texastribune.org

lorgo_numputz , to U.S. News in Texas A&M suspended professor accused of criticizing Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in lecture

This is the definition of “fascism” - the bundling together of unrelated things

e_t_ Admin , to Texas in [Texas Tribune] Justice Department threatens Texas with legal action over floating barrier in Rio Grande

It's infuriating that my tax dollars funded that barrier and will fund Texas' defense in court.

Waraugh , to Work Reform in [Texas Tribune] “We are dying”: Houston workers protest new state law removing water break requirements

It’s crazy to me that anyone could sit on their ass in AC all day and even consider speaking to take water breaks away from construction workers. I went in figuring they got 10 minutes per hour and it’s only 10 minutes per four hours?! Fuck that noise, they need more time to rest and hydrate. What the fuck is wrong with people.

TokenBoomer , to Texas in [Texas Tribune] Texas gets $60 million in federal funds to strengthen power grid against extreme weather

Hope they have to answer for every cent. Otherwise, it’ll just end up in some cowboys pockets

Brunbrun6766 OP Mod ,
@Brunbrun6766@lemmy.world avatar

Federal money USUALLY comes with strict rules and paper trails but we will have to wait and see

Telorand , to Texas in To fight poverty, some Texas cities gave aid with no strings attached. Conservatives are pushing back.

Lest you forget, cruelty is the point, no matter what they say.

They don't care about taxes "being used correctly," because they are sitting on one of the biggest slush funds in the entire US, and they couldn't possibly be bothered to actually use it to better the lives of Texans. /s

ETA: These kinds of guaranteed income programs always work, no matter where they're deployed. $500/mo isn't enough for anyone to just grift off the system for long at all, and most want to be self-sufficient anyway. If the point or effect of poverty programs isn't to pull people out of poverty, then you're doing it wrong (or in the case of Conservatives, the system is working as intended).

AllNewTypeFace , to Texas in Financiers plan to launch a Texas-based stock exchange
@AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space avatar

This idea has a distinctly musky smell about it

SARGEx117 , to Texas in Federal emissions funds to be spent on highways

It’s almost like they just want the money and have no intention of doing the things the money was intended for. Kind of like the “welfare queens” their types like to harp about…

Hazdaz , to Texas in [Texas Tribune] Texas’ environmental agency enables companies to increase oilfield wastewater disposal in rivers

What a shithole state.

keeb420 ,

a one star state.

TwoGems , (edited ) to Work Reform in [Texas Tribune] “We are dying”: Houston workers protest new state law removing water break requirements
@TwoGems@lemmy.world avatar

Ribbit

psvrh , to Texas in Police arrest more than two dozen pro-Palestine protesters on UT-Austin campus amid tense standoff
@psvrh@lemmy.ca avatar

So much courage, as opposed to their response at Uvalde.

formergijoe ,

Are you kidding me?! That dude had a gun! You can't expect cops to take care of a dude with a gun!

/s

Naminreb , to U.S. News in Supreme Court permits Texas police to arrest people who illegally cross the border as the SB 4 legal clash continues

Funny thing is that immigration is a matter of two parties: the receiving country and the country of origin. Even if the Supreme Court of the US says it’s OK for Texas to deport…Texas doesn’t have any agreement with Mexico or any other country to deport people to.

Mexico already said they only have an agreement with the US…not with f’ing Texas.

So, any caught immigrants in Texas will either have to be shipped to some country that will take them, or be kept in Texas jail.

Either way, it will be expensive. It will create a humanitarian crises, and it will create an unsafe situation for Americans abroad, in particular in Mexico.

The Supreme Court has forgotten that International agreements take precedence over local laws.

alyaza OP Mod , to U.S. News in Climate change, costly disasters sent Texas homeowner insurance rates skyrocketing this year
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

this is also a recurring theme in Florida, where pretty much the entire insurance market is being propped up artificially by state intervention. it doesn’t seem to be as bad in Texas yet, but we’re quickly coming up on a period in time where hard decisions are going to have to be made about what can be covered and what in effect has to be written off.

IHeartBadCode , to Politics in Texas secessionists feel more emboldened than ever
@IHeartBadCode@kbin.social avatar

As soon as we declare independence, we're going to be wealthy.

Hey I'm pretty sure the UK could let you know a thing or two about aforementioned topic.

A separate currency

Oh yeah, just FYI, world market does oil trade in US dollars which you wouldn't have access to and would make selling that oil to US aligned countries really difficult. And the countries that aren't US aligned, they know that, so they'll be expecting deals for them or they won't buy your oil either.

I personally believe that our personal GDP will double in five to seven years.

That's going to be really difficult as you'll become more toxic than Chernobyl soil on the International market and Texas has no where near enough domestic trade to actually hit that 200% GDP in seven years.

But let's be frank here, an independent Texas would not go bankrupt. They have enough cash and product to stay afloat. But much like the US Civil War taught us all, that the Confederates found out super fast what happens when they get cut off from literally every market on the planet Earth. It makes it really difficult to keep that bottom line from going red and really forces governments to either make really difficult calls on how to govern their slowly decaying nation or start a war and try to convince the world that they should trade with them.

Texas would not crumble overnight but they would be hurting very badly economically. They would in fact be very poor. Very, very poor. If they think their oil is going to save them, go ask Venezuela how that's working for them.

Treczoks ,

One additional key issue is that they would also use a lot of federal institutions that way.

mars296 ,

Well according to the guy in this article, there will be no taxes. So it would go bankrupt pretty quickly. Unless the plan is to nationalize the oil companies? Seems antithetical to what they are going for and the USA seems to have a secret clause in the constitution that it must overthrow any government that does that.

Pons_Aelius , (edited ) to Politics in Texas secessionists feel more emboldened than ever

World-class college football

In a game that is only played in one country... (well two if this genius is successful)

“The independence of Texas is good for humanity as a whole,”

I doubt it is possible be more narcissistic and self centred.

Personally, If Texas ever declared and the USA allowed them to leave I have a feeling they would be begging the US to readmit them to the union in a very short time.

These people fail to realise that so much of what they benefit from being in Texas is because it is part of the USA.

What happens when NASA and the DOD remove all their facilities and staff?

What happens when they have to defend themselves?

Sign trade agreements with the rest of the world?

What happens when the USA slaps tariffs on their oil to protect US interests?

Etc

etc

etc

etc.

It reminds me of children talking about how cool it will be when they are adults and don't have to listen to mom and dad.

They can stay up all night and play games!

They can eat ice-cream for breakfast!

They can do what ever they want!!!

lowdownfool ,
@lowdownfool@kbin.social avatar

The guy the quote in the article is definitely a believer in make-believe fantasy land nonsense. Look up Claver Kamau-Imani.

RubberStuntBaby ,

What happens to the Republican party without Texas' Electoral votes, senate and house seats? Wait... I think I'm warming up to this idea.

HubertManne , to Texas in [Texas Tribune] Their water is undrinkable. So these West Texas residents have taken matters into their own hands.
@HubertManne@kbin.social avatar

So they have teaken matters into their own hands. By asking for grants.

Letstakealook ,

After voting for politicians who promise to bring about these very conditions.

HubertManne ,
@HubertManne@kbin.social avatar

Yeah I feel like if it was a story from a liberal area the title would read something like residents clamoring for handouts and not pulling themselves up by their bootstraps.

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