You probably should if you're going to argue this.I did not, it's not in the document at the top of the thread.
Higher minimum wages seem to be working in small towns in states that passed them, maybe you're just wrong?It's not about what the minimum is set to, it's about who is setting it. Smalls towns in remote places do not generate the same amount of traffic as the same businesses would in cities. A hardware store in a midwestern hamlet can't afford the same payroll as the same store would in LA. A $15 minimum wage is totally unlivable in most major cities and untenable for many small towns, which is why the propose doing it by locality only.
It's not the truth, it's an opinion. It's a difference of opinion and I'm acknowledging that, but it's an opinion nonetheless.I appreciate your honesty, admitting that you only disagree to make a political stance independent of truth.
Wow, way to completely dodge the article's point. They don't have a voice in the districts they're in now, they're such a minority in each district they may as well not vote. In the old version they got someone on the city council, giving them a voice in local politics and they explicitly lost that now. They have less representation in local politics than they did before. Because of republicans specifically. If you're going to "blame" the old map on democrats, then democrats gave them power and republicans took it away. You're not going to be able to dance around this.You mean they de-gerrymandered the map. The map had previously been cut up into this shape: https://static.texastribune.org/media/files/3ec714085db94377eec54fe75bf18ca3/Historical County Commissioners Precinct Map.pdf?_ga=2.234799767.806828974.1655896994-2075738854.1655896994
Which packed as many racial minorities as possible into a single district, giving them a single county representative and no voice at all in the other 4 precincts. That article talks about electing a black mayor as though that will go away, but that has nothing to do with county board districts. The city will still elect its mayor exactly the same. The article talks about the districts having a higher percentage of white voters than the overall population, as though that's the result of districting, but that's just pointing out that there are a lot of non-white, non-voters who live there.
Just, like, imagine if they were previously on the current map, and then they passed the old map packing all the minorities into one district. Would you not be upset at that?
Further noting you're studiously not talking about how the republican party hates gay republicans and how you believe we should stop fluoridating the drinking water.