Don't move to Texas

bnew

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Texas Republicans Propose Horrific Punishment for Abortion Patients​

Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling

Thu, May 30, 2024 at 12:06 PM EDT·2 min read

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Having some of the nation’s strictest abortion laws isn’t enough for the Texas GOP. Instead, Republicans in the Lone Star State are actually considering the death penalty as punishment for people who undergo the medical procedure.

A new platform proposed at the state’s GOP convention on Saturday included calls for legislation that would transform the fetal personhood ideology into law, which would effectively categorize any person receiving an abortion at any stage as a murderer.

The 50-page document claims that “abortion is not healthcare, it is homicide” and calls for lawmakers to extend “equal protection of the laws to all preborn children from the moment of fertilization.”

Not everyone in attendance was in support of the endeavor, however. Harris County Precinct 178 Chair Gilda Bayegan volunteered to speak at the event, calling on her party to drop its anti-abortion platforms on the basis that the state’s draconian restrictions to the medical procedure were alienating its base.

“I’m up here begging you not to make it one of our priorities,” Bayegan said.

Her party clearly did not listen. The GOP wish list is a revealing glimpse into which direction they are headed, but it wasn’t the first clue. In January, Hood County Republican Party officials were spotted attending an Abolish Abortion Texas function in which the death penalty was discussed as a possible repercussion for women and minors who seek out not just abortion but also in vitro fertilization treatments.

“There’s no difference in the value of born people and preborn people,” Paul Brown, the group’s director, said in leaked video footage, revealing the philosophy behind the extreme measures. “In short, abortion is murder. And that’s starting at the moment of fertilization even prior to implantation. So that Plan B pill, or what’s known as the morning-after pill, which is used to terminate or kill a baby prior to implantation, that is an abortion.”

(Plan B does not “kill” an embryo, as Brown claims. Instead, it prevents fertilization from occurring in the first place.)

Texas isn’t the only state to consider classifying the lifesaving medical procedure as homicide or even sentencing people to death for seeking the treatment. Republican lawmakers in Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina introduced similar legislation last year. All of those bills were defeated, with even some state Republicans deeming them too extreme.
 

bnew

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Texas professors sue to fail students who seek abortions​


Men are using abortion bans to control and abuse women in their lives for "consensual sexual intercourse"​


By​

Senior Writer

Published June 3, 2024 5:45AM (EDT)​


Ken Paxton | University of Texas at Austin (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)
Ken Paxton | University of Texas at Austin (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)

tion care, the filing continues, the professors should be allowed to flunk students. Additionally, Bonevac asserts that he has a right to refuse to employ a teaching assistant who has had an abortion, calling such women "criminals."

The sexual hang-ups of abortion opponents are rarely far from the surface, but even by those low standards, the unjustified male grievance on display in this new Texas lawsuit is a doozy. At issue are federal regulations, called Title IX, first signed into law by President Richard Nixon in 1972. They currently bar publicly funded schools from discriminating on the basis of sex or gender. This means that schools cannot penalize students for health care based on sex. As a male student would be granted leave if he had to travel for surgery, so must a female student, the federal statute requires. The two men argue that granting students an excused absence in such cases violates their First Amendment rights.

Even though the plaintiffs suing for the right to flunk female students for abortion include boilerplate arguments in which they feign concern that abortion is "killing," the legal filing makes it clear that what really outrages Bonevac and Hatfield is that Title IX prevents them from controlling the private lives of students. Along with their anger about abortion, they grouse about not being allowed to punish students "for being homosexual or transgender." They also argue they should be able to penalize teaching assistants for "cross-dressing," by which they appear to mean allowing trans women to wear skirts.



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As Jessica Valenti at Abortion, Every Day wrote, the language of the legal complaint is "downright petulant." The picture painted is of two men obsessed with controlling student lives based on what they're packing inside their underwear. It should be common sense that college students should be graded on their performance in class, not whether or not their professor resents their sex life or sexual identity. Alas, because the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and Texas banned abortion, it's created a pretext for every busybody who wants to spend less time grading papers and more time working himself into an angry froth over the imagined sexual exploits of his students.

Even though Bonevac and Hatfield work in Austin, Texas, they filed their lawsuit 486 miles away in Amarillo, Texas. The reason for this is not mysterious: Donald Trump-appointed judge Matthew Kacsmaryk. The right-wing judge has a long and frankly unhinged history of screeching at top volume about the evils of "sexual revolutionaries." (Yes, that does sound like a compliment, but he doesn't mean it as such.) It takes very little to draw Kacsmaryk's sexualized condemnation. Premarital sex, for instance, makes one a "sexual revolutionary." Using contraception within marriage also makes one an irredeemable pervert. In his legal writings, Kacsmaryk is very clear that sex is only for procreation within marriage, and anything outside of that should draw legal sanction. He has not weighed in on whether there should be restrictions on what sexual positions are legally permissible within the procreation-only marital sex, but give him time.

Unfortunately, the Dobbs decision, which ended abortion rights, didn't just empower professors who are overly preoccupied with the sex lives of undergraduates. Texas has swiftly turned into a case study in how abortion bans aren't really about "life" at all, but about giving abusive misogynists a whole new set of tools to use in controlling women. As Melissa Gira Grant at the New Republicwrote earlier this month, domestic "[a]busers have noticed and taken advantage" of how abortion bans mean the "legal system itself" is now "an instrument of abuse." Operators at domestic violence hotlines have seen a surge in calls from victims whose abusers who "use state anti-abortion laws to intimidate and threaten partners" who have had or are considering an abortion.

Related

Samuel Alito's snide denial of his Jan. 6 flag is just as ugly as flying it in the first place

One would think the Republicans who wrote the abortion bans might want to distance themselves from terrible men using the laws as leverage to force women into sexual relationships. Instead, Republicans are embracing the cause of men who believe coercion is an acceptable substitute for romance. Jonathan Mitchell, the former Texas solicitor general who wrote one of the two major Texas abortion bans, has been representing men who don't even bother to hide that they are motivated by a belief that women simply don't have a right to say no to them.

We've covered the first case, of Marcus Silva, extensively at Salon. Court filings accuse Silva of extensive abuse of his ex-wife, including getting drunk at her work party and calling her misogynist names in front of colleagues. Her friends document how he reportedly knew his ex-wife was going to abort a pregnancy, but didn't try to stop her. Instead, he wanted to use her abortion as leverage. Text messages show him threatening to turn her and her friends into the law after her abortion unless she returned to do his laundry and have sex with him. Mitchell is representing Silva in a lawsuit against his ex-wife's friends for "aiding and abetting" an abortion that made it easier for her to leave him.

Turns out Mitchell is quickly creating a cottage industry of using the Texas law to help men harass ex-girlfriends. As the Texas Tribune reported earlier this month, Mitchell is representing two more men who want to use legal action to punish their ex-girlfriends for traveling out of state to get a legal abortion. In one case, the woman's lawyers argued it was part of a "scheme to harass an ex-girlfriend who has moved on from her relationship with him." Even if Mitchell never moves to sue the women, their providers, or their friends who helped, by filing legal motions, a legal expert told the Tribune, Mitchell can put "the woman in front of a court reporter and force her to answer questions." Making a woman sit through humiliating questioning at the hands of an abusive ex-boyfriend is clearly a punishment in and of itself. And, again, for using her legal and moral right to terminate an unwanted relationship.

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In the decades after Roe v. Wade, the Christian right insisted stridently that their opposition to abortion was about "protecting life," and was not about restoring male dominance over women. That this was a lie was always evident to those willing to look even a centimeter below the surface. These same forces also organized against sex education and affordable contraception, both far more effective at preventing abortion than abortion bans. But in the aftermath of Dobbs, there can be no doubt. After red states started banning abortion, the abortion rate rose, fitting the pattern seen in other countries with severe abortion restrictions, because anti-abortion states also tend to be hostile to pregnancy prevention.

These series of legal maneuvers in Texas further flesh out what's really going on here. Nosy right-wing professors and angry ex-boyfriends are not, despite their feeble protestations to the contrary, just really into babies. For people who actually care about children, there are plenty of volunteer opportunities that aid real kids who need food to eat and opportunities to grow. Instead, the throughline is anger at women, whether students in their classrooms or ex-girlfriends who don't return their calls, for living their lives outside of the control of the men who feel entitled to dominate them.
 

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TEXAS NEWS


Texans use Whataburger app to track power outages caused by Hurricane Beryl​


More than 1.7 million in the Houston area remain without power as of press time.​

By Michael Karlis on Tue, Jul 9, 2024 at 1:55 pm



The gray Whataburger logos indicate which locations are closed due to a power outage, while the orange logos show locations that are open. - Screenshot / Whataburger App


Screenshot / Whataburger App

The gray Whataburger logos indicate which locations are closed due to a power outage, while the orange logos show locations that are open.

Texas fast-food staple Whataburger is serving more than burgers in the wake of Hurricane Beryl.

Instead of ordering food, folks are using the San Antonio-based burger chain's app to track power outages in the Houston area.

On Monday, Hurricane Beryl slammed into the Texas Gulf Coast as a strong Category 1 storm, flooding Houston-area highways and knocking out power to nearly 3 million residents, according to the Associated Press.

Although the website of Houston-based utility CenterPoint Energy includes data on the number of customers without power — 1.7 million as of press time — the site doesn't provide a map showing which service areas are affected by the outage.

That's where the Whataburger app comes in. Using the app, users can tell which parts of Houston have power and which neighborhoods are in the dark by checking out what Whataburger locations are open for business. Assuming they have power, the chain's restaurants run 24 hours.

The clever hack was discovered by X user @BBQBryan, who shared it Monday evening with other users of the social media platform.

"The Whataburger app works as a power outage tracker, which is handy since the electric company doesn't show a map," @BBQBryan tweeted.

Y’all be safe out there! x.com

— Whataburger® (@Whataburger) July 9, 2024

His post has racked up 16,000 likes and nearly 4 million views as of noon Tuesday.

Whataburger was so impressed with @BBQBryan that company officials asked for his mailing address so they could send him a gift for "using the app so creatively."

Meanwhile, CenterPoint Energy said in a late Monday press release that it hopes to restore power to 1 million customers by Wednesday.

"While we tracked the projected path, intensity, and timing for Hurricane Beryl closely for many days, this storm proved the unpredictability of hurricanes as it delivered a powerful blow across our service territory and impacted a lot of lives," CenterPoint Senior Vice President Lynnae Wilson said in a statement. "We know we have important work ahead for our customers who depend on us, especially during the hot summer months."
 

Nokids

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Been in Dallas going on 4 years and just hit the point I’m ready to leave. Smoove times, got my career going here but idk just not feeling it anymore…I’m fully remote permanently so I could go anywhere

Where did you guys move after leaving Texas?

I’m looking to live near a beach or at least vibes like that Miami, San Diego, LA , darkhorse Atl
 

Batsute

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Been in Dallas going on 4 years and just hit the point I’m ready to leave. Smoove times, got my career going here but idk just not feeling it anymore…I’m fully remote permanently so I could go anywhere

Where did you guys move after leaving Texas?

I’m looking to live near a beach or at least vibes like that Miami, San Diego, LA , darkhorse Atl

I’m probably heading back to the northeast or northwest once I get promoted with my current job. Maybe Chicago.
 

Yinny

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Been in Dallas going on 4 years and just hit the point I’m ready to leave. Smoove times, got my career going here but idk just not feeling it anymore…I’m fully remote permanently so I could go anywhere

Where did you guys move after leaving Texas?

I’m looking to live near a beach or at least vibes like that Miami, San Diego, LA , darkhorse Atl
I just hit three years in Austin and was considering going to Houston but my likely next step is New Jersey where my family is from. For sure East Coast as I miss the easy access to the coast, the diversity and quality of food and the more urban culture. I want my son to be around my family.
 

Nokids

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I’m probably heading back to the northeast or northwest once I get promoted with my current job. Maybe Chicago.
I just hit three years in Austin and was considering going to Houston but my likely next step is New Jersey where my family is from. For sure East Coast as I miss the easy access to the coast, the diversity and quality of food and the more urban culture. I want my son to be around my family.
See it’s crazy how other people want to dip out. I’m from the east coast my self and it was cool when I first came; cheap rent, baddies galore, career opportunities

But ever since I started working remote I realized I don’t really want to stay here. I lived uptown, frisco etc. thought about Houston/ Austin but mannn can’t get jiggy with those places either.

No kids, good career shyt I hope we all can head to where we want. Jersey is dope I liked a place I think it was called Montclair. And I really really liked Chicago it just get too cold for a nikka haha
 

num123

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See it’s crazy how other people want to dip out. I’m from the east coast my self and it was cool when I first came; cheap rent, baddies galore, career opportunities

But ever since I started working remote I realized I don’t really want to stay here. I lived uptown, frisco etc. thought about Houston/ Austin but mannn can’t get jiggy with those places either.

No kids, good career shyt I hope we all can head to where we want. Jersey is dope I liked a place I think it was called Montclair. And I really really liked Chicago it just get too cold for a nikka haha
For the last few years i have been going back home during November-mid January. I do not mind the cold but the snow kills me.
 

Batsute

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See it’s crazy how other people want to dip out. I’m from the east coast my self and it was cool when I first came; cheap rent, baddies galore, career opportunities

But ever since I started working remote I realized I don’t really want to stay here. I lived uptown, frisco etc. thought about Houston/ Austin but mannn can’t get jiggy with those places either.

No kids, good career shyt I hope we all can head to where we want. Jersey is dope I liked a place I think it was called Montclair. And I really really liked Chicago it just get too cold for a nikka haha

Breh I lived in houston all my life before I took a role in NE for work, and came back for work.

Friends in my age group are over the weather, cost of living, infrastructure etc. I used to say the food will keep me coming back but fukk that I know how to smoke a brisket and I can make some solid tacos.
 

the next guy

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Imagine an entire state being a scam. Doesn't even have nice beaches like Florida (another dump).
 
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