Groups take message to college campuses: No more lies into laws
The way we pass laws in this state is failing young Texans.
Elected officials use lies to pass bad laws. Turning lies into laws hurts our state and risks alienating a rising generation of Texans when we should be doing everything possible to encourage their participation in the political process.
That politicians ignore or distort facts for the sake of their agenda is nothing new — in Texas or across the country. But it’s something that seemed to go into overdrive this year — with devastating effects. Here are a few examples:
This year, Texas lawmakers passed a law allowing child-welfare providers that contract with the state to discriminate against LGBT families in foster care and adoption placements. The law’s supporters argued that the legislation would protect “religious freedom.” The reality is protections for that freedom already existed, carefully balancing the convictions of religiously affiliated child welfare service providers with the needs and beliefs of children they serve. But the truth didn’t matter, and the governor signed the bill into law anyway.
The issue of abortion should be guided by established science, but instead we again saw how politics and misinformation dominate. This year, lawmakers passed another unnecessary law that bans a safe, medically proven method of abortion. They also enacted a new requirement on fetal remains. Medical experts and others pointed to the deeply flawed arguments behind these measures, but legislators passed them anyway. The truth was legislative leaders were simply looking for excuses to put more obstacles in the way of women seeking safe, legal abortion care.
The Legislature also passed a “show your papers”-style law that targets immigrants and people of color. Law enforcement officials decried the law as making their communities less safe — the opposite of what its supporters assured us was needed to protect public safety.
And let’s not forget about a bill that didn’t become law but triggered a debate dominated by fake facts. The so-called “bathroom bill” targeted transgender Texans for discrimination and was based on numerous lies; the most pernicious of them was the outrageous suggestion that transgender people are an inherent danger to women and children. The bill’s supporters can’t cite incidents in which a transgender person entered a public restroom to harm someone else. The bill was defeated, but there’s a real possibility it — and the lies — will return next legislative session.
It’s time to end this shameless tactic at the Texas Capitol. That’s why our organizations, Texas Rising and Deeds Not Words, are visiting the state’s universities this month for a series of campus forums. Our message is simple: No more lies into laws. We’re taking this message to our universities as the country nears a major milestone. It is estimated that in 2018, people ages 18-34 will surpass baby boomers to become the country’s largest voting-eligible generation.
This generation of Texans has already been directly affected by another bad law based on misinformation: a voter ID measure from 2011 that bars them from using student identification to vote. Experts pointed out that the kind of voter fraud targeted by this law is virtually nonexistent. But lawmakers passed it anyway because its real purpose was to suppress voting among targeted populations, including young people.
The future of this state is increasingly in this generation’s hands, and some of these Texans will one day represent us at the Capitol. So, it is vital to create an environment that encourages as many members of this diverse group to get involved in the political process — on everything from voting to running for office.
Our fear, however, is that too many members of this generation will see what happened at the Legislature and choose to take a pass. And who can blame them when they see politicians who can’t deal in basic facts?
We hope our forums on college campuses will start a conversation about how this rising generation can lead and return our politics to a place where reality rules the day.
Untruths will only continue to produce bad policy. Our state can’t continue to run on lies.
Re: Nov. 14 article, “AISD moves to rename remaining schools with Confederate ties by August.”
Here we go again with political correctness in the schools.
The board president said: “We don’t need schools named for Confederate soldiers and sympathizers.”
Probably most of us associate the names of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson as Confederates, but the names of Reagan, Lanier, Allan and Fulmore?
And why stop here? Using the board’s logic, we ought to rename our city. Austin must have been a slavery sympathizer, because the colonists he recruited had slaves.
And while we’re at it, how about Texas?
Texas was part of the Confederacy and fought a revolution to help establish slavery
We are in the beginning stages of a great transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources. As fossil fuels become more difficult and expensive to extract, renewables have become cheaper.
Fossil-fuel energy production is the paradigm of the past, while renewables are the paradigm of the future.
China and India are forging ahead at warp speed to develop and implement renewable technology. If the U.S. does not get on board with renewable technology, we will quickly be eclipsed as the leader in energy technology by China and India.
Our leaders in the U.S. must come to grips with the certainty that we must make this transition.
We can accomplish this with a minimum of economic disruption, in a nonpartisan, market-oriented approach using the carbon fee and dividend method for gradually reducing our use of fossil fuels and smoothing the way to a renewables economy.