- Paxton (Not) Impeachment Update:
- My prediction was wrong. Horribly, horribly wrong.
- That prediction of conviction on impeachment was based on one simple fact: There was no way, I thought, that the House Republicans would have impeached him without them being 100% convinced that the Senate would follow along and convict. Why would they jeopardize their jobs over Paxton -- an issue they didn't have to touch -- if it could possibly backfire in the Senate?
- I mean, from a political survival standpoint, if the House Republicans thought that Saturday's vote was in any way possible then they were absolutely nuts to vote to impeach. Now they have targets on their backs. I don't understand what happened at all. It's now called a "Republican civil war":
- And make no mistake about it, they will be targeted. There are jobs in jeopardy. The ultra-MAGA extremists are out for blood. And the West Texas Oil Man PAC has signaled that it is coming after them. This is the head of the PAC immediately after the vote:
- That same guy was very vocal about letting Senators know where the ultra-MAGA stood before the vote. They listened:
- House Managers watched the vote go down. That's David Spiller of Jacksboro right in the middle. I've got to talk to him.
- And then Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who served as judge at the trial, went scorched earth on them after the vote. And yesterday he was still at it. (Don't worry about the fact he received $3 million from the aforementioned PAC before the trial.)
- House Managers press conference following the acquittal was very brief:
- The guys had nothing to do with it despite them wanting to let you think that they did.
- While the verdict was being read. This guy needs some scene control:
- On Friday, the embattled sheriff of Clay County was convicted by a Montague County jury of Official Oppression. I can't believe you could convict law enforcement of anything up there.
- This is a real tweet from an official government account last night.
- I'm sure you've seen the Rep. Lauren Boebert groping video. She said last night that "I was a little too eccentric . . . . I'm on the edge of a lot of things."
- Actions no longer have consequences.
- Someone told me I needed to keep an eye on the Decatur School Board meeting tonight. I looked at the agenda and these are the only closed session issues that got my attention.
- There is a "tipping point" for certain products that explode in popularity. If you saw a graph for the the initial sales of computers, cell phones, flat screens, -- any revolutionary product -- it starts off flat and then explodes upward. I saw this in the Dallas Morning News yesterday:
- This may be the most obvious betting directed decision I've ever seen: Down by 10, one play and threes seconds left, second down, you're not going win, but you kick a field goal which just happens to cover the spread?
- Do we really need a commercial for the new Exorcist movie during a late afternoon Cowboys game?
9.18.2023
Random Monday Morning Thoughts
9.15.2023
It's Friday -- Let's Get Out of Here
Puppy wishes it was 102 Dalmatians...ð pic.twitter.com/wwKzBJlY9P
— ðo̴g̴ (@Yoda4ever) September 14, 2023
First look at the largest movie screen in the world, inside the Sphere (via Darren Aronofsky) pic.twitter.com/ZY23Q1cWlv
— Las Vegas Locally ðī (@LasVegasLocally) September 12, 2023
Well, that's one way to wake up! ðĪŠ The Sphere in Las Vegas started Friday morning off by displaying a giant emoji on its Exosphere. Check out the display from our FOX5 Strat Cam. pic.twitter.com/3I1kxbZuob
— FOX5 Las Vegas (@FOX5Vegas) September 15, 2023
.@GeorgeDunham pic.twitter.com/IX7RHx0uqQ
— Picks With Friends (@PicksWFriends) September 10, 2023
Deeply obsessed with this tiny Irish child’s trolley problem joke pic.twitter.com/zhon0uU5l3
— Nnaemeka St Anthony Nwodo (@naonspixelz) September 9, 2023
Random Friday Morning Thoughts
- First photos in the media of the victim of the alleged murder in Boyd this week have appeared. The defendant remained in jail this morning on a $350,000 bond.
- In the ongoing litigation about who should represent capital murder Defendant Tanner Horner in Wise County, we have the first response to a request made two weeks ago the Court of Criminal Appeals. It's from his lawyer removed from the case. We are now awaiting responses of the judge as well as the newly appointed lawyers from Regional Public Defender's Office which must be made "within 20 days" of 8/30/23.
- It has arrived. The impeachment vote will be held in the Senate today after closing arguments which at start at 9:00 a.m.
- The head of the ultra MAGA extremists came to Paxton's defense yesterday.
- The head of the extremists MAGA PAC funded by the West Texas Oilmen issued a threat.
- Hunter Biden was indicted on gun charges. If he's guilty, so be it. But the Fifth Circuit has already struck down the law of one of the charges by relying on Trump Supreme Court's expansive expansion of 2nd Amendment rights in Braun. The other charges will probably face a similar fate.
- As of midnight, we now have an auto strike.
- No one is asking me for "strike advice", but I wouldn't do this half-arse partial strike. I'd do a complete walkout. Go full throttle or not at all. You know, half measures something-something.
- Am I the only one who thought the "Big Three" included Chrysler instead of something named Stellantis?
- Uh, oh. The Bridgeport High School soccer coach strip club scandal has made the Daily Mail treatment. (He paid the money back and lost his job, let's give the guy a break.)
- Remember this photo the other day of the Sheriff of Tarrant County posing with Kyle Rittenhouse? Well also in the photo is Jake Neidert who had just fired off this very offensive post. Once that post came to light yesterday, his recent past employer, Rep. Tony Tinderholt, immediately distanced from him with this post. (The last time I checked, Neidert had been a Baylor University student.)

Birds of a feather. - Texas District Clerk vs. Texas District Attorney in Hays County. Fun fact: The District Clerk made the news last year after winning election as a 19 year old.
- Trouble in Aggieland.
- Ticket fans: The fight of Cumulus vs. Dan and Jake is heating up. The Ticket's most reccent filing is here. The boys' curt response is here. And the Ticket even made a Wire reference in a pretentiously worded footnote.
- Time which has passed since the Wise County Sheriff's Office, despite having a full male DNA profile, has failed to solve the murder of Lauren Whitener in her home at Lake Bridgeport: 4 years and 71 days.
9.14.2023
Random Thursday Morning Thoughts
- Yep, we've got another murder charge on the books in Wise County after a man allegedly shot his stepson. But I bet this one is going to be a bit messy. Deputies had been called to the home earlier in the evening.
- Impeachment quick hits:
- We had the first appearance of a lawyer on the prosecutor's team, and she was fantastic. Erin Epley should have been in charge of the whole thing.
- This was weird: Paxton's mistress was scheduled to testify yesterday, showed up, waited around all day, and then was excused behind closed doors when she told them she intended to take the Fifth.
- Overall, the prosecution's presentation has been a mess. They had a time limit which they mismanaged, were disjointed, and let the defense push them around.
- Case in point. Video. This was really bad.
- Tony Buzbee sounds like Mack Brown.
- This is interesting: The Senate will vote today on a Motion which, if passed, would result in an impeachment conviction also preventing Paxton from ever seeking office again. Without it, there would have to be two seperate votes at the end of the trial (assuming conviction.) I would think that this is basically going to be a preview of the verdict today.
- The Messenger has a story on the new budget for Wise County and included this nugget:
- After the capture of the escaped Pennsylvania inmate, there was a press conference. And then someone decided to do a bit with a question. This really happened. Video. Yep, an inquiry about one small person possibly standing on the shoulder of another small person inside a trenchcoat.
- I don't like this trend at all.
- A man who shot and killed two people is hanging out with the Tarrant County Sheriff. Rittenhouse's cult following is just weird.
- Mitt Romney announced yesterday that he won't seek re-election in the Senate. On the same day, we learned he texted Mitch McConnell before January 6th that he was hearing something very bad may happen.
- Mildy legal nerdy stuff. This case is out of Houston and illustrates something I've mentioned over the years. More and more criminal prosecutions are occurring over unintentional conduct. Hey, this case has bad facts, but there would not have been a criminal prosecution 30 years ago. Side note: The family had already received a jury verdict of $95 million last year.
- Very legal nerdy stuff: That story is behind a paywall, and I really want to read the rest of that paragraph that gets cut off above. It sounds like the defense lawyer changed his election to have to the jury assess punishment, the judge let him, and then the prosecutor and the defense lawyer got into it.
- Very legal nerdy stuff #2: She was convicted of reckless conduct. She was definitely negligent but almost no one understands how reckless conduct, when the law is properly applied, is almost impossible to prove.
- Messenger: Above the Fold
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