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Good morning.
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Here's a preview of today's show .Below, Texas Standard producer and reporter Sean Saldana writes about his recent feature on Cesar Chávez's legacy, and an important interview that informed it.
When I interviewed Rebecca Flores, a lifelong farm worker organizer who knew Cesar Chávez personally, she said that she once ran into a San Antonio pastor who "called him a prophet" – a characterization she agreed with.
It's an incredibly strong comparison, but when you talk to people who were involved in the farmworkers’ movement in the ‘60s and ‘70s, it absolutely describes how they feel about Chávez: He was a savior.
Before Chávez began his work, farmworkers were among the most ignored people in America. By the time he died, farm work had become culturally relevant in a way that nobody could've fathomed.
Chávez has become so prolific – and his name so regularly invoked in American progressive politics – that his life is usually simplified to a few beats: He was a union leader, he fought for farm workers, and he was Mexican American.
All of those things are correct, but they're not exactly unique. After all, the civil rights era is full of heroic characters who scored massive wins against long odds.
The long version of Chávez’s life – the one that dives into his motivations, his complicated views on immigration and his impact on farm work as an industry – is far more complicated.
You can
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read and listen to the story here , explore a timeline of Chávez’s life, and listen to an extended interview I did with Chávez biographer Miriam Pawel. She wrote “The Crusades of Cesar Chavez,” a methodical look at the life of America's most influential labor leader. We're also
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continuing the conversation on Twitter Spaces today at 1 p.m. CT – and I hope you can make it.
Reach out through
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- Sean Saldana
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@SeanASaldana
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The complicated legacy of Cesar Chávez
Though he died in 1993, Chávez is still perhaps the most famous labor organizer in American history, and a Latino icon of the civil rights era. But as a Mexican American with radical views on immigration,
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Chávez was a man of many contradictions.
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‘It was a lot of fun because we had each other’: Margo Price writes about lean times on the way up in new memoir
In “Maybe We’ll Make It,” Price tells the story of growing up in rural Illinois to becoming a star in Nashville.
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Facebook's bet on the metaverse: ‘It’s not clear when it’s going to pay off’
The company has sunk billions of dollars into its virtual reality technology – but has yet to see mass-adoption by the general public.
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‘Yonderings’ may be the best travel guide for Big Bend
"Yonderings" contains straightforward, Marine-boot-camp instructions about hiking the trails of Big Bend – and poetic prose about the magic you’ll encounter along the way.
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Everybody wants the ‘Latino vote’ in Texas. But what do Latino voters want?
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(Texas Newsroom)
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Austin is looking for a place to store massive amounts of water to pull from during droughts
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(KUT)
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Space Center Houston announces expansion with new moon, Mars facilities
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(Houston Public Media)
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San Antonio organizers launch bid to amend city charter, decriminalize abortion and ban chokeholds
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(Texas Public Radio)
The Talk of Texas is running down the state’s entire 254 counties – Anderson to Zavala – with points of interest pulled from the Texas Standard archives.
Is there a can't-miss attraction in your area?
mailto:
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Drop us a line and let us know.
Caldwell County
Founded: 1848
County seat: Lockhart
Population: 45,883
Come hungry: While the urban barbecue explosion’s given it a run for the money, Lockhart’s still seen by many as
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the BBQ capital of Texas , due to historic smokehouses like Black’s Barbecue, Smitty’s and Kreuz Market (which, yes,
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now serves sauce ).
Salad course: Sure, smoked meat’s synonymous with Lockhart. But as our producer Michael Marks noted this spring, a new facility there is on the cutting edge of the vegetable world. The 500,000-square-foot
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Iron Ox greenhouse in Lockhart relies on robotics and AI to grow and package produce, rain or shine.
One last thing:We recently profiled scenic Burleson County (not to be confused with Burleson, Texas,) which has the town Caldwell as its county seat – which is separate from Caldwell County. Got it?
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- Chris Smalls
We recently spoke with Smalls, who led the first successful union organization of an Amazon warehouse.
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Read and listen to our interview .
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Thank You to our Sponsors
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