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Good morning,
Here is the Texas Minute for Friday, June 3, 2022.
– Brandon Waltens
Correction Upfront:
Yesterday's Texas Minute was missing a couple of links. Here they are below:
Abbott's Call for "Firearm Safety" Legislation [[link removed]]
Controversial High School Health Text Tramples Parental Rights [[link removed]]
Gov. Greg Abbott Poised to Snub Upcoming Texas GOP Convention
Gov. Greg Abbott appears positioned to skip [[link removed]] the Republican Party of Texas Convention, as he has not yet accepted an invitation to sponsor the event or address the party’s grassroots, with the event just two weeks away.
Every election year, thousands of delegates at the Texas GOP convention vote on the party’s legislative priorities, tweak the party platform, and elect party leadership. Mixed into the business are speeches from statewide elected officials to inspire and rally the party base heading into the November election.
Traditionally, the event is financially sponsored in part by those same elected officials. But according to the Republican Party of Texas, Abbott has so far declined to do either.
According to a list of sponsors obtained by Texas Scorecard, the vast majority of other statewide Republican officials have contributed financially to the convention, including:
Lt. Gov. Dan PatrickComptroller Glenn HegarLand Commissioner nominee Dawn BuckinghamAttorney General Ken PaxtonU.S. Sens. John Cornyn and Ted CruzRailroad Commissioners Wayne Christian and Christi Craddick
“I want to sincerely thank all of the public officials and companies who have sponsored our convention. Putting on the largest convention in the country is a huge financial undertaking, and it wouldn’t have been possible without their support.” –Texas GOP Chair Matt Rinaldi
Abbott’s campaign maintains that he will be holding his own “welcome reception” instead.
Belton School Officials Caught in Bond-Boosting Shenanigans
Officials in yet another Texas school district have been caught boosting passage of property tax-backed bonds worth millions by monitoring which district staff and parents had voted and urging administrators to make “a strong push” to get out the vote. Erin Anderson [[link removed]] has the story.
Belton Independent School District in Central Texas had two bonds on the May 7 ballot totaling $174 million.
Whistleblower documents shared by Corey DeAngelis of the American Federation for Children show that on May 2, Belton ISD Superintendent Matt Smith emailed “all principals” and several other administrators in the district about the bond election.
In the email, Smith notes exactly how many staff members and parents had voted at that point, urging them to ensure they had a "strong push with staff and parents for early voting and for election day on Saturday!"
“Superintendents can build their empires by unethically pressuring subordinate employees to vote in low turnout elections." –Corey DeAngelis
The Headline
Don't miss The Headline [[link removed]] today at 5:30 p.m. This week, Chris McNutt of Texas Gun Rights will join us to talk about Beto O’Rourke’s latest flip-flop on gun-grabbing, as well as Gov. Greg Abbott’s call for “firearm safety” legislation.
Plus, Tim Hardin of Texans for Fiscal Responsibility explains their brand new “Prosperity Plan” to actually cut government spending. Friday Reflection: Failing The Next Generation [[link removed]]
by Michael Quinn Sullivan
Listen to the Reflections Podcast [[link removed]]
In the 1980s, Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox parroted the long-standing leftist line that parents shouldn’t be trusted to raise their kids, let alone educate them at home. The Texas judiciary eventually laughed those arguments out of court, but that school of thought – if you will pardon the pun – drives education policy around the nation. And it does so at the peril of the republic.
If reading the Bible does nothing else, it should drive home the importance of parenthood. If we take nothing else from the Bible’s unflinching narratives about families and nations, it should be that no responsibility is more serious than educating the next generation.
Consider the story of Abimelech, one of Gideon’s seventy sons. Yes, seventy. While Gideon was a hero early in his life, his final days saw a man who poorly handled fame and fortune. He led his countrymen astray, and as we see in the life of Abimelech, he did an even worse job with his own kids. Gideon’s post-war life set a horrible example.
While Gideon famously refused to become a king, Abimelech had other designs. He killed all of his brothers, except one, and went about the task of subduing the country. Eventually, his dreams were dashed when he was struck on the head by a rock thrown by a woman. As a he lay dying, Abimelech ordered his armor-bearer to run him through, so no one would say a woman killed him.
(But all you ladies know the score.)
Gideon made a mess of his kids and his country, and his kid made the country worse. So maybe Mattox had a point—about Gideon at least.
But the bad example of Gideon simply serves to illustrate the fundamental truth of the Bible: that it is the responsibility of parents to direct their children in the path of godliness. As Proverbs 22:6 so famously puts it, "Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it."
Education is too often reduced into little more than a unionized widget factory. Children are shoved in one end with the expectation that they will be stamped anonymously into a shape approved by those running the factory, and emerge as good little serfs.
That’s not how it is supposed to be.
Here’s how the Texas Constitution describes the purpose of education: "A general diffusion of knowledge being essential to the preservation of the liberties and rights of the people, it shall be the duty of the Legislature of the State to establish and make suitable provision for the support and maintenance of an efficient system of public free schools."
In a rather short period of time, we went from a system devoted to the preservation of liberties and rights to one that pushes porn in libraries and teaches children the color of their skin is more important than the content of their character. All that while rejecting basic truth and failing miserably to teach basic reading, writing, and arithmetic.
Education has gone from "training up" a child to tearing down the moral and religious upbringing of their families.
We all know Jim Mattox was dead wrong. The state might do a decent job stamping out serfs, but it does a miserable job training the heart of a child in the ways of liberty and self-governance.
As parents, our most awesome responsibility isn’t building wealth for ourselves or providing material trinkets to our kids, but is found in securing the future of our children – and of their republic – by training them to love God and serve their neighbors.
Quote-Unquote
"The future doesn't belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave."
– Ronald Reagan
Your Federal & State Lawmakers
The districts displayed here should reflect those recently redrawn by the Legislature. Though the new lines do not take representational effect until 2023, they will appear on the 2022 ballot. Please note that your incumbent legislator and/or district numbers may have changed.
U.S. Senator [[link removed]]
John Cornyn (R)
(202) 224-2934
U.S. Senator [[link removed]]
Ted Cruz (R)
(202) 224-5922
Governor of Texas [[link removed]]
Greg Abbott (R)
(512) 463-2000
Lt. Governor [[link removed]]
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
Land Commissioner [[link removed]]
George Bush (R)
(512) 463-5001
Commissioner of Agriculture [[link removed]]
Sid Miller (R)
(512) 463-7476
Railroad Commissioners [[link removed]]
Wayne Christian (R)
Christy Craddick (R)
Jim Wright (R)
(512) 463-7158
State Board of Education [[link removed]], District
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U.S. House [[link removed]], District
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Texas Senate [[link removed]], District
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Texas House [[link removed]], District
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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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