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9th & Congress: Winners & Losers – April 5, 2024

Every Friday morning at 8:30 a.m., I discuss the week’s Winners & Losers on the Cardle & Woolley show on Austin’s 1370 Talk Radio. It’s a lightning round with Jim Cardle, Lynn Woolley and me that runs the gambit from public policy and political trends to sports and culture in Texas, America and the world. You can listen to the segment with everybody’s comments by clicking the 8:30 a.m. segment here.

Here’s the highlights from my Winners & Losers list for the week of March 30 to April 5:

Big Winner of the Week: The University of Texas at Austin for firing an estimated 60 employees who worked in so-called “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” (DEI) programs and projects at UT. Following up on a letter from State Senator Brandon Creighton, R-Conroe, the Longhorns took the most visible action of any college or university in the state so far to follow the state’s anti-DEI law, Senate Bill 17 which requires that DEI be ended at taxpayer-funded universities.

Big Loser of the Week: The $20 an hour minimum wage requirement that kicked in in California. This job-killing (and likely small business-killing) proposal will hit young workers particularly hard and is another demonstration that the big blue state on the West Coast hasn’t a clue how the economy actually works.

Other Big Winners:

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak backed Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling’s pushing back on Scotland’s new expanded hate speech laws. The laws make it a crime to “misgender” a man who insists he is a woman but has no protections for actual women. Rowling has shined a spotlight on transgender criminals who have raped and assaulted women when they insist on being detained in women’s prisons. Sunak said it was not a crime to state the “actual facts of biology” and that his Conservative Party supports free speech.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott gets a big thumbs up for his trip to the Big Apple to speak to the New York GOP Gala. Abbott continues to get accolades for busing illegal migrants to sanctuary cities—exposing them as simply “sanctimonious cities” —and showing the rest of the country what it is like to be overrun at our southern border.

Fort Worth is now the home of Texas’ newest TV station, Merit Street, a national outlet that is anchored by Dr. Phil. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and State Sen. Tan Parker, R-Flower Mound, were on hand for the ribbon cutting.

More DEI Losers: 

The NAACP is a big loser for urging black athletes to boycott the state of Florida because of Florida’s laws banning DEI. Florida also bans teaching gender and sexuality studies to young children. Early reports indicate most black athletes are ignoring the boycott. More than 35 African-American football stars have recently announced they are committed to Florida teams. If you recall, when the NAACP first issued its “travel warning” to African Americans for Florida last year, it was revealed that several of its executives actually lived in the Sunshine State. Here’s part of the NAACP’s statement:

“Please be advised that Florida is openly hostile toward African Americans, people of color and LGBTQ+ individuals. Before traveling to Florida, please understand that the State of Florida devalues and marginalizes the contributions of and the challenges faced by African Americans and other minorities.”

Another DEI loser is Harvard’s Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging which announced more segregated graduation ceremonies this week including a “Disability Celebration,” a “Global Indigenous Celebration,” an “Asian American, Pacific Islander, Desi-American (APIDA) Celebration,” a “First Generation-Low Income Celebration,” a “Jewish Celebration,” a “Latinx Celebration,” a “Lavender Celebration”—which refers to LGBT students—a “Black Celebration,” a “Veterans Celebration,” and an “Arab Celebration.” If diversity is the goal, why is everybody being segregated into homogeneous groups?

NCAA Final Four is the Final Big Winner of the Week – Both the men’s and women’s bracket have been full of really great games. There have been lots of busted brackets and no Texas teams made it to the final round, but this weekend’s lineup of men and women from both NC State and UConn, along with Alabama and South Carolina, will be big fun!

Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.

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State Sen. Brandon Creighton’s Bill Ending DEI Was Not a Suggestion

Senate Education Chairman Brandon Creighton, R-Conroe, has alerted Texas universities that he will be calling them to the Capitol in May to provide an update on their progress in ridding Texas campuses of DEI, as required by Senate Bill 17. With the support of Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, Creighton wrote the strongest anti-DEI legislation in the nation and his letter reminds university leaders that failure to comply with the law could ultimately affect their funding.

To be clear on what Sen. Creighton is talking about, DEI is the acronym for “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” a deceptively named race-based ideology that divides people into two groups—oppressors, who are mostly white people, although increasingly Jews and Asians are included in the oppressor group, and victims, who are African American, Hispanic or gay. Sometimes women are included in the victim group, though rarely white women. Victims also include those who are suffering from gender dysphoria.

DEI advocates have been working for over a decade to re-segregate university campuses in Texas and across the country so “victims” aren’t required to interact with “oppressors” in classes and activities. Many Texas universities have segregated graduations for Black students and Hispanic students. “Lavender graduations” are held for gay students.

Arguing in favor of DEI programs, a student at the University of Texas at Austin, where only 5.5 percent of students are African-American despite two decades of DEI programs, said, “I don’t feel like I go to a (predominately white institution) because I’m always around my Black friends.”

Imagine if a white student boasted, “I don’t feel like I go to a racially integrated university because I only hang out with my white friends.”

There has been massive blowback on Texas campuses following the passage of Senate Bill 17. The Austin-American Statesman reported that both students and faculty are rattled, exhausted and confused. DEI has infiltrated every aspect of university life because it seems administrators have put forward almost anything in the name of DEI without assessing the impact on students and its relevance to the educational mission of the academic institution.

For example, in a move that harkens back to the “Whites Only” signs before the Civil Rights Act, in the name of DEI, at least one flagship university established separate study rooms in the library for only LGBTQ students. When the library was crowded, other students were required to sit on the floor whether the separate study rooms had people in them or not.

Students at Texas A&M lamented that when the so-called “Pride Center” closed down there would be no place for women students to get binders to smash down their breasts so they looked like men. But administrators at the University of Texas at Dallas bragged that they were able to keep their “transition closet” open to provide cross-dressing outfits and supplies for students who believe they are the other gender. The officials insist they are now using “transition” as a broader term.

When the University of Texas announced that it would change the name of the Gender and Sexuality Center to the “Women’s Community Center,” it stated its mission was to provide “a place for Longhorns of all genders to connect, find resources, and get support around experiences of intersectionality, community, and gender solidarity.”

“Longhorns of all genders?” The wacky notion that there are Longhorns who are some gender other than male or female, like the evil idea that it is good for black students to only hang out with other black students, are two of the prime directives of DEI that permeate campus culture. Instilling these beliefs and others rooted in critical race and gender theory is the mission of DEI at every level.

The Chronicle of Higher Education recently published a survey of a number of Texas universities and found some leaders were taking comprehensive steps to adhere to Senate Bill 17. But change will not be quick.

An official at Texas A&M was caught on tape saying that DEI programs were simply being “rebranded.” At the University of Texas at Tyler, an administrator said they were getting around SB 17 by “being creative.” At Texas Tech, an administrator said DEI programs were now all operating under the Campus Access and Engagement program.

Sen. Creighton made clear in his letter to university leaders that none of this is permissible under the law.

These frantic administrators who are clinging to DEI seem unaware that the biggest indictment against it is that it doesn’t work. A British study is the latest to reveal what we have seen in Texas—DEI makes no difference in increasing the recruitment of minority and marginalized students or improving their academic outcomes or career opportunities. Sen. Creighton is right to remind university leaders across the state that the mandate of SB 17 to shut down these racially divisive and ineffective DEI policies isn’t a suggestion—it is Texas law, and could cost them their funding.

Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.

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The Sherry Sylvester Show | Episode 23: Dr. Walter Wendler on Academic Leadership

Live from Texas Policy Summit 2024, TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester sits down with the President of West Texas A&M University, Dr. Walter Wendler to discuss what is needed in today’s academic leaders in order to prepare Gen Z for what the future has in store for them.

Listen to the Sherry Sylvester Show on Apple or Spotify.

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TPS 2024 – Winning the War on Woke

States like Texas and Florida are fighting back against the left’s radical ideology that permeates nearly every major American institution. The panel discusses the success conservatives are having and the where the battle moves next.

To watch more videos from the 2024 Texas Policy Summit, click here.

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The War Against History Continues in Texas

Wokeness won’t go away quietly, especially in the war against history. In April, a new Texas history organization, created in the aftermath of a critical race showdown within the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA), announced it will meet for its first symposium, titled “Texas History in the 21st Century: Looking Back, Moving Forward.”

At this event, to be held at Texas Christian University, college professors can learn about “Writing Against the Master Narrative,” as well as pay tribute to former TSHA Chief Historian, Walter Buenger.

One doesn’t have to read too closely between the lines to get the impression that these historians, almost exclusively academics, apparently believe that there’s some kind of “master narrative” that needs to be challenged.

You may recall that their honoree, Buenger, has dismissed the Alamo as “insignificant,” while insisting that the shrine of Texas liberty has been misused to “commemorate whiteness.”

Is that the “master narrative?”

From commentary in the media, it is clear that this new group believes they are up against the Texas Legislature, which rightly banned the teaching of the 1619 Project—after it had been debunked by seemingly every reputable historian in the country.

Perhaps they also believe it is important to put the book “Forget the Alamo”—written by two partisan reporters and a political consultant, which was also debunked by any historian that matters—in Texas classrooms?

Because they are professors, they may also be fighting against the Texas Legislature’s passage of a ban on diversity, equity and inclusion offices and programs in Texas public colleges and universities. The Texas DEI bill has nothing to do with teaching history, but it does prohibit classifying every student by the color of their skin, ethnicity, or gender.

DEI ideology on campus permeates every aspect of campus life, especially the teaching of history. It is built on a flawed and racially divisive view of history that allows for only one lens—race and oppression. It’s a worldview that encourages people to make ridiculous statements, such as claiming the story of the Alamo “commemorates whiteness.”

DEI is a simplistic attempt to reduce Texas history, American history—the history of all Western civilization—into a war between villains and heroes. Using their analysis, every hero (in the so-called “master narrative”) is a villain and consequently, every villain must be made into a hero.

(To see how this works in contemporary times, just look at how campuses—students and faculty alike—made heroes out of the terrorists who attacked Israel.)

Real historians cannot be driven by a political ideology. They know that no figure from the past, not one as saintly as Francis of Assisi nor one as despicable as Benedict Arnold, can be portrayed as either fully hero or villain. Human beings are complicated, and so must their historical reckoning be. The shameful institution of slavery did exist in Texas, and no teacher of history can shy away from that. That’s why Texas teachers are required to teach about slavery, reconstruction, Jim Crow and the Civil Rights era.

Texans, like all Americans, have not always lived up to the ideals established at Washington on the Brazos. But we have never lost sight of them either.

Here at TPPF, our award-winning “Forging Texas” film series tells the story of the Texas Revolution—but it also tells the story of the first woman to lead a cattle drive across the Chisolm Trail, the Vietnamese migration to Texas in the 1970s and, most recently, investigates the birth of the African American film industry in Texas with our film, “The Making of a Classic.”

The 1836 Advisory Project was established by the Texas Legislature in 2021 and has produced a Texas history summary that is available to everyone at State DMV offices. It covers all of Texas history—the good, the bad and the ugly. Even one of the authors of “Forget the Alamo,” called it “surprisingly accurate.”

Focus groups conducted by TPPF found that most residents of the Lone Star State, whether native-born or recently arrived, African American or Hispanic, are proud to call themselves Texans. They consider the Texas story to be their own story—a story of courage and struggle, striving and success. They certainly do not view it as a white-washed “master narrative.”

We can hope that the Texas Alliance for History doesn’t become just another group of grumbling, left-leaning professors trying to convince Texans that their great state that grew out of nothing to become the seventh largest economy in the world and the job creator for the nation is somehow an evil place.

Over a million people visit the Alamo every year, a site where 200 men courageously fought to the death to ensure that Texas would be independent and free. Some African Americans and abolitionists fought beside Travis and Crockett. Everyone who was there during the siege has a story, and true historians want to learn about all of them. No one who knows the story would describe the sacrifice at the Alamo as “insignificant.”

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The Sherry Sylvester Show | Episode 22: Celebrating Women’s History Month

TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester takes a time out from her typical interview schedule to honor the women who have blazed trails across our great nation, highlighted with Sherry’s favorite episode of TPPF’s award winning series, Forging Texas: Trailboss!

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Busing Illegal Migrants Wins Elections

The New York Post reports that on Super Tuesday, MSNBC’s progressive women’s roundtable got a big laugh out of exit polls showing that illegal immigration was the top priority for GOP voters in Virginia.

Former Biden spokeswoman Jen Psaki laughingly insisted that she lives in Virginia and there’s no problem. Joy Reid called the poll proof that Republicans are racist.

Rachel Maddow mockingly quipped, “I guess Virginia does have a border with West Virginia.”

Maddow’s snarky comment will no doubt overtake the 50 year-old legend of a similar clueless remark on the media elite by New Yorker writer Pauline Kael who reportedly said in 1972, “I don’t understand how Nixon won the election. I don’t know anyone who voted for him.”

Nixon won 49 states.

Maddow and her friends clearly missed the latest data from Gallup in February which found that immigration is now at the top of the list of critical problems cited by Americans. Or perhaps the MSNBC girls are just getting their information on what is going on at the border from the Texas media.

The Texas press has pretended for years that concerns about the border are simply a trumped up talking point for Republicans designed to incite fear into voters and demonize people who are looking for a better life. The culprits they target most frequently are Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick.

For the Texas press, describing 5,000 to 10,000 people crossing the border every day as an “invasion” is a crime against humanity. Actual crimes against humanity on the Texas border, including rape trees displaying the underwear of sexual assault victims and sex trafficking of minors, don’t get as much play.

Although it’s big national news, I don’t recall seeing many Texas media reports about the hundreds of terrorists who have been detained at the border or the thousands of Chinese who are coming over now. The Texas media has also ignored thousands of criminal illegal aliens who have been entering Texas though the southern border for years. The press treats them as a figment of former President Donald Trump’s imagination.

After the primary election on Tuesday, the Texas media was as stunned as the women on MSNBC when nearly a dozen House GOP incumbents they thought were too big a deal to fail fell to Republicans who were backed by Gov. Abbott. All over the state, candidates backed by Abbott and Patrick defeated longtime incumbents.

Abbott asked voters to elect representatives who would not give an inch to Democrats, and voters listened to him—because they know the Democrats are responsible for the tragedy that has been happening at the border since President Joe Biden’s inauguration.

The Texas media belittled then-candidate Trump in 2016 when he brought the issue of the border into the national conversation. They stepped up attacks on Abbott for beefing up security at the border and establishing Operation Lone Star. They also attacked Patrick who stood by his election promise to appropriate millions—and ultimately billions—to substantially increase the manpower of the Department of Public Safety at the border.

Of course, if some border politician criticized Abbott, the Texas media was all over that. But even when Trump flipped several solid blue counties to red in South Texas, the Texas media failed to connect the dots.

When Abbott sent illegal migrants to the big blue cities, the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune and the Washington Post finally reported what the Texas press refused to investigate—what happens to a city or a state when it is overrun with a constant influx of new immigrants in need of virtually everything. What happens when crime skyrockets? What happens when people’s land and homes become migrant stopovers? How do hospitals, schools and other public services keep up?

The Texas press remains mostly silent on the border. Still, not only has immigration become the top issue for Americans, but polls show for the first time that a majority of Americans now support building a border wall.

Of course, school choice was also a critical issue in Texas’ Super Tuesday, but a strong majority of Texans have supported a parent’s right to choose the best school for their child for at least a decade. The Texas media refused to cover that story too. They opted for helping the teachers unions block reforms, rather than writing about parents whose children are trapped in failing public schools.

Abbott’s firm stand on school choice will be transformational for the future of the state, but he was able to win that battle because he bused migrants north and called the bluff of sanctuary cities. He exposed them as simply sanctimonious cities and showed America the truth about what is going on at the southern border.    

He got no help from the people who are supposed to tell these stories—the Texas media—but most Americans get it now… except those women at MSNBC.

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The Right Idea | Episode 43: Super Tuesday Reaction with Sherry Sylvester

Brian and Derek have the pleasure of sitting down with TPPF’s Distinguished Senior Fellow Sherry Sylvester to discuss the results of the 2024 Primary Election, from a national, statewide and, local perspective.

2:26 Derek’s take on the major headlines coming out of Tuesday’s results – Parents Win!
3:19 Sherry’s take on the big winners and losers – Don’t mess with Governor Abbott
6:04 How School Choice impacted Texas statewide
9:50 The Media’s coverage of Super Tuesday
17:43 School Choice Support in the 89th Legislature
19:35 What will the School Choice debate look like next year?
26:15 George Soros failed
35:49 Who are Texas’ new Congressional candidates?
39:22 New Senator hazing

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Winners, Losers & Drones

Every Friday morning at 8:30 a.m., I join the Cardle & Woolley show, Talk 1370 Radio, in Austin to pick the week’s top Winners & Losers, which has gotten a lot easier since November 5 — just put President-elect Donald Trump at the top of the winners list. Time Magazine has named him Person of the Year, and except for Don Lemon, nobody is quibbling about the choice. Trump has essentially taken over as president, both at home and abroad, and nobody seems unhappy about it. Clearly, the Europeans who showed up at Notre Dame Cathedral last week were pleased to see him — as was the longshoremen’s union he met with earlier today.

Trump’s election has ushered in a new era of optimism — even people who didn’t particularly support him are buoyed by the knowledge that the Biden era is over and things are going to change, finally. Here’s who else made my list:

Winner: Whoever Launched the New Jersey Drones

As of Friday morning, nobody seems to know anything about the drones that have been flying over New Jersey every night for the past month. Granted, New Jersey Republican Congressman Jeff Van Drew says credible sources told him they were launched from an Iranian mothership off the Jersey coast, but the Defense Department quickly shot him down, which is exactly what Van Drew wants to do with the drones. Van Drew is a former Democrat who became a Trump Republican in 2020. Trump’s team was essential in getting him re-elected, so if there are “credible sources” who can back-up the Iranian mothership story, you can bet Trump’s people know about it, too.

Van Drew represents several coastal counties in southern New Jersey, not all that far from Grover’s Mill, the site of the Martian landing in the legendary War of the Worlds radio broadcast that panicked the nation into believing America was under attack from Martians in 1938. That was 86 years ago, but the people of New Jersey will not be fooled again. No one in the Garden State has panicked. They’ve seen this kind of thing before.

Loser: America’s Defense Capabilities

Perhaps folks in New Jersey wouldn’t feel so confident if they’d seen the report from the House Select Committee on China, which estimates that if the United States got into a war with China over Taiwan, we’d run out of anti-ship missiles in a week and long range missiles in a month. No estimates on how we would fare if the Jersey shore were attacked by aliens from outer space, but we are behind China in virtually every aspect of warfare capability. Rebuilding America’s defenses is a top priority of the incoming Trump administration, and if you look at this report, it’s clear that dramatic change can’t come soon enough.

This point was underscored on Wednesday when the Department of Defense released a statement stating that it was dealing with climate change as the top security concern in Africa. The statement precisely captured what is wrong with our national defense effort and why Americans voted for something dramatically different.

Winner: Pete Hegseth Gets Cornyn’s Support

It’s also one reason why prospects for President-elect Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, are now looking up. Momentum for Hegseth rebounded over the last week, with an assist from a number of grassroots and policy groups and a Hegseth pledge to at least one senator that he would stop drinking if he got the job. Texas Sen. John Cornyn said that he would support Hegseth this week. Texas’ other senator, Ted Cruz, had previously announced he would back him. Hegseth is a decorated combat veteran and is clearly committed to getting the Department of Defense back on mission.

Winner: Daniel Penny Found Not Guilty

Daniel Penny’s victory in court was not just a victory for him, it was a victory for the people of New York and for our country, a sign that safety is again a priority for our communities. Penny, who subdued a man on the New York City subway who was threatening to kill his fellow passengers, is a Marine Corps veteran who said his only motivation was to protect others. Penny is white and the man threatening the passengers was African-American so black leaders across the country have condemned the jury, but there’s no indication that most African-Americans feel Penny’s actions were unjust. An African-American woman who was on the train during the trial testified in his support, noting that most of the passengers on the train were also minorities.

Loser: Sen. Elizabeth Warren on UnitedHealthcare CEO Assassination

In response to the heinous murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren stated that while violence was never the answer, she understood the murderer’s frustration, having lost faith in the government to solve the health care problem. As the National Review noted, her fellow Democratic Sen. John Fetterman did not feel the need to issue a nuanced statement: “He’s the a**hole that’s going to die in prison,” Fetterman said. The Pennsylvania senator also called the murder “vile,” noting that Thompson leaves behind two children who will grow up without a father.

Loser: “Gender-Affirming Care”

The Washington Post reported this week that so-called LGBTQ+ people are shrinking in fear of what will happen to them once the Trump administration comes in. This story, like many of its ilk, conflates the concerns of the transgender community with gay rights. Several of Trump’s major donors are prominent in the gay community and he just appointed Scott Bessant, who is gay, as Treasury Secretary.

What Trump has pledged to end is the practice of allowing gender-confused children to be prescribed puberty blockers or be subjected to sex-change surgery — so-called “gender-affirming care.” It has nothing to do with gay rights. Britain announced this week that it is banning puberty blockers altogether, following the path of most of Western Europe, which has long acknowledged the danger and ineffectiveness of drug treatments and surgery to treat gender confusion. Britain’s action hasn’t convinced Democrats in Congress, 140 of whom voted against the National Defense Reauthorization Act yesterday because the bill would prohibit the military from providing puberty blockers and other “gender-affirming care” to military kids. Perhaps if those Democrats knew that we’d run out of anti-ship missiles in a week if we have to fight with China about Taiwan, they’d have put the need for more weapons ahead of puberty blockers.

Winner: U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace Takes Stands on Women’s Privacy

Before we leave the topic of gender confusion, we need to acknowledge U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-South Carolina, who was accosted this week by a transgender activist because she has insisted that women’s bathrooms in the nation’s capital be used exclusively by women. Public restrooms exclusively for women have been a key factor for women’s equality throughout history. Before public restrooms were available for women, we were unable to work or participate in community life. Mace is a hero for recognizing that to ensure women’s privacy and safety, we can’t turn our bathrooms over to men. Texas is also mobilizing to reinstate restrictions on men using women’s restrooms.

Winner: Webb County and Judge Tano Tijerina

Webb County Judge Tano Tijerina announced this week that he will become a Republican, reflecting the political change in Texas border counties, which voted overwhelmingly in support of Trump in November. Webb County, which has been reliably Democrat for 100 years, is anchored by Laredo. The fact that this major border city was forced to experience the negative impact of President Joe Biden’s open-border policies clearly had an impact on voters. Judge Tijerina made the right move.

Loser: The Progressive Shoulders Greg Cesar Stands On

The Wall Street Journal published a piece this week musing on the career of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who suggests he may retire in 2031. Throughout his 50 years in politics, Sanders has, among other things, been an apologist for brutal communist regimes in Soviet Russia and elsewhere. Sanders noted that when he was first elected to Congress, he founded the Progressive Caucus with only five people. Last week, the Progressive Caucus, which now numbers more than 100, selected Austin Congressman Greg Casar as its new head, proudly placing him on Sanders’ shoulders. Casar will be carrying out Sanders’ tradition of supporting despots, just like his predecessor, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Washington, who has vigilantly praised the Hamas terrorists while calling Israel a racist state. After his selection, Casar held his first press conference with Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minnesota, by his side. Recall that Omar characterized September 11 as a time when “some people did some things.” Fellow progressive Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Michigan, who accused President Joe Biden of genocide last year, was also there.

Loser: Norway is Worse than California

As Fredrik Haga explains in this great Free Press article, 100 of Norway’s top taxpayers have left in the past two years, taking half the country’s wealth with them. To stanch the flow, Norway is now imposing a 38% exit tax on the market value of your assets. Even California hasn’t thought of introducing an exit tax to make it too expensive for people to leave.

One tax policy that is bankrupting Norwegians is an “unrealized gains tax” on all your assets, even if you didn’t sell them. Vice President Kamala Harris had an “unrealized gains tax” on her wish list, had she been elected. That’s one more reason we can be thankful she was not.

Drones have also been spotted in New York and Pennsylvania, but so far, we’ve not seen one blinking light in the sky in Texas. Keep your eyes peeled, and have a great weekend!

Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.

Sign up to receive this in your inbox every week at www.texaspolicy.com/9thandCongress.

Follow me on X @sylvester1630 and follow my podcast, the Sherry Sylvester Show on AppleSpotify or wherever you get your podcasts.

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The Sherry Sylvester Show | Episode 20: Restoring the City on a Hill with Chris Sinacola

TPPF’s Sherry Sylvester sits down with Director of Communications and Media at the Pioneer Institute Chris Sinacola to discuss how bad history and civics education in our schools have become and what we can do to turn it around.

Listen to The Sherry Sylvester Show on Apple or Spotify.

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