Friday, June 12, 2026

She Always Showed Up: The Life and Legacy of Shundra Jacquot

Houston, in the days after Shundra Denae Jacquot’s passing, people kept returning to the same detail.

Not a milestone. Not a title. Not even a defining accomplishment.

An image.

A woman getting ready—makeup done, hair in place, high heels on—moving through life as if presence itself was a promise she intended to keep.

“There were times as a child where I can remember the new cars, shopping sprees, new houses, new PlayStations, new bikes,” her son said, his voice steady until it wasn’t. “And then there were times when the lights got cut off, water got cut off. And even then, that lady had on her high heels and her makeup.”

The room responded the way rooms do when truth is recognizable. Laughter first, then silence that feels like recognition rather than absence. Because what he was describing wasn’t vanity. It was continuity. A refusal to let circumstance dictate how she met the world.

That same sense of continuity threaded through every story told about her.

Her daughter remembered it differently, but just as clearly. Shundra was late—famously, reliably late. A family joke that had evolved into strategy.

“If you told her an event started at three,” she said, smiling as the room leaned in, “she might not even start getting dressed until two-thirty and somehow still arrive around five o’clock.”

The laughter that followed was immediate, familiar. Everyone knew this version of her too. But her daughter didn’t let it end there.

“Whether she arrived right on time, an hour late, or two hours late,” she said, “she always showed up.”

It was said simply, without emphasis. Yet it lingered longer than anything else. Because it wasn’t about punctuality. It was about reliability in a life that had never been guaranteed to be stable. It was about presence that could not be measured by clocks.

Long before she became “Mama” to three children and grandmother to many more, Shundra was a girl moving through Houston schools—Hartman Elementary, Dowling Middle, Paul Revere, Madison High. Even then, people who knew her describe a life defined less by where she was and more by how fully she entered whatever space she occupied.

In junior high, Constance “Candy” Williams met her at Paul Revere. She remembers the beginning as ordinary—shared classrooms, shared seats, shared laughter—but what it became was not.

“She became my best friend,” she said. “And over time she became a little sister I never knew I needed.”

There was a stillness when she said it, as if the sentence had been lived more than spoken. The kind of friendship that doesn’t announce itself as important until years later, when you realize it never left.

Years after that first meeting, Constance remembers protecting her, guiding her, watching her grow into someone who would eventually do the same for others. That pattern repeated itself everywhere Shundra went. She didn’t just enter relationships. She deepened them.

Adrienne told a similar story, one that began in ninth grade and never really ended. They sat together in class, studied together, talked every day. Then one afternoon, Shundra asked a question that changed everything.

“Can I move in with y’all?”

Adrienne still laughs when she remembers her answer.

“I said no questions asked, yes.”

She went home. Asked her grandmother. Came back with permission.

“She packed her clothes and moved in,” Adrienne said. “And she became my sister.”

What followed was not a dramatic turning point, but something more lasting: everyday life shared fully. Washing dishes. Negotiating chores. Laughing through arguments that never quite mattered in the end. Growing up side by side until there was no clear line between friendship and family.

And always, there was her smile.

“She’ll just smile and light up a room,” Adrienne said. “You just look at her and she just starts smiling.”

That smile would follow her into adulthood, into motherhood, into the rooms where life became heavier.

Her uncle Jay remembered her not in fragments but in motion—always nearby, always part of the family’s rhythm, growing up alongside him in a way that blurred generational lines.

“We kind of grew up like sister and brother,” he said, half smiling at the memory. Then his tone shifted, grounded in something more recent. “She really worked hard and raised you guys right. You guys are so tight. And I’m so proud of you guys.”

It was not framed as observation so much as recognition. A life translated into its clearest evidence: children who remained connected.

Because if there was a center of gravity in Shundra Jacquot’s life, it was motherhood.

Her children spoke about her in a way that held both humor and reverence, as if they were still learning how to place her properly in memory.

Her son spoke first, carefully, then more openly as the story carried him.

There were good seasons, he said. New houses. New cars. New everything. And there were difficult ones. Seasons where utility bills became uncertainty. Seasons where stability disappeared without warning.

But what he remembered most was not the instability.

It was her.

Still doing her makeup. Still stepping into her heels. Still refusing to present herself as anything less than whole, even when life was fractured behind the scenes.

“What my mom did was model how we should feel about ourselves whenever life is life-ing,” he said. “You can still look good. You can still smell good. You can still treat people good.”

He paused, as if realizing he had been learning it in real time all along.

Even the way she corrected him had become part of that education.

The GameStop story arrived with laughter before it arrived with meaning. He was nine or ten, wanting Grand Theft Auto. She said no and offered two other games instead. He negotiated. He pouted. He tried every strategy a child can invent when they believe persistence will eventually become permission.

“I’m in there trying to bribe her,” he said. “I’ll do the dishes, I’ll vacuum, I’ll cut everybody’s grass.”

It didn’t work.

In the car, he kept going. Until she turned around, walked back inside, and returned both games.

“I got zero hands,” he said, laughing.

But the laughter shifted when he reached the point.

“These are privileges. I don’t have to buy you this.”

At the time, it was loss. Years later, it became structure. A lesson in gratitude that had nothing to do with games and everything to do with understanding the difference between want and entitlement.

Still, the most intimate memory he shared had nothing to do with discipline or lessons.

It was touch.

Even as an adult, even as a father, he said he would still hold his mother’s hand when he visited her.

“Something about it was so soothing to me,” he said.

The room changed at that moment. Because it reframed everything. The authority. The lessons. The strength. All of it softened into something simpler. A mother’s hand. A son’s instinct to reach for it.

Later, he spoke about grief more directly. About the shock of loss. About the unanswered questions that followed the early morning call. About the anger that sat beside love in ways he was still learning to understand.

“I have a thin line between patience and zero tolerance,” he said. “So if I come off aggressive, I’m sorry. I love all of you. But I’ll be alright. We’ll be alright.”

And somehow, that too sounded like her.

Her daughter closed the distance between memory and meaning in a different way. She spoke about being raised by a woman who corrected, guided, and shaped her with a persistence that only love can sustain.

There were ISS forms signed without permission. There was a principal’s call. There was discovery. And there was consequence. Her mother made her write signatures again and again until the lesson was impossible to ignore.

And then came the correction that stayed longer than the punishment ever did.

Even now, she said, she could still hear her mother in the background of her life—fussing, correcting, insisting, loving.

Because love, for Shundra, was not passive. It was active. It showed up as structure. As accountability. As presence.

It also showed up as community.

Her daughter spoke about it directly in the way only someone standing inside grief can.

“Lean on each other,” she said. “Because that’s what y’all have. Everybody in this room is your support system.”

Then, softer, she added what many needed to hear.

“And cry. Don’t let anybody tell you not to cry. If you want to go in a room by yourself, you cry.”

And then, finally, what anchored it all.

“She’s still here with you in spirit. She’s watching over everything you do.”

The idea did not erase grief. It held it.

Even outside of her children, the pattern remained the same.

Friends became family.

Family became extended by choice.

People who entered her life rarely left unchanged.

And through it all, the same detail returned again and again, unforced and unpolished, as if it belonged to her more than any other description ever could.

High heels.

Makeup.

Presence.

A way of stepping into the world that refused to shrink, even when life demanded compromise.

It is often said that people leave behind memories.

But in Shundra Jacquot’s case, what she left behind feels closer to instruction—quiet, repeated, lived rather than spoken.

Show up.

Even when it’s hard.

Even when it’s late.

Even when life is unstable.

Show up anyway.

And when you do, do not arrive as someone diminished by circumstance.

Arrive as yourself.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

When Neutral Language Produces Unequal Outcomes: Disparate Impact and Modern Policy Promises

We live in a political era where almost no policy is described in openly discriminatory language. That fact is often treated as proof that modern governance has moved beyond discrimination itself. But civil rights law—and decades of evidence in housing, employment, education, and criminal justice—tells a more complicated story: policies do not need discriminatory intent to produce discriminatory outcomes.

This is not a rhetorical claim. It is a legal and empirical doctrine embedded in U.S. jurisprudence under the concept of disparate impact, first clearly articulated in Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424 (1971), where the Supreme Court held that facially neutral employment practices can still violate civil rights law when they operate to reproduce racial inequality. The Court’s logic was direct: neutrality in language does not erase inequality in effect when systems are built on unequal foundations.

That principle was reaffirmed decades later in Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., 576 U.S. 519 (2015), where the Court explicitly recognized that structural inequality can be reinforced through neutral policy mechanisms—and that civil rights law must be capable of addressing outcomes, not just intent.

That legal framework is essential for understanding the current wave of major federal policy promises being debated and implemented in the second Trump term. Because when you strip away branding, slogans, and political framing, what remains is a consistent pattern: large-scale, facially neutral policies operating in a society that is already deeply unequal.

And in that kind of system, neutrality is not enough to guarantee fairness.


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Start with immigration enforcement. A promise to carry out the “largest domestic deportation operation in American history” is typically framed in neutral terms: law enforcement, border security, and legal compliance. But law does not operate in abstraction—it operates on people distributed across a real population.

And in the United States, undocumented immigrants are not evenly distributed across racial and ethnic groups. They are disproportionately Latino, disproportionately concentrated in specific industries and regions, and often embedded in mixed-status families. That means large-scale enforcement does not land evenly on “the population” as a whole. It lands with concentrated force on specific communities.

No explicit racial language is required for that outcome. It emerges from demographic structure itself.

That is disparate impact in its most basic form: a neutral rule producing predictable, uneven burden because the underlying population is not neutral.


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The same logic applies to voter identification and citizenship verification policies. These are almost always justified in the language of integrity and standardization. The argument is simple: everyone should follow the same rules.

But equality of rules is not the same as equality of access to compliance. Decades of election research, including analyses from the Government Accountability Office, have shown that access to qualifying identification is unevenly distributed across income levels, age groups, and geographic regions. Those disparities are not random—they reflect long-standing structural inequalities in transportation, bureaucracy, housing stability, and administrative access.

So when the requirement is applied universally, the burden is not universal. It is concentrated. And because race in the United States is tightly correlated with income and geographic inequality due to historical housing and labor patterns, that burden often tracks racial lines even when race is never mentioned.

This is precisely the kind of mechanism civil rights law was designed to recognize: systems that appear neutral on their face but reproduce inequality in practice.


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Education policy provides another clear example. Efforts to reduce federal oversight or expand school choice are often framed as empowering families and returning control to local communities. On paper, this sounds like decentralization and freedom.

But the United States does not begin from an equal educational baseline. School funding is still heavily tied to local property wealth, which means educational quality is structurally linked to neighborhood wealth. And neighborhood wealth in the United States is not randomly distributed—it reflects decades of housing segregation, redlining, and economic stratification.

So when federal equalization mechanisms are weakened, the result is not a level playing field where all districts suddenly compete equally. It is a system where already-advantaged districts are better positioned to adapt, while under-resourced districts absorb greater instability.

Once again, the policy may be neutral in design. But the effects are not neutral in distribution.


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Tariffs and broad import taxes operate through a different but equally revealing mechanism. A tariff does not say anything about race, class, or identity. It is applied uniformly to imported goods. Yet economic research consistently shows that tariffs function as consumption taxes that are partially passed on to consumers.

And consumption is not evenly distributed across income groups. Lower-income households spend a larger share of their income on goods affected by price changes. That means the same policy produces unequal economic pressure depending on where you sit in the income distribution.

No targeting is required. The structure of consumption alone determines the outcome.


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Even in criminal justice policy, the pattern repeats. Expanding enforcement capacity, increasing penalties, or strengthening policing authority is almost always justified in the language of safety and deterrence. But enforcement in the United States has never been evenly distributed geographically or socially.

Policing intensity, prosecution patterns, and sentencing outcomes are all shaped by where enforcement is concentrated. And where enforcement is concentrated is itself shaped by historical patterns of segregation and poverty.

So even neutral laws, when filtered through uneven enforcement systems, produce uneven outcomes.


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When viewed individually, each of these policy areas can be debated on its own terms. Immigration policy raises questions about sovereignty and labor. Voter ID laws raise questions about integrity and access. Education policy raises questions about federalism. Tariffs raise questions about industrial strategy. Criminal justice policy raises questions about safety.

But when viewed together, a broader structural pattern becomes impossible to ignore:

Neutral policy language does not produce neutral outcomes when applied to a structurally unequal society.

This is the central insight of disparate impact doctrine. It is also its most politically uncomfortable implication. Because it shifts the focus away from intent—away from what policymakers say they are trying to do—and toward what policies actually do once they interact with real-world inequality.

That does not require assuming malicious intent. In fact, disparate impact theory explicitly does not depend on it. It requires something more grounded and more empirically verifiable: the recognition that unequal starting conditions produce unequal outcomes even under uniform rules.

So when evaluating a policy agenda, the most important question is not simply whether it is framed in neutral terms, or whether it is justified through legal authority. The deeper question is structural: who bears the burden of implementation, and is that burden predictably concentrated in already-marginalized communities?

Because if the answer is yes, then neutrality in language does not resolve the question of fairness in effect.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

When a Country Is Understood Like a Small Town



One of the most fascinating dynamics in American politics is how people make sense of numbers. The United States is a nation of more than 340 million people, yet political debates are often framed in ways that feel more appropriate for a town of 3,400.

This matters because scale changes everything.

Imagine a small town where ten residents are caught committing fraud in a public assistance program. That would likely become the biggest local story of the year. People would know the names involved. Local officials would feel pressure to respond. Residents might reasonably conclude that the system has a serious problem.

Now imagine a national program serving tens of millions of people. Even if thousands of fraudulent cases are discovered, the actual rate of fraud could be extremely low. Yet when politicians or media outlets report only the raw number—"thousands of cases of fraud"—many listeners instinctively evaluate the information using a small-community framework. The number sounds alarming because human beings are generally better at understanding concrete counts than percentages.

This is not unique to one political party. However, conservative messaging has often been particularly effective at translating national issues into the language of local experience. A problem involving a fraction of one percent of participants can be described in a way that makes it feel immediate, personal, and widespread.

Consider Medicare. More than 65 million Americans are enrolled in Medicare. When officials announce that they have uncovered hundreds of thousands of improper claims or payments, the figure sounds enormous. But without context, it is difficult to know whether that represents a systemic collapse or a relatively small error rate in a program serving a population larger than many countries.

The same dynamic appears in discussions about immigration. Headlines may report that millions of migrants crossed the southern border over a period of years. That is undeniably a large number. Yet numbers can be both large and contextual at the same time. A country with more than 340 million residents, an economy employing more than 160 million workers, and millions of annual births, deaths, and residential moves operates on a scale that is difficult for the human mind to grasp intuitively.

When people hear "millions," they often imagine an immediate transformation of their local environment. Yet the impact of migration is distributed unevenly across geography, industries, and time. Understanding what those numbers mean requires more than hearing the number itself. It requires understanding the denominator.

The same pattern emerges in discussions surrounding transgender Americans. Political campaigns and media coverage frequently devote significant attention to transgender participation in sports, school policies, healthcare, and public accommodations. Yet estimates generally place the transgender population at well under 2 percent of Americans. Even if one believes these debates are important, the amount of political attention devoted to them can create the impression that the issue affects a much larger portion of the population than it actually does.

Psychologists have a name for part of this phenomenon: the availability heuristic. People tend to judge how common something is based on how easily examples come to mind. If a particular type of story is repeated frequently, the public often assumes the underlying event is common, regardless of its actual prevalence.

A shark attack provides a useful comparison. Shark attacks receive extensive media coverage despite being extraordinarily rare. Most Americans understand that sharks are not one of the leading threats to their safety, yet many still report feeling greater fear of sharks than statistically more dangerous risks. The stories are vivid. The examples are memorable. The scale becomes distorted.

Political communication often operates in the same way.

A handful of welfare fraud cases can become symbolic of an entire assistance program. A small number of crimes committed by undocumented immigrants can become representative of immigration as a whole. A few controversial incidents involving transgender individuals can come to define public understanding of an entire population.

Again, this does not mean the underlying concerns are fabricated. Fraud exists. Crimes occur. Policy debates matter. The question is whether the scale of the response matches the scale of the problem.

This may help explain one of the enduring puzzles of American politics: why many rural and small-town communities often support policies that economists argue provide them with limited direct economic benefit.

The answer may be that many voters are not primarily making economic calculations. They are evaluating politics through the lens of community management. In a small town, maintaining order, preserving cultural norms, protecting local identity, and ensuring fairness often feel more important than maximizing economic efficiency. Political messages that emphasize rule-breaking, social change, or threats to community cohesion may resonate even when the measurable economic effects are small.

Viewed this way, the divide is not necessarily between informed and uninformed voters. It is partly a divide in scale. One side often talks about percentages, systems, and aggregate outcomes. The other often talks about stories, examples, and exceptions. One asks, "What does the data say about the whole population?" The other asks, "What would happen if this occurred in my community?"

Both approaches contain useful insights. Statistics can reveal patterns that individual experiences miss. Personal stories can highlight problems that aggregate data obscures.

The challenge arises when a nation-sized problem is evaluated entirely through a small-town lens. At that point, a few thousand cases can feel like a national crisis, while a policy affecting millions can seem abstract and distant.

America's political debates often turn not on the facts themselves, but on the scale at which those facts are understood. Before asking whether a number is large or small, it may be worth asking a simpler question:

Large compared to what?

In a nation of hundreds of millions of people, that question may be more important than the number itself.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Same Abraham. Different Son. Same Test.

This is where people get tense.
Let’s breathe.
What It Actually Is
Eid al-Adha commemorates Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son in obedience to God.
Muslims believe the son was Ishmael. Jews and Christians traditionally believe it was Isaac.
That difference matters — but so does the shared story.
📖 Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
📜 In the Torah:
📖 In the Christian Bible:
Same Genesis 22 account.
📖 In the Qur’an:
Surah As-Saffat (37:99–113) recounts the sacrifice narrative (the son is not named in the Qur’an).
What People Get Wrong
This is not about violence.
It is about obedience and divine mercy — because in all traditions, the child is spared.
Nobody dies in the story.
That part gets skipped in arguments.
Shared Themes
Faith. Testing. Provision.
Same patriarch. Same desert. Different interpretive lineage.
Why It Matters Now
If three major faiths share Abraham, maybe we can at least share context.
You don’t have to celebrate every holiday.
But villainizing what you haven’t read?
That’s optional.
Reading is free

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Report the Story, Not the Spectacle


Donald Trump shared an AI-generated video mocking comedian Stephen Colbert, continuing a pattern of using digitally altered content to target critics and political opponents on social media.

The video, posted on both X and Truth Social, depicted Trump physically discarding Colbert into a dumpster before transitioning into celebratory imagery. The official White House social media account later amplified the post with a brief farewell message.

The post came shortly after CBS aired the final episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The program’s cancellation occurred amid broader corporate restructuring tied to Paramount Global’s proposed merger with Skydance, which requires federal approval from the Trump administration.

Following the show’s cancellation, Trump publicly celebrated the end of Colbert’s program and suggested other late-night hosts could face similar outcomes. He has previously targeted other television personalities, including Jimmy Kimmel, over critical commentary and jokes made about him and his family.

The incident reflects a broader pattern in which Trump frequently shares AI-generated or digitally manipulated media aimed at critics, opponents, and public figures. Recent examples have included fabricated political imagery involving Gaza, Greenland, Democratic lawmakers, and other political subjects.

Earlier this year, Trump also shared an AI-generated video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama in a racially offensive way. The post was later deleted, with the White House attributing it to a staff error. Trump condemned the racist imagery after the fact but declined to apologize.

The growing use of AI-generated political content has raised ongoing concerns among media ethicists and journalists about misinformation, algorithmic amplification, and the role news organizations play when reproducing inflammatory or misleading social media posts.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Texas Under Greg Abbott: A Data-Driven Look at the State’s Biggest Failures

For years, Texas leaders have promoted the state as a model of economic freedom, low regulation, and conservative governance. Governor Greg Abbott has repeatedly argued that Texas represents the “future of America.” But beyond the branding and political messaging, many of the state’s measurable outcomes tell a more complicated story.

Texas remains economically large and culturally influential, but on several core indicators — infrastructure reliability, maternal health, healthcare access, and disaster preparedness — the state has struggled under Abbott’s leadership.

The Power Grid Crisis Became a National Embarrassment

The clearest example came during Winter Storm Uri in 2021, when the Texas power grid collapsed during extreme cold.

Millions of Texans lost electricity and heat for days. Pipes burst. Water systems failed. Families burned furniture for warmth. The storm ultimately caused at least 246 deaths according to state figures, though some researchers estimate the true toll was far higher. 

The failure exposed long-standing weaknesses in Texas’ independent electric grid system, overseen by ERCOT and regulated by state-appointed officials. Multiple ERCOT board members resigned afterward. 

Critics argued the disaster was not merely a weather event but a policy failure years in the making. Texas had repeatedly resisted stronger winterization requirements and broader federal grid integration. Even after reforms, energy experts continued warning that the grid remained vulnerable during severe winter events. 

Research also showed the outages disproportionately harmed lower-income and minority communities. 

Abbott initially blamed renewable energy during the crisis, despite investigations later showing failures across natural gas, coal, nuclear, and wind systems. 

Texas Has Some of the Worst Healthcare Access in America

Texas consistently ranks among the worst states for healthcare coverage.

The state has led the nation in uninsured residents for years, largely because Texas leaders refused to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Millions of federal dollars were left on the table while roughly 5 million Texans remained uninsured.

The consequences are measurable:

Rural hospitals have struggled or closed.

Preventive care access remains limited.

Emergency rooms absorb routine healthcare demand.

Medical debt remains widespread.


This matters especially in a state with one of the fastest-growing populations in the country.

Abbott’s supporters argue that Medicaid expansion would increase government dependence and long-term spending. Critics counter that refusing expansion has cost Texas both lives and economic stability.

Maternal Health Outcomes Have Worsened

Texas already had one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the developed world before the state enacted some of the nation’s strictest abortion laws.

Since the abortion ban took effect in 2021, researchers and investigative journalists have documented alarming increases in severe pregnancy complications.

A 2025 ProPublica analysis found that sepsis rates among women hospitalized during second-trimester pregnancy loss increased by more than 50% after Texas’ near-total abortion ban took effect. 

Researchers have also warned that abortion bans are likely to increase maternal mortality and severe maternal morbidity, particularly in states like Texas that already had poor maternal health outcomes. 

At the same time, Texas lawmakers restricted how maternal mortality review committees could investigate deaths tied to abortion policy. 

The issue has become a national flashpoint because Texas is effectively serving as a large-scale policy experiment with real public health consequences.

Property Taxes Stayed High Despite Political Promises

Republican leaders in Texas frequently campaign on “low taxes,” but many homeowners have experienced sharp increases in property taxes over the past decade.

Texas has no state income tax, but local property taxes are among the highest in the nation. Rapid population growth and soaring home values have pushed many families’ housing costs upward even when mortgage rates remained stable.

Abbott and state lawmakers passed several property tax relief packages, but critics argue the relief has not kept pace with rising valuations and local tax burdens.

For many middle-class Texans, especially in metro areas like Houston, Austin, and Dallas, the practical cost of living has risen significantly despite the state’s low-tax reputation.

Infrastructure and Disaster Preparedness Continue to Struggle

Texas has increasingly faced overlapping climate and infrastructure challenges:

winter freezes,

hurricanes,

heat waves,

drought,

water shortages,

and grid strain from population growth.


The state’s rapid growth has often outpaced infrastructure planning.

During Hurricane Beryl in 2024, millions lost power again in the Houston region, reviving criticism about energy resilience and emergency management. 

Experts have repeatedly warned that Texas’ approach often prioritizes deregulation and short-term market efficiency over long-term resilience. 

Texas Still Grows — But Growth Alone Is Not Proof of Good Governance

Supporters of Abbott point to job growth, corporate relocations, and population increases as evidence that Texas policies work.

And to be fair, Texas has attracted major companies and added jobs faster than many states.

But economic growth alone does not automatically mean government systems are functioning well for ordinary residents.

A state can simultaneously:

attract corporations,

experience population growth,

and still fail residents on healthcare, infrastructure, disaster readiness, and public wellbeing.


That tension increasingly defines modern Texas.

The Bigger Question

The real debate is no longer whether Texas is economically successful.

It is whether state leadership has translated that success into reliable systems that protect and serve the people already living there.

Under Greg Abbott, Texas has often prioritized ideological battles and national political branding while struggling with basic governance challenges that directly affect daily life:

keeping the lights on,

ensuring healthcare access,

protecting pregnant women during medical emergencies,

and preparing infrastructure for predictable disasters.


For many Texans, those are not abstract political issues anymore. They are personal ones.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Where Democracy is Drawn

On election night in the United States, maps light up in red and blue like a weather system passing over the country. They look like clean reflections of public will—who won where, who lost, what changed. But those maps are not drawn that night. Long before ballots are cast, long before campaigns begin in earnest, another map has already been quietly shaped in offices, hearings, and increasingly, in software programs that can simulate millions of electoral outcomes in seconds.

That earlier map has a name: the district map. And the process that shapes it is called gerrymandering.

Every ten years, after the U.S. Census counts the population, states redraw their legislative districts to ensure equal representation. In theory, this is a straightforward democratic adjustment—people move, populations shift, representation follows. One person, one vote. A balancing act.

But in practice, the process has become something far more strategic.

Once the new population data is released, whoever controls the state legislature often controls the pen that redraws the lines. And those lines matter more than most people realize. They determine not just who represents a community, but which communities are even grouped together in the first place.

With access to detailed voter histories, census demographics, and sophisticated mapping software, modern map drawers can predict voting behavior with unsettling precision. Neighborhood by neighborhood, block by block, they can estimate how a district will vote before a single candidate has entered the race.

From there, the logic of gerrymandering unfolds in two deceptively simple techniques.

One is “packing,” where voters of one political type are concentrated into a few districts where they will win by overwhelming margins. The other is “cracking,” where those same voters are split across multiple districts so their influence is diluted everywhere else. The result is not always obvious on a map, but it becomes very visible in election outcomes.

Two districts might look oddly stretched or fragmented, but the real effect shows up later: a party winning roughly half the vote across a state can end up holding a commanding majority of the seats.

This is not hypothetical. It is measurable.

Political scientists often use something called the efficiency gap, which tracks “wasted votes”—votes beyond what was needed to win, and votes cast for losing candidates. When those imbalances consistently favor one party, it signals that district lines are doing more than organizing voters; they are structuring outcomes.

In some states, analyses have shown that seat share can diverge from vote share by double digits. A party might win 50% of the vote but secure closer to 60% or even 65% of legislative seats, depending on how districts are drawn. That gap does not emerge from voter preference alone. It is engineered through geography.

Wisconsin offers one of the clearest modern examples. In a recent state Assembly election cycle, Democratic candidates collectively received a majority of the statewide vote, yet Republicans secured a strong majority of the seats. The difference was not a sudden shift in public opinion—it was the result of district boundaries drawn in the previous decade that efficiently concentrated and dispersed voters in ways that favored one party’s long-term control.

And Wisconsin is far from unique. Across multiple states, researchers have found that only a small fraction of congressional districts are genuinely competitive. Many are effectively safe before the first vote is cast. In those districts, the real contest often happens in the primary election, where more ideologically extreme voters tend to have greater influence, further shaping political outcomes.

What makes this system especially powerful in the modern era is technology. Gerrymandering is no longer just a matter of intuition or local knowledge. It is computational. Mapmakers can run simulations that generate thousands or even millions of possible district configurations, each tested against voting data to produce desired political outcomes. Machine learning models can estimate partisan lean with remarkable accuracy using not only past election results but also demographic and behavioral indicators.

In this sense, district drawing has evolved into something closer to optimization than guesswork. The question is no longer simply “How do we draw fair districts?” but, in many cases, “How do we maximize advantage within legal constraints?”

The effects of these choices extend beyond election math. When districts are heavily packed or cracked, representation becomes distorted. Communities that share economic, cultural, or geographic interests may find themselves split across multiple representatives, weakening their collective influence. Meanwhile, districts that are safely one-party dominated often produce less competitive general elections, which can reduce incentives for broad coalition-building.

Researchers have also linked highly noncompetitive districts to lower voter turnout. When the outcome feels predetermined, participation can decline. Over time, this can feed back into the system itself, reinforcing the very patterns that produced the imbalance.

There are attempts to counter this. Some states have moved toward independent redistricting commissions designed to remove or reduce direct partisan control over map drawing. California and Michigan are among the most cited examples. Early evaluations suggest these systems tend to produce more competitive districts and closer alignment between statewide vote share and seat share, though the results depend heavily on how independence is defined and enforced.

Still, reform is uneven, and legal limits are narrow. In 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that federal courts would not adjudicate most partisan gerrymandering claims, effectively leaving the issue largely to states and voters themselves.

So the process continues, quietly, every decade: census data becomes political data, political data becomes geographic lines, and geographic lines become power.

What makes gerrymandering particularly difficult to grasp is that it hides in plain sight. There are no illegal votes being cast, no ballots being altered. Instead, the structure surrounding the vote is shaped in advance, like a stage built before the actors arrive.

On election night, the results look like a reflection of public will. But long before that night arrives, someone has already decided where the audience is sitting, how the stage is divided, and which voices will be amplified in each section.

The map is not just where democracy happens.

In many ways, it is where democracy is designed.