🕯️ A Tragedy Unfolds in Central Texas
Between July 4 and July 6, 2025, catastrophic flash floods tore through Central Texas—devastating communities in Kerrville, Comfort, and along the Guadalupe River. At least 70 as the river surged over 20 feet in a matter of hours.
people lost their lives, many of them children attending summer camps. Dozens remain missing. Entire neighborhoods were swallowed up within minutes.
Families were separated. Roads were washed away. Camp cabins turned into coffins. It was one of the deadliest natural disasters in Texas history.
💬 Abbott’s First Response: Prayer Over Policy
In the wake of the carnage, Governor Greg Abbott stepped up to a podium, solemn and composed. He didn’t begin with a plan. He didn’t lead with what went wrong. He didn’t speak of infrastructure or early warning systems. Instead, he offered… prayer.
🖥️ Watch the moment Abbott asks Texans to join him in prayer (YouTube)
“Texans are known for their faith, strength, and resilience,” Abbott said, declaring Sunday, July 6 as a statewide Day of Prayer. He called on churches and citizens to seek healing through spiritual means.
To grieving parents, to stranded residents, and to a public begging for answers, it felt like salt in a wound. Prayer, they argued, wasn’t what was missing. Action was.
🔧 What Went Wrong—and Why Prayer Wasn’t Enough
Despite early storm forecasts and warnings from the National Weather Service (NWS), no large-scale mandatory evacuations were issued. Camps like Camp Mystic, where a dozen girls perished, had no formal flood evacuation protocol. Water rose so fast that entire campsites were gone in minutes.
Why wasn’t more done?
NWS staffing has been slashed under multiple conservative administrations, including Trump’s, weakening early warning systems.
The Texas Division of Emergency Management has struggled with underfunding and coordination gaps, especially in rural areas.
Texas infrastructure spending on climate resilience has consistently taken a back seat to tax cuts and ideological battles.
Instead of leading with an honest review of these issues, Abbott turned to the Bible.
🧠 Prayer as Performance
There’s nothing wrong with prayer. For many, it offers peace, purpose, and a connection to community during hard times. But prayer becomes performative when it replaces responsibility—when it’s used to distract from policy failures.
Abbott didn’t just mention prayer. He centered it. And not once did he take responsibility for why the system failed so many.
It was déjà vu for many Texans. After all:
In 2021, during the Winter Storm Uri that killed hundreds due to grid failure, Abbott appeared on Fox News blaming renewable energy—then asked for prayer.
In 2023, following a mass shooting in Allen, Texas, he skipped over gun policy and again asked for prayer.
Now, in 2025, with children literally washed away by floodwaters, he once again falls back on faith while dodging accountability.
🤥 Abbott and the Trump Doctrine: Cut, Blame, Pray
Abbott isn’t acting alone. This approach mirrors Donald Trump’s own governing philosophy: cut public services, vilify experts, and then shift blame—or offer shallow empathy—when disaster hits.
Trump gutted FEMA and NOAA staffing between 2017 and 2020.
He repeatedly tried to defund the NWS, calling it “wasteful bureaucracy.”
And like Abbott, Trump often invokes God and patriotism in times of crisis to cover up his administration’s inaction.
When you slash experts, underfund science, and ignore climate warnings, tragedies like this are no longer accidents. They’re consequences.
📉 The Deadly Cost of Budget Cuts and Anti-Science Governance
Here’s what happens when you govern by ideology rather than data:
| Area | What Was Cut or Ignored | Result |
|---|---|---|
| NWS Forecasting | Staffing cuts + tech underinvestment | Flood alerts delayed or missed |
| Emergency Planning | Local and state drills deprioritized | Camps left without evacuation plans |
| Infrastructure | No new flood protections funded | River barriers failed or didn’t exist |
| Climate Adaptation | Denial of climate risks | No statewide planning for flash floods |
Texans are now paying the price. And the price, in July 2025, is over 70 lives.
🙏 What Real Leadership Should Have Looked Like
Real leadership isn’t just about what you say after the fact—it’s about what you do beforehand.
Here’s what Governor Abbott could have done:
Pre-deployment of rescue teams to high-risk areas ahead of the storm.
Mandatory evacuations in zones like Kerrville and Canyon Lake.
Real-time flood monitoring and alerts pushed through all communication systems.
Requiring summer camps to have written and tested flood evacuation procedures.
Holding emergency briefings with local officials and meteorologists.
Calling for federal aid in advance of July 4th storms, not after bodies began washing up on roads.
He did none of those things.
⛪ Faith Isn’t the Problem—False Faith Is
Abbott’s prayer-centered response is especially frustrating for people of real faith, many of whom believe that faith requires action.
As the Bible says in James 2:17:
“Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”
To many Texans, Abbott’s response felt like a performance—not a plan.
It’s not just unhelpful to lean on prayer while ignoring science, preparedness, and accountability. It’s dangerous.
🔁 History Repeats Itself: From Rick Perry to Greg Abbott
Abbott’s strategy isn’t new. His predecessor, Rick Perry, famously declared a “Days of Prayer for Rain” in 2011 during a record-breaking drought—then refused to acknowledge climate change or invest in water infrastructure.
This kind of faith-before-function governing has become part of Texas Republican tradition, especially under Trump’s influence.
And while storms grow stronger, systems grow weaker.
🌎 Climate Change, Still Denied
Texas experiences more extreme weather every year—hotter summers, stronger storms, bigger floods. Scientists across the board agree: this is climate change in real-time.
Yet Abbott:
Rejects environmental regulation
Fought the EPA on clean water rules
Signed laws banning local climate ordinances
And when the rains came this time, he asked for prayer—not policies.
🎯 Final Verdict: Abbott’s Leadership Is Hollow
Abbott had the power to save lives. He had access to NWS warnings. He had the ability to enforce evacuations and fund flood control infrastructure. But instead of leading, he preached.
And people died.
If this were just one incident, maybe prayer would feel comforting. But when it’s part of a long pattern of failed leadership, it becomes clear:
Abbott’s version of prayer isn’t meant to solve problems—it’s meant to excuse them.
📣 Closing Thought: Texans Deserve More Than Thoughts and Prayers
They deserve:
Modern infrastructure
Early warning systems
Leaders who listen to experts
Policies that protect the vulnerable
And yes—leaders who believe in both faith and responsibility
Until that happens, Texas will keep getting washed away—and no amount of prayer will rebuild what political negligence destroys.
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