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K-12 Education

In The Name Of Anti-Racism, San Diego Schools Will Teach Black And Hispanic Kids Less

During his successful run for the presidency in 2000, George W. Bush warned against “the soft bigotry of low expectations.” Then-candidate Bush delivered his remarks at the 91st annual meeting of the NAACP on July 10, 2000. Bush  added, “A great movement of education reform has begun in this country built on clear principles: to raise the...

November 25, 2020
Local Government

The Media Misread the Moment. Texas Lawmakers Must Not.

The media got it wrong. Again. For months, we were told that Texas was turning blue. One outlet confidently assured us that: “the state is just as competitive as more traditional battleground states (and more competitive than some!)” Another commentator declared: “For the first time in 18 years, Democrats are seriously challenging Republicans’ political monopoly...

November 25, 2020
Criminal Justice

Pennsylvania leads way in offering prison video visits

Connecting with people via video has become routine for many personal and professional settings during the COVID-19 pandemic. Social distancing restrictions have increased the use of new video tools to maintain connections and streamline operations during uncertain times. Even entities reluctant to adopt modern technologies had to adapt to unexpected circumstances. Prisons serve as a...

November 24, 2020
Economy

States with more economic freedom lost fewer jobs during the pandemic

The Fraser Institute is out with its new yearly assessment of Economic Freedom in North America. Fraser, based in British Columbia, Canada, ranks both nations and states internationally and in North America for their economic freedom, measuring factors such as tax rates, government spending, and labor laws. Fraser found that the top five states for economic freedom...

November 23, 2020
Health Care

Direct primary care for the vulnerable

Direct Primary Care (DPC) is not really a new model for health care in Texas. Long before employer-based insurance (with the safety nets for the elderly and disabled, Medicare and Medicaid) became the standard, patients paid doctors for their care. There were no middlemen—only the patient and the physician, and they made the decisions. DPC...

November 23, 2020
Energy & Environment

Be Careful When Placing Labels on Energy

An article appeared in the Dallas Morning News on Nov. 3—and was reprinted on the front page of the Nov. 8 Austin-American Statesman business section—with the title “Can clean energy plug hole in Texas oil patch?”. This article made us stop and think about some of terminology mistakes we make when we talk about energy....

November 23, 2020
Other

Post Election Pondering

The question I’m asked repeatedly now is what it all means. Vice President Joe Biden is projected to be the next president of the United States. President Donald Trump has not yet conceded; indeed, legal challenges are just getting underway in several states. We don’t know how those will play out. If I were to offer a simple observation,...

November 17, 2020
Economy

COVID-19 Must Not Break the Successful Texas Model

Shutdowns and stay-at-home orders across Texas due to COVID-19 have spiked unemployment,  slowed tax receipts, and forced the permanent closure of  8,900 Texas businesses since March. This, from one of the most dynamic and fast-growing economies in the world. A return to previous success is possible, and necessary, by safely reopening Texas and promptly strengthening...

November 17, 2020
Election Integrity

Hard lessons learned in 2020 election

To say we are confused in November 2020 is an understatement. But we have it within our power to ensure all votes are counted, even if recounts are needed. As of this writing, President Donald Trump appears to have lost his bid for re-election. In the background of that, fact checkers in the media have...

November 16, 2020
Energy & Environment

New oil and gas regulations are wrong for Colorado

The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission recently announced it plans to significantly increase, in some cases quadruple, setback rules limiting where oil and gas can be harvested. Though the regulatory agency claims to be championing public health and safety, its proposed setbacks are completely arbitrary and would all but kill the state’s energy industry...

November 16, 2020
Local Government

The Need for Fiscal Prudence

Despite the hardships many have faced—and continue to face—because of the pandemic, local entities across the state still asked voters on Election Day to approve a bundle of bond propositions totaling approximately $12.8 billion. But just as many individuals and families were forced to trim their budgets, voters told Northwest ISD to do the same....

November 16, 2020
Family

As COVID-19 Takes its Toll, Remember Kids in Foster Care

The COVID-19 pandemic has hit Hispanics particularly hard. The reasons for this range from language barriers to higher rates of comorbidities. Combine this with another disturbing trend—4,200 children in New York alone have lost a parent to COVID-19, putting a quarter of them at risk of going into foster care—and a crisis is becoming clear....

November 16, 2020
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