Bloggers posted in post-postmodern fashion this week, turning their attention to the intersection of reality and that series of tubes called the Internet. They're also investigating legal problems facing judges and attorneys, commenting on presidential campaigning in Texas and showing off pictures of stuff. Capping it off is some miscellany.
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You've Got Mail
Check out e-mails from Gov. Rick Perry's office at this link via KVUE's Political Junkie, who's been chronicling the saga since the beginning. The latest installment of "The Purge," found here, has our ears burning (and so does this Burnt Orange Report post). Others snooping through the messages include Texas Observer Blog and Fort Worth Star Telegram's blog PoliTex. And Political Junkie profiles another "freedom-fightin' computer geek..."
In the Pink Texas pimps her new column and a new blog about national politics at TexasMonthly.com. Meanwhile the Texas Monthly online and print editions laud Off the Kuff's Charles Kuffner as one of the "35 People Who Will Shape Our Future." (The list also includes Texas Youth Commission Ombudsman Will Harrell, via Grits for Breakfast, as well as, inexplicably, rapper Chamillionaire, for some reason...)
Break a rule, that's a paddlin'. Burnt Orange lays down the laws for the privilege of posting at the site here, here, here, here, here and here. And Austinist puts out a casting call.
Over at Annex, State Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, hops on the virtual bandwagon with this guest blog blasting state leaders and high court judges. And one of the Professors-R-Squared put his mouth where his fingertips are by offering expert testimony at the House Elections Committee meeting on photo voter ID and fraud. Annex wonders if this is a first for bloggerkind.
The downlow on those who read Grits, from Grits. And Right of Texas has brand new digs. Meanwhile, Mike Falick's Blog features a trio of online time burglars dealing with printers, comic strips and historical images. In other news, Doctors will be spreading viruses this year that will stuff e-mail inboxes with endorsements of five incumbent state legislators, says Trail Blazers, the Dallas Morning News's blog.
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Bar Tending
There's an e-mail floating around in Harris County urging "defense attorneys to boycott pleading out any cases on Thursday, January 31st to protest the sexist and racist administration of [District Attorney] Chuck Rosenthal," according to the writer of Life at the Harris County Criminal Justice Center, who suggests that clients might want to be consulted first.
Here's a pithy, informative post from Defending People: The Art and Science of Criminal Defense Trial Lawyering: "Apparently the difference in Chuck Rosenthal's pension if he leaves now and if he leaves after completing his second term is something on the order of $90,000. A year." Also from Defending People, some more reasons why Rosenthal ain't going nowhere.
"[A] new kind of three shell game is going on" in the non-indictment of Supreme Court Justice David Medina and wife Francisca, says Half-Empty. Meanwhile, musings argues that Medina should be brought up before the Texas Ethics Commission for breaking campaign finance rules.
Sex offenders getting screwed (and someone ought to put a stop to it), reports The Defense Perspective, who also offers some scenarios in which the best move is to make your own client take a lie detector test. And Tex Parte Blog congratulates the winners of the State Bar of Texas's YouTube contest.
Capitol Annex has a look-see at Supreme Court candidate Linda Yañez's finance reports, noting that she spends about $2,200 per year "dining" at restaurants, hundreds for unspecified "travel expenses" and once dished out $162.36 at J.C. Penney's for "campaign materials."
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A Chill in Hell
So you're saying there's a chance? Posts like these on the Texas presidential primary from Half-Empty and Houtopia remind us of a certain scene from Dumb and Dumber.
A dozen-or-so Houston Democrats traveled to South Carolina to help out presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, says Trail Blazers. It didn't work.
Mike Huckabee's a'comin' to Austin, says Postcards, while Perry's a'gone to Florida for Rudy Giuliani, says PoliTex. And Green Party candidate Cynthia McKinney will be a'dinin' in Fort Worth in February, reports PoliTex.
Dan Grant, who's facing Texas Justice's Larry Joe Doherty in CD-10's Democratic primary, did indeed advise 2004 Presidential nominee John Kerry on foreign policy matters, confirms the Statesman's blog Postcards from the Lege, which also has something on the contest in HD-148.
WWJPD stands for "What Will Jerry Patterson Do?" now that the Land Commissioner's presidential endorsee Fred Thompson has officially dropped his GOP presidential bid, reports Trail Blazers. (More from Postcards here.)
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Imaging All the People
A photograph of a chupacabra taken by lobbyist Robert Floyd (*insert blood-sucking joke here*) made it into the pages of the Austin American-Statesman, says Capitol Crowd, who also profiles Alyssa Eacono, chief of staff for state Rep. Will Hartnett, R-Dallas.
Do public surveillance cameras reduce crime? Color Grits skeptical. Meanwhile, Burnt Orange has video of Noriega's "I've Had Enough Speech," while Observer has an item on the House Elections meeting on photo voter ID. And here's the trailer for an upcoming documentary on the T. Don Hutto Immigration Detention Facility, courtesy of Grits.
Meanwhile, Cd22watcher continues their coverage of the congressional race here, here, here, here and here. Two highlights are that GOP candidate Pete Olson is the outer of the fake photo of Dean Hrbacek ("Shame on Pete. This coming from a candidate that has been using a 9-year-old photo of himself...") and that Roll Call thinks Shelley Sekula-Gibbs will win the GOP primary. (That makes one.)
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Dross and Datum Spree
Looks like House District 17 candidate Latreese Cooke, a Democrat, "has a long criminal record," says Burnt Orange. More on HD-17 here. And Kuff interviews HD-27 candidate Ron Reynolds.
The Young Conservatives of Texas are calling out HD-67 Republican John Cole for possible push polling, to Annex's surprise. Meanwhile, LaRhonda Torry's back on the Democratic primary ballot in HD-147. She's facing incumbent Garnet Coleman, says Kuff.
Tax cuts all around (for property owners), House Speaker Tom Craddick proposes to the Texas Association of Businesses, according to Texas Politics, the Houston Chronicle's blog. Any enemy of Craddick is a friend of many El Paso lawmakers, reports the El Paso Times's blog Vaqueros & Wonkeros. Maybe that's because of Craddick's opposition to the Texas Tech medical school in El Paso, ponders BurkaBlog.
The Texas Youth Commission is looking for a permanent executive director, reports Grits, who also offers a county-by-county analysis of racial disparities in incarceration rates of drug offenders.
The AFL-CIO isn't backing a soul in the race for Railroad Commissioner, says Texas Politics. Meanwhile, incumbent U.S. Senator John Cornyn is destroying Democrats in terms of fundraising, reports Trail Blazers, cautioning that it's a little early for Cornyn to be counting chickens, though.
San Antonio preacher John Hagee tells Florida pastors to instruct parishioners to stand up and be counted during church, in order to embarrass them into voting, says Trail Blazers. And a faith-based private prison is facing opposition in Fannin County, says Texas Prison Bid'ness.
Yes, Texas, there are nearly 580,000 gay people in the Lone Star State, including 50,000 gay couples, one-fifth of whom are raising children, say UCLA researchers, via The Texas Cloverleaf.
This edition of Out There was compiled and written by Patrick Brendel, who hails from Victoria and finds Austin's climate pleasantly arid. We cherry-pick the state's political blogs each week, looking for news, info, gossip, and new jokes. The opinions here belong (mostly) to the bloggers, and we're including their links so you can hunt them down if you wish. Our blogroll — the list of Texas blogs we watch — is on our links page, and if you know of a Texas political blog that ought to be on it, just shoot us a note. Please send comments, suggestions, gripes or retorts to Texas Weekly editor Ross Ramsey.