|
Texas really is a Province. I believe the time has come for Texas to finally admit that they are neither the largest state in the Union nor the most sophisticated in the ways of the world. If the truth be known, Texans would not be any more willing to sell their religion for a better economy than George Bush is, considering that he is spending it all to hell. If some despot came to America and offered a better economy and security for their children as long as they swore fealty to him and allowed their religion to be a subset of his, would they agree? Not blood likely. I suspect that even Molly Ivey would come out in defense of her state and join hands with George Bush if so attacked. George may be a Despot who stole the Presidency with the Republican high rollers but he is at least her Despot and not some foreign one. Why would they consider that a 3,000 year old culture would not have ties deep enough to join together against a young, provincial and basically illiterate arrogant son of the former head of the Central Intelligence Agency, not the most beloved institution in the Middle East?
It was not always that way. Once, Texas still had the sophistication of the Hispanics of Mexico North to help the Anglo farmers. They were underneath but they still shaped the discussion. In fact it was Texas who absorbed all of the liberal immigrants from the Oklahoma ethnic and political cleansing in 1917 in the Green Corn Rebellion. Another dirty little secret along with the recent Greenwood race riots in Tulsa that has come to the surface. But today, after oil, Texas is different. Maybe from all of the Immigrant Arrogants from the other states in the Union who liked the Texas Braggadocio and have absorbed it like Seiji Ozawa absorbed Western Music. More broad than deep. But still effective. Certainly not deep enough to understand the failures of the Imperialists whose steps they now follow though they deny it. |
- Re: [Futurework] Is Texas the problem? Ray Evans Harrell
- Re: [Futurework] Is Texas the problem? Keith Hudson
- RE: [Futurework] Is Texas the problem? Karen Watters Cole
- RE: [Futurework] Is Texas the problem? Keith Hudson
- RE: [Futurework] Is Texas the problem? Harry Pollard
- Re: [Futurework] Is Texas the problem? Ray Evans Harrell
