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Wednesday, May 18, 2016

The solution? "... maybe, as the aged white voters of the religious right pass to their rewards, they will be replaced by more open-minded millennials."

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COMMENTS:
*  How did you become crazy? It's religion! If the religious leaders and the politicians collude to convince you that "God wants" you to vote a certain way, you no longer follow your common sense. You are now trying to vote your way into heaven. Now the politician becomes much more powerful. Which means that government becomes more powerful and less accountable. As long as the Pastor says it's what God wants, the politician can pretty much get away with anything. See Paxton. The founding fathers believed there should be separation for good reason
*  no, when you have folks like I forgot Perry, and the crazy lady who thinks the president was a male prostitute and she is running for the board that picks school text books, and you pass laws that are ruled unconstitutional and your legislators spend most of their time on God, gays, Guns and Sex related bills, you kinda do that to yourselves...you're not alone... Oklahoma to the north has the same issue... people think you are nuts because you have nutty people who make the news....
*  Texans are as crazy as the crazy foreign born Senator they've elected...Rafael "The Canadian" Cruz is the face of Texas...
*  After devoting a reasonable amount of time and thought to the question of 'how,' I now deem it highly probable that Texans in general are a bunch of crazies.
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People think Texans are a bunch of crazies. How did we get here?
By Mimi Swartz, May 17, 2016

Hillary Clinton is coming to town, but not for any public events. Instead, she plans to appear at a fund-raiser at a loyalist’s grand Houston home. The cost of attending is detailed on the Evite: $2,700 for a Champion, $1,000 for a Fighter and $500 for an Advocate (not surprisingly, first to sell out).

No doubt Clinton could draw an adoring crowd, but it’s accepted as a waste of time for national Democratic candidates to come here to seek actual votes, as opposed to cash. Texas has become as predictably red as California and New York are blue, with the predictable result that it has become nearly irrelevant in the presidential races.

Our most recent candidate for national office just crashed and burned: Despite his ostrich-skin cowboy boots, Ted Cruz was trounced by a Yankee who, truth be told, is far more stereotypically Texan in his rich-guy rubeness.

Another failed Texas candidate, Rick Perry, just endorsed Trump, proving once again that the former governor’s cravenness is truly as big as Texas. Remember when Perry was still in the race, and he branded Trump a “cancer on conservatism”? Governor “Oops” must believe his fellow Republicans are as memory-impaired as he is.

To be the punch line to a not-so-funny joke is not a happy place for Texans. Say what you will about politicians like Lyndon Johnson, Phil Gramm, Kay Bailey Hutchison, Ann Richards and Bush 41, but they believed in government and governing, and they were taken seriously by the rest of the nation. In the House, there was Sam Rayburn, Tom DeLay and Dick Armey. Maybe you didn’t like their politics, but they got things done.

That kind of gravitas has quit the scene. Texas boasts legions of engineers, architects, doctors, lawyers, artists and energy executives who enjoy global reputations, but back home pridefully ignorant pygmies run the political show. One example: When our senior senator, John Cornyn, was running for re-election in 2014, the Houston Chronicle’s editorial board asked him for his view of a huge coastal storm-surge-protection project in the Houston-Galveston area known as the Ike Dike. His answer: “I don’t even know what that is.”

And he looks like a legislative wunderkind compared with our junior senator. “Now it’s time for Ted Cruz to represent the people who sent him to Washington,” the Chronicle suggested after the Indiana primary. Good luck with that.

Mary Beth Rogers, the author of the optimistic “Turning Texas Blue,” summed up our collective frustration: “The conventional wisdom is we are just a bunch of crazies down here.”

How did we get here? The reasons are varied. The national Democratic Party’s decades-long shift to the left contributed to the end of 100 years of Democratic dominance. (Even Perry was a Democrat, because, back in the day, nobody in Texas was a Republican.)

The energy boom of the late ‘70s and early ‘80s brought an influx of the disaffected from the Rust Belt, boosting the angry, turn-back-the-clock conservatism already here. Then, in the ‘90s, Karl Rove and DeLay’s grand plan to create a perpetual Republican majority in Texas also tilted control of Republican primaries toward ever more right-wing activists.

Meanwhile, Texas Democrats’ case of learned helplessness became chronic. They hardly bother to run for dogcatcher. Wendy Davis’s ignominious defeat in her 2014 run for governor proved it was time to start over, but strategic efforts have not taken off.

“They spend a lot of time updating voter files, but nobody knows how to use those things,” one longtime Democrat told me. The difference between pragmatism and self-pity has become hard to discern. That was never the norm.

Then the cuckoos took over. It’s astounding that a state so modern in many ways has moved so far backward when it comes to taking care of its own people. Is it cynicism or plain old ignorance that makes our legislators appear oblivious to the damage that cuts to public education and health care will do to our future work force?

Few in Texas see a quick way to restore the state to national relevance, if not respectability. Maybe the long-predicted Latino surge at the polls will save us (thanks to Donald Build-a-Wall Trump). Or maybe, as the aged white voters of the religious right pass to their rewards, they will be replaced by more open-minded millennials.

“Our best hope is to become a swing state like Florida,” Rogers proposed.

It’s a humbling thought for a Texan, but we have to start somewhere.
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