Every Friday morning, I join the Cardle & Woolley Show on Talk 1370 Radio in Austin to announce the week’s Winners & Losers. While the congressional map wars continue and would-be candidates wait for the smoke to clear, here’s who made the list:
WINNER: Gov. Greg Abbott Goes After Muslim Extremists in Texas
After recent events in Michigan—and England, Gov. Greg Abbott continues to ramp up his efforts to ensure that Sharia Law gains no foothold in the Lone Star State. This week, the governor declared the Council on American-Islamic Relations and the Muslim Brotherhood foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organizations, prohibiting them from buying land. Yesterday, Abbott ordered the DPS to investigate both groups. The Muslim Brotherhood has spawned many organizations, including Hamas, and CAIR often serves as an apologist voice for Muslim violence, including following the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel. CAIR insists it is a civil rights organization, and it is suing Abbott for going after them, but comments by its leadership (including referring to Zionist groups as “enemies”) disproves that characterization.
Here at TPPF, we noticed that CAIR recently testified against the new comprehensive social studies curriculum. It prefers the vague and unstructured standards that are currently in place that have allowed misinformation and ideology to be leaked into what K-12 students study. Texans can be thankful that Abbott is making it clear we’re having none of that in Texas.
WINNER: TrumpRX & Jelly Roll
A great winner leading up to Thanksgiving is the news this week that country music star Jelly Roll has lost 200 pounds. The formerly very fat guy—he once weighed over 500 pounds – is another good sign that health is in and the whole “body positivity” propaganda movement, which declared that obesity is just a lifestyle choice, is over.
Much of this is due to the GLP-1 medications including Ozempic and Wegovy, which were designed to treat diabetes, but turned out to be the most effective weight loss drug in history so far.
The only problem is that the drugs are very expensive and so far, lots of the people showing big weight loss are movie stars and celebrities who can afford a medication that can cost over a thousand dollars a month—and is not usually covered by insurance.
President Trump announced last week that he intends to change all that. He calls it TrumpRX, and it will lower the prices of the drugs so that regular fat people can more easily afford them. Ozempic, the most expensive, would drop from $1350 a month to $350 a month in his plan—still pricey, but manageable. Currently, the medication is administered through shots, but oral versions are being developed, and Trump hopes to provide the initial doses at $150 a month.
The U.S. has more obese people than any other country in the world—74% of the country is overweight. If President Trump can pull this off, it could be more transformational than anything he’s done so far. Granted, world peace and securing the border are enormously important, but this is so much closer to home. Three out of four people are overweight, and Trump has a plan that could change that.
If he can pull this off, depending on the time line, he probably doesn’t need to worry about the mid-terms, and certainly can make sure Republicans keep the White House and everything else in 2028. Can’t you see a giant red graph chart on the White House lawn showing trillions of pounds lost? Make America Thin Again!
Winner: A College Degree Still Matters
A new report by Axios this week suggests that maybe we don’t know as much as we think we know. Texas is leading the way in bringing back campuses that that support open inquiry and debate. But nobody likes what is going on in higher education today, and we often hear that a college degree doesn’t matter much anymore.
Currently, only 20% of Republicans say a college degree is “very important,” compared to 43% of Democrats. Another 40% of Republicans say college is “fairly important,” but most people have had it with the astronomical costs, the woke culture and degree programs that don’t seem to line up with job opportunities.
But newly released census data reported by Axios and others shows that college graduates who are now 25 or older earn more than twice as much as their counterparts who are only high school graduates. According to the data, the median income of someone with at least a bachelor’s degree is $132,700, while a high school grad median income is $58,410.
Earnings for college-led households rose 6% over the past two decades, compared with a 3% increase for high school graduates.
That’s something to ponder as Education Secretary Linda McMahon announced this week that she is ready to shut down the U.S. Dept. of Education. She says that if the recent government shutdown proved one thing, it was that the bureaucrats at the Department of Education aren’t needed. Six weeks out, and nobody missed them.
LOSER: The Latest Jasmine Crockett Update
For those who are keeping a list, which includes me, the really dumb thing that U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas did this week was announce that her team had pulled together a more complete list of people who had taken campaign contributions from the notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, including Mitt Romney, George Bush and the National Republican Campaign Committee. That’s not true, of course. It turns out Crockett and her crackerjack team did not consider that there might be more than one Jeffrey Epstein in America. In fact, National Review found over 300 in a quick search including almost a hundred in New York alone. Crockett’s team also neglected to check contribution dates, since several of her big expose’s charged Epstein, the sex offender, with donating to Republicans after he was dead. I often cringe when President Trump describes one of his enemies as being a “low-IQ individual,” but when he says it about Crockett, he clearly has a point.
WINNER: Walking Back EVs
California continues to deny a Politico report from a couple of weeks ago that they are pulling back on their plan to phase out gasoline powered cars by 2035. President Trump is trying to overturn the policy, but, while Newsom and his crew continue to talk smack about the White House effort, Axios is reporting that state regulators realize that their requirement that all cars be electric by 2035—which is now 9 years away—is not realistic or even practical.
California has been the spear carrier in banning gas-powered cars, and other blue states were looking for it to lead, but the fact is that electric cars aren’t affordable, particularly without the tax incentives to buy them, and there aren’t enough charging stations. Recall that Biden appropriated $7.5 billion to build hundreds of them across the country, but couldn’t manage to even construct one.
In more good news for our fossil fuel producing state, the VA announced this week that they are pulling the plug (get it?) on the $77 million Biden had allocated to put charging stations on military bases.
WINNER: Texas UIL Blocking Foreign Student Recruitment
While the whole country continues to look for ways to unravel what is happening to college football—and all college sports (see former college athlete and TPPF Board Member Cody Campbell’s analysis here), it turns out that the University Interscholastic League Legislative Council is taking steps to block foreign exchange students from participating in high school varsity sports in Texas.
One coach noted that rules regulating American kids from going from one school to another to play sports are very strict, but foreign students are now marketing themselves on social media, catching the eyes of coaches and being recruited to enter the country as exchange students to play.
Under the proposed rules change, foreign exchange students will still be allowed to play in sports—they just won’t be able to participate on varsity teams. The rule still has to be approved by Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath.
WINNER: Texas Emergency People
Former President Joe Biden did many dumb things, but one of the dumbest was when he accused Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick of not calling him back about disaster aid following Hurricane Beryl in 2024. Trying to make some kind of weird political point, Biden accused Patrick, who was acting governor at the time, of being unreachable even though he was in the state’s Emergency Operations Center for days, working alongside Biden’s federal FEMA employees.
The roar back from the Lt. Governor resulted in an unprecedented editorial from the Houston Chronicle where they admitting they had been wrong to believe Biden, and saying that Patrick was right and Texas is way ahead of FEMA. In addition to Lt. Gov. Patrick, the Chronicle praised the longtime director of the Texas Department of Emergency Management, Nim Kidd.
So it is not surprising that the Trump administration is now considering moving FEMA to Texas, at least partly because Nim Kidd turned down the FEMA job right after Trump was re-elected because he didn’t want to leave the Lone Star State. Nobody does. We’ll see what happens.
Gig’em, Wreck ‘em, Hook ‘em
In what may have been the best game anywhere this year (or any year), the maroon tribe over at Texas A&M managed to pull off the largest comeback victory in Aggie history, after being down 27 points to South Carolina at halftime. The Aggies are now 10-0 for the season, No. 1 in the SEC and at No. 3 in the national rankings.
Things didn’t go so well for the Longhorns last week, when another piece of the dream died. Even though the betting lines all favored Georgia over Texas going into the game, fundamentalist orange bloods—and many who are orange blood adjacent—believed that if the stars were aligned, the Longhorns could come out on top. But, of course, the stars were out of whack and Texas dropped 7 points, to No. 17 in the national rankings
Up in Lubbock, the Red Raiders of Texas Tech are No. 1 in the Big 12 and they share No. 6 in the national rankings with my beloved Oregon Ducks. Tech easily demolished Central Florida on Saturday after their big College Game Day win against BYU the week before.
Texas A&M will take on the unranked bulldogs of Samford (not a typo) University in Alabama on Saturday at 11 a.m. in College Station while Texas plays Arkansas in Austin at 2:30 p.m. Texas Tech isn’t playing this weekend.
WINNERS & LOSERS will be off next week for Thanksgiving, but in case you missed it, I want to share my story of what happened in the Massachusetts Bay that first Thanksgiving—complete with the socialism and the number of Indians that were actually at the big dinner.
According to [William] Bradford, not long after the Pilgrims landed in 1620, they found that the collectivity they had instituted in the colony bred “confusion and discontent and retard[ed] much employment” because men did not want to work without pay for other men’s families. And so, a little more than a year after the first Thanksgiving, they decided to divide up the land they had so that everybody had a share and could grow what they wanted. Productivity increased, and the colony began to prosper, attracting more and more immigrants and ushering in the great migration from England.
Read the rest of the article here.
Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.
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