Texas has several billionaire bullies who want the state to keep their taxes low, cut benefits to needy people, and enact vouchers so that more students can attend religious schools on the public’s dime.
Russell Gold writes in the Texas Monthly about Tim Dunn, a billionaire who has used his money to purge the Republican Party of moderates. In addition to being an oilman, Tim Dunn is a pastor and a devout Christian nationalist. He has funded numerous organizations that act as pass-throughs for his political contributions, such as Defend Texas Liberty PAC, the Texas Public Policy Foundation, the First Liberty Institute, Empower Texans, Texas Scorecard, Ballotpedia, Stand for Freedom PAC,
Gold writes:
You may not think about Tim Dunn. Indeed, unless you’re a close observer of Texas politics, it’s likely you haven’t heard of him. But Dunn thinks a lot about you.
For two decades he has been quietly, methodically, and patiently building a political machine that has pushed Texas forcefully to the right, sending more and more members of the centrist wing of the Republican Party into exile. A 68-year-old oil billionaire, Dunn seeks to transform Texas into something resembling a theocracy. If you ever wonder why state laws and policies are more radical than most Texans would prefer, the answer has a lot to do with Dunn and his checkbook. If you question why Texas’s elected officials no longer represent the majority of Texans’ views, the reason can be traced to the tactics employed by Dunn and the many organizations and politicians he funds and influences. He has built his own caucus within the Legislature that is financially beholden to him. And despite his Sunday school pleas for comity, Dunn has deepened Texas’s political divisions: there are the Democrats and what remains of the mainstream conservative Republican Party. And then there are Dunn and his allies….
In the past two years Dunn has become the largest individual source of campaign money in the state by far. Until recently his main tool for exerting influence has been the Defend Texas Liberty PAC, to which he has given at least $9.85 million since the beginning of 2022. This is nearly all the money he contributed to Texas races over that span and the majority raised by the committee. The political action committee targets Republicans, many of them quite conservative, whom it deems insufficiently loyal to the organization’s right-wing agenda. Dunn is not a passive donor who will dole out a few thousand dollars after a phone call and some flattering chitchat. The funding machine he has built is designed to steer politics and control politicians.
Its methods are deceptively simple. A Dunn-affiliated organization lets lawmakers know how it wants them to vote on key issues of the legislative session. After the session, it assigns a number, from zero to one hundred, to each lawmaker based on these votes. Republicans who score high, in the eighties or nineties, are likely to remain in Dunn’s good graces. But those who see their scores drift down to the seventies or even sixties—who, in other words, legislate independently? Their fate is easy to predict.
They’ll likely face a primary opponent, often someone little known in the community, whose campaign bank account is filled by donations from Dunn and his allies. This cash provides access to political consultants and operations that can be used to spread false and misleading attacks on Dunn’s targets, via social media feeds, glossy mailers, and text messages. “They told you point blank: if you don’t vote the way we tell you, we’re going to score against you,” said Bennett Ratliff, a Republican former state representative from Dallas County. “And if you don’t make a good score, we’re going to run against you. It was not a thumb on the scale—it was flat extortion.” Ratliff lost in 2014 to a Dunn-backed right-wing candidate, Matt Rinaldi, who scored a perfect one hundred in the next two sessions and quickly amassed power: Rinaldi now serves as the combative and divisive chair of the state GOP…
Dunn’s influence goes well beyond campaigns and politics. His résumé is lengthy. He is vice chairman of the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a right-wing think tank located a couple of blocks south of the Capitol. TPPF generates policy proposals—from severe property tax cuts to bills that impede the growth of renewable energy—that are often taken up by the Texas Legislature and emulated in other red states. He has served for years on the board of the First Liberty Institute, a legal powerhouse that has won Supreme Court cases to advance Christianity’s role in public life. ..
In the past several years Dunn has become involved with multiple online media operations. “You can’t trust the newspapers,” he wrote in a 2018 letter to voters. But apparently you can trust Texas Scorecard, a political website that is often critical of politicians who don’t support his agenda. Texas Scorecard was published by Empower Texans, a group largely funded by Dunn that then became a separate organization in 2020. It continues to publish articles that are generally critical of candidates Dunn opposes.
He has also been an officer with Chicago-based Pipeline Media, which maintains a network of websites designed to look like independent local media outlets but that churn out often-partisan articles that amplify stances taken by special interest groups. The Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University found that this network has attacked renewable energy and advocated for property tax cuts. Further, Dunn is a longtime board member of the Lucy Burns Institute, publisher of the website Ballotpedia, which provides information on federal, state, and local elections. It recently launched an “ultra-local” initiative, publishing updates on candidate positions and endorsements in areas that have become news deserts after the closures of local newspapers. The site reported more than a quarter billion page views in 2022…
Dunn has a few key powerful officials in his pocket, including Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick (a job considered more powerful than the governor) and Attorney General Ken Paxton, who escaped an effort to impeach him thanks to Dunn’s largesse.
Dunn is up-front about his desire to use politics to pave the way for a “New Earth,” in which Jesus Christ and his believers will live together. (“When heaven comes to earth and God dwells with his people as the King,” Dunn has said.) Until then, he remains a key player in the growing Christian nationalism movement, which rejects the importance of pluralism to American identity. Instead it contends that only devout Christians are good Americans.
Back in 2010, Dunn met with Joe Strauss, the Republican Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives. Strauss represented San Antonio. He is Jewish. Dunn told Strauss that only Christians should be in leadership roles.
Considering that Jesus was Jewish, that’s not a very Christ-like sentiment. Unless you are a Christian nationalist.

I used to ask myself — Why did we build a society where sociopaths rise to the top?
Nowadays I realize the question is — Why did we let sociopaths build a society where sociopaths rise to the top?
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Christian Nationalism is not a philosophical approach to Christianity. It is rather, an approach to power that references the word for its effects on that power. It closely resembles the Medieval approach to Christianity, wherein the state was subservient to a centralized church. This morphed into the rise of the nation state in such a way that revolutionary philosophy of the Enlightenment rejected Christianity, or the notions it depended on it. These ideas kept Europeans from accepting the paradigm of the goodness of individual contribution to self governing. Indeed it was this individualist point of view that took the majority of criticism from the early fascist movement.
Well! Here we are again.
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This type of Christian centric thinking led to The Crusades where it has been estimated that more than 1.7 million people died.
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Which religious sects fought in the Crusades?
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The main Christian groups in the crusader states were the Greek Orthodox, the Syrian Orthodox, the Armenians, the Maronites and, in the second quarter of the twelfth century, the Frankish Catholics. The French Catholics joined the later crusades.
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The back story before the commencement of RE’s history-
Wikipedia, “Crusades”-
the first crusade/expedition was in 1095 and began with a proclamation from Pope Urban II of the Catholic Church. 1099 was the date of the conquest of Jerusalem. Wikipedia said the two most
well known of the series of religious wars were in 1095 and 1291. Adding purpose to the wars, Wikipedia describes the Church-sanctioned crusades against Christians not obeying papal rulings…
.
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Readers can gain additional information about the Crusades from the Wikipedia entry, “Crusades against Christians”…”The Papacy’s drive for homogeneous Christianity.”
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A thorough look at the crusades is contained in Stephen Runcimen’s three volumes. As far as I know, it remains the definitive work
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Urban preached the call to the First Crusade in 1099 in France. To French kings, enticing the nobles to fight the Saracen kept them from vying for royal power at home. The goal was way more a political one than it was a religious one, but couching it in religious terms proved more effective.
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Thanks Roy for adding comment.
Additional info.- Pope Gregory VII was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of papal states. He was the 157th Pope (1073-1085). He restricted use of the papal title to the bishop of Rome. In the succession, Pope Urban II was the 159th pope.
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RE
In terms of numbers, how significant were the Maronites? Historians described them being “rediscovered” in the mountains near Tripoli, Lebanon… by crusaders headed to the conquest of Jerusalem. By at least 1182, Maronites were affiliated with the Holy See. (And, currently, they recognize the Pope as head of their church.)
Historians describe the early Crusaders as mostly from the western Catholic tradition. The sacking of Constantinople (Eastern Orthodox religious sects) figures into the history, 1202-1204.
I ask Roy to correct the info., if it is in error.
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You tell ’em, Linda. It was Catholics from Mordor, allied with Satan and under the direction of Sauron the Dark Lord.
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John Paul II apologized for the 4th Crusade.
Info about the sacking of Constantinople
is available on-line. “The actions of the Crusaders directly accelerated the collapse of Christendom in the East.”
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Well said, RT! And to the genocide, subjugation, and appropriation of the land another other resources of indigenous peoples worldwide!
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She was supposed to just say “Catholic,” though.
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Haaaaaaa!!!!! I was wondering just today what the Koch, Catholic Conferences, Thanos nexus was that is behind necrotizing fasciitis.
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Dunn- $9.85 mil. -Texas
Leonard Leo-$18 mil. -Ohio
and, Leo has at least $1.6 bil. to spend nationwide.
The Lever (10-27-2023), “Leonard Leo’s Fight Against Abortion Access”…”Leo’s dark money network has spent $18 mil. opposing the campaign to enshrine abortion rights in Ohio’s Constitution.”
So, Dunn gets identified as being in the Christian sect (in his case, right wing protestant). And, Leo’s right wing Catholic sect remains unidentified by media and influencers. And, that’s not weird or bizarre to Bob. The reporter who covered Dunn must have been traumatized personally by a person in the Christian sect.
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Dunn recently sold his company for a reported $12 billion. This Christian Nationalist can buy a lot of influence. We need to get rid of Citizens United.
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Citizens United wasn’t decided by protestant, Christian nationalist jurists.
On the other hand, Leonard Leo plays/played a large role in the selection of jurists for Republicans and, Don McGahn of the Jones Day law firm, played a huge role in Trump’s selection of 3 jurists for SCOTUS.
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You ever notice, when you do your laundry (assuming you are not wealthy enough to have others do it for you), that there is always at least one sock missing?
Leonard Leo. Amy Conan the Barbarian/Barette. Koch. Koch’s Bassett Hounds. The Manhattan Institute for Barkeeping. The Day-O Banana Boat Song Law firm. AND Catholic Conferences.
They are knitting a muffler large enough to cover the whole state of Ohio and END DEMOCRACY.
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“And, that’s not weird or bizarre to Bob”
Bob was one of the first people to write on this blog about the nefarious behind-the-scenes activity of Leonard Leo.
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“ It can be difficult to understand. The Jewish culture is not the same as ours. I have a lot of Jewish friends and they are like cactus fruit: sweet on the inside and prickly on the outside.”
Dunn Quoting from the First Epistle of Peter. It advises women, who are “the weaker vessel,” not to braid their hair or wear too much gold jewelry. They should “adorn themselves by submitting to their own husbands.”
Dunn later talked about his view that men’s brains are structured differently from women’s: men are superior problem solvers, while women tend to be more articulate.
https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/billionaire-tim-dunn-runs-texas/
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Bob and all: Three things I take from these discussions:
(1) I think the nefarious activities of our current crop of billionaires gives the best argument for “taxing the rich” and “for-ALL-of the-people regulations” (where “government by monetization” is not the ruling ideology) than any thing we can know today.
(2) We should adopt the term ”pseudo-Christian” or even “pseudo-Catholic” (read Vatican II not to mention the New Testament). . . . for what, in fact, is a cancer of totalitarianism on the human spirit. Even if “God gave us government,” it is a democratic and not a theocratic gift (of/for/by the people whose hearts and choices are at the call-and-respond center, and not Nurse Cratchet and her clipboard)–nothing about external force, and nothing these “pseudo-Christians” are doing politically or socially resembles even a “lite” reading of the New Testament. (Further (to Linda), Leo does not equate to either Catholic, The Catholic Church, or Christianity . . . On the contrary . . . “Catholic” is a flag he conveniently wraps himself in to hid his totalitarian intentions.) Excuse me, please, while I puke from reading about the billionaire who apparently thinks he owns the entire state of Texas and everyone in it. Finally, . . .
(3) The “freedom of religion” idea, also a part of the U.S. Constitution, does not equate to “Let us Transform Democracy into Theocracy.” Nor does “separation of church and state” equate to “Rid the World, and Even the Public Square, of Religious Expression.” Nor does living in the spirit of Christianity equate to a mandate to release one’s own brand of totalitarian government on everyone else.
The whole thing is supposed to rest on the ideals of love and reason. Then there’s that . . . and if that’s the case, quite possibly, we’re toast. CBK
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Retired Teacher
The past-
When accepted, a history that omits the truth, undercuts all arguments against the selective telling of events, for example, refutation of Rufo’s 1776 version of American history.
The present-
Dienne 77’s protection of Trump/Putin i.e. her omission of their moral failures, is condemned at the blog. It’s hypocritical for blog commenters to justify their own omissions about and/or the downplaying of the Catholic church’s activities and expenditures aimed at advancing the anti-democracy GOP.
Glass houses, a history that teaches us nothing and… personally-directed gaslighting
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If the voucher programs are funded by religious institutions, you can basically forget about, the separation of church and state, which was what the, primary cause of the Pilgrims’, floating over to the U.S., from England for, and, Texas will, be ruled by, primarily, WHITE Christians, and, racism in the South will, get, worse and worse, and, doon, there won’t be a, safe place for the, minority populations, the non-whites, to live. This is, truly, AWFUL, so, why aren’t, any of the, voters, objecting to this???
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The primary push for vouchers was to get money for Catholic schools. “Whose Choice? How school choice began in Ohio,” Akron Beacon Journal, Dec. 14,1999.
A major force in state capitols for school vouchers are Catholic Conferences.
The legal scholar credited as most influential in advancing religious charter schools is a professor at Notre Dame who is a Koch Manhattan Institute Fellow.
Media and influencers avoid writing and talking about politicized right wing political campaigns by Catholics.
Voters would object if they knew the enemy went beyond the convenient bogeyman, protestant evangelicals.
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