It’s Tuesday, and that means it is time for yet another edition of the Texas Progressive Alliance Weekly Round-Up.
This week, many bloggers in Houston and in the Gulf Coast region are without power and digging out from Hurricane Ike. We extend our best wishes for a speedy recovery not only to our member bloggers in these regions but to all citizens in the areas hit by Ike. Please consider making a donation to the Red Cross to help relief efforts.
Click on for the highlights.
Why does Sarah Palin hate wolves? The Texas Cloverleaf clues us in.
Everybody knows that this year’s wedge’em and hate’em issue is Hispanics immigration. CouldBeTrue at South Texas Chisme says Texas leads the way with banning rents in Farmers Branch, denying passports to citizens in the Valley and threatening document checks during an evacuation.
During the preparations for Hurricane Ike, Off the Kuff noted yet another lawsuit filed against Farmers Branch for its ongoing war against immigrants and apartment renters.
Sen. John Cornyn claims to be voting “Texas values” when he consistently rubber-stamps Bush in the U. S. Senate. Eye On Williamson asks, since when have torture, spying on Americans and misleading the country on matters of war and peace been Texas values?
PDiddie survived Ike almost exactly as he predicted.
BossKitty at TruthHugger wonders if disaster lessons recently learned, will be used as we watch Hurricane Ike Recovery, Texas Style
Colloquialisms are a wonderful rhetorical device to create an instant sense of commonality within the minds of the voting public. However, they can at times be misconstrued (right, Governor Swift?) which is why McBlogger took some time to offer Sen. Obama (The BEST!) a phrase he could use that can’t possibly be interpreted as anything other than an attack on John McCain and his worthless ideas, proposals and suggestions.
North Texas Liberal examines in-depth the Palin pick, comparing and contrasting her with Obama’s VP pick of Joe Biden, and dissecting the media’s coverage of Sarah Palin.
jobsanger writes about how United States interference into Bolivia’s internal affairs have gotten American ambassadors kicked out of two countries in South America, and how some politicians can’t refuse even a bad photo op.
Vince at Capitol Annex notes that State Rep. Phil King (R-Waxahachie), chair of the House Regulated Industries Committee, is having a fund-raiser at the home of a lobbyist for telecom giant AT&T. King’s committee just happens to regulate telecommunications in Texas.