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   The crisis in Texas continues, with almost 2 million people
  still without power in frigid temperatures. Pipes are bursting in homes,
  pulling down ceilings and flooding living spaces, while 7 million Texans are
  under a water boil advisory. Tim Boyd, the mayor of Colorado City, Texas, put on
  Facebook: “The City and County, along with power providers or any other
  service owes you NOTHING! I’m sick and tired of people looking for a damn
  handout!... If you are sitting at home in the cold because you have no power
  and are sitting there waiting for someone to come rescue you because your
  lazy is direct result of your raising! [sic]…. This is sadly a product of a
  socialist government where they feed people to believe that the FEW will work
  and others will become dependent for handouts…. I’ll be damned if I’m going
  to provide for anyone that is capable of doing it themselves!... Bottom line
  quit crying and looking for a handout! Get off your ass and take care of your
  own family!” “Only the strong will survive and the weak will parish [sic],”
  he said. After an outcry, Boyd resigned. Boyd’s post was a fitting tribute to talk radio host Rush
  Limbaugh, who passed today from lung cancer at age 70. It was
  Limbaugh who popularized the idea that hardworking white men were under
  attack in America. According to him, minorities and feminists were too lazy
  to work, and instead expected a handout from the government, paid for by tax
  dollars levied from hardworking white men. This, he explained, was
  “socialism,” and it was destroying America. Limbaugh didn’t invent this theory; it was the driving
  principle behind Movement Conservatism, which rose in the 1950s to combat the
  New Deal government that regulated business, provided a basic social safety
  net, and promoted infrastructure. But Movement Conservatives' efforts to get
  voters to reject the system that they credited for creating widespread
  prosperity had little success. In 1971, Lewis Powell, an attorney for the tobacco
  industry, wrote a confidential memo for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
  outlining how business interests could overturn the New Deal and retake
  control of America. Powell focused on putting like-minded scholars and speakers
  on college campuses, rewriting textbooks, stacking the courts, and pressuring
  politicians. He also called for “reaching the public generally” through
  television, newspapers, and radio. “[E]very available means should be
  employed to challenge and refute unfair attacks,” he wrote, “as well as to
  present the affirmative case through this media.” Pressing the Movement Conservative case faced headwinds,
  however, since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) enforced a policy
  that, in the interests of serving the community, required any outlet that
  held a federal broadcast license to present issues honestly, equitably, and
  with balance. This “Fairness Doctrine” meant that Movement Conservatives had
  trouble gaining traction, since voters rejected their ideas when they were
  stacked up against the ideas of Democrats and traditional Republicans, who
  agreed that the government had a role to play in the economy (even though
  they squabbled about the extent of that role). In 1985, under a chair appointed by President Ronald
  Reagan, the FCC stated that the Fairness Doctrine hurt the public interest.
  Two years later, under another Reagan-appointed chair, the FCC abolished the
  rule. With the Fairness Doctrine gone, Rush Limbaugh stepped into
  the role of promoting the Movement Conservative narrative. He gave it the
  concrete examples, color, and passion it needed to jump from think tanks and
  businessmen to ordinary voters who could help make it the driving force
  behind national policy. While politicians talked with veiled language about
  “welfare queens” and same-sex bathrooms, and “makers” and “takers,” Limbaugh
  played “Barack the Magic Negro,” talked of “femiNazis,” and said “Liberals”
  were “socialists,” redistributing tax dollars from hardworking white men to
  the undeserving. Constantly, he hammered on the idea that the federal
  government threatened the freedom of white men, and he did so in a style that
  his listeners found entertaining and liberating. By the end of the 1980s, Limbaugh’s show was carried on
  more than 650 radio stations, and in 1992, he briefly branched out into
  television with a show produced by Roger Ailes, who had packaged Richard
  Nixon in 1968 and would go on to become the head of the Fox News
  Channel. Before the 1994 midterm elections, Limbaugh was so effective in
  pushing the Republicans’ “Contract With America” that when the party won
  control of the House of Representatives for the first time since 1952, the
  Republican revolutionaries made him an honorary member of their group. Limbaugh told them that, under House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
  the Republicans must “begin an emergency dismantling of the welfare system,
  which is shredding the social fabric,” bankrupting the country, and “gutting
  the work ethic, educational performance, and moral discipline of the poor.”
  Next, Congress should cut capital gains taxes, which would drive economic
  growth, create hundreds of thousands of jobs, and generate billions in
  federal revenue. Limbaugh kept staff in Washington to make sure Republican
  positions got through to voters. At the same time, every congressman knew
  that taking a stand against Limbaugh would earn instant condemnation on radio
  channels across the country, and they acted accordingly. Limbaugh saw politics as entertainment that pays well for
  the people who can rile up their base with compelling stories—Limbaugh’s net
  worth when he died was estimated at $600 million—but he sold the Movement
  Conservative narrative well. He laid the groundwork for the political career
  of Donald Trump, who awarded Limbaugh the Presidential Medal of Freedom in a
  made-for-tv moment at Trump’s 2020 State of the Union address. His influence
  runs deep in the current party: former Mayor Boyd, an elected official, began
  his diatribe with: “Let me hurt some feelings while I have a minute!!” Like Boyd, other Texas politicians are also falling back on
  the Movement Conservative narrative to explain the disaster in their state.
  The crisis was caused by a lack of maintenance on Texas’s unregulated energy
  grid, which meant that instruments at coal, natural gas, and nuclear plants
  froze, at the same time that supplies of natural gas fell short. Nonetheless,
  Governor Greg Abbott and his allies in the fossil fuel industry went after
  “liberal” ideas. They blamed the crisis on the frozen wind turbines and solar
  plants which account for about 13% of Texas’s winter power. Abbott told Fox
  News Channel personality Sean Hannity that “this shows how the Green
  New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America.” Tucker
  Carlson told his viewers that Texas was “totally reliant on windmills.” The former Texas governor and former Secretary of Energy
  under Trump, Rick Perry, wrote on House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s
  website to warn against regulation of Texas’s energy system: “Texans would be
  without electricity for longer than three days to keep the federal government
  out of their business,” he said. The website warned that “Those watching on
  the left may see the situation in Texas as an opportunity to expand their
  top-down, radical proposals. Two phrases come to mind: don’t mess with Texas,
  and don’t let a crisis go to waste.” At Abbott’s request, President Biden has declared that
  Texas is in a state of emergency, freeing up federal money and supplies for
  the state. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has sent 60
  generators to state hospitals, water plants, and other critical facilities,
  along with blankets, food, and bottled water. It is also delivering diesel
  fuel for backup power. —- Heather Cox Richardson Notes: https://billmoyers.com/content/the-powell-memo-a-call-to-arms-for-corporations/ https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/02/17/texas-abbott-wind-turbines-outages/  | 
 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has raised over $2 million via Twitter for 5 on-site emergency relief groups in Texas as of 1:46 pm 2/19/21.
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