Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

sonias

sonias's Journal
sonias's Journal
March 9, 2012

Don't Mess With Texas Women (Austin Rally 3/13)

Don't Mess With Texas Women

Your voices are being heard. As the Women’s Health Express tours Texas giving a voice to women impacted by the latest attack on women’s health care, Governor Perry suggested that he will find funding for the Medicaid Women’s Health Program that he has targeted for elimination.

The Medicaid Women’s Health Program provides essential health screenings and birth control to more than 130,000 low-income women in Texas, including more than 2,300 Austin women who received free health exams at Planned Parenthood's E. 7th Street health center through this program last year.

This attack on the Medicaid Women’s Health Program follows Governor Perry’s elimination of two-thirds of Texas’ family planning budget that resulted in 300,000 low-income Texas women losing access to life-saving cancer screenings, birth control, prevention and treatment of STDs, and other essential health exams.

Can Governor Rick Perry be trusted when it comes to women’s health?

Join Cecile Richards, Carolyn Wonderland, Marcia Ball, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Colin Gilmore and others to stand up for women’s health at the Texas State Capitol Tuesday, March 13th at 6:30pm, and tell Governor Perry to stop playing politics with women's health!

The Women's Health Express is visiting 16 cities across Texas in 9 days and the final stop will be in Austin, next Tuesday.

Join us so that the message is loud and clear- Enough is enough--Stop playing politics with women’s health care.

We hope to see you Tuesday!

Sarah Wheat and Pam Smallwood
Interim Co-CEOs


March 5, 2012

When States Abuse Women (Texas)

Nicholas D. Kristof NYTimes 3/3/12
When States Abuse Women

HERE’S what a woman in Texas now faces if she seeks an abortion.

Under a new law that took effect three weeks ago with the strong backing of Gov. Rick Perry, she first must typically endure an ultrasound probe inserted into her vagina. Then she listens to the audio thumping of the fetal heartbeat and watches the fetus on an ultrasound screen.

She must listen to a doctor explain the body parts and internal organs of the fetus as they’re shown on the monitor. She signs a document saying that she understands all this, and it is placed in her medical files. Finally, she goes home and must wait 24 hours before returning to get the abortion.

“It’s state-sanctioned abuse,” said Dr. Curtis Boyd, a Texas physician who provides abortions. “It borders on a definition of rape. Many states describe rape as putting any object into an orifice against a person’s will. Well, that’s what this is. A woman is coerced to do this, just as I’m coerced.”

“The state of Texas is waging war on women and their families,” Dr. Boyd added. “The new law is demeaning and disrespectful to the women of Texas, and insulting to the doctors and nurses who care for them.”


The Texas law is the most extreme to take effect so far the article goes on to say.

Molly had us pegged decades ago - "Texas the testing lab for bad public policy".

March 1, 2012

Fan favorite Paul Qui of Uchiko wins 'Top Chef: Texas'

AAS 3/1/12

Fan favorite Paul Qui of Uchiko wins 'Top Chef: Texas'

His boss might have won a James Beard Award, but Uchiko's Paul Qui has won the title of "Top Chef" in the finale of Wednesday night's Bravo hit series, "Top Chef: Texas."

Qui, who trained under Uchi chef Tyson Cole before taking the reins at Cole's second restaurant, Uchiko, in 2010, had been a fan and judges' favorite throughout the ninth season of the Emmy-winning series, and he beat Chicago chef Sarah Grueneberg in the finale at the Black & Blue restaurant in Vancouver.

Uchi and Uchiko have been hosting watch parties throughout the season, and during the finale Wednesday night at Uchiko, where Cole was working the kitchen, more than 100 people who were gathered around the TV sets hanging in the lobby and over the sushi bar erupted in cheers as Qui took home the coveted prize.

Alekz Xavier had never seen an episode of "Top Chef" until this season but, with three of her friends, had attended every watch party on Wednesday nights.


to Paul Qui and Uchiko! Uchi is my favorite sushi restaurant and this is just a great recognition for Uchi and Texas!

February 29, 2012

Texans give more money to Colbert's PAC than to Romney's

Houston Chronicle 2/27/12
Texans give more money to Colbert's PAC than to Romney's

WASHINGTON - How popular is comedian Stephen Colbert's semi-serious Super PAC, Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow?

In Texas, it's more popular that Mitt Romney's leading Super PAC.

Federal Election Commission records examined by the Houston Chronicle indicate more Texans have donated to Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow than to the pro-Romney Restore Our Future.

Colbert, a popular TV satirist, created Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow as a means of educating his cable audience on how Super PACs could affect the 2012 presidential election.

(snip)
Houston resident Rebecca Stewart is the among the Texas donors. She says she decided to donate not because she was a fan of Colbert's Comedy Central, but because she was upset with the Supreme Court's ruling that led to the Super PAC craze.


February 28, 2012

New interim maps for Texas



They're not pretty for Austin.

February 24, 2012

Supreme Court delivers major ruling on water regulation

Austin Legal blog AAS 2/24/12

Supreme Court delivers major ruling on water regulation

In a ruling likely to have a wide impact on the regulation of water use in Texas, the state Supreme Court today ruled that landowners have an ownership interest in water beneath their land and may be compensated if regulations limit their access to it.

The legal dispute involves a ranch owner who sued when the Edwards Aquifer Authority issued a permit that limited the amount of underground water that could be used.

The authority had argued that if landowners can be compensated for limiting access to their water, the result would be a disaster, creating an unknown number of legal disputes and a financial burden that could make regulating water impossible.

(snip)

Ken Kramer, director of the Sierra Club’s Lone Star Chapter, said the decision could have disastrous impact on the state economy and environment.

“The court has done a huge disservice to everyone who has been working for proper management of the groundwater resources needed for our state’s people and our environment,” Kramer said.


Well it's each person for themselves once again. I'm sure the water corporations that buy/rent the Texas Supreme Court judges are happy. They will just suck all the water from underneath faster than anyone else can. And then continue to sell it to everyone else at exorbitant prices. Water is the new black gold in Texas.

What a mess.
February 24, 2012

Decision on Texas voter-ID law could be a long time coming


Trailblazers blog DMN 2/23/12
Legal experts: Decision on Texas voter-ID law could be a long time coming

WASHINGTON--When Hans von Spakovsky of the conservative Heritage Foundation and Laura Murphy of the ACLU debated about voter-identification laws on Thursday, the two legal experts were coming from opposite ends of the spectrum.

Still, they were able to find at least one view they shared: Neither expects the dispute over Texas' voter-ID law to be decided anytime soon.

"What we do know is that it's very unlikely that these laws will be adjudicated before the election," said Murphy, director of the ACLU's Washington Legislative Office. "The Supreme Court is not likely to hear any [voter-ID] cases before the November 2012 election."

Von Spakovsky, a former Federal Election Commission official, pointed out that Texas, which recently sued the Justice Department for allegedly delaying approval of its voter-ID law, may have to wait for its turn in court behind earlier challenges from South Carolina and Alabama.

(snip)
Murphy said the laws are a result of "Republican-controlled legislatures who may fear that low-income people, students, the elderly, the disabled and racial minorities are taking aim at their political powers."


I sure hope this holds. I want to see the Supreme Court change makeup before these bills even see any possibility of going into law in Texas.

February 21, 2012

Vampire bats in Texas?

AAS 2/20/12

Vampire bats in Texas? Texas State researcher says it's possible -- and now is the time to prepare

To the growing list of unwelcome effects of global warming or climate change or whatever your politics dictate you call the phenomenon, you may add this: Vampire bats are threatening to invade Texas.

The bats are native to South and Central America and Mexico, and a move north is a distinct possibility in coming decades, Texas State University biologist and wildlife disease expert Ivan Castro-Arellano said.

Vampire bats can't survive for long in temperatures below 50 degrees. But if Texas continues to experience mild winters, colonies of the nonmigratory species could find homes here.

Weather models show temperatures could go up an average of 2 to 11 degrees in the next century, and Castro-Arellano said the much-maligned creatures of the night may emigrate from Mexico to the Lone Star State in half that time or less.

It's an issue for ranchers and others with livestock because vampire bats can injure and even kill their prey — mostly sleeping mammals — with repeated feedings. Vampire bats cost Mexican ranchers millions in losses every year, Castro-Arellano said. The U.S. Census Bureau places the value of Texas' livestock at more than $14 billion


Like we don't already have enough blood sucking varmints (texas repukes).
February 19, 2012

El Paso Mayor John Cook wins recall appeal (Good ruling - he stood with LGBT)


El Paso Times 2/17/12

Update: El Paso Mayor John Cook wins recall appeal

Mayor John Cook has won the appeal in his lawsuit against a group seeking to recall him.

The Eighth Court of Appeals on Friday unanimously ruled that the recall group had violated the law in its petition drive. The court ordered Municipal Clerk Richarda Momsen to decertify the recall petitions and ruled that no recall election using them can be held.

The order states, "Having instructed the City Clerk to decertify the petitions, no election thereon may be called or held."

(snip)
Pastor Tom Brown, Word of Life Church and others are trying to recall Cook and City Reps. Susie Byrd and Steve Ortega because all three officials voted to restore health benefits for gay and unmarried partners of city employees after voters passed a ballot initiative in November 2010 repealing them.

(snip)
Cook says organizers of the petition drive violated a law prohibiting corporations -- including nonprofit churches -- from making political contributions to recall elections.

Brown and his Word of Life Church were among the defendants in the case. Brown said they would appeal Friday's decision to the Texas Supreme Court.

(snip)
"My analysis is it can't be appealed to the Texas Supreme Court," Walker said.


Congratulations to Mayor John Cook and his legal team! Way to do the right thing and restore those benefits for those families against the ugly pettiness of so called "Christian" values!

February 17, 2012

Texans Leave the Voting to a Small Minority

Texas Tribune 2/17/12

Texans Leave the Voting to a Small Minority

It doesn’t take very many people to win an election in Texas.

With redistricting fights pushing the primaries closer to summertime — and further from the possibility of giving the state’s Republican voters any say in who should be their presidential nominee — turnout could be even lower than normal.

“Normal” is a relative term when it comes to turnout in Texas elections.

Remember that big gubernatorial fight the Republicans had in 2010? Gov. Rick Perry and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison each spent more than $20 million on their campaigns. Debra Medina, a political newcomer appealing to fiscal conservatives and Tea Party voters looking for alternatives to the career politicians on the ballot, brought even more attention to the race.

At the time, the state had 18.8 million people who were old enough to vote. That big, fat, exciting Republican primary attracted fewer than 1.5 million of them — less than 8 percent.


The pathetic truth about voting in Texas. It's just a few partisan right wing hacks that control the outcome of voting. If it were only the motivated partisan hacks on our Democratic side that had control.

Really though it would be nice to see a high voter turnout. Even breaking the 25% eligible voter turnout mark would be epic.

Profile Information

Gender: Do not display
Hometown: Austin, TX
Home country: U.S.
Member since: 2001
Number of posts: 18,063
Latest Discussions»sonias's Journal