The Texas Reporter (TR) is not to be confused with the Texas Country Reporter (TCR). TCR is a weekly TV show that highlights cool places and people around the state of Texas, now run by J.B. Saucedo. TR is an online presence that describes itself as follows:
News, views, and insights from every corner of Texas and over 99 nations. Travel, national, and global coverage with a Texan perspective.
The main person behind TR is still mostly anonymous. I've read many of his articles, which are often left-leaning, but still don't know his name. Hateful radical terrorist right-wingers target people like him continually.
Texas is far from a one-party state. Of the 17 million Texans who are registered to vote, 46% are Democrats and only 38% are Republican. Another 16% are registered as Independent. Even with figures like that, the last time a Democrat was elected to a statewide office was November of 1994. How is that possible, I hear you ask. My suspicion is that the Republicans (who control the machinery of voting) have been suppressing Democratic votes and have flat-out been cheating. Do I have proof? Fuck no. If I did, I'd be screaming it from the rooftops. Another factor is that Democrats simply do not vote in high percentages like the Republicans do. That would do it.
Maybe this year we will finally elect another Dem to statewide office, like James Talarico to the Senate to take John Cornyn's place. It's looking good so far, and there will be no pop-up sexual allegations against Talarico as there were against Graham Plattner of Maine. Talarico's opponent, current Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, is almost as corrupt and bad a person as Trump.
Below is a recent column published in TR, and what follows that is another column published as a defense for the first one.
Sign hanging from a building in Tehran, Iran.
I do not support political assassination. I do not wish death on anyone.
But Americans need to stop acting shocked when people in other countries hate the leaders who bomb them.
We attacked Iran. We fired missiles into their country. We have threatened to “obliterate” them. We talk about ancient civilizations like they are disposable, inferior, or somehow less human than us.
And Iran is not some empty spot on a map. It is one of the oldest civilizations on Earth. It is Persia. It is Cyrus. It is Xerxes. It is poetry, architecture, scholarship, faith, history, and culture stretching back thousands of years before the United States existed.
I’ve read about pre-revolutionary Iran, post-revolutionary Iran, the Iranian Revolution, and Operation Ajax, when the United States and Britain helped overthrow Iran’s elected government in 1953. That history matters.
So no, I’m not celebrating anyone threatening to kill Donald Trump.
But I also understand that when the head of state of the country bombing you and threatening to destroy you is viewed as a terrorist by the people being bombed, that anger did not come from nowhere.
You do not have to endorse violence to understand cause and effect.
You do not have to support the Iranian government to recognize the humanity of the Iranian people.
And you do not get to bomb people, threaten their country, mock their poverty, interfere in their politics, sanction their economy, and then act confused when they hate you.
And then we have an addendum
Every time I post something about Iran, I get comments asking some version of the same question:
“What about ‘Death to America’?”
Fair question. But I think too many Americans stop there and never ask the next question:
I’ve spent a lot of time reading about Iran. The Iranian Revolution. The Shah. Operation Ajax. U.S. and British involvement in overthrowing Iran’s elected government in 1953. The SAVAK secret police. The events that led millions of Iranians to conclude that foreign powers had too much control over their country’s future.
You don’t have to agree with the Iranian government to understand why that history matters.
So let’s put the shoe on the other foot.
Imagine a foreign country helped overthrow the U.S. government.
Imagine they helped install a ruler many Americans viewed as a dictator.
Imagine they trained and supported the security forces that monitored, arrested, intimidated, and sometimes tortured political opponents.
Imagine that went on for decades.
Then imagine Americans eventually rose up and overthrew that government.
Do you think Americans would have warm feelings toward the foreign country that helped create the mess?
Or do you think there might be a little resentment?
Understanding that doesn’t require supporting the Iranian government. It doesn’t require agreeing with every slogan, policy, or action that came afterward.
It simply requires recognizing that history did not begin yesterday.
One of the biggest problems in American discussions about foreign policy is that we often view other countries only through the lens of what they have done to us, while ignoring what we may have done to them.
If we’re going to have an honest conversation about Iran, we should be willing to look at the entire story, not just the chapters that make us feel comfortable.
History is rarely as simple as good guys and bad guys. And nations, including our own, are rarely innocent spectators in the events that shape the world.