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The State of Texas: Trump rolls back federal protections for transgender students

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Thu, Feb 23, 2017 06:22 PM

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What Texas is talking about today No Images? February 23, 2017 QUOTE OF THE DAY ?Anybody who knows

What Texas is talking about today No Images? [Click here]( [MSC OPAS Presents Jersey Boys]( [Texas Monthly]( February 23, 2017 QUOTE OF THE DAY “Anybody who knows the whereabouts of Kong please contact police.” —Corpus Christi police Lieutenant Chris Hooper, to the [Corpus Christi Caller-Times](. Kong is a large inflatable gorilla that was stolen from its post outside a Fiat car dealership in Corpus on Sunday. His whereabouts remain unknown, despite this, uh, unique description from Hooper: “It’s a large black gorilla, wearing white sunglasses, red shorts and it’s holding a yellow car above his head.” #findKongyall BIG NEWS LGBT Loss On Wednesday, President Donald Trump rolled back federal guidelines implemented by his predecessor, Barack Obama, to protect transgender students, according to the [Texas Tribune](. The move essentially leaves it up to the states to decide whether transgender students can use school restrooms that coordinate with their gender identity or if they must use the restrooms of their assigned-at-birth sex. Texas has been at the forefront of the national battle. As the [Dallas Morning News]( notes, the Trump administration’s decision could serve as further fuel to the fire for Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, who has been championing [Senate Bill 6](, a proposal that would limit where transgender people can use public restrooms. “We agree with President Trump that this is a state issue,” Patrick said in a [statement](. “SB 6 does not discriminate against anyone.” Texas is also the leader of a group of states that challenged the legality of Obama’s transgender protections shortly after he implemented the guidelines last May. The state successfully argued before a federal judge that the feds had overstepped their boundaries and risked forcing folks to go against their religious beliefs. In January, U.S District Judge Reed O’Connor issued a temporary injunction that blocked the guidelines. Trump’s rollback of the guidelines, however, leaves Texas to reevaluate whether it should bother moving forward with the lawsuit.”The action taken today by the Trump administration is encouraging and my office is evaluating what impact it might bear on our ongoing litigation,” Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a [statement](. “Our fight over the bathroom directive has always been about former President Obama’s attempt to bypass Congress and rewrite the laws to fit his political agenda for radical social change.” [MSC OPAS Presents Jersey Boys]( MEANWHILE, IN TEXAS . .. Rest In Peace Texas Monthly lost a legend on Wednesday with the passing of writer Gary Cartwright. He was among the magazine's first hires in the early seventies and stuck around TM for most of his career, which spanned about 40 years and brought us some truly unforgettable stories. “Gary was a master storyteller,” former TM publisher Mike Levy told the [Austin American-Statesman](. “Great writers do three things: get the stories—in other words, get people to talk, and Gary could get anybody to talk—then put all the pieces together and have the wisdom to figure out what it meant.” The North Texas native honed his craft at the Fort Worth Press under legendary Texas sportswriter Blackie Sherrod, an integral part of a group of Sherrod-taught Texas writers that includes Bud Shrake and Dan Jenkins. “For all of his books and wonderful magazine pieces, he’ll always be remembered best for his lede on a Dallas Cowboys game, which went something like: ‘The Four Horsemen rode again yesterday. You know them: Pestilence, Famine, Death and Meredith,’” Jenkins told the Statesman. This magazine is a writer's magazine, and, as TM's [John Spong writes](, that's because of Cartwright. "For all the great voices that have come through Texas Monthly in the meanwhile, Cartwright’s is the chief reason the reputation persists." You can [read our collection remembrances]( here. Second Chance The U.S. Supreme Court gave a Texan sitting on death row a new lease on life, ruling on Wednesday that Duane Buck could ask for a new hearing to challenge his death sentence, according to the [Houston Chronicle](. Buck's SCOTUS challenge was centered around whether or not racially-biased evidence was used to put him on death row. During the original trial, Buck's own attorney called on a psychologist, Walter Quijano, who proceeded to tell the court that the color of Buck's skin made him more dangerous. In the [majority opinion](, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that Quijano's testimony "coincided precisely with a particularly noxious strain of racial prejudice, which itself coincided precisely with the central question at sentencing. The effect of this unusual confluence of factors was to provide support for making a decision on life or death on the basis of race." Roberts wrote that "Dr. Quijano’s report said, in effect, that the color of Buck’s skin made him more deserving of execution," adding that "It would be patently unconstitutional for a state to argue that a defendant is liable to be a future danger because of his race." So Buck's case will be kicked back to a lower court in Houston for review. Drunk Love Wednesday was National Margarita Day (so, too, is today, in the sense that literally every day is National Margarita Day), and one Galveston writer took it upon himself to celebrate the occasion by restating a dubious claim: that the Texas island gave birth to the refreshing tequila-and-lime drink. "As an Islander, I will proudly boast that Santos Cruz of Galveston Island, Texas invented the Margarita," Roane wrote on [Galveston.com](. "I dare you to prove me wrong. Give me your best salty shot." Roane claims Santos Cruz fellow first thought up the margarita while bartending at The Balinese Room in Galveston, as a special concoction for singer Peggy Lee. Roane had apparently written about Cruz last year, too, but after a year's worth of margaritas it must have been time for a refresher. Anyway, Roane threw some shade at Texas Monthly, claiming we erroneously identified the inventor of the margarita in a [1974 story](. "They go on and on about some guy, Pancho Morales, who drives a milk truck in El Paso," Roane writes. Well, Roane, we're sticking to our story. It's worth noting that Galveston.com is the "official website of Galveston tourism and marketing," so the story was probably mixed in favor of the island. After all, who wouldn't want be known as the first Margarita City? We can debate the issue over 'ritas. WHAT WE'RE READING Some links are paywalled or subscription-only. Congressional town halls have been getting pretty spicy in Texas [Houston Chronicle]( Rex Tillerson has had a tough start as Secretary of State [Politico Magazine]( A transgender bathroom battle is raging in a Fort Worth federal prison [Fort Worth Star-Telegram]( Police in Arizona captured the "Barrel Chested Bandit" suspected of robbing a bunch of Texas banks [Amarillo Globe-News]( A soldier died in a car accident during a training exercise at Fort Hood [Killeen Daily Herald]( THROWBACK THURSDAY FROM [@TMTROVE]( [Who Was Jack Ruby?]( by Gary Cartwright From the late, great Gary Cartwright: "If there is a tear left, shed it for Jack Ruby. He didn’t make history; he only stepped in front of it." [MSC OPAS Presents Jersey Boys]( MORE FROM TEXAS MONTHLY [23 Writers and Editors Remember Gary Cartwright]( by Texas Monthly Staff Awe, gratitude, and stories upon stories. Gary would approve. [The Houston Police Department Estimates The Value Of Tom Brady’s Missing Super Bowl Jersey]( by Dan Solomon With that figure, it’d make it one of the most expensive pieces of sports memorabilia of all time. [Latinos Won’t Turn Texas Blue Anytime Soon]( by R.G. Ratcliffe Growing Latino vote may be years away from deciding statewide elections. Enjoy getting your daily fix of Texas Monthly? Spread the word and share it. [Forward to a Friend]( Texas Monthly PO Box 1569 Austin, TX 78767 Texas Monthly has sent you this alert because you signed up to receive it either online at texasmonthly.com, at the website of one of our business partners, or when you filled out a reader response card. You may cancel your subscription to this and other Texas Monthly newsletters at any time. Please see our Privacy Policy. [Like]( [Tweet]( [Forward]( [Preferences]( | [Unsubscribe](

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