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    HERO Debate

    Astrodome deserves a vote; HERO doesn't: Why equality should never be decided at the ballot box

    lwayne_ashley
    L. Wayne Ashley
    Aug 6, 2014 | 12:03 pm
    Following hours of discussion, Mayor Annise Parker signed the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance into law at Wednesday's city council meeting.
    Following hours of discussion, Mayor Annise Parker signed the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance into law at Wednesday's city council meeting.
    Transadvocate/Twitter

    Editor's note: Clifford Pugh's column on the invalidation of petitions to place the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance on the November ballot was published Tuesday. Columnist L. Wayne Ashley offers a different view.

    One must admit that “Let the people vote” is a nice-sounding argument. Voting, at least in contemporary democracy, is the way we choose our representatives in government, and it is often the way we choose how to allocate public money for certain uses. In recent years Houstonians have weighed in on the fate of the Astrodome, the usefulness of red light cameras, funds to rebuild city infrastructure and whole host of other topics.

    These are issues that deserve a vote.

    But the Astrodome, beloved or hated as it may be, is not a person. It wasn’t guaranteed the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. It doesn’t think, it doesn’t feel, and it doesn’t become disenfranchised. These are experiences that belong solely to people, and under the Constitution of the United States of America, people have rights above and beyond subjection of public opinion. As President Thomas Jefferson said in his inaugural address:

    All, too, will bear in mind this sacred principle, that though the will of the majority is in all cases to prevail, that will, to be rightful, must be reasonable; that the minority possess their equal rights, which equal laws must protect, and to violate which would be oppression.”

    In the centuries since President Jefferson’s words, this sacred principle has been advanced through our nation’s courtrooms, battle fields, protests and press conferences. With almost every instance, the disenfranchised have had to rely not on majority vote, but on the actions of a few courageous leaders to assert their cause. Have we forgotten that the slaves in this country were not freed by the ballot box, but by executive order?

    The reality of Houston in 2014 is all of these discriminatory practices are still happening, and citizens have painfully few methods of recourse to combat them.

    The Houston Equal Rights Ordinance wasn’t something that area lawmakers dreamed up. It is a set of protections meant to enable rights which already exist, but haven’t been fully realized under an oppressive status quo.

    If pregnant women were not being shown discrimination in the workplace, the law wouldn’t need to protect them.

    If veterans or LGBT people were not excluded unfairly for job opportunities, the law wouldn’t need to protect them.

    If African-Americans weren’t being refused entry into business establishments simply because of their race, we wouldn’t need the law to protect them.

    But the reality of Houston in 2014 is all of these discriminatory practices are still happening, and citizens have painfully few methods of recourse to combat them.

    Proof of atrocities

    For proof of these atrocities, look no further than the HERO public sessions. Hundreds of speeches were given by Houston residents that were unfairly fired from a job, refused service or rejected for housing due to discrimination.

    No matter how much national press coverage it may generate, Houstonians do not deserve to have their constitutional rights subjected to a ballot.

    People like Jenifer Rene Pool, a one-time victim of housing discrimination, testified that had the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance been around when she first moved to the city, she may not have been forced into temporary homelessness. Our leaders have a responsibility to ensure that the rights of all Houstonians are protected, and municipal law was not getting the job done.

    When asked, most in the opposition seem to agree that everyone deserves equal rights and protections. Speaking against the ordinance, they never cite that they want to discriminate against people in the workplace, or in a place of business. Their arguments boil down to one thing and one thing only… bathrooms. Time and again, they justify defeat of the law based on an imaginary narrative of some "man in a dress" that lurks in a restroom to harm women and children. This narrative is one of absolute fiction, and has been discredited by medical organizations across the globe.

    As speaker Cassandra Thomas of the Houston Area Women’s Center stated in her speech to Council…

    I’ve spent the last thirty years of my career in this city working with sexual assault survivors. I’ve spoken all over the country on this issue. 90 percent of the time, women and children are sexually assaulted by men that they know and trust… fathers, uncles, family friends, clergy, teachers… not ‘the boogey man’. These are the folks that they have been told to trust and to follow. If you really want to stop sexual assaults, then let’s cut out the scare tactics and speak the truth.”

    Without the truth on their side, HERO opponents must construct their arguments against the law on falsehoods. If given the forum of a referendum, they would spend all of their time spreading lies about the LGBT community in the hopes of continuing city-sanctioned discrimination.

    Few would doubt that the opinions of Houston voters have changed dramatically since the '90s. We were the first city in the country to elect, and then re-elect an openly gay mayor after all. But no matter how much national press coverage it may generate, Houstonians do not deserve to have their constitutional rights subjected to a ballot.

    Houston musician and college advisor L. Wayne Ashley is founder and editor of Texasleftist.com.

    But the Astrodome, beloved or hated as it may be, is not a person. It wasn’t guaranteed the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

    Astrodome, parking lot
      
    NevWorldWonders.com
    But the Astrodome, beloved or hated as it may be, is not a person. It wasn’t guaranteed the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
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    top of the line

    9 Houston universities make U.S. News' 2025 list of top grad schools

    Amber Heckler
    Apr 18, 2025 | 3:00 pm
    University of Houston
    Photo by Terren Hurst on Unsplash
    The University of Houston has the fourth best graduate engineering school in Texas.

    Nine prestigious Houston universities have climbed through the ranks in U.S. News & World Report’s recently released report of the best graduate schools nationwide for 2025. Several graduate programs also appeared among the top 10 in a Texas-wide comparison.

    U.S. News published its annual national "Best Graduate Schools" rankings on April 8. They look at several programs including business, education, engineering, fine arts, health, and many others.

    For the 2025 report, the publication added new Ph.D. social sciences and humanities program rankings in English, history, political science and sociology for the first time since 2021. U.S. News also ranked graduate economics and psychology programs in the social sciences and the humanities for the first time since 2022.

    Among the newcomers are Houston Christian University and Texas Southern University.

    Here's how the nine local schools ranked, statewide and nationally, and how they compared with last year's national ranking:

    University of Houston
    • No. 4 best graduate engineering school in Texas; No. 72 nationally
    • No. 5 best graduate education school in Texas; No. 81 nationally (down from No. 63 last year)
    • No. 5 best law school in Texas; No. 63 nationally (up from No. 68)
    The University of Houston Law Center has the No. 9 best health law program in the nation, and ranked No. 15 for its legal writing program. The university's part-time MBA program ranked No. 38 nationally.
    University of Houston, Clear Lake
    • No. 12 best graduate education school in Texas; No. 166 nationally
    The Clear Lake branch of the University of Houston tied for No. 166 for its part-time MBA program.
    Houston Christian University
    • No. 21 best graduate education school in Texas; tied for No. 234-258 nationally
    University of Texas Health Science Center
    • No. 1 best Doctor of Nursing Practice program in Texas; No. 33 nationally (up from No. 45)
    • No. 2 best graduate nursing program in Texas; No. 41 nationally (down from No. 31)
    Prairie View A&M University, Northwest Houston Center
    • No. 5 best graduate nursing program in Texas; No. 104 nationally (up from No. 117)
    • No. 7 best Doctor of Nursing Practice program in Texas; tied for No. 143-158 nationally

    Rice University

    • No. 2 best graduate business school in Texas; No. 29 nationally (unchanged)
    • No. 3 best graduate engineering school in Texas; No. 26 nationally
    Rice's entrepreneurship program is the 9th best in the country, and its part-time MBA program ranked 13th nationally. The George R. Brown School of Engineering earned nods for its No. 10-ranking biomedical engineering and environmental engineering programs.
    University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston
    • No. 5 best Doctor of Nursing Practice program in Texas; No. 76 nationally
    South Texas College of Law Houston
    • No. 7 best law school in Texas; No. 138 nationally
    Out of the 11 law programs ranked by U.S. News, the South Texas College of Law performed the best for its trial advocacy (No. 12), dispute resolution law (No. 23), and legal writing (No. 51) programs.
    Texas Southern University
    • No. 10 best law school in Texas; tied for No. 178-195 nationally
    More specifically, TSU has the 64th best trial advocacy law program in the nation, U.S. News said.
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