As the DNC and the Corpowoketarianz become more and more dependent on one another for power, they will inceasingly walk lock step with each other in terms of the types of human action governnce they are willing to attempt to affect using coercive action, be it the direct action of the state, or the soft-power extension of the state (the part the DNC controls), the Corpowoketarianz, the American international corporations that all decided to go all-in with the Corpowoketarianz agenda and surrender any semblance of Bill-of-Rights-Based Americanism in how they treat their employees and their customers.
The Corpowoketarianz are most likely at the zenith of their power, and I have little doubt the government-powered faction of this unholy alliance will eventually move to strike down the power the corpowoketarianz currently poesses, but, for now, the state and the corporation are one, and will be for the near-foreseeable future. Texas is becoming a battleground of sorts, a proving ground, really for corowoketarianz power. If the corpowoketarianz, through the use of their considerably market monopoly power, a power protected directly by state guns, can flip Texas blue, then the end is near for all political parties outside the DNC-Corpowoketarianz one.
Once that power consolidation is complete, the infighting between the very wealthy families of tech and the very wealthy families of legacy (government and legacy business) will begin. I am betting the old guard will eventually purge and claim the toys of the new guard (the wealthy new corpowoketarianz feudal lords and ladies) for themselves. But let’s hope we never have to ask theat question, as it is on that will never be answered if they faill to consolidate political party power.
In Texas, the GOP is against mandates in general regarding Covid. The official DNC policy is mandate and control and capitalize on this ’emergency’ to continue to sieze wealth from the many that is given to their billionaire allies while also developing habits of police-state submission and expectation from the masses. And our American corporations, the corpowoketarianz, have signed on, for the sake of their government ally, their brother in seditious arms, the DNC.
This is not to suggest that I know exactly how to handle our Covid reality, or that mandates, be it vaccines or masks, might or might not be justified, this is to suggest that the usefulness to we the poors, the powerless, is the least of the concerns or motivations for the DNC and the Corpowoketarinz that do its soft power bidding.
Texas GOP’s All-In Focus on Culture War Spurs Corporate Backlash – Bloomberg
From www.bloomberg.com
2021-08-12 15:17:31
Excerpt:
Business and politics are colliding in Texas, where Republican Governor Greg Abbott is facing backlash over a conservative social agenda that companies say will make it harder for them to attract and retain the best talent.
The latest flare-up came Wednesday, when Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins, a Democrat, issued an executive order that requires masks be worn inside businesses and schools, defying Abbott’s ban on such mandates. Issues like voting rights and the treatment of transgender children have also recently divided the governor and corporations operating in the state. Dell Technologies Inc., Apple Inc., Facebook Inc. and International Business Machines Corp. have publicly criticized priorities of the Republican-dominated state government.
It’s an awkward position for a politician who has painted himself as a champion of economic development, ready to tout successes in luring Oracle Corp., Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. and Tesla Inc. to the Lone Star State and helping oversee the nation’s biggest jobs increase from 2010 to 2020. But facing re-election next year along with declining popularity and ultra-conservative challengers in the Republican primary vote, Abbott has pushed for legislation that plays well with his base even if it’s increasingly at odds with major corporations.
“Since the time George W. Bush was governor, we have seen that economic development as a cornerstone for growth for the Republican party in Texas,” said Jim Riddlesperger, a political science professor at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth. “What he is doing here is playing to the audience for the Republican primary and not to the general public.”
There’s a risk to that strategy come general election time, amid an influx of newcomers from companies relocating to the state as well as pandemic-era transplants lured by warm weather and zero income taxes. Many of those new residents have a more liberal disposition than life-long Texans, threatening the Republican party’s dominance of the state, which boasts the world’s ninth-largest economy.

