For the last few weeks, I've been unable to get a startling statistic out of my head: Since the recession officially ended, Texas has created more than four of every 10 new jobs in America.
That's right, Texas: the reddest of red states, home to gun lovers and school textbooks that question whether the founding fathers intended for the separation of church and state.
I am no ideologue. Still, I tend to tilt reflexively to the left, making the jobs figure a bit disconcerting at first.
But the number is real. Which means that if you care about putting people back to work at a time when nearly 14 million in this country are unemployed, maybe Texas has something to teach us.
Unfortunately, that's not the posture many commentators have taken.
When the data from Texas emerged -- touted first by Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas -- conservatives were quick to celebrate, embracing the jobs tally as powerful evidence of the superiority of Republican ideas as well as proof that Texas Gov. Rick Perry would make a good president. But that's simplistic.
Meanwhile, liberals immediately set out to shoot the numbers down. MSNBC's Rachel Maddow held up a giant bologna and mocked the "Texas miracle." That view, however, is too cavalier.
So what's actually happening?