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Idle Thoughts And Prayers: Why I’m Not Attending The CHARGE Energy Branding Conference in Texas

I was supposed to be attending CHARGE: Energy Branding this week in Houston. It’s a conference on energy marketing for the utility and energy industries to which I had received a free pass as a representative of my company. Especially in the post-COVID reawakening, the idea of traveling somewhere new is quite exciting to me. It’s also especially valuable for me to be thinking about connecting with potential strategic partners for my company as we work to define the future of utility programs focused on decarbonization. There’s so much interesting stuff going on right now, and I was honestly pretty stoked. But I opted not to attend for a couple of reasons, the most significant of which was that I cannot in good conscience bring my business to the state of Texas right now, where the Uvalde school shooting left 22 dead, mostly schoolchildren, to a chorus of Thoughts And Prayers from Republican legislators around the country.

The peculiar, yet oddly appealing, animation that serves as the logo for CHARGE. A swirling of gold, water, and… bismuth? I don’t know.
Thoughts, Prayers, and Death

No amount of thoughts and prayers are going to curb this country’s epidemic of gun violence, and Greg Abbott and the rest of the Republican Party embracing this paradigm of inaction coupled with this age-old mantra of “thoughts and prayers” is simply not going to move the needle at all. We know this. The Uvalde school shooting is unique, however, in that it highlights not only problems with mental health and easy access to especially lethal firearms, but also problems with policing in general that I’ve written about extensively in the past.

Among the various levels of policy failure, the Uvalde school shooting tragedy is:

That the Uvalde shooting has pitted disproportionately Republican state authorities against local police is an extremely unusual occurrence. It’s notable in highlighting the fragmentation that is occurring to highlight the fact that police aren’t actually necessarily the best way to protect society from violence.

Anyway, I’m not going to be attending, but I do hope to be able to attend a future conference. And in the coming weeks, I’ll be publishing some pieces here (and elsewhere) on some concrete policy ideas about how we can address this issue without running afoul of the Constitution (that pesky Second Amendment, right?!) or the crazies. It will be difficult. But I have faith that it can be done. The victims of the Uvalde school shooting are owed more than thoughts and prayers, and the citizens of Texas at large are owed better leadership at all levels of government. In the meantime, Houston will have to wait. Sorry, Greg.

This Could Have Been Me, had I been willing to condone the state of Texas’ preposterous response to the tragic Uvalde school shooting. Planes taxiing at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City. File photo by Xavier Marchant.

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