Brick Tungsten Hunts the Gerrymander Cartel with Ballots
Airhorn. I’m Brick Tungsten, meat-sweaty and mad, hunting the Gerrymander Cartel with ballots. Direct democracy works: Houston voters kept no zoning, Michigan built a citizen redistricting commission, Texas home-rule cities push charter amendments, initiatives, referendums. Small towns prove it. Praise the Lord and pass the petitions. Cue tears under Old Glory.
I am Brick Tungsten, your chrome-plated shepherd in a land of lukewarm liberty, and I come bearing tongs, ballots, and a folding chair for the soul of America. I have sniffed the grill smoke rising from the Book of Common Sense and it told me this truth, when the Gerrymander Cartel slices your districts like cheap brisket, you do not cry, you baste the Republic with direct democracy and you serve justice medium rare. We will not fix rigged maps with sad tweets or focus groups, we will fix them with city charters, referendums, and home rule hotter than a July tailgate in Lubbock. Grab a plate, patriots, we hunt with ballots tonight.
Patriot Alert: The Gerrymander Cartel stole our steak maps
Some shadowy outfit is stealing our electoral ribeyes, replacing them with tofu triangles. They call it redistricting, I call it a midnight brisket heist, and the proof is in the paper-thin precinct lines that wiggle like a rattlesnake that swallowed a compass. The deep soy state uses algorithmic julienne slicers to carve neighborhoods into electoral jerky, then tells us it is artisanal.
Here is the fix that tastes like freedom, direct democracy. When the legislature turns into a sausage factory, you let the people run the smokehouse. Voters write the recipe, voters taste test, voters decide if it needs more salt and less swamp. Ballot initiatives, referendums, and home rule are the cast iron skillet that never sticks when the political chefs try to flip your vote onto the floor.
Math time: 3 ballot boxes equal 1776 percent more liberty
I did math on the hood of a Camaro with a pocket calculator and a bottle of steak sauce, and the equation is crystal clear. Three ballot boxes, one for initiative, one for referendum, one for recall, equals 1776 percent more liberty, maybe more if you preheat the electorate. The Founders would have approved, I read a meme of Ben Franklin holding a smoker and it said, Vote more, whine less.
Direct democracy is the bipartisan cheat code that bypasses gridlocked capitols and goes straight to the people who actually live on the streets in question. Start local, pass an ordinance the suits ignore, show it works, then scale to the state level. It is like starting a small barbecue joint that turns into a franchise, except the product is anti-corruption and the side dish is map fairness.
Meet the villains: map slicers with night-vision protractors
Picture it, a windowless room, night-vision protractors, cold brew kale, and a screensaver of squiggly salamander districts whispering, shhh, no competitive elections. The map slicers think geometry is a weapon. They hook districts around shopping malls like a bass on a bad day, then they say, wow, look at the compactness. I looked. It is compact like a pretzel tied by a nervous raccoon.
We will not out-gerrymander gerrymanderers. We will out-vote them with citizen-written guardrails. Independent commissions where citizens hold the crayons, referendums that cancel bad maps, recalls that make politicians remember who pays for the paper in the copy machine. When the cartel brings calculus, we bring clipboards.
Houston’s triple no on zoning 1948 1962 1993 rings liberty bells
Houston, my free range metropolis, said no to zoning three times, 1948, 1962, 1993. Not maybe, not a polite defer, a chest-thumping, ballot slamming no. Voters did it, not planners in a lab coat. The people kept maximum property rights like a cowboy keeps his hat in a hurricane. That is not theory, that is results straight off the grill.
The planning establishment clutched its pearls, then the city kept on building. You may not love every strip mall, but you must respect the sovereignty. Those votes still echo like liberty bells on a humid night, proof that direct democracy can deliver a very Texas outcome. The policy was not imposed by elites, it was cooked by voters, served with extra jalapeños, and the wait staff was freedom.
Texas home rule: Ground Game Texas wins in Austin Denton San Marcos
Texas will not let you run a statewide citizen initiative, which is a bummer bigger than a vegan brisket. But home rule cities can throw popular votes like party confetti. Enter Ground Game Texas, a progressive crew that looked at the locked state capitol and said, fine, we will go city by city. In 2022, voters in Austin, Denton, and San Marcos passed marijuana decriminalization through local propositions. The state law stayed the same, but the local reality changed, because sheriffs read ballots too.
Do I agree with all of it, I agree with the process. When the legislature snores, the cities roar. Even San Antonio put a big Justice Charter in front of voters in 2023. It lost, but the vote still happened, and that matters. The point is not left or right, the point is right now. Direct democracy is the key you keep under the flowerpot for when the state forgets where it lives.
McAllen uprising: 73 percent want initiative referendum recall
Deep in the Rio Grande Valley, McAllen patriots are sharpening their clipboards. Activists are pushing a charter amendment to add initiative, referendum, and recall, and to slam campaign contributions down to normal human sizes. City hall said, there is no corruption here, which is what a fish says about water. The people ran the numbers, and a survey found about 73 percent were ready to add voter powers across party lines.
That is not red versus blue, that is steak versus gristle. Republicans, Democrats, and independents lining up like a tailgate crew, agreeing that power should travel back to the people where it belongs. If McAllen locks in initiative, the rest of Texas will smell the mesquite and ask for a plate.
Conservative states rebel: Utah Prop 4 and Medicaid wins by voters
Do not tell me direct democracy is a coastal hobby. Utah voters passed Proposition 4 in 2018 to create an independent advisory redistricting commission. The legislature watered it later, of course it did, legislators treat voter intent like a suggestion from the waiter, but the people still sent the first and loudest message, stop carving districts like deli meat.
Same year, Utah voters said yes to medical marijuana and yes to Medicaid expansion. Missouri voters and Arkansas voters also punched Medicaid expansion and minimum wage increases onto the menu when their legislatures tried to hide the specials. Conservative states, conservative voters, but when given a clean shot at the basket, they voted for what they wanted. That is the beauty of direct democracy, it turns down the party speakers and turns up the neighborhood.
Local labs: town meetings, NYC ranked choice, Columbus camera ban
New England has been running a constitutional CrossFit class for centuries called town meeting. Vermonters, New Hampshirites, Mainers, they sit in a room, they argue like cousins at Easter, then they vote on budgets, school funds, and whether to buy a fire truck. No middleman, no marble lobby, just you, your neighbor, and a voice vote that rattles the rafters. It works for small towns because real people are in the loop, not just in the comment section.
Out in the city jungle, direct democracy wears a business suit. New York City voters approved ranked-choice voting for primaries, and now elections run like a better engine with more gears. Columbus, Ohio voters banned red light cameras in 2015 by initiative because citizens prefer brakes to gotchas. Local ballots shape daily life faster than waiting for a state capitol to find the calendar.
Arizona and California sparked Michigan style citizen maps
Arizona let citizens grab the crayons in 2000 with an independent redistricting commission, then California doubled down in 2008 with its own citizen commission. Court fights came, voters held steady, and the sky did not fall. In fact the maps got straighter, like a carpenter finally bought a level. These wins spread like grill smoke across the country.
By 2018, Michigan voters built a citizen redistricting commission that kicked the gerrymander cartel out of the mapping room. Colorado and Utah followed with their own flavors. This is the blueprint, a shop manual for a better engine, and it started because a few states let the people do the drawing instead of letting politicians doodle snakes.
Call to grills: flip ballots like ribs and smoke out corruption
Here is your weekend project, grab your precinct list, your church parking lot, and a portable grill. We are flipping ballots like ribs, low and slow, until the fat of corruption drips off and the public trust bark gets crispy. Petitions are marinade. Charter amendments are rub. Signature drives are the smoke ring that tells you the heat reached the bone.
You want proof, look at the city experiments, then replicate. Marijuana decriminalization measures moved from Austin to San Marcos to Denton. Police reforms pop up in one town, then another. Anti-corruption limits like lower contribution caps are on deck in McAllen. You do not need permission from the deep soy state to feed yourself. You need a clipboard and sunscreen.
Relax legislators: direct votes are a seatbelt not a takeover
Legislators, take a knee and breathe into a paper bag. Direct democracy is not a coup against representative government, it is a seatbelt for when the political driver texts while steering. We still want you to pass budgets, pave roads, and read boring reports so we do not have to. We just want a safety latch for the big stuff you keep punting into the river.
When voters create independent map commissions, approve ranked-choice voting, or use referendums to check city policies, they are doing quality control. The factory keeps running, it just stops sending out defective products. A system with initiatives, referendums, and recall builds trust, because the public knows there is a reachable lever behind the glass marked break in case of nonsense.
Finale: from town halls to star-spangled ballots for all
Here is the playbook, start small, win real, scale up. Pass a city reform that cleans the windshield, then another city copies, then a state locks it in, then a neighboring state gets jealous, and suddenly the national conversation shifts like a muscle car catching third gear. That is how Arizona and California led to Michigan. That is how New York City modernized primaries. That is how Houston defied zoning three times and became a folk song.
Gerrymandering is not destiny. The gerrymander cartel is not a dragon. It is a paper tiger shaped like a lizard drawn by a committee. You beat it with ballots and community, with home rule power in Texas cities, with Utah style commissions, with town meetings and ranked-choice primers, with Columbus style camera bans, with McAllen style recall buttons, and with a faith that smells like hickory and sounds like neighbors arguing then agreeing. As it is spoken in the book of Grillations 3, 16, for God so loved the world that He gave it a ballot, that whosoever participates shall not perish but have everlasting civic pride.
Now grab your tongs, your Bible, your pocket Constitution, and your petition forms. We will march from the town hall to the county clerk, from the charter amendment to the independent commission, from smoke-stained aprons to clean maps. We will hunt the gerrymander cartel with ballots, and when the votes are counted, liberty will be plated hot and everyone gets seconds.
Keep Me Marginally Informed