Throughout my final go to to the barbershop, when the dialog turned to “racism in America” (a endless Black barbershop subject), a 60-ish trying brother who was getting his bald fade tightened up requested anybody in earshot, “Is Abbott ‘touched’ or is that ni**a simply merciless and weird”?
In full transparency, the brother who requested the query about Texas Governor Greg Abbott didn’t use the time period “touched,” however fairly one thing else. I’ll simply say, for folks within the Black group, “touched” is the politically appropriate model of the descriptor brotherman truly used. One other barbershop patron concerned within the “touched or merciless” dialog, declared Abbott was attempting to place himself because the “white supremacist wonderbread; I imply wunderkind, since everyone knows he’s gunning for the White Home.”
In much more transparency, different not so endearing phrases had been used to explain Abbott–phrases that will get individuals within the public eye canceled instantly. However to be truthful, Black barbershop conversations are meant for that house solely. The brothers at this explicit institution agreed to have most of their opinions shared as long as the title of the store and people making the feedback had been both omitted or modified.
And in my expertise, Black individuals bend over backwards to point out respect for the humanity of individuals exterior the Black circle, whether or not they agree with them politically or not. However when the query was requested about Abbott being “touched or simply merciless,” little or no deference was being given to the state’s CEO as a result of these gathered on that specific day felt, virtually to a person, that Abbott’s actions have proven little deference or respect for Blackfolk in Texas—or anyplace else, for that matter.
The brother who requested to be recognized as “NoneYa Bidness,” who questioned if Abbott was “touched or simply merciless and weird,” was referring to some particular, latest strikes by Texas’s governor.
Like Abbott’s sickle cell response.
As State Rep. Jarvis Johnson identified in a letter dated June 17, 2023, and shared together with his constituents, “At the moment, Governor Greg Abbott vetoed HB 181, an effort pushed for years by statewide and nationwide sickle cell illness advocates, which might have established a sickle cell registry in Texas.”
HB 181, was a bipartisan invoice, handed by each the Texas Home and Senate with a supermajority—an virtually unparalleled accomplishment nowadays. Over 20 people and organizations testified in assist of the invoice.
Abbott, nonetheless, hit it with the veto.
“It’s fully outrageous that Governor Abbott vetoed HB 181, for a lot of causes,” mentioned Johnson. “Texas was poised to obtain federal funding from the Facilities for Illness Management to determine a sickle cell registry. This much-needed funding virtually actually won’t be obtainable within the subsequent legislative session two years from now.
“Though anybody can have the genetic illness, it predominantly impacts African Individuals. And not using a knowledge sickle cell registry, we don’t have an correct image of how many individuals with sickle cell illness there are, and what their well being outcomes are,” added Johnson.
Texas has one of many highest populations of individuals residing with sickle cell illness (SCD), one in every of them being the spouse of one of many barbers, “Willie Pete.”
“That little man has no coronary heart,” mentioned Pete. “It’s sickle cell, man. Why would you trash one thing that would assist so many individuals? However what must you anticipate from somebody who appears to be making a gift of weapons in Texas even when colleges are getting shot up left and proper.”
Bidness reminded barbershop patrons that an unofficial survey of Abbott’s ballot numbers with Blackfolk had him teetering someplace between “Donald Trump” and devil (virtually even with Massa Mo’ from “Roots”). Bidness then defined, with such horrible numbers with Black Texans, supporting a sickle cell registry backed by state Republicans and Democrats, might have been a straightforward PR victory for Abbott, affording him a head nod of recognition from the bruhs, at the least.
Nonetheless, Abbott vetoed it.
Exterior of Blackworld, others too had been standing in stark amazement at Abbott’s mad veto spree.
Abbott vetoed a invoice (Home Invoice 3159) that will have expanded voting entry to Texans with disabilities; a transfer {that a} extra cynical individual would possibly discover fairly ironic. However Jessica Anacker, president of Texas Democrats with Disabilities, did not see the humor.
“Greg Abbott will cease at nothing – it doesn’t matter what – to disclaim as many Texans as doable the flexibility to precise their fundamental proper to vote,” mentioned Anacker. “I hear on a regular basis about how polling areas are usually not accessible, or that people with disabilities can’t get the wanted help on the polling areas. If Greg Abbott actually cared concerning the lives of Texans, then he would work to guard the suitable to vote. This isn’t what freedom and democracy is. No eligible Texan – irrespective of their social gathering – ought to be denied the suitable to vote due to a incapacity or being pregnant.”
Nonetheless, Abbott gave it the thump’s down.
Texas Democratic Get together Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa launched an announcement on Abbott’s veto binge.
“Greg Abbott has vetoed 76 payments from the 88th Legislative Session – nearly all of that are bipartisan, narrowly-focused payments that will have in any other case helped Texans who’re at the moment being failed by the system he created, or payments to assist set up applications that will have a optimistic affect on the residents of our state,” mentioned Hinojosa.
Harris County Lawyer Christian Menefee was upset at an Abbott motion that didn’t contain a veto—technically.
Abbott signed Senate Invoice 1750, which abolishes the Harris County Elections Administrator’s Workplace, and Senate Invoice 1933, which permits the Secretary of State to supervise, handle, and even take steps to take away county elections officers in solely Harris County. Many view this as a giant authorities hostile takeover of native authorities affairs—despite the fact that Republicans have for many years positioned themselves as anti-big authorities and pro-local authorities management.
And although not technically a veto, these two signed payments probably “veto” Black and Brown and college-aged Texans’ voting energy.
“I’m gearing as much as sue the state over these payments and I anticipate to be within the courts within the subsequent couple weeks. We gained’t sit again and permit Republicans in Austin to focus on Harris County officers and disrupt our elections,” mentioned Menefee. “The Texas Structure makes clear that Texas legislators shouldn’t be abusing their energy by singling out a county to deal with political vendettas as an alternative of doing what’s proper for all Texans.”
Bidness and his fellow barbershop attendees mentioned these strikes and questioned aloud if Abbott was “touched within the head” (mentally impaired) or simply “imply as all-da-be damned.”
They leaned closely in the direction of “imply as all-da-be damned,” or in Bidness’s phrases, “merciless and weird.”
Requested by a sure Defender reporter if he had ever learn award-winning author from The Atlantic, Adam Serwer’s e book, “The Cruelty is the Level,” Bidness mentioned he hadn’t, however the title sounded so much like “Abbott, Trump, the Klan and all them January 6 insurrectionist MFs.”
Serwer, like many economists, theorized self-identified MAGA supporters had been voting in opposition to their very own self-interests by supporting GOP insurance policies that denied expanded entry to healthcare, greater training, and pupil mortgage forgiveness, and pushed for improved employees’ rights.
Nonetheless, when Serwer requested his MAGA interview topics about their voting habits, and the way their assist of sure political stances would do them hurt, he found that the overwhelming majority of them didn’t thoughts the hardship of GOP insurance policies so long as these insurance policies stored advantages from reaching Blacks and Latinx communities. Serwer dug deeper, and located that the driving pressure behind his MAGA-heavy interview topics’ willingness to just accept political insurance policies detrimental to themselves, was the enjoyment and satisfaction they felt understanding that their votes stored advantages from “the undeserving.”
After the Defender reporter shared this info with all within the barbershop, one brother, we’ll name him “Michael C. Jordan,” mentioned, “Man, you might’a simply mentioned they get off on our ache, and left it at that.”
To which Bidness replied, “Merciless and weird… and a bit touched.”