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    Let Me Sum Up

    Friday 5: Torture didn't help us find Bin Laden, but don't tell Mark Davis that. Plus: More beer!

    Eric Celeste
    Jan 25, 2013 | 10:22 am

    From the home office in downtown Dallas, it’s a very foggy Friday Five. Have you seen or read Stephen King’s The Mist, people? Why aren’t you inside your house, screaming in fear as this fog descends upon us? I know I am.

    1. Mark Davis is just the freaking worst.
    I know he’s a radio troll, just saying the dumbest, most outrageous things he can to rile up those who know better. That’s why I don’t listen to his show. But when he types something, I sometimes accidentally run across it. Like this horrible thing he wrote championing the depiction of torture in Zero Dark Thirty.

    Look, you can pull up your crazy pants and pretend you’re a torture-loving badass all you want, but it’s a fact that a) torture never led to any information that proved helpful in fighting Bin Laden, and b) the FBI, “constrained” by U.S. law during its decades of interrogations, has denounced the disgusting practice as both ineffective and immoral. The CIA, of course, continues its efforts to justify its actions through compliant mouthpieces like Davis.

    There are hundreds of impeccably sourced stories that back this up. Just use your Google to talk to the Internet, ask it about torture and Bin Laden, and be sure to include reputable reporters like Glenn Greenwald in your queries.

    The Internet will tell you that this excellent film took dramatic license; that doing so is controversial because the movie also tries to trumpet how realistic it is; and that those who assert torture had practical benefits are wrong. Not that such information will stop shameless idiots like Davis from saying otherwise.

    2. Parkland is great at getting pissed off. At compliance, well …
    Frontburner has a good summation of the latest salvo in the ongoing battle between Parkland and the Dallas Morning News. Basically, the paper reported that the hospital had hired a powerful D.C. lobbying firm (no big whup) and suggests the language in the contract suggests the firm will at least discuss the ongoing government monitoring of the hospital with national healthcare officials (doi).

    For some reason, this infuriated the hospital, which sent out a release saying the reporter lied about what a source told the paper. Some free PR advice for Parkland: Unless you can prove the lobbying firm won’t in any way discuss the oversight situation with anyone who has any say about your regulatory concerns in any way ever, then take this ass-slap for what it is and move on.

    I’m not saying the paper didn’t interpret your actions in the harshest possible way. Maybe it did. Papers sometime do that when you’ve effed up as completely and totally as you have in the past few years. Suck it up and move on.

    3. Irving can serve more booze!
    Irving restaurants can now have a 50-50 ratio of food-to-alcohol sales. (In other words, they can match the way I eat dinner.) Some in Irving (read: the olds) wanted to keep the old ratio (60 percent food), because they were worried that allowing businesses to sell more alcohol would harm the city.

    The city council then realized, wait, Irving’s already a shithole, so it changed the ratio. At least that’s the way I’m reporting it.

    4. Jane McGarry returns to TV.
    Did everyone see the rebirth of the former Channel 5 anchor’s career yesterday on the TV over at Channel 8? Of course you didn’t! Who watches TV? You, like me, wait until someone sends you a link and you watch it on your computer or iPad or phone. So, here’s the link. Watch! It’s Jane McGarry!

    5. This is how I can prove Mark Davis was trolling us in No. 1.
    When he writes for silly right-wing websites, he makes insane arguments about torture. When he writes for real editors at the DMN, he writes a solid, sensible column about how conservatives should argue Obama’s policies with the same directness the president offers. Which to me makes No. 1 even worse.

    He’s not dumb. He knows exactly who he’s trolling. And I’m dumb enough to be outraged by it.

    Retweets

    Why 24 months? But I wanna see them now.

    After new livery, @americanair redesigning uniforms for 1st time in 20yrs. They'll be rolled out in 24 months. MORE: ow.ly/1Rv9t0

    — Jason Whitely (@JasonWhitely) January 25, 2013

    No. 1 shows what an Internet troll Mark Davis can be. No. 5 shows how he can be a sensible columnist when he wants to be.

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    texas premiums

    These 10 jobs boast the biggest salary premiums in Texas, study says

    Amber Heckler
    May 5, 2026 | 3:25 pm
    where it pays to work in texas and where it doesn't
    Photo courtesy of SmartAsset/iStock
    Geoscientists earn the biggest premium by working in Texas, whereas editors have the biggest penalty for working in the state.

    A move to Texas helps some careers and hurts others, and a new SmartAsset study has revealed the top professions where the median annual earnings in the Lone Star State exceed the national median. The study also examined the occupations that suffer the biggest penalties for being in Texas.

    The report, "When it Pays to Work in Texas — and When It Doesn’t," published in April, analyzed over 700 occupations to determine which have the biggest "Texas premium" — meaning jobs where the price-adjusted median annual pay in Texas most exceeds the national median for the same occupation — and which jobs have the biggest “Texas penalty,” where the statewide median annual pay falls furthest below the national median. Salaries were sourced from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and adjusted for regional price parity.

    According to the report's findings, geoscientists have the biggest "Texas premium" and make a $159,903 median annual salary. Texas' salary for geoscientists is 61 percent higher than the national median for the same position (after adjusting for regional price parity).

    "Texas’s large petroleum industry helps explain why employers in the state retain so many geoscientists," the report's author wrote. "In fact, the Lone Star State is home to more geoscientists than any other state except California."

    There are more than 3,600 geoscientists working in Texas, SmartAsset said.

    These are the remaining top 10 occupations with the biggest "Texas premiums" (salaries are price-adjusted):

    • No. 2 – Commercial pilots: $167,727 median Texas earnings; 37 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 3 – Sailors: $67,614 median Texas earnings; 36 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 4 – Aircraft structure assemblers: $83,519 median Texas earnings; 35 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 5 – Ship captains: $108,905 median Texas earnings; 27 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 6 – Nursing instructors (postsecondary): $100,484 median Texas earnings; 26 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 7 – Tax preparers: $63,321 median Texas earnings; 25 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 8 – Chemists: $104,241 median Texas earnings; 24 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 9 – Health instructors (postsecondary): $128,680 median Texas earnings; 22 percent higher than the national median
    • No. 10 – Engineering instructors (postsecondary): $129,030 median Texas earnings; 22 percent higher than the national media

    Where Texas workers suffer the biggest penalty
    SmartAsset said an editor is the Texas profession where workers earn the furthest below the median for the same occupation elsewhere in the U.S. Not to be confused with film and video editors, BLS defines editors as those who "plan, coordinate, revise, or edit written material" and "may review proposals and drafts for possible publication."

    The study found editors make a price-adjusted median wage of $29,710, which is 61 percent lower than the national median for the same position, and there are nearly 8,200 editors in Texas.

    It's worth noting that the salaries for editors may be skewed by the fact that there are not major publications in rural areas of Texas, and other professions may also have financial deviations for similar reasons.

    Several healthcare jobs also appear to have the worst penalties in Texas compared to elsewhere in the country. Home health aides are the second-worst paying professions in the state, making a median wage of $24,161.

    "More home health aides work in Texas than in nearly any other state, with only California and New York employing more," the report said. "However, the more than 300,000 Texans in this occupation earn median annual pay that is about 31 percent below the national median, after adjusting for regional price parity.

    SmartAsset clarified that pay penalties are not consistent "across the board" for other healthcare occupations in Texas.

    "For physical therapy assistants, occupational therapy assistants, and postsecondary nursing instructors, Texas may be an especially strong place to work, with these occupations offering 'Texas premiums' of between 17 percent and 26 percent," the study said.

    These are the remaining top 10 occupations where median annual earnings in Texas fall furthest below the national median for the same occupation:

    • No. 3 – Cardiovascular technicians: $49,382 median Texas earnings; 27 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 4 – Semiconductor processing technicians: $38,295 median Texas earnings; 25 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 5 – Tutors: $30,060 median Texas earnings; 25 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 6 – Control and valve installers: $56,496 median Texas earnings; 24 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 7 – Mental health social workers: $46,109 median Texas earnings; 23 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 8 – Clinical psychologists: $74,449 median Texas earnings; 22 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 9 – Producers/directors: $65,267 median Texas earnings; 22 percent lower than the national median
    • No. 10 – Interpreters/translators: $46,953 median Texas earnings; 21 percent lower than the national median
    smartassetjobsreportstexassalariesmoney
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