Chris Tomlinson is an opinion writer for The Houston Chronicle and one of the best critics of the state’s loony leadership. In this column, he warns of the perils of pushing out the free-thinkers. As Forrest Gump famously said, “Stupid is as stupid does.”
He writes:
Texas lawmakers are targeting colleges and universities in the next culture war battle, putting our most vital economic drivers at risk.
Our public universities are why Texas outperforms, whether it’s petroleum engineering at Texas A&M, electrical engineering at UT-Austin or transportation at Prairie View A&M University. Multi-disciplinary research universities produce diverse workforces and innovative entrepreneurs that benefit state and local economies.
The right-wing thought police, though, are fed up with freethinkers. Recent laws and proposed bills aim to restrict what ideas faculty and students can explore. The brightest minds will not stick around if the GOP limits intellectual freedom.
Republicans spent the 2023 legislative session protecting white supremacy by attacking programs intended to help historically under-represented students succeed. GOP lawmakers worried that fragile white students may feel uncomfortable discussing the nation’s history of slavery and oppression.
State Sen. Brandon Creighton, a Conroe Republican who leads the Senate Education Committee, passed a law banning diversity, equity and inclusion programs at public universities. In a stunning example of Orwellian doublethink, Creighton said his law would boost diversity.
However, when UT Austin complied with Senate Bill 17, a third of the 49 people laid off were Black, even though African-Americans make up only 7% of employees. Roughly three-fourths of the employees let go were women, though they make up just 55% of the total staff.
Across all campuses, the University of Texas System eliminated more than 300 jobs to comply with the law, arguing it was a cost-saving measure.
“Why is it that you must save costs on the backs of Black and brown employees and female employees?” Texas NAACP President Gary Bledsoe asked.
Not only do Republican leaders want to wipe out programs trying to reverse the lingering effects of white supremacist rule, but they also want to stop research into how racism and bigotry have harmed our society.
The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents, appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott, recently cut 52 academic programs, including global culture and society, LGBTQ studies, global health, Asian studies and a certificate in performing social activism in the College of Performance, Visualization and Fine Arts. Regent Michael J. Plank echoed UT officials, saying the board has a duty to “eliminate waste.”
Across the country, conservatives are using “cost saving” as a fig leaf for suppressing ideas they don’t like. For example, A&M had only offered the LGBTQ studies minor for three semesters before declaring it wasteful.
The University of North Texas made 78 changes to its course schedule, removing words such as race, gender, class and equity from titles and descriptions, the Dallas Morning News reported. Freedom of speech group PEN America accused university leaders of abusing SB17.
“UNT seems to be arguing that the principle of academic freedom only exists when state law allows it,” Jeremy Young, PEN’s Freedom to Learn project director, said. “This ludicrous interpretation effectively nullifies academic freedom as a protection against government censorship, setting a perilous precedent for higher education institutions across Texas and potentially beyond.”
Texas A&M and UNT may have only been obeying in advance of more restrictive laws to come.
“While DEI-related curriculum and course content does not explicitly violate the letter of the law, it indeed contradicts its spirit,” Creighton said during a Texas Senate Higher Education Subcommittee hearing. “The curriculum does not reflect the expectations of Texas taxpayers and students who fund our public universities.”
Newly elected state Rep. Carl Tepper, a Lubbock Republican, has introduced a bill requiring the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to calculate a ratio of student debt to annual salary for every degree or certificate offered. The board would then assign a rating: reward, monitor, sanction or sunset. The goal is to shut down programs in the latter categories.
Learning for learning’s sake would not be tolerated under House Bill 281.
Political leaders have long interfered with colleges and universities. Texas lawmakers started using professors as political scapegoats within three years of establishing UT. Institutions have long offered tenure to protect underpaid professors from political interference.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has repeatedly said he wants to ban tenure and make it easier to remove professors who teach or study ideas the Legislature doesn’t like.
Unsurprisingly, two-thirds of the 950 Texas faculty surveyed by the American Association of University Professors said they would not recommend teaching in Texas to colleagues.
Texas Republicans may feel a mandate to drive free thinkers out of public universities, but Texas employers looking for an educated workforce will pay the price.

I think “I could care less what happens in Texas (or Florida).” But then this nagging thought from Dr. King gives me the shivers – “A threat to justice anywhere ….”
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You have to care about what happens in Florida and Texas because they are the Petri dishes for the worst, any-social experiments.
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Moreover, in general: “What affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” That’s the nature of the “interrelated structure of reality,” King offered.
The documentary “The Dust Bowl” is so much like a prediction of the horror Trumpian folly will unleash. Different contexts but the same underlying operation of the interrelated structure of reality.
Stratford, Texas, April 1935…
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I used to like Texas. I never thought their creed was to engage in intellectual suicide. CBK
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Did autocorrect perhaps have a bit too much to drink on Thanksgiving? What else explains these? “Gouston Chronicle” which I’m pretty sure ought to be Houston, and “lead we ship” which I suspect was intended to be leadership.
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William, thank you! Repaired. It’s not the drink, it’s the eyes.
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The whole control women’s body and anti-DEI agenda is how the right is trying to perpetuate white male supremacy. Their anti-intellectualism is based on the idea that in an authoritarian future, they will need drones to carry out the plans of the billionaire overlords. Original thinkers will resist their plans. Those in the social sciences and arts, will be more likely to question and challenge their plans. The right wing extremists want worker bees, not protesters. If anything, Trump has shown us how easy it is for a demagogue to fool most of the people. All these components fit their narrative, or maybe I am reading too much science fiction.
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“If anything, Trump has shown us how easy it is for a demagogue to fool most of the people.
Horse manure. No, the tRump has not fooled “most of the people.” 75M out of 225M-eligible voters is not most of the people.
Why do you keep repeating that lie?
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Not all Texans are Republicans. Many are Democrats and independents and even many Republicans don’t think like that.
How a fraction of voters decide who runs Texas | The Texas Tribune
The small fraction of voters who vote in the primaries decide who runs in the midterm and general elections. Trump relied on that fact to take over the Republican Party and primaried Never Republicans from running for reelection.
The autocratic lunatics that rule Texas today did the same thing.
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Latinos tend to be rather traditional, and they are difficult to politically engage. If they ever voted in proportion to their numbers, they could run Texas.
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