From Michael Quinn Sullivan <[email protected]>
Subject Texas Minute: 10/29/2021
Date October 29, 2021 11:02 AM
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Good morning –

How hard would you fight to protect your family and neighborhood from an invading force? Would you hold them off for a year even if you knew it was a lost cause? I think you would, so I end the week reflecting on why.

Here is today's Texas Minute.

– Michael Quinn Sullivan

Friday, October 29, 2021

Update/change your subscription [[link removed]].

But first… Brandon Waltens was desperate for someone to be on the Headline [[link removed]] with him this morning, so he asked me to pop on. We’ll cover a lot of ground, including the constitutional amendments election going on. Join us live at 11 a.m. [[link removed]], or catch the podcast [[link removed]] and video archive [[link removed]] later today.

Where Was Abbott? Topics at the first GOP gubernatorial debate included border security, securing the state’s electrical grid, and vaccine mandates… but Gov. Greg Abbott didn’t participate. As Brandon Waltens reports [[link removed]], the three conservatives challenging Abbott for the Republican Party nomination made sure the incumbent’s record was front and center.

Taking part in the gubernatorial forum—hosted jointly by conservative organizations in Wise, Parker, Grayson, and Cooke Counties—were former State Sen. Don Huffines, former Texas GOP Chair Allen West, and media personality Chad Prather.

A full video [[link removed]] of the debate can be found on YouTube [[link removed]]. Here Come The Lawsuits Democrats have deployed an army of attorneys to attack Texas’ new election security law. Erin Anderson reports [[link removed]] that dozens of liberal lawyers have lined up to challenge Texas Republicans’ signature election integrity bill in court.

Republicans have described the new law, Senate Bill 1 [[link removed]], as making it “easy to vote, but hard to cheat.”

Five federal lawsuits filed in September have now been consolidated into a single case that involves more than two dozen plaintiffs represented by at least 60 lawyers. A few individual voters are plaintiffs in the case, but most are Democrat-allied organizations like LULAC Texas, the League of Women Voters, the Texas Organizing Project, the statewide teachers’ union Texas AFT, FIEL Houston, and the Workers Defense Action Fund. Federal Judge Sides With Southwest Airlines On Vax Mandate A federal judge in the Northern District of Texas is allowing Southwest Airlines to mandate the jab for its employees, despite the objections of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association. Griffin White explains [[link removed]] the decision came after the airline changed course and said they wouldn’t fire employees who refused to take one of the COVID vaccine regimens.

“Requiring Southwest employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19 will likewise improve the safety of air transportation, the efficiency of Southwest’s operations, and further the goal of safe and reasonable working conditions for pilots. In addition, because Southwest is a federal contractor, the Vaccine Policy is required by law,” wrote Judge Barbara Lynn, who was appointed to the federal bench by President Bill Clinton. College Buys A Piano… For Distance Learning Odessa College used federal COVID relief money to buy a $200,000 piano, writes Robert Pratt in a new commentary [[link removed]]. He explains this is one more example of just how “overfunded” many educational institutions have become.

“Using taxpayer money for so-called ‘public’ art is often justified as a public good, and that is an argument for another time. Odessa College, a community college, using COVID ‘emergency relief’ money to buy a Steinway player piano is so wrong that it lends itself to that analogy of it being unsporting to shoot fish in a barrel.” – Robert Pratt [[link removed]] Who Are Texas’ Real Leaders? Hint: not the politicians!

Join engaged citizens from around the state for the Conservative Leader Awards dinner [[link removed]] on Dec. 4 in Irving. There, you will meet the real leaders in Texas: citizen-activists who fight tirelessly for liberty. This annual event recognizes the special achievements of difference-making activists by presenting them with engraved cavalry swords.

The evening will be highlighted by naming the recipient of the 2021 Torch of Freedom. This special award is given to the individual who has made significant personal sacrifices in the effort to light brushfires of liberty.

Individual tickets and sponsorships are available! [[link removed]] Friday Reflection: Real People, Holding Firm [[link removed]]

Read in Browser [[link removed]]

🎧 Listen to the Reflections Podcast [[link removed]] 🎧

by Michael Quinn Sullivan

Almost by definition, the stories of great battles are the stories of soldiers specifically trained to carry out the art and science of war. With the balm of time and physical distance, the horror of a battle is sanitized by telling ourselves that – even when the soldiers were conscripted – the participants knew what they were doing.

Sometimes that’s true, maybe even often. But it isn’t always. Take, for example, the story of the ancient Israeli city of Gamla. This town was the site of a ferocious siege involving thousands of people lasting more than a year.

Gamla had long been apathetically loyal to Rome – which is to say, they simply stayed out of everyone’s way. But as the Great Revolt led by independence-minded Jews gained steam in the 60s A.D., and the Roman military machine began committing horrendous atrocities to clamp it down, Gamla’s apathy turned into a resolve for independence.

Unlike the more famous Masada in southern Israel near the Dead Sea, Gamla was simply a town. Where Masada was purpose-built as a military fortress, Gamla was a collection of homes, shops, and a synagogue built on a steep hill. Even today the prominent outcropping resembles a camel’s hump – hence the name Gamla, which is the Aramaic word for that beast of burden.

Gamla was out of the way, overlooking from a distance the Sea of Galilee – but as its loyalties shifted, it became an object of Roman ire. Some 60,000 Roman soldiers laid siege to the town, which typically had a population of less than 3,000 – though by some reports the “population” might have doubled due to refugees just before the Romans arrived.

Yes, Gamla eventually fell. But, again unlike Masada where the entrenched defenders chose suicide over death or capture, the people of Gamla fought to the bitter end. This town – again, not a fortress, not a military outpost – held off the greatest military force the world had ever seen for more than a year. These simple people made a mockery of the Romans.

The people of Gamla fought with the righteous fervor of people who have no choice but to fight. As the Roman historian Josephus described it, “The effect on the Romans was devastating.”

The reason why is the most obvious: they simply refused to give up. The people of Gamla were not occupying an antiseptic position chosen by military tacticians, they were defending their homes. These real people fought not because they were conscripted, or even for the sake of esoteric principles in an ill-defined cause, but because they and their very real families were threatened.

A town that should have been casually wiped from the face of the earth instead drained the Romans of time and energy. People who should have withered at the sight of the advancing legions instead held firm.

With defeat inevitable, the people of Gamla simply decided to go down fighting. They remained faithful to their families, their neighbors, and, yes, even to the cause to which they were reluctant combatants.

We’re not always going to find success in our fights, but we, like the people of Gamla, should strive always to be faithful.

Quote-Unquote

“The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.”

– G. K. Chesterton​​

Your Federal & State Lawmakers

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U.S. Senator [[link removed]]

John Cornyn - R

(202) 224-2934

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(202) 224-5922

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Greg Abbott - R

(512) 463-2000

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Dan Patrick - R

(512) 463-0001

Attorney General [[link removed]]

Ken Paxton – R

(512) 463-2100

Comptroller [[link removed]]

Glenn Hegar – R

(512) 463-4600

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George Bush – R

(512) 463-5001

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Sid Miller – R

(512) 463-7476

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Wayne Christian – R

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Jim Wright – R

(512) 463-7158

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Speaker of the Texas House

Dade Phelan (R)

(512) 463-1000

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Produced by Michael Quinn Sullivan and Brandon Waltens, the Texas Minute is a quick look at the news and info of the day we find interesting, and hope you do as well. It is delivered weekday mornings (though we'll take the occasional break for holidays and whatnot).

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