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    "A Celebration of Diversity"

    Trailblazers set out to intelligently bash Rick Perry's day of prayer: A response to The Response

    Steven Thomson
    Aug 3, 2011 | 5:26 pm
    The American Family Association's cross it offered to customers during the Christmas season has been compared by some groups to the burning crosses of KKK rituals.

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry's much-ballyhooed day of prayer and fasting, The Response, will take control of Reliant Stadium on Saturday morning. The shebang is largely funded by the hyper-conservative group artfully known as the American Family Association.

    Explains the diehard Christian (and possible GOP presidential candidate) Perry regarding our nation's moral crisis, "There is hope for America. It lies in heaven, and we will find it on our knees."

    Perry's not the only one who gets on his knees. Make way for the simultaneous anti-Response, the Trailblazers Brunch, hosted by the Harris County Democratic Party, which will honor LGBT community members at the Hyatt Regency Downtown. With its title, "A Celebration of Diversity," the event is designed in direct contrast to the stadium Bible stomp.

    "The Response goes too far because the organizers behind it are so extreme," Michael Keegan tells CultureMap.

    More than just a heathen free for all, the morning meeting will honor Mayor Annise Parker, Judge Steven Kirkland, Councilmember Sue Lovell, Judge Phyllis Frye, Linda Morales and the late John Paul Barnich. Serving as Mistress of Ceremonies is Fiona Dawson, with Equality Texas executive director Dennis Coleman providing a keynote address.

    The Trailblazers Brunch is an annual event now in its fourth year. In the past it has recognized female, Latino and African American leaders, but we're eager to learn The Response's response to this year's roster of honorees.

    "Talks were already in the works to honor LGBT leaders at this year's brunch," says Houston Stonewall Young Democrats president Robert Shipman, "but when Gov. Perry announced his event, the Harris County Democratic Party decided to host the brunch in direct opposition."

    The American Family Association's issues director, Bryan Fischer, has alleged that gays caused the Holocaust (and are planning a sequel) and should be withheld from public office. Also on the AFA agenda is criminalizing homosexuality, converting foreign Muslims to Christianity, halting mosque construction and banning Muslims from the armed forces.

    The Southern Poverty Law Center classifies the AFA as a hate organization. "It is extremely difficult to land on that list," Shipman said. "It takes pretty egregious activity. The AFA's repeated and sustained misinformation and hype is what makes it among the very few religious organizations on that list."

    The Trailblazers Brunch is the only anti-Response event officially being held by the Harris County Democratic Party, but detractors are flocking to Houston in protest of Perry's rally. Among them is Houston-native Michael Keegan, president of People For the American Way, which monitors the activities of the religious right and fights for issues like separation of church and state and religious liberty.

    "The Response goes too far because the organizers behind it are so extreme," Keegan tells CultureMap. "It's very unusual for a politician to ally with the AFA because they're so radical and don't speak to most people's values when they profess that the First Amendment only applies to Christians or that Oprah is making the way for the antichrist."

    A senior fellow researcher from People For the American Way will accompany Keegan in Houston as part of a 25-year-long documentation of the radical religious right.

    Adding to the mix is Westboro Baptist Church, which has scheduled pickets (listed on its website, which goes by the name: GodHatesFags.com) at The Response, the Trailblazers Brunch and what Westboro's website calls the "fag military" at the U.S. Coast Guard Air Station at Ellington Field. Yes, Westboro is against Perry's day of prayer as well.

    Westboro writes on its website: "Again, Gov. Perry falls short and his thought of God are too human. We are a nation that has not honored God and given Him the glory for all things!

    "This "Day of Prayer" will do more to further the wrath and anger of God toward this nation. It will bring about God's will, which will be a glorious sight."

    A Celebration of Diversity takes place from 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday at the Hyatt Regency Downtown. Tickets are $50. RSVP to leah@hcdp.org. Rick Perry's day of prayer runs from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Reliant Stadium. The Response is free to attend, but registration is required and stadium parking will cost $15.

    What's your response to the Response?

     
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    eyes on the road

    5 Houston highways rank among deadliest roads in America, per report

    Amber Heckler
    Jun 12, 2025 | 9:30 am
    I-45 Houston downtown
    Photo courtesy of TXDOT
    I-45 is in the hotseat again.

    Heads up to Houstonians commuting on the city's freeways: Five busy Harris County highways were just deemed among the deadliest roads in the country, with I-45 in Houston ranking as the deadliest road in Texas. That's according to a new study based on the latest National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data.

    The study, commissioned by Santa Ana, California-based company Future Bail Bonds, compared fatal crash data across 96,000 U.S. roads from 2019-2023. The top 150 "deadliest" roads were ranked by the total number of fatal crashes that occurred during the five-year period.

    The No. 1 deadliest road in America is I-15 in San Bernardino County, California, the study found. The interstate, which runs from Southern California to Las Vegas, experienced the highest rate of deadly car crashes from 2019-2023 with 196 crashes.

    For comparison, I-45 in Houston had 88 fatal vehicle wrecks during the same time period to rank as the 16th deadliest U.S. road and No. 1 deadliest in Texas. Considering that tens of thousands of people drive the road every day, a fatal crash is relatively unlikely, but the data underscores the need for drivers to remain aware of their surroundings at all times.

    The crowded highway stretches from Dallas to Galveston, and the I-45 North Freeway earned its own spot on the list as the 124th deadliest U.S. road. I-45N experienced 44 deadly crashes between 2019 and 2023, the report said. I-45's controversial expansion project between downtown Houston and the north Sam Houston Tollway (and portions of connecting freeways) also earned it a new reputation as a "freeway without a future" by the activist group Congress for the New Urbanism.

    Elsewhere in Harris County, I-10 ranked as the 22nd deadliest U.S. highway on the list with 76 fatal crashes during the five-year span. It was dubbed the third most fatal Texas highway, with I-35 in Austin splitting up the two Houston roads as the second deadliest statewide.

    "From 2019 to 2023, motor vehicle crashes claimed 186,284 lives across 96,257 roads in the United States, underscoring the persistent danger on American roadways," the report said.

    Two more Houston highways ranked much farther down the report, but still remained among the top 150 deadliest U.S. roads: FM 1960 ranked 114th on the list with 45 fatal crashes, and I-610 ranked No. 131 with 43 fatal crashes.

    Nine other Texas roads that were deemed the deadliest in America with the highest rates of fatal vehicle crashes from 2019-2023 include:

    • No. 23 – I-30 in Dallas County (76 crashes)
    • No. 27 – I-410 in Bexar County (73 crashes)
    • No. 32 – I-10 in El Paso County (69 crashes)
    • No. 63 – I-20 in Tarrant County (56 crashes)
    • No. 66 – I-820 in Tarrant County (55 crashes)
    • No. 115 – SR-12 in Dallas County (45 crashes)
    • No. 130 – I-35 in Bexar County (43 crashes)
    • No. 132 – I-635 in Dallas County (43 crashes)
    • No. 141 – I-10 in Jefferson County (42 crashes)
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