| I work for a trade association and many of our businesses are trying to get out of TX. Their politics are getting in the way of good business. |
| We've been able to hire a few STEM professionals from Texas in the past few years, and they have voluntarily moved to the DC metro. |
lol ok sure because TX is at the forefront of avant garde technology. They even hate EVs. |
The weather is a deterrent not an attraction in Texas. -- Expat who left because of the painful heat |
Yes. And even the mayors of liberal cities elsewhere are freaked out by immigration now that it's impacting them to a fraction of the degree that it has affected Texas for decades. I'm pro-immigration. Let's let in everybody who doesn't have a criminal record and help them to settle in cities that are begging for population replenishment. But do enforce the laws at the border already. In some Texas communities, it's like a sinking boat with more and more people climbing aboard. A strain on every kind of public and social service that my liberal friends in Montgomery County would be screaming about -- while also sanctimoniously disparaging Texas. |
where are those? |
Yes, very. Texas’s most recent gerrymander managed to dilute all of the gains in voters who were overwhelmingly moving to the urban and suburban areas. |
Paxton will just change the vote. He even admitted it last time. Texas is never going blue not be cause the people who vote will vote Red it is because Texas is a dictatorship. Abbott.... Electric grid in Texas is horrific good luck MAGA Morons. |
+1 see also electrical grid capacity. |
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People are moving there voluntarily. Bicker about it all you want but they are choosing with their feet.
Not my choice, personally, but most people who live in Texas appear to really love Texas. |
That might be effective in humid east Texas, but you’ve clearly never experienced a west Texas sandstorm. There’s just not much moisture in the air. |
Here’s what people need to understand about Texans and electric vehicles, Texas is big. It’s a different scale altogether. Not only are the distances vast, but a lot of it is empty. For example, Google says the distance between Houston and El Paso is 746.5 miles. By comparison, it says the distance between DC and NYC is 224.8 miles. You could drive round trip DC to NYC, go back to New York City a second time, and still have 70 miles left over. A lot of rural communities are pretty small. To go to the hospital, see a specialist, or do serious shopping, it might take hours. If you want people in Texas to get behind EVs, you need to make the charge last a lot longer, with a much faster recharge. I would also point out that while electric cars may be better for air pollution and conservation of fossil fuels, the lithium batteries they apparently require a lot of water to refine the lithium. While I’m not aware of lithium mining in Texas, specifically, it is apparently in other locations facing water shortages. Here’s a report from PBS about the concerns that lithium mining will increase water shortages: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=HA4kAVnwnEc |
Both parties gerrymander. The AP seems to think the extent of gerrymandering each does is roughly equivalent. https://apnews.com/article/redistricting-gerrymandering-2022-elections-e576c35ee37ef7ae14337953a42541c2 |
So, does that mean you got your kid a hand gun for their first birthday and a semi automatic for their 2nd? Normally, we don't do safety training down here until the kid has amassed a small arsenal. |
.... feet AND WALLETS.... There is a lot of money in TX - oil and business |