US continues to go backward...

Former Texas House speaker says GOP megadonor Tim Dunn told him only Christians should hold leadership positions


Former Texas House Speaker Joe Straus said on Thursday that Midland oil magnate Tim Dunn, one of the state’s most powerful and influential GOP megadonors, once told him that only Christians should hold leadership positions in the lower chamber.


Straus, a Republican who is Jewish, relayed the encounter in an interview with former Texas Tribune CEO Evan Smith at the LBJ School of Public Affairs. It appeared to be the first time Straus publicly confirmed the anecdote, which was first reported by Texas Monthly in a 2018 story that cited “Straus insiders.”

The alleged remarks came at a November 2010 meeting, shortly after Dunn’s political network had targeted many of the Democrats and moderate Republicans who had helped Straus ascend to the speakership the year before. With Straus poised to seek a second term as speaker the following January, he said he asked Dunn to meet in the hopes of finding common ground on “fiscal tax issues.”

But Dunn reportedly demanded that Straus replace “a significant number” of his committee chairs with tea party-aligned lawmakers backed by Dunn’s political advocacy group, Empower Texans. After Straus rebuffed the demand, the two began to talk about social policy, at which point Dunn allegedly said he believed only Christians should hold leadership posts.


“It was a pretty unsatisfactory meeting,” Straus said Thursday. “We never met again.”

Dunn did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Straus’ confirmation of the comments comes as Dunn’s political empire continues to face scrutiny for its ties to avowed white supremacists and antisemites. In October, The Texas Tribune reported that Jonathan Stickland, the then-leader of Dunn’s most powerful political action committee, hosted prominent white supremacist and Adolf Hitler admirer Nick Fuentes at his office for nearly seven hours. The Tribune subsequently uncovered close ties between numerous other Fuentes associates and Defend Texas Liberty, the PAC that Stickland led until he was quietly replaced last year.

The reporting prompted Speaker Dade Phelan and 60 other House Republicans to call for the Texas GOP to cut ties with Defend Texas Liberty and Stickland. Dunn has not publicly commented on the matter, though Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said Dunn “told me unequivocally that it was a serious blunder” for Stickland to meet with Fuentes. Patrick added that Dunn had assured him his political action committee and its employees would have no “future contact” with Fuentes.


Late last year, the state party’s executive committee narrowly rejected a ban on associating with Holocaust deniers, neo-Nazis and antisemites — which some members said could create a slippery slope and complicate the party’s relationship with donors or candidates. After outcry, the Texas GOP’s executive committee passed a significantly watered-down version of the resolution earlier this year.

At the time of his alleged remarks to Straus, Dunn was a lesser-known political entity, using groups such as Empower Texans to push for libertarian economic policy and help fund the state’s nascent tea party movement. Groups and lawmakers backed by Dunn had been particularly critical of Straus, frequently attacking him as a weak conservative — a claim they’ve made against each of Straus’ successors, including Phelan.

Since then, Dunn’s influence on state politics has steadily grown. He and another West Texas billionaire, Farris Wilks, have poured tens of millions of dollars into far-right candidates and movements who have incrementally pulled the Texas GOP and Legislature toward their hardline, anti-LGBTQ+ and immigration stances. Dunn's allies have meanwhile pushed back against claims that he is antisemitic or adheres to Christian nationalism, which argues that America's founding was God-ordained and that its institutions and laws should thus favor their brand of ultraconservative Christianity.


Even after the Tribune’s reporting sparked a wave of backlash, Dunn emerged from last month’s primary perhaps stronger than ever, after his political network made good on its vows for vengeance against House Republicans who voted to impeach their key state ally, Attorney General Ken Paxton. Nine GOP incumbents were unseated by hardline conservative challengers and eight others, including Phelan, were forced into runoffs — mostly against primary foes backed by Dunn’s network.

The primary also paved the way for the likely passage of legislation that would allow taxpayer money to fund private and religious schools — a key policy goal for a movement that seeks to infuse more Christianity into public life. The push for school vouchers was spearheaded by Gov. Greg Abbott, who spent more than $6 million of his own campaign money to help unseat six anti-voucher Republicans and push four others into runoffs.


Straus, whose decade-long run as speaker overlapped with Abbott’s first term as governor, criticized Abbott’s spending blitz to take out fellow GOP lawmakers. He also accused Abbott of falsely portraying members as weak on border security even after they voted for the GOP’s entire slate of border legislation last year, pointing to Abbott’s ads attacking state Rep. Steve Allison, Straus’ successor in his San Antonio district.

“It’s too bad the governor took on all these members who are 99% with him,” Straus said.

Abbott has called the results “an unmistakable message from voters” in support of school vouchers. He recently said the House was two votes away from a clear pro-voucher majority and urged supporters to “redouble our efforts” during the runoffs.

Straus argued Abbott’s move to unseat anti-voucher incumbents “showed more frustration than political courage,” citing the governor’s failure to pass a voucher measure during the spring regular session and multiple special sessions.


“Persuasion failed, so he took on retribution,” Straus said. “I think it’s really unfortunate, and I think it just further diminishes the work of the Legislature and our state government.”

Abbott's campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Straus, who served in the House from 2005 to 2019, announced he would not seek reelection in the fall of 2017, after concluding a months-long feud with Patrick over a bill that would have regulated which bathrooms transgender Texans could use. Straus opposed the measure, which never made it through the House.

Since Straus’ retirement, the Legislature has passed laws barring transgender minors from accessing puberty blockers and hormone therapies and restricting which sports teams transgender student athletes can join.

Straus said the array of recent laws aimed at LGBTQ+ Texans have left the community “borderline persecuted.”


“Where's the humanity in that? And why is it such an obsession?” Straus said. “Time and time again, they try to find some niche thing they think will play well in the primary when, in my view, it's rooted in just plain indecency.”

Straus largely demurred when asked to assess Phelan’s performance as speaker, quipping that he “really didn't appreciate former members pontificating about whether I was good or bad” during his run as speaker. He said Phelan has generally been a good speaker, though when asked if Phelan made the right move to impeach Paxton, Straus said, “history has made that questionable,” citing the primary results.

Still, he argued that it remains to be seen how the House will change next session, even with its apparent shift to the right last month and calls from hardline House members to align more with Patrick and the Senate.


"In my experience, the House has never been easily tamed," Straus said after the LBJ School interview. "And I think that if I were a betting man, I would bet that the House will want to protect its independence, that it'll want to protect its institution."
 

Fox News Host Unleashes Ridiculous 'AI' Claim In Confusing Biden 'Editing' Report

Fox NewsHarris Faulkner claimed that Donald Trump’s remarks “didn’t happen the way the Dems say it did” as she falsely suggested that President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign used artificial intelligence to alter a clip of his rival.
But Trump’s anti-immigrant remarks in the Biden campaign clip go unedited from a slightly-longer video of the former president’s speech.


The host, on Thursday, claimed the Biden-Harris HQ’s X account was under fire for selectively “editing” a clip of Trump’s recent remarks on the killing of Laken Riley.
“The Democrats say, ‘Please don’t call them animals, they’re humans,’ I said, ‘No, they’re not humans, they’re not humans, they’re animals,’” said Trump as he touched on the suspect in the killing, who officials say unlawfully crossed into the United States.
“You got that, right?” asked Faulkner before playing an extended version of the clip featuring what Trump “actually said.”
“The 22-year-old nursing student in Georgia who was barbarically murdered by an illegal alien animal. The Democrats say, ‘Please don’t call them animals, they’re humans,’ I said, ’No, they’re not humans, they’re not humans, they’re animals,” he said in the longer version of the video.
“First of all, how in the world did they edit all those words together to even put something like what they had, that’s amazing,” said Faulkner, who noted that she’s “pretty good” at editing as a journalist.
“What are they using? AI?”

The Biden-Harris HQ later mocked Faulkner’s report by calling the network “desperate” for sharing an “unedited, verbatim” clip of the former president.

“No, this is not AI, @FoxNews. This is the presumptive Republican nominee for president,” the account wrote in another post.


 

There are on avg 55 earthquakes every day on Earth and ~ 20,000 EVERY YEAR, but if they happen in a Dem controlled state it means GOD IS ANGRY.......she never said this about the Oklahoma Quake last month.....odd....​



Marjorie Taylor Greene says NYC earthquake and next weeks eclipse is God telling Americans to 'repent'

  • A 4.8 magnitude earthquake struck the northeastern US on Friday morning.
  • Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a self-described Christian nationalist, said it's a sign from God.
  • She said Americans need to "repent."
Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said the New York City earthquake on Friday is a sign the nation needs to "repent."

An estimated 4.8 magnitude earthquake rattled the northeastern region Friday morning. If accurate, the quake — which had an epicenter about 30 miles west of Newark — would be the third-largest earthquake in recorded New Jersey history.

Greene, a self-proclaimed Christian nationalist, said the earthquake was God sending a message to Americans.

"God is sending America strong signs to tell us to repent," she posted to X. "Earthquakes and eclipses and many more things to come. I pray that our country listens."

Parts of the nation will experience a total solar eclipse on April 8. (And no, the eclipse has nothing to do with the earthquake).



After spending much of 2023 making efforts to be more of a mainstream Republican, it appears Greene is back to her old ways.
 

There are on avg 55 earthquakes every day on Earth and ~ 20,000 EVERY YEAR, but if they happen in a Dem controlled state it means GOD IS ANGRY.......she never said this about the Oklahoma Quake last month.....odd....​



Marjorie Taylor Greene says NYC earthquake and next weeks eclipse is God telling Americans to 'repent'

  • A 4.8 magnitude earthquake struck the northeastern US on Friday morning.
  • Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a self-described Christian nationalist, said it's a sign from God.
  • She said Americans need to "repent."
Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said the New York City earthquake on Friday is a sign the nation needs to "repent."

An estimated 4.8 magnitude earthquake rattled the northeastern region Friday morning. If accurate, the quake — which had an epicenter about 30 miles west of Newark — would be the third-largest earthquake in recorded New Jersey history.

Greene, a self-proclaimed Christian nationalist, said the earthquake was God sending a message to Americans.

"God is sending America strong signs to tell us to repent," she posted to X. "Earthquakes and eclipses and many more things to come. I pray that our country listens."

Parts of the nation will experience a total solar eclipse on April 8. (And no, the eclipse has nothing to do with the earthquake).



After spending much of 2023 making efforts to be more of a mainstream Republican, it appears Greene is back to her old ways.
For once I’ll agree w Marge being the epicenter was like 5 miles from Trump’s Bedminster Golf Club.
 
Breaking news: Tim Sheehy was cited for illegally discharging a weapon in a national park but says he made up the gunshot to cover up a bullet wound he received as a Navy SEAL in Afghanistan that he never reported to superiors.

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Dumb and Dumber




DeSantis signs legislation guarding first responders from fentanyl exposure, raising awareness​


Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation to combat fentanyl, Sanford, Fla., April 8, 2024. (Video/DeSantis' office)

Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation to combat fentanyl, Sanford, Fla., April 8, 2024. (Video/DeSantis' office)

SAMFORD, Fla. – Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation on Monday cracking down on the intentional exposure of fentanyl around first responders.
He signed an additional bill bringing awareness to overdoses primarily caused by drugs like fentanyl.
The first bill, SB 718, by Sen. Jay Collins, R-Tampa, establishes that it’s a second degree felony for any adult who, in the course of unlawfully possessing fentanyl, recklessly exposes a first responder to such substances that results in an overdose or serious bodily injury of the first responder.
 
Dumb and Dumber




DeSantis signs legislation guarding first responders from fentanyl exposure, raising awareness​


Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation to combat fentanyl, Sanford, Fla., April 8, 2024. (Video/DeSantis' office)' office)

Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation to combat fentanyl, Sanford, Fla., April 8, 2024. (Video/DeSantis' office)

SAMFORD, Fla. – Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation on Monday cracking down on the intentional exposure of fentanyl around first responders.
He signed an additional bill bringing awareness to overdoses primarily caused by drugs like fentanyl.
The first bill, SB 718, by Sen. Jay Collins, R-Tampa, establishes that it’s a second degree felony for any adult who, in the course of unlawfully possessing fentanyl, recklessly exposes a first responder to such substances that results in an overdose or serious bodily injury of the first responder.
RIGHT! A number of drug addicts overdosing on fentanyl have been brought back to life by having their lives saved by first responders using Norcan and getting their hearts beating again. Sometimes the awful incident resulted from mistaking fentanyl for meth or another drug. I don't see how the bill helps the problem or fights the illicit use of fentanyl.
 
RIGHT! A number of drug addicts overdosing on fentanyl have been brought back to life by having their lives saved by first responders using Norcan and getting their hearts beating again. Sometimes the awful incident resulted from mistaking fentanyl for meth or another drug. I don't see how the bill helps the problem or fights the illicit use of fentanyl.
It is a way to shine a spotlight on a drug issue that the GOP nominee is claiming is happening because of the current border situation....as the current GOP nominee is tying fentanyl trafficking to the Mexican border (which is not untrue since the 2020s prior to that most fentanyl in the US was smuggled in by China)...it is a political bill fully and 100% only for a political election year to pint out the reality of fentanyl at the border

The reality is regardless of the immigration situation at the border ...fentanyl has been snuggled into the US from Mexico for decades upon decades...since the 60s actually .. China has moved from smuggling it into the US themselves to exporting 90% pure fentanyl to Mexico where drug kingpins make pills out of that which contain 10% fentanyl and then smuggle that into the US....there were 241,000 POUNDS of illegal drugs confiscated by the US border patrol in 2023..of that 176,000 POUNDS at the Mexican border....of that weight 27,000 POUNDS was fentanyl up from ~5,000 POUNDS confiscated in 2020

It didn't really hit the spotlight and become political until 2006 when the number of ODs attributed to it hit 20,000 for the first time and then a study was published in 2017 showing that OD from fentanyl had quintupled from 2000 to 2016...it was also at this point they realized that fentanyl had gone mainstream in the US because prior to 2016 80% of all fentanyl ODs occurred East of the Mississippi
 
Dumb and Dumber




DeSantis signs legislation guarding first responders from fentanyl exposure, raising awareness​


Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation to combat fentanyl, Sanford, Fla., April 8, 2024. (Video/DeSantis' office)' office)

Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation to combat fentanyl, Sanford, Fla., April 8, 2024. (Video/DeSantis' office)

SAMFORD, Fla. – Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation on Monday cracking down on the intentional exposure of fentanyl around first responders.
He signed an additional bill bringing awareness to overdoses primarily caused by drugs like fentanyl.
The first bill, SB 718, by Sen. Jay Collins, R-Tampa, establishes that it’s a second degree felony for any adult who, in the course of unlawfully possessing fentanyl, recklessly exposes a first responder to such substances that results in an overdose or serious bodily injury of the first responder.
Another bill that will deter people who need help calling for it.

Any idea on the number of first responders ODing from fentanyl while on the job? This appears to be solving a problem that doesn't exist.
 
Another bill that will deter people who need help calling for it.

Any idea on the number of first responders ODing from fentanyl while on the job? This appears to be solving a problem that doesn't exist.

Cops say they're being poisoned by fentanyl. Experts say the risk is 'extremely low'


Last December, Officer Courtney Bannick was on the job for the Tavares, Fla., police department when she came into contact with a powder she believed was street fentanyl.

The footage from another officer's body camera shows Bannick appearing to lose consciousness before being lowered to the ground by other cops.

"I was light-headed a little bit," Bannick later told WKMG, a local television station. "I was choking, I couldn't breathe."

Other officers can be heard on the tape describing Bannick's medical condition as an overdose. They administered Narcan, a medication that reverses opioid poisoning.

"She's breathing," a cop says. "Stay with me!"

The Tavares police department blamed the incident on fentanyl. Local officials declined NPR's requests for an interview, as did Bannick. Speaking with WKMG, a television station in Orlando, she said she felt lucky to be alive.

"If I didn't have backup there, I wouldn't be here today," she said soon after the incident.

Reports of police suffering severe medical symptoms after touching or inhaling powdered fentanyl are common, occurring "every few weeks" around the U.S. according to experts interviewed by NPR.

But many experts say these officers aren't experiencing fentanyl or opioid overdoses.

"This has never happened," said Dr. Ryan Marino, a toxicologist and emergency room physician who studies addiction at Case Western Reserve University. "There has never been an overdose through skin contact or accidentally inhaling fentanyl."

A dangerous street drug that poses "extremely low" risk to officers​

Many police officers clearly believe fentanyl poses a significant risk. The synthetic opioid is powerful, killing tens of thousands of Americans every year.

But medical experts say it's difficult to get fentanyl into the body. That's why people addicted to the drug often smoke it or inject it using needles.


"Fentanyl does not pass through the skin efficiently or well," Marino said. "The dry powder form that's encountered in street drugs is not going to pass through the skin in any meaningful way."



Researchers also say the risk of fentanyl powder poisoning someone when it's airborne like dust is extremely low.

"There's never been a toxicologically confirmed case," said Brandon Del Pozo, a former police chief who studies addiction and drug policy at Brown University." The idea of it hanging in the air and getting breathed in is highly highly implausible - it's nearly impossible."

NPR reached out to the Tavares Florida police department and Officer Bannick asking for toxicology reports or other information confirming she was affected by fentanyl. They declined to make that medical information public.

We also contacted numerous other law enforcement and government agencies, as well as researchers around the U.S.

We couldn't find a single case of a police officer who reported being poisoned by fentanyl or overdosing after encountering the street drug that was confirmed by toxicology reports.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent a statement to NPR saying the agency does believe some officers nationwide have experienced medical symptoms after encountering fentanyl. None of those cases involved actual overdoses and none appeared life-threatening.


"The health effects...were such that responders needed medical attention and could not continue performing their duties," said Dr. L Casey Chosewood with the CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

One 2021 case study cited by CDC of a police department in Ohio found common symptoms described by police included lightheadedness, palpitations, and nausea.

Symptoms of stress and fear, not opioid overdose​

Del Pozo believes the real risk to police officers from street fentanyl isn't accidental overdose. He says the more serious health impact is being caused by anxiety and stress, driven by fear.

"Imagine you do a job every day where you just think being near a certain car or a certain person [who might have fentanyl] could kill you," Del Pozo said.

"It's a real mental health problem for officers. It's just not necessary to have that fear."



Del Pozo said many reported fentanyl overdoses among police involve symptoms that look more like panic attacks than opioid overdoses.

"So when an officer just at the thought of being exposed to fentanyl falls over, goes unconscious or panics, that's a health problem. That's something the officer needs help for."

Experts say this heightened fear grew after the first fentanyl warnings were issued by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration half a decade ago.

In June 2017, Chuck Rosenberg, head of the DEA under Presidents Obama and Trump, appeared in a video urging cops to treat fentanyl as a major risk.

"Fentanyl is deadly," Rosenberg warned. "Exposure to an amount equivalent to a few grains of sand can kill you."

A few months later, however, toxicology researchers issued a report contradicting that assessment. They too could find no cases where officers had been poisoned by fentanyl.

"The risk of clinically significant exposure to emergency responders is extremely low," they concluded.

Warnings remain, despite lack of confirmed cases​

The DEA's website still includes a warning to police about the risks of brief skin contact or inhalation of airborne powder.

dea-fentanyl-1-106afc9e23a17d172edf5cc34ae42434c968c514-s1100-c50.jpg


Researchers say the risk to police officers from street fentanyl exposure is "extremely low," but warnings like this one can be found on the Drug Enforcement Administration's website.

Drug Enforcement Administration
"Inhalation of airborne powder is MOST LIKELY to lead to harmful effects, but is less likely to occur than skin contact," the advisory cautions, "The safety and health of the community, including our law enforcement partners, is a priority of the Drug Enforcement Administration," a DEA official said in a statement to NPR. "DEA has consistently followed CDC guidelines on preventing occupational exposure to fentanyl."

The CDC website does urge caution, including the wearing of gloves, masks and other protective gear.

"We are currently updating and revising our guidance in this area to reflect new information and ongoing health hazard evaluations," a CDC spokeperson said in a statement. "We anticipate this guidance will be available within the next month."


Speaking on background, some officials suggested to NPR it is safer for warnings to remain in place so police err on the side of caution.

But Marino, the toxicologist and emergency room physician at Case Western Reserve University, believes exaggerated fears of fentanyl make it harder for police to do their jobs protecting the public.

"I have seen this play out in reality where someone who is truly experiencing an overdose, overdosed on fentanyl, will not be resuscitated appropriately or in a timely manner because of this fear that getting close to them or touching them could cause some kind of second hand overdose."

With fentanyl deaths still at record levels, local police are often the first responders on the scene. Experts say how they're trained, how they view the dangers of fentanyl and how they do their jobs could mean life or death for many people with addiction.
 
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things we say in America...the world is flat; drag queens frequently visit schools, and some are teachers; most High Schools teach CRT; trans are just confused youth who think they are wrong sex because of teachings in school, and others just want to frequent opposite sex bathrooms; ban books that mention sex or gay or sex or just plains makes people uncomfortable; fentanyl is fatal through contact of skin; the eclipse is the end of the world (well, it should have been), ruined your phone taking a picture though (well, maybe not); trump is innocent (yes, of everything!); biden is senile; ex-presidents sell bibles and shoes as a side-gig; January 6 was not what it appears; Christianity is the only religion; oh yeah, bud light still sucks!!
 
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