So I found myself hitchiking with a friend through texas during the drought in 1988. Though hitchhiking is probably not the proper term since no one picked us up. I think we walked the entire way from Oklahoma City to north of Dallas through miles of dead vegatation and nary a building to be seen. And the sun beat down on us and we quickly ran out of water as the sun climbed in the sky and I kept saying don't worry, we're almost to the lake up ahead, but he couldn't see it and we just kept on walking. Hours and hours later it turned out to be an abandoned barn of some kind and when I finally realized I was trying to walk towards a mirage for too many hours I gave up and laid on the side the road to die. As the heat of the asphalt started cooking my back my friend swayed back and forth unable to continue on and still refusing to collapse on the ground and it was at the moment the only nice person in Texas pulled over and started yelling at us for being so stupid then drove us to a Denny's so we could get some water...
So I found myself hitchiking with a friend through texas during the drought in 1988. Though hitchhiking is probably not the proper term since no one picked us up. I think we walked the entire way from Oklahoma City to north of Dallas through miles of dead vegatation and nary a building to be seen. And the sun beat down on us and we quickly ran out of water as the sun climbed in the sky and I kept saying don't worry, we're almost to the lake up ahead, but he couldn't see it and we just kept on walking. Hours and hours later it turned out to be an abandoned barn of some kind and when I finally realized I was trying to walk towards a mirage for too many hours I gave up and laid on the side the road to die. As the heat of the asphalt started cooking my back my friend swayed back and forth unable to continue on and still refusing to collapse on the ground and it was at the moment the only nice person in Texas pulled over and started yelling at us for being so stupid then drove us to a Denny's so we could get some water...
Im from texas, and yeah, there is alot of mexicans lol, I think there are more mexicans then whites now, i dont have a problem with it, being that im 1/2 white 1/2 mexican, just sayin
Texas: Letting illegals in since 19XX.... but seriously, is there a real difference aside from the views of people in both states? Yes, Texas is mostly republican and they gave us 'great' people like Herbert Walker and 'W', and Cali gave us people like Reagen and is mostly democratic. See way too many 'illegals' in this country now, and both places (more a less Texas) are to blame
who else is gonna do all the jobs whites don't wanna do, I mean, I know a lot of hard working white people that will do anything, but not if your gonna pay then minimum wage, and give them crappy benefits.
I believe Texas does over $100 billion of business export/import with Mexico... which is 34.4% of Texas exports as of 2009 which was down nearly 10% from the prior year... 27% of their imports came from Mexico in 2009 down 17% from 2008... Mexico and Texas do alot of business...
Texas' top export was refined oil and its top import was crude oil in 2009...
Haters keep on hating.... but this report begs to differ. Enjoy
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So what example should America follow, that of deficit-slaughtering, budget-cutting, seriously limited government in Texas, which has added 730,000 jobs in the past decade, or that of regulation-happy, spend-mercilessly, owe-everything, flee-this-place-quickly California, which has lost 600,000 jobs during the same period?
While not a hard question in a nation where unemployment recently shot up over 9 percent again and is dramatically expanding its unfunded entitlement promises on top of its accumulating debt, let's continue to look at some astounding facts about Texas after noting a much-repeated analysis of how it got there.
It has no state income tax, low corporate taxes, does just enough regulating to get the job done, cares for the environment without making a fetish of it, lets its legislature meet for a relatively short period just once every two years, keeps the executive branch slim and trim and is a right-to-work state where unions don't get to grab dues through governmental coercion.
Businesses love all that, varied researchers tell us. A number point out that, in 2008, Texas accounted for fully 70 percent of all new jobs created in America, and if you think that's great, which it is, don't suppose this was a one-shot deal. Businesses are reported to rate Texas the single best state in which to operate. Give them a chance and many will pull up stakes from yonder plunder-and-abuse venue and follow the Lone Star to high profits, sharing prosperity and opportunity as they resettle.
Meanwhile, what glitters is definitely not the Golden State. California is faced with a $26 billion deficit, cripples businesses with unconscionable taxes and rules, has dreamt up environmental objectives that in effect are combat tactics against the common good and is faced with a cost of living that is only part of the reason why citizens are deserting the place like the hordes that once upon a time rushed to enjoy its splendor.
Recently, even Governor Jerry Brown described his state as "fantasy land," and he wasn't talking about movies issuing from Hollywood. He was talking about the sort of thing various publications have documented -- The Washington Examiner, The Weekly Standard, The Economist, The National Review, Newsweek and more -- such as the second highest personal state income tax in the country and public employee pensions there is no way to honor.
There are liberals who hate the mention of any of this, especially when conservatives point out how the two states are so much alike in population and demographic mix, and to be sure, there are some non-political factors at play. The liberals vastly overreached, though, with some making a major point earlier this year about how Texas was faced with a budget it couldn't handle and others bemoaning a service deficit.
Texas, with a vastly increasing inflow population that makes it even tougher to deal with employment and governmental growth, has nevertheless been fighting back successfully against budgetary expansion, using some gimmicks but mainly necessary program reductions to keep taxes down to a level instigating entrepreneurship. Services there are hardly in as much jeopardy as in California, whose overcrowded prisons the Supreme Court refuses to tolerate, and nothing helps the poor like jobs. Texas does not shine in public education, but outdoes California in national testing, it's reported.
The Texas example is basically the way America has to go, the way Republicans in the House of Representatives insist we go, and the way too many Senate Democrats and President Barack Obama resist, their clear preference being the California model of spend yourself into misery, soak-the-upper-middle-class and businesses with tax hikes, tie the businesses up with so many regulations they can't compete anymore and offer no remedy but mush and demagoguery on anything truly serious in scope.
It won't work in part because, as a new USA Today report shows, the government's entitlement pledges (mainly to Medicare and Social Security) grew so much last year that they now exceed anticipated revenues by $61.6 trillion, or $534,000 per household. Does anyone actually believe that, even if some tax increases done through reform might help, we can tax our way out of this?