more than that they are citizens who are concerned enough to show up.

I mean, we wouldn't want to to assume that Congressman Green is requiring photo i.d. so he can collect information on attendees. Surely, nothing like that.

Apparently, individuals petitioning for redress must be held to a higher standard than those wishing to vote in the eyes of Democrat Gene Green.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Linda Douglass Admits: White House Breaking the Law

Joe Crabb won't seek re-election

The Tribune is reporting that State Rep. Joe Crabb (R-127) has decided he won't be seeking re-election.

This is a Harris county seat that is unlikely to flip, but you can still bet on some wrangling, given the very slim majority of Republicans at this point.

The Tribune has an idea of who might throw their hats in to replace Crabb: Humble ISD school board member Dan Huberty and local physician Dr. Martin Basaldua.

Nancy Pelosi and Astroturf

The right to disagree

Thoughtful words from our Secretary of State.

Austin Tech Republicans this Wednesday

I am leading a discussion on social media and the conservative movement for the Austin Tech Republicans on Wednesday. We meet at the Mangia Pizza up on MoPac & Duval (close proximity to IBM and National Instruments, not too far from Freescale, Apple, Sun Microsystems and others, a short trip to Dell). Would love to have you there!

This won't be a "how to use Facebook and Twitter" kind of deal. We want to talk about the role of social media in elections, how the Internet has changed the way we campaign and how it hasn't, what the Republican Party can learn from the #dontgo and Tea Party movements (in terms of strategy ONLY - we're not getting together for a Republican bash session), etc. We only have the space for an hour and a half - so we could always continue the discussion online ;-)

Some things to mull over in the meantime:

28 Reasons Why the CEO is Afraid of Social Media

When tactics drown out strategy

MUST READ: The Internet and the 2008 Election by the Pew Internet & American Life Project

Mashable's Twitter Guide Book

Facebook is now the fourth largest site in the world

Social media for elected officials

Saturday, August 08, 2009

TCRP Chairman Edwards speaks out in Saturday's Statesman

I have to give due credit to the Statesman for publishing a balancing opinion. I know, I know - you're as shocked as I am!

Travis County Republican Party chairman Dr. Rosemary Edwards speaks out on health care, the Doggett events, and insurance on today's Statesman editorial page.

Also, here's the whole of H.R. 3200, the health care reform bill everyone's talking about, and the legislation Dr. Edwards' op-ed is referring to.

From the column:

Obama's health care reform is just the next verse in the same song, the liberal song of dependency on government for everything that government bureaucrats decide that we need — and nothing that they determine we don't. Democrats have sung this song with the faithfulness of a church choir for decades. If Doggett's precarious encounter with his constituents last week is any indication, it may be about time freedom rang again.

Friday, August 07, 2009

Video of Tampa Town Hall

Courtesy of The Right Fangirl:

Project 2,996

This year, on September 11, I am participating in Project 2,996.

Project 2,996 is an online initiative to get people to learn about, and remember, the victims of 9/11.

I will be writing a tribute for Luis Jimenez.

The project is in need of more bloggers willing to remember someone who died on 9/11. Please help us remember all 2,996 of those people. You can sign up here: http://project2996.wordpress.com/2009-signup/

Still have questions for Congressman Doggett?

Congressman Lloyd Doggett is pretty determined. If you want to ask him questions, he'll be at the Rundberg Health Center, 825 E. Rundberg Lane at 11:15 a.m. Saturday.

This is according to the Statesman.

Union thuggery at congressional townhall in Missouri

Boy oh boy, I'd be worried about this crowd. They look awfully scary to me! Apparently, Russ Carnahan thought so, and decided he would try to out-smart his upset constituents by stationing union members at his health care townhall event last night. I think you know where this is going. Courtesy of Missourah Blog, via Gateway Pundit:




And Erick Erickson over at RedState has revealed the truth behind Florida State Rep. Kathy Castor's SEIU-sponsored townhall.

Thursday, August 06, 2009

Debunking is a great word

With Twitter down and Facebook hiccuping, it seems we must resort to the old blog standby for spreading news.

A couple of things that caught my eye today:

Mary Katherine Ham exposes leftist lies about recess townhalls
. It's nice to have this formal debunking of the "memo" that was supposed to have sparked the protests at congressional townhall meetings. It's pathetic that we have to do any debunking. It's not like the protesters are showing up with professionally printed signs, or that there are organized walkouts at local businesses. I mean, that would be pretty horrific, I think.

Talking Points Memo is reporting that Congressman Brad Miller (D-NC) has received death threats over the health care debate. Listen, people. This is NOT okay. I don't know what else to say. Show up at scheduled townhalls, make your case calmly and then go. If your congressman isn't having a townhall or public meeting, well, call their offices and state your position (again - CALMLY and RATIONALLY). This crap is NOT OKAY.

In all the hoopla over health care, I forgot we hadn't gotten through the Sotomayor appointment. Looks like there will be a vote in the Senate tonight.

QR is reporting that Texas Supreme Court Justice Harriett O'Neill will not be seeking reelection.

Guess what? Young people aren't falling for Obama so much anymore. Stealing this part from Peter Wehner at NRO: “Respice post te! Hominem te memento!”

Courtesy of the Heritage Foundation and others:
The House Appropriations Committee, at its own initiative, added to the 2010 Defense appropriations bill another $132 million for two elite Gulfstream jets for ferrying Members of Congress around the country.

Dr. Richard Rahn from the Cato Institute (in today's Washington Times) debunks the idea that taxing the wealthy will solve our economic problems.

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Chet Edwards ignores, then set conditions to meet with, constituents



Even more video taken by this blogger - check it out! Edwards has laid out CONDITIONS for meeting with his constituents! Outrageous.

And in case you forgot what ACTUAL mob rule looks like, check out what Michelle Malkin compiled here.

Rob Koons speaks out on UT Western Civ

I don't know how I missed posting about this, but Barbara Moeller's article for Minding the Campus some weeks ago, exposing the rise and fall of the Western Civ program at the University of Texas, was incredible.

One of the saddest things, and most revealing things, about our culture today is the purposeful destruction of the Great Books programs and Western Civilization core curriculum at American universities. I had a Brit history professor in college who summed up the cause quite well: the liberal academics who came of age during the late 60s and early 70s are running the ranch, and they've done their damnedest to overturn the conservative focus that had been maintained for years prior. He said this as one of the professed hippies-turned-academics, of course, flabbergasted by the rise of campus conservatism which mirrored in many ways what had happened with the rise of campus liberalism and radicalism in his day.

At the University of Texas, the liberal academics have taken their mission very seriously, and have in recent months succeeded in the total destruction of the Western Civilization program.

Robert Koons, the man who was martyred for the cause, so to speak, has an article up at the Pope Center today, describing his side of the story and what exactly the Western Civ program was that made it so frightening to the left. An excerpt:

Our program was rightly perceived as a threat to the monopoly of what I call the Uncurriculum, which prevails at UT and at most universities today. It is the absence of required courses and of any structure or order to liberal studies. The Uncurriculum dictates that students accumulate courses that meet a “distribution” standard—a smattering of courses scattered among many categories. Even within majors, the trend has been to eliminate required sequences.

Read the whole thing here
.

It is a terrible time to want to learn in America. You are systematically being denied access to the thought that created this country in the first place.

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

More from the unhinged left

You know, I'm not usually one to catalog the moronic rhetoric the other side lets spew forth (others do a better job with that), but I think this is a step too far, and I don't feel like staying quiet.


I can't even believe that someone would go there. So people, all of whom showed up on Saturday because they want Congressman Doggett to listen to them, and to heed their voices (they are, after all, his constituents - hard to fathom, I know) are like a ruthless murderer. Their anger at being brushed aside by the man they elected is not AT ALL similar to the kind of rage that fueled McVeigh.

I'm getting tired of this kind of irrational, blind, ignorant hatred. I really, really am.

Desperate Doggett fields softball questions

All hail Big Brother

This is the full message first reported on by Jeff Emanuel and Michelle Malkin, among others. Big Brother - Kommandant Obama - has spoken:

TUESDAY, AUGUST 4TH, 2009 AT 6:55 AM
Facts Are Stubborn Things
Posted by Macon Phillips

Opponents of health insurance reform may find the truth a little inconvenient, but as our second president famously said, "facts are stubborn things."

Scary chain emails and videos are starting to percolate on the internet, breathlessly claiming, for example, to "uncover" the truth about the President’s health insurance reform positions...

...There is a lot of disinformation about health insurance reform out there, spanning from control of personal finances to end of life care. These rumors often travel just below the surface via chain emails or through casual conversation. Since we can’t keep track of all of them here at the White House, we’re asking for your help. If you get an email or see something on the web about health insurance reform that seems fishy, send it to flag@whitehouse.gov.

Dear Obamabots and flunkies of The Adminstration: My name is Michele Samuelson and I live in Austin Texas. I'm against the health care plan.

Monday, August 03, 2009

Doggett had a bad, bad day

Isn't this awesome? I heard that Doggett told the media he "hasn't seen anything like this in 15 years in Congress." Well, Congressman, get used to it.


Sunday, August 02, 2009

Your fancy degree didn't land you six figures? Sue your school!

Not even kidding. A jobless grad named Trina Thompson spent $70k on her Monroe College degree, and when she couldn't find a job, she filed a lawsuit to get the money back. Read her story here.

Um, no. No no no.

Let's break it down for Trina, shall we?

1 - A college education is not job training.

2 - A COLLEGE EDUCATION IS NOT JOB TRAINING.

3- Your college/university does not owe you anything. If you couldn't find a job, tough cookies.

4- Really? An information technology degree in this day and age, with a glutted and failing market even before you declared your major? Couldn't have thought that through better?

5- But in any event, a college education is not job training. You need more than that to make it in any field. Internships (the non-paying, getting-coffee-making-copies kind), networking, crappy bottom-of-the-totem-pole jobs.

6 - Awww, you have $70k in debt? Boo-hoo, honey. Welcome to the post-collegiate world.

Really, that's all I have for now. This story made me laugh in a very mean way - I have no sympathy for the young lady in question. This is a sad situation because of the economy, but her sense of entitlement is sickening. And, one more person falls victim to the "a college degree will solve my financial woes" mentality that has significantly lessened the worth of a college education in this country.

Ridiculous.

New protests springing up against Obama

Dave Nalle has been chronicling the rise of a new form of anti-Obama protesting happening in certain parts of the country.


Eanes ISD school board to appoint new member

Eanes ISD school board member Gail King is stepping down, and that gives the remaining trustees the task of appointing someone to fill her place. The list of applicants given in this July 30 article from the Westlake Picayune is very interesting (check out the wealth of info on former Eanes ISD president Brad Shields, courtesy of Keep Eanes Informed).

Will be keeping an eye on this one.

Saturday, August 01, 2009

While I was away.....

Since I'm just returned from a wonderful week-long excursion to the Texas Panhandle, I'm not much up to writing about politics - that will come probably around noon tomorrow, when I'm tired of doing laundry and scouring the cabinet for unexpired food. After all, big things (or really, not-so-big things) happened while I was away and I want to put my two cents in! But for now, I thought I'd share some links of things I'm bookmarking for reading later.

TIME Magazine: Mourning the Death of Handwriting (I thought I was the only one!)


I couldn't agree more with this rant at the Guardian, about anachronistically thin women in period films. PUT ON SOME WEIGHT, KEIRA!

On the way home, my husband and I went to Archer City to shop at Larry McMurtry's bookstore, Booked Up (check out the Barry Goldwater poster in one of the storefronts). I HIGHLY recommend this place! We picked up a neat copy of a 1952 Texas government textbook, which we're thinking may need to be required reading for every aspiring political junkie/political activist.

Interested in funky, homemade jewelry? Check out IdolCeremony on Etsy.

I love this book blog at Amazon, Omnivoracious. Check out their list of the best books of 2009 so far.

Sox vs Stripes is a great Yankees/Red Sox blog that all baseball fans should read. And this latest post has to do with pitching. Brian Cashman needs to read this. So should Tom Hicks, really.

NTU: Rhetoric vs Reality on Health Care