The Texas Progressive Alliance wishes everyone a happy Labor
Day week — and reminds you to vote only for Democrats and third-party
candidates who show they actually care for labor — as it brings you this week's
roundup. It also reminds you, per the material inside the dashes and World
Socialist Web Site, that many Dems are ConservaDems whose support for
labor issues is tepid.
SocraticGadfly
offers some critical analysis about Corey Robin's claim that
socialism is specially identifiable with freedom.
David Hogg has decided to intervene in
the Texas Senate race. Yours truly told him on Twitter he should have
been here during the Democratic primary, or even he really wants something to
do, tend to political knitting in Florida and help out third parties and their
candidates. Even worse in some ways, Basta Michael Avenatti in
the Texas Senate race. If he visits South Carolina post-November,
he’s running for president.
At least one of Beto’s campaign gambles, documented
here, is at risk of backfiring. Reportedly, many Valley Hispanics still
don’t know who he is..
Off the
Kuff notes the motion by the plaintiffs in the Texas redistricting
lawsuit to bring
the state back under preclearance for its discrimination in
map-drawing.
Via Grits for BreakfastOff
the Kuff McLennan County DA Abel Reyna is
officially barred from doing anything more on Twin Peaks until he is
out of office.
Eric
Berger invites you to share your memories of Hurricane Harvey.
Cory
Garcia revisits a viral warning about Harvey.
David Bruce Collins laments “libruls” attacking
Glenn Greenwald.
Dan
Solomon tells Alex Jones' Tumblr tale.
Better
Texas Blog says all workers deserve paid sick days.
Paradise
in Hell cites Ken Paxton as a good role model for lower ethical
standards.
Jackie
Wang reports on the status of a Confederate monument that had been
removed from a San Antonio park.
Finally, yours truly asks, via collected Tweets, if John
McCain is finally fully
dead and buried.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments are appreciated, as is at least a modicum of politeness.
Comments are moderated, so yours may not appear immediately.
Due to various forms of spamming, comments with professional websites, not your personal website or blog, may be rejected.