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Good morning,
Yesterday, we asked readers about tenure in the state's colleges and universities. Today, you can find out what your fellow readers had to say.
This is the Texas Minute for Tuesday, August 1, 2023.
– Michael Quinn Sullivan
But First... Effective today, it is illegal to manufacture or sell incandescent light bulbs. If the federal government put as much effort [[link removed]] into stopping illegal aliens from entering the country as they now will with the scourge of rogue light bulbs, the border would probably be secure. Paxton Files Motion to Dismiss Articles of Impeachment The legal team for Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a motion with the Senate to dismiss all but one of the articles of impeachment brought against him. They say because the alleged misconduct occurred prior to the 2022 general election, it cannot be considered under the so-called prior-term doctrine. Sydnie Henry has the story [[link removed]].
"Prior-term doctrine," based on Texas Government Code 665, holds that because citizens are the ultimate authority in electing people to public office, if allegations of misconduct are known to the public prior to the election, then the alleged misconduct cannot be the basis for removing a public official from office.
According to Paxton’s lawyers [[link removed]], the “prior-term doctrine provides a necessary safeguard" to prevent impeachment from being used as a "tool for political retaliation and abuse."
Paxton’s team says impeachment Articles 1-7 and 9-20 should be dismissed due to prior-term doctrine. They do not seek the dismissal for the 8th article – dealing with a legal settlement for former OAG staff – because it occurred after the 2022 election.
House lawyers have not yet responded [[link removed]] to the Paxton motion for dismissal.
In a rushed proceeding on Memorial Day weekend, Texas House leadership unveiled a secret investigation into Paxton and called a rushed vote on impeachment, with 61 Democrats and 60 Republicans in support.
A trial in the Senate is expected to begin on Sept. 5. UT Refuses to Remove Chief Historian Despite Texas Senator’s Criticism The University of Texas has refused to cut ties with the chief historian of the Texas State Historical Association after State Sen. Mayes Middleton (R-Galveston) asked the university to not extend his contract with the TSHA. Matthew DeLaCruz has the details [[link removed]].
Chief Historian Walter L. Buenger has been with the TSHA since 2017 and has asserted that the Battle of the Alamo was “tactically insignificant.” Buenger has reportedly claimed the slogan “Remember the Alamo” was racist in origin and only garnered significance in the 1890s. According to Middleton, Buenger's ideology “marginalizes Texas.”
TSHA falls under the authority of UT's College of Liberal Arts. The college's dean chose to extend [[link removed]] Buenger's contract. Oklahoma Guardsmen Head To Border The State of Oklahoma is sending 50 National Guardsmen [[link removed]] to assist Texas law enforcement on the Texas-Mexico border.
Oklahoma joins the ranks [[link removed]] of 12 other states who sent National Guard troops to secure the Texas-Mexico border. Republican governors from across the U.S. have aided Operation Lone Star – Texas’ border security initiative – by sending 1,305 guardsmen and 231 law enforcement personnel. Harris County Detention Officer Assaulted By Inmate A Harris County detention officer was ambushed and severely beaten by an inmate while working an understaffed shift on the Harris County Jail “double lockdown” floor, which houses high-risk, violent criminals. Micah Rice has the story [[link removed]].
The inmate alleged to have committed the assault is in jail on charges of capital murder. He is alleged to have assaulted three other detention officers.
Harris County Jail has continued to be non-compliant with the Texas Commission on Jail Standards inspections, creating potentially unsafe conditions for both inmates and officers.
Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez told county commissioners in March that although there were more than 150 open positions, he “could not fill them because there just aren’t enough persons willing to do this work for the pay we offer.”
Race Heats Up For Republican National Committee
Debbie Georgatos has entered the race for a Republican National Committee seat. She joins Randan Steinhauser in challenging incumbent Toni Anne Dashiell. Valerie Muñoz reports on the campaign [[link removed]].
Georgatos has worked as a labor and employment law attorney and hosts a conservative talk show called “America, We Can Talk.” Her announcement comes a month after former State Republican Executive Committeewoman Randan Marie Steinhauser announced her bid for the position.
Dashiell stirred controversy after refusing to back a resolution from the State Republican Executive Committee urging the RNC to elect a new leader.
The race will be determined in San Antonio next May during the Republican Party of Texas' biennial convention. Support Texas Scorecard?
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$9 [[link removed]] $18.36 [[link removed]] $25 [[link removed]] $50 [[link removed]] Other 🔒 [[link removed]] Number of the Day
1,093
The number of inventions patented by Thomas Edison, including one for the incandescent light bulb.
[Source: The Franklin Institute [[link removed]]]
Quote-Unquote
"If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in five years there'd be a shortage of sand."
– Milton Friedman
Y'All Answered [[link removed]]
Like other institutions of higher education in the United States since the early 1900s, those in Texas grant "tenure" to professors – effectively shielding their employment except in the most extreme situations.
Originally established to provide academic freedom in research, some claim it has become a shield for left-wing political activism; they want to end the practice. Others, however, assert providing tenure helps draw prestigious faculty to the state.
Yesterday, we asked readers if tenure should be abolished at the taxpayer-subsidized universities and colleges in Texas. The results: 93.96% of readers said they want to abolish tenure, compared to 6.04% who do not.
Here is a sample of the comments [[link removed]] I received from folks who participated in the survey.
"As a former Associate Professor (without tenure) at UTSD in Houston, I found tenure to be an outdated concept that only encourages complacency among those who achieve it." – Dr. Michael Miller
“Tenure is just a get-out-of-jail-free card for professors to treat undergraduates cruelly without repercussions. It used to be for the protection of research, but the men and women of the Academy have perverted its purpose and protections.” – Laura Nunn
“Do not abolish tenure; that would be throwing out the baby with the bath water. Instead, target the administrators and governing boards that do the hiring and monitoring of the faculty. Political discrimination in hiring and spineless pandering to student crybabies and leftist demagogues needs to stop.” – Paul Price
“There is no tenure in the real world. Corporations conduct performance reviews annually, and life conducts them daily.” – Mark Juelg
"Whereas it might feel good to remove the protection of faculty who 'preach' leftist beliefs in the classroom, the reality is that removing this protection from conservative faculty, or even those who just refuse to toe the line of leftist ideology, will result in the termination of those the left see as a hindrance since the left has already captured the administration of most state universities." – Bari Tinker
"I believe tenure is important at every level of the education timeline, BUT it should NEVER be a license for allowing this reprehensible behavior." – Patt Hoffman
“Tenure has outlived its intended purpose. It has morphed into a means to prevent the removal of poor/bad instructors of our vulnerable younger generation.” – Dennis Scharp
“The very question shows a lack of understanding as to what ‘tenure’ is. EVERY faculty member is on ‘probation’ with his/her department when hired...(s)he must ‘fit’ the department standards of understanding and the ability to convey that understanding to students, or they are simply not needed and can be fired for cause as soon as that becomes apparent. ‘Tenure’ means they are off probation and contribute. They can still be fired just like anybody else, and for all the same reasons, just not for ‘cause.’” – Jerry L. Cooke, Ph.D.
“I associate the word 'tenure' in institutions of 'higher education' with the word 'swamp' in Washington!” – John R. Makow
“Without tenure, professors at Texas universities would have no protection if they teach the truth in defiance of the woke philosophy that predominates on campuses. Conservatives are much more likely to suffer than liberals.” – Jerry Harben
“Tenure falls in the same category of seniority in civil service and the lack of term limits - all harmful to a free and productive society. Besides, Texas does not need prestigious (liberal) faculty from other states.” – Richard Steenson
"Tenure is a concept at odds with capitalism & a free market…concepts that America is proud to cultivate." – Dana Krasinski
“A two-edged sword, tenure may ensure that quality professors are retained, but it also may ensure that professors who have essentially become worthless are also kept on staff. In my humble opinion, an interesting experiment would be to abolish tenure and observe the results. All of us may be surprised and pleased at what happens.” – Charles Busbey
“Just like the ‘left’ has twisted the meaning of words to their evil purposes, they have done so with tenure.” – Kermit Heaton
“A tenured professor is the only position I know of that pays someone for not doing their job. Colleges and universities should focus on the business of preparing students for real-world employment and nothing else.” – Thomas Camardo
“Tenure has allowed radical ungodly left-wing people to become activists, not teachers, and should be done away with. Our colleges have become indoctrination centers rather than educational facilities.” – Sam Bridges
“There should be right of due process, but not guaranteed employment called tenure.” – Terry Soll
“Abolishing tenure is our only hope to reclaim our universities that have been captured by leftist dogma.” – Tom Bartel
“Tenure: just a kind of union protection. Who needs so-called 'prestigious hires' if they're going to teach woke lies?” – Tim Rhodes
"Employ teachers and professors because they are competent, i.e. on merit. Exactly why would we want to draw prestigious leftist faculty to the state?" – James Moyer
“No professional job in the private sector that I am aware of carries with it the protection of tenure. There shouldn't be a special carveout for educators, especially since they are employees of taxpayer-funded institutions.” – David Vargha
“Tenure = Untouchable. That's how you create super-ultra activists.” – Patricia Forsythe
“I voted to abolish tenure because, like labor unions of old, it has long passed its usefulness; but a serious consequence of abolishing tenure should be noted. Since the governor has continued to allow leftist regents to fill our universities with leftist administrators and those administrators fill the university classrooms with leftist professors, every conservative professor will be fired at will. Example: Dr. Johnson Varkey, St. Philip’s College in San Antonio. Tenure is not good, but leftist regents and administrators are worse. Fix the worst problem first, then abolish tenure.” – Gerald Slater
"Texas taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to pay career-long salaries to college faculty members that don’t live up to 'prestigious' expectations." –Mickey Melton
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