The heat has been turned up more in the past hour.
Greg Abbott Faces More Backlash as Migrant Child Dies on Bus: 'Barbaric'
Story by Thomas Kika •1h
Texas Governor Greg Abbott came under fire on Friday after a report emerged that a migrant child had died while being bused to Chicago.
The busing of migrants to major cities, particularly those run by Democratic governments, has become an increasingly common tactic of Abbott's in handling migrants who cross the U.S.-Mexico border into Texas. Abbott, a Republican, has said that the practice is meant to bring greater attention and concern to the issue of undocumented migrants to Democrats, whom he has accused of not treating the issue seriously enough. His opponents, however, have decried the practice as inhumane and likened it to human trafficking as a political stunt.
This practice came under renewed fire on Friday after Texas officials confirmed that a 3-year-old boy had died on one of the program's buses en route to Chicago, the Houston Chronicle reported. Few details about what happened to the boy are available, but the Texas Division of Emergency Management claimed that "no passenger presented with a fever or medical concerns" before the trip began.
"Once the child presented with health concerns, the bus pulled over and security personnel on board called 9-1-1 for emergency attention," the division said in its official statement. "After the ambulance arrived, the bilingual security personnel translated for the parents and the paramedics who were providing care for the child. The child was then taken to a local hospital to receive additional medical attention and was later pronounced deceased."
Reactions online to the child's death were swift, with various critics of Abbott taking to social media to condemn his treatment of migrants and the busing program specifically.
"Greg Abbott is already responsible for a child dying in his razor wire buoy stunt," Democratic strategist Sawyer Hackett posted to X, formerly known as Twitter, on Friday. "Now another child has died in his stunt to abduct and ship migrants out of state. He has blood on his hands. He shouldn't be sued, he should be prosecuted."
Ben Meiselas, co-founder of the left-wing political action committee, MeidasTouch, called the report sickening and condemned Abbott's program as "barbaric."
"Not sure how many migrants need to literally die on Greg Abbott's watch for us to treat what's happening at the Texas border as the national scandal that it should be," MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan posted to X.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/greg- ... 6e68&ei=22
From the standpoint of the coming dark age, this is mainly to point out that the State of Texas, even though it is one of the most financially sound places in the world, can't really afford to transport illegals in style or take half measures at the border where what amounts to an illegal invasion is taking place. Therefore, despite the effort to solve the problem in the most expedient way he can come up with, Greg Abbott can't really get to the root of the problem, even if he wanted to, and things will therefore continue to deteriorate. Still, I wouldn't bet against Greg Abbott, as he appears to be the least worst alternative to many people, evidenced by the booming population of Texas as people flee Democrat run cities and states that are collapsing.
America’s Fastest Growing City Is Embracing ‘Yellowstone’ Mania
Story by Shelly Hagan and Julie Fine • 2h
(Bloomberg) -- The leader of the fastest-growing US city is betting that Yellowstone mania and quality-of-life issues in bigger metros can help sustain the expansion even as corporate relocations slow from the peak of the pandemic era.
Mattie Parker, the mayor of Fort Worth, Texas, says a focus on crime, homelessness, parks and reliable infrastructure has positioned the city of 950,000 as an attractive alternative to Chicago, San Francisco and New York, which have struggled with perceptions of deteriorating safety in the aftermath of Covid-19.
The 39-year-old Republican, broadly considered to be a moderate in deep-red Texas, says that Fort Worth’s pitch to lure businesses highlights its roots (the city’s slogan is “Where the West Begins”) and small-town vibes, even if its stockyards are now more of a tourist draw than a genuine agricultural enterprise. The nostalgia for cattle ranching and cowboys generated by the hit television series Yellowstone and 1923 — created by Taylor Sheridan, who partly grew up in Fort Worth — are only adding to its allure.
“Fort Worth continues to be an incredibly unique city that is very proud of our Western heritage,” Parker said in an interview at City Hall, where a display case held shovels from groundbreaking ceremonies over the years. “And the timing couldn’t be better because of this fanfare and frenzy over Yellowstone and 1923.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/a ... r-AA1fbDK8
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.