If by "fix" you mean screwing over Wall Street, yeah, nothing gonna happen
I don't trust either of them to fix anything.
If by "fix" you mean screwing over Wall Street, yeah, nothing gonna happen
But you vote the Magic R
Only when the Dems nominate an especially repugnant candidate like Beto.
Who was the last Democrat you voted for governor? Ma Ferguson?
Oh look, another edgy libertarian freethinker pretending to hate Republicans as much as Democrats.
Welcome to the herd, bro!
lol calling yourself libertarian and voting anti-abortion
'This is Texas — get with the program':
Woman flashes gun at neighbors who came by to tell her about their party
A Houston woman is facing charges allegedly pointed a gun at a couple who let her know about an upcoming party in their apartment complex,
Brown, 35, was told by a judge to have zero contact with the couple and her bond was set at $10,000.
https://www.rawstory.com/texas-woman...aving-a-party/
Texas schools now refusing dictionary donations
thanks to GOP-backed book restrictions
https://www.rawstory.com/texas-book-ban-2658961066/
What a ed-up-to- state
CATASTROPHE #88:
THE BAG TEXAS LEGISLATURE RETURNS FOR A BRUTAL YEAR
What lawmakers should do to mitigate the state's cascading crises,
and what they are liable to do instead.
Firmly in control, Abbott, Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, and GOP lawmakers are now free to do as they please—to pick up where their vengeful 87th legislative session mercifully left off just over a year ago.
The party’s activist base is eager to
continue the march toward one-party authoritarianism,
punishing political enemies and
catering to political patrons as they go.
Many bills have already been filed to
further expand prosecution under Texas’ abortion ban,
along with measures to concentrate power over elections in the office of GOP Attorney General Ken Paxton and
to continue persecution of transgender children and their families.
From the 1970s well into the 21st century, the state regularly funded pay increases for its government employees.
But now workers haven’t seen a wage bump since 2014,
when lawmakers approved a modest 3 percent raise over two years,
accompanied by heavier workloads.
Employees in the lowest-paid positions are predominantly people of color, who are hit the hardest by these stagnant wages.
https://www.texasobserver.org/texas-legislature-preview-2023
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