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Economy

As small farmers feel the squeeze, will fuel prices mean food shortages?

TYLER—Victor Zillmer keeps the prices on his fresh berries, vegetables and jams as low as he can—but lately, he’s having to raise those prices more and more. It’s all due to two closely related costs: diesel fuel and fertilizer. On this warm June morning, he’s driven into Tyler from nearby Lindale with a truck full...

June 18, 2022
Criminal Justice

AG Merrick Garland must resign or enforce the law

Former federal prosecutor Brett Tolman said Friday on “Fox & Friends First” Attorney General Merrick Garland should resign if the Justice Department is not going to enforce laws to protect Supreme Court justices. “It is playing with fire,” he said. “And the attorney general right now should either resign or enforce the law impartially. And that includes enforcing...

June 17, 2022
K-12 Education

State Board of Education Member Serves Unions, Not Moms on Waiting Lists

There’s something conspicuously absent from State Board of Education member Aicha Davis’s warmed-over critique of charter schools—the voices of the thousands of Texas families who are on waiting lists to get into them. Throughout this summer, families throughout the state will desperately await phone calls and emails informing them that a seat has opened up,...

June 16, 2022
Energy & Environment

Life:Powered’s Take on the International Day of the African Child

As there seems to be a national day for almost everything, including peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, our readers may be wondering, does every national day apply to Life:Powered? Our answer is “probably, yes.” You see, energy affects everything that we do. Without it, I would have probably slept through my alarm, not have had...

June 16, 2022
Family

The solution to gun violence isn’t public policy

We are a nation in crisis. It’s not a gun crisis or even a mental health crisis. It’s a crisis of fatherlessness. Each time we see such senseless violence unfold as the devastating shooting that made the small town of Uvalde a household name, we cry anew for policy solutions. But almost every such attack...

June 16, 2022
Local Government

Harris County Courts New Debt, Higher Taxes

The Harris County Commissioners Court is considering whether to put a $1 billion bond measure on the November ballot to fund a variety of public safety, transportation, and flood control initiatives. This comes on the heels of the Court passing a $2.5 billion bond in 2018 for flood control, and an $850 million bond in...

June 15, 2022
Foreign Policy

Tamaulipas votes amid concerns of ‘narcopolitics’

Supporters waved flags and snapped selfies as they waited for the MORENA party’s final rally to start in Reynosa – the scruffy border city of maquiladoras opposite McAllen, Texas. Music blared two hours later as the rally for MORENA’s gubernatorial candidate Américo Villarreal still hadn’t started. Such tardiness can be common in Mexican political rallies as...

June 13, 2022
Economy

The Griswolds’ Inflation Vacation

School’s out for summer and everyone is ready for a vacation. And who can blame them? The world’s been through a lot, so it makes sense that travel demand is up 86%. But with skyrocketing inflation on everything from the pump to plane tickets to groceries and more, who can afford to go anywhere besides...

June 13, 2022
Economy

Joe Biden Is Misusing The Defense Production Act To Cover Up His Own Policy Failures

Here’s a crash course on the Defense Production Act (DPA) for the current commander-in-chief — who, evidently, has never familiarized himself with the national defense infrastructure of the United States. F-22s don’t achieve supercruise speeds with batteries. Marines aren’t issued baby formula in their MREs. And Nimitz-class aircraft carriers don’t rip through the waves at...

June 13, 2022
Local Government

Austin Is Giving the Gift of Taxpayer Dollars—And That’s Illegal

The city of Austin will soon start sending out $1,000 checks—with no strings attached—to approximately 85 Austin families, in the state’s first experiment in “universal basic income” (UBI). But the Texas Constitution prohibits cities from giving gifts—and that’s why this program is likely unconstitutional. The program is aimed at people who are being priced out of...

June 13, 2022
Energy & Environment

Burg’s Corner—“We’re just thankful to have a crop”

As a Georgia peach, with “Peachtree” in my childhood home address, I have been skeptical about Texas’s peaches. So, when we pulled up to Burg’s Corner, the retail site of Jimmy Duecker Orchards, a store right off Highway 290 East, I was planning on disappointment. Founded in 1948, the store was the hub of the...

June 9, 2022
Energy & Environment

The Texas Grid Should Pass Its Test this Week, But the Problems Are Not Fixed

Texas is seeing record June heat, reminiscent of the scorching summer of 2011, and record electricity demand is being forecast. After the disaster in February 2021, many Texans are wondering how long the grid will be able to handle the state’s growing electricity demand. They’re right to wonder, and while the Texas grid should pass...

June 9, 2022
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