Friday, January 17, 2025

SLAVERY, RELATIONS WITH NATIVES, SHAPED EARLY MATAMOROS HISTORY

(Editor's Note: The following narrative originally appeared in El  Bravo newspaper of Matamoros and we translated it for our Spanish-challenged readers.)

"Mi Matamoros Querido"

By Oscar Treviño Jr.

The Spanish Crown formed the Internal Provinces Command in 1776 due to the constant attacks by marauding bands of Indians (natives) of the Plains, Comanches, and other tribes who resisted the efforts of the government to colonize them.

Nuevo Santander formed part of the command and a demarcation line was formed to cordon the colonies from the attacks.

The colonization of Nuevo Santander was based on the establishment of "Ayuntamientos," (a political jurisdiction roughly equal to a county), so that each town could name a mayor, a prosecutor, and two council members (regidores).

The evangelization and conversion of natives was entrusted to Franciscan monks from the College of the Propagation of the Faith based in Guadalupe, Zacatecas. In 1793, the priests Francisco Pueyes and Manuel Julio Silva arrived and at once proposed that the name of the community be changed to "Nuestra Señora de Refugio de los Esteros," partly because the inhabitants called it "El Refugio" or "Villa del Refugio."

The Huastecos and the Olives who had been transported here from Florida, strongly resisted colonization and fought against both the local inhabitants and the domesticated natives. They were summarily exterminated.

(The name Tamaulipas is derived from Tamaholipa, a Huasteca term in which the "tam" prefix signifies "place where." As yet, there is no scholarly agreement on the meaning of holipa, but "high hills" is a common interpretation. However, a native population of Tamaulipas, now extinct, was referred to as the "Olives" during the early colonial period, which is a likely Spanish transformation on holipa... source: Wikipedia)

The native prisoners were exchanged at a rate of 60 to 80 natives for a horse. After the Crown – whose policy forbade slavery – discovered that this trade was being allowed in Nuevo Santander, it charged José de Escandón y Helguera and tried him to Juicio de Residencia (Trial by Residence?) in 1767. Despite this fact, he still retained the governorship of Nuevo Santander. Escandón died four years later but was vindicated by the honors granted him in Spain upon his death.

The Franciscans, meanwhile, decided to change the center of the town to a higher elevation due to the chronic flooding of the Rio Grande and it was moved two blocks to the south, where it currently exists.
They used the traditional town layout used in their native Spain: the cathedral toward the east, a plaza, the government building housing the cabildo to the west, and prominent businesses and citizens to the north. They christened the new layout as "Congregación de Nuestra Señora Refugio."

They also brought a patron saint, a virgin originally named "Nuestra Señora de Refugio de los Pecadores," (Our Lady of the Refuge of Sinners), but removed the word "sinners" since everyone had converted to Catholicism.

The Plaza de Armas, now known as "Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla", was a very important place because that's where "La Picota" was placed. This consisted of a large stake upon which were impaled the heads of natives who resisted the authority of the Crown. There was also a type of wooden platform where public executions would take place.

It was called "plaza de armas" because the authorities would call out the inhabitants in case of an indian attack, raiders, or foreigners. They would hand out weapons to the inhabitants that showed up to defend the town or go after the raiders.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

VINCE CRIXELL III, MEMBER OF A PIONEER BROWNSVILLE FAMILY, DIES

Darling Mouser Funeral Home
Vincent L. Crixell III


BROWNSVILLE, TX. – Vincent L. Crixell, III, died peacefully on Tuesday, the 14th of January 2025, in Brownsville, Texas. 

Born on September 10, 1934, in Brownsville, Texas, Vincent was the beloved son of Gloria Cardoza Crixell and Vicente Laulom Crixell, Jr., and brother of Adolph E. Crixell. He was preceded in death by his mother, father, and brother. Vincent was a devoted son, brother, husband, father, grandfather, and friend. His commitment to family, community, and faith marked his life.

Vincent graduated from Brownsville High School in 1952 and from The University of Texas at Austin College of Pharmacy in 1956. While at UT, he was a proud member of the Texas Longhorn Band. While briefly attending UT Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, Texas, Vincent met his future wife, Barbara Baker Crixell. The two raised four daughters: Viveca, Monique, Laurette, and Patrice.

After living in Dallas and Pharr, Vincent settled in his hometown of Brownsville, Texas. He became deeply rooted in the community and dedicated his life to improving and growing it.

His dedication to the pharmaceutical field marked his professional journey. He worked at Palm Village Pharmacy and Pfizer Pharmaceutical and later owned and operated Calderoni City Drug in downtown Brownsville. His commitment to quality care was evident as the head pharmacist at Valley Baptist Medical Center and Drug Emporium in Brownsville, Texas. Vincent’s attentive care for his pharmacy customers was well-known and appreciated.

Vincent was a dedicated civil servant, actively contributing to the development of his community and holding leadership positions in many civic organizations. Vincent was appointed to the Brownsville Housing Authority board in the early nineteen seventies where he was appointed as chairman from 1970-1972. 

In the early nineteen eighties, he was a founding board member of KVEO, Brownsville’s local National Broadcast Company affiliate. He served on the Brownsville Public Utilities Board where he served as chairman from 1986-1987. Vincent served as the Brownsville Chamber of Commerce president from 1987-1988.

He also served on the Greater Brownsville Incentives Corporation board in the nineteen nineties where he was chairman from 1992-1994. He enjoyed his participation in the Texas and Brownsville Jaycees, where he held various leadership positions. Vincent particularly loved the beautiful tradition held every February in his hometown celebrating the sisterhood between our two border cities of Brownsville and Matamoros. 

He enjoyed serving as part of the Mr. Amigo Association where he served as board president in 1985, and he continued to serve on this board through 2003. He was also an honorary life director of Charro Days, Incorporated. He worked tirelessly behind the scenes of many community organizations to help improve his hometown.

A devout Catholic, Vincent's faith was a guiding force in his life. He was actively involved in St. Luke Catholic Church and many other ministries within the Diocese of Brownsville.

Vincent is survived by his beloved wife, Martha Balboa Crixell of Brownsville, with whom he shared a profoundly loving and happy life for the last 32 years. He is also survived by his four daughters Viveca Crixell (Nick) Serafy of Brownsville, Monique Crixell (Roger) Keller of Brownsville, Laurette Crixell Kirby of San Antonio, Texas, and Patrice Crixell (Charles) McAllister of Auburn, Alabama; and by his grandchildren Nicholas III, Jenna, Paul (Lauren), Jason (Carla) and Clayton Serafy, Ricardo (Emily) Crixell, Haley (Andy) Mohl, Houston (Whitney) and Westin Kirby, Taylor (Ronnie) Rucker, Madison (Caleb) Fahlgren, and Chase McAllister. His beloved niece, Annette (Alex) Camacho of San Antonio, Texas and his grandnieces, Natalia and Daniela Camacho, also survive him.

His family included numerous great-grandchildren who brought Vincent immense joy: Ryleigh, Nicholas IV, Tanner, Pablo, Luka, Georgiana, Gisele, Alexander and Carlos Serafy, Julian Crixell, Jackson and Whitman Kirby, and Hadley Rucker. His family, including cousins, nieces, nephews, and numerous friends, will forever cherish his memory.

Visiting hours will be held on Sunday, the 19th of January 2025 between the hours of one o'clock and five o'clock in the afternoon within the East Chapel of Darling-Mouser Funeral Home. The recitation of the holy rosary will be recited at seven o’clock Sunday evening at St. Luke Catholic Church, 2800 Rockwell Drive, Brownsville.

The Funeral Mass will be celebrated at ten o'clock in the morning on Monday, the 20th of January 2025 at St. Luke Catholic Church. Family and friends are asked to meet directly at the church.

Entombment with committal rites will be held at one o'clock in the afternoon within the Buena Vista Burial Park Mausoleum, 5 McDavitt Boulevard, Brownsville. Family and friends are asked to meet directly at the mausoleum.

Pallbearers include Vincent’s grandsons Niko, Paul, Jason, and Clayton Serafy, Ricco Crixell, Houston and Westin Kirby, and Chase McAllister. Honorary pallbearers include Dr. Ford Lockett, Rey Lopez, Ralph Cowen, Joe Rivera, Nick Serafy, Roger Keller, Alex Camacho, Taurino Gonzalez, Exiquio Balboa, Emilio Crixell, and Alfredo Crixell.

In lieu of floral arrangements and customary remembrances, the family requests donations in memory of Vincent to The Love Builds Hope Foundation of the Diocese of Brownsville, 700 Virgen de San Juan Boulevard, San Juan, Texas 78589. He will be remembered as a man of great faith, love, and generosity, and his presence will be deeply missed by all who knew him.


SUDDENLY, THE WOLF LAWYER'S STRATEGY TAKES AN OMINOUS TURN...




 

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

SPECIAL COUNSEL REPORT LAYS BLAME FOR JAN.6 AT TRUMP'S FEET (CLICK ON LINK BELOW TO READ ENTIRE REPORT)

In August 2023, the special counsel Jack Smith charged Donald J. Trump with three intersecting conspiracy counts accusing him of plotting to overturn his loss in the 2020 election. Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

By Alan Feuer and Charlie Savage
The New York Times. 
Jan. 14, 2025
Leer en español

Jack Smith, the special counsel who indicted President-elect Donald J. Trump on charges of illegally seeking to cling to power after losing the 2020 election, said in a final report released early Tuesday that the evidence would have been sufficient to convict Mr. Trump in a trial, had his 2024 election victory not made it impossible for the prosecution to continue.

“The department’s view that the Constitution prohibits the continued indictment and prosecution of a president is categorical and does not turn on the gravity of the crimes charged, the strength of the government’s proof or the merits of the prosecution, which the office stands fully behind,” Mr. Smith wrote.

He continued: “Indeed, but for Mr. Trump’s election and imminent return to the presidency, the office assessed that the admissible evidence was sufficient to obtain and sustain a conviction at trial.”

The Justice Department delivered the 137-page volume  (click on link to read report) – representing half of Mr. Smith’s overall final report, with the volume about Mr. Trump’s other federal case, accusing him of mishandling classified documents, still confidential — to Congress just after midnight on Tuesday.

The report amounted to an extraordinary rebuke of a president-elect, capping a momentous legal saga that saw the man now poised to regain the powers of the nation’s highest office charged with crimes that struck at the heart of American democracy. And although Mr. Smith resigned as special counsel late last week, his recounting of the case also served as a reminder of the vast array of evidence and detailed accounting of Mr. Trump’s actions that he had marshaled.

In his report, Mr. Smith took Mr. Trump to task not only for his efforts to reverse the results of a free and fair election, but also for consistently encouraging “violence against his perceived opponents” throughout the chaotic weeks between Election Day and Jan. 6, 2021, when a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol, injuring more than 140 police officers.

Mr. Smith laid the attack on the Capitol squarely at Mr. Trump’s feet, quoting from the evidence in several criminal cases of people charged with taking part in the riot who made clear that they believed they were acting on Mr. Trump’s behalf.

In several lengthy footnotes, Mr. Smith explored the trauma experienced by Capitol Police officers who were attacked during the riot, including “shell-shock” and the inability to move. He quoted one officer who described the effort to keep rioters from getting to congressional staff members inside the Capitol; the officer said that for them, that could have meant “possible death. People are getting killed, maimed.”

LEST WE FORGET: TODAY IS THE REV. MARTIN LUTHER KING'S BIRTHDAY

 

SUSPECT WHO SHOT MAN TO DEATH AT CITY LIBRARY "INCOMPETENT"

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
KGBT-Various Sources

The man accused of fatally shooting another man in the Brownsville Public Library has ben ruled incompetent to stand trial, court records show.

Humberto Paz was arrested on May 11, 2024 after police say he shot and killed 71-year-old Vahid Khaledi. Both men allegedly got into a verbal alteration at the library, located at 2600 Central Blvd.

The Brownsville Police Department previously said they found a weapon on Paz at the library, and arrested him on charges of murder and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

Police confirmed Paz had a history of mental health issues, and that he had posted conspiracy theories against the federal government on the day of the shooting before he went to the library. 
In one posting, he stated a conspiracy theory that: "Since 1910, Tejas has been injuring the scout boys, Scout girls, and Girl Scouts, because Austin Tejas has been abusing the military federal command system. They have been abusing the military federal command system. 

"They have been abusing of the parental control area of the brain with their encephalitis, as you have noticed many of those so-called aren't  uniform service members have they attempt to code to a military law with their encephalitis, those extreme organisms that thrive on the extremes are pussing the brain of innocent scouts, boys and girls, teens, young adults, adults, etc. with their intentions of criminal terroristic to be the fungus."

And: "The bacteria thrives in the extremes that is always attempting to hijack the brain with their pussing swells the brain eventually kill the organism....Cycle repeats they have a molecular language that is infected with pussing because it is fungus that they have tattooed on the dermis." 

On Monday, Paz was deemed incompetent to stand trial.

“[Paz] does not have the sufficient present ability to consult with his attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding; or a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him,” court documents state.

In a social media post, Brownsville Police Department Public Information Officer Abril Luna said mental health called were made to police but that there had been no indications he was a threat.

The fatal shooting led Texas State District 38 Representative Erin Gamez to introduce a bill this  legislative session to give communities the right to prohibit firearms in libraries in municipalities and counties across the state.

“I’m thrilled to share that I have filed my initial round of bills for the upcoming legislative session. These bills were developed in collaboration with various community stakeholders," she said. 

"I believe these initiatives will make a positive difference in our community and across our great state. In order to enhance safety and accessibility for all members of our community, I am introducing the following bill(s)."

HB 1138: was filed in response to the tragic shooting incident at the Brownsville Public Library last May. It empowers municipalities and counties to prohibit firearms in libraries they establish and operate.

Court documents state Paz will be transferred to a mental health facility or residential care facility “for further examination and treatment toward the specific objective of attaining competency to stand trial.”
Panic-stricken parents and children fled from library at the time of the shooting.

THE REAL HISTORY OF THE ORIGIN OF MATAMOROS, TAMAULIPAS

 (Ed.'s Note: The following narrative on the founding of Matamoros was posted here some 14 years ago. One of our readers reminded us that we had posted it and asked if we still had the original Spanish version. Unfortunately, we did not. We found one that originally appeared in El Bravo and translated it for our Spanish-challenged readers. We thank our reader for reminding us.)

"Mi Matamoros Querido"

By Oscar Treviño Jr.

While colonization was under way by 1749, Matías de los Santos Coy decided to establish a livestock ranch called "San Juan de los Esteros Hermosos." The location of that first effort at settling the area is near what is today the intersection of Calle Quinta y Matamoros. Esteros refers to what we call "resacas" on the Brownsville side.

However, Santos Coy had to give up that effort because of constant attacks by local natives who did not show a propensity to be "civilized."
That's the reason why today Santos Coy is not considered one of the founding settlers of the city.

Two years before, José de Escandón wrote a letter to the Crown saying that this place – Matamoros – was an inadequate place to build a town because of the annual flooding of the Rio Grande and because of the poor drainage of the land that caused outbreaks of yellow fever and pestilence.

Nonetheless, in 1747, 12 families came down from Camargo and Reynosa upriver and they founded a congregation called "San Juan de los Esteros Hermosos", and choosing, coincidentally, the same spot chosen temporarily by Santos Coy.

In 1784 they filed the paperwork to purchase 113 sitios de ganado mayor- something like 17. 5 square kilómeters - claiming that they had lived on the site for more than 10 years. The owner of the land, Don Andrés Vicente o Antonio de Urízar, who didn't know his property named Don Ignacio del Valle as his representative in the transaction. The families named Ignacio Anastacio de Ayala as their representative and the deal was consummated with Diego de Lasaga, the political and military governor of the colonia del Nuevo Santander present as well as Pedro Félix Campuzano, the judge commissioned by the government for the mediation of lands.

Even though the families signed the documents on October 18, 1784 in San Felipe de Linares, Nuevo León, with Juan Jacinto de Lanuza, Andrés Vicente de Urízar's new representative, it wasn't until January 3, 1785, when the transaction was finalized.
In this way, large tracts of the land and big ranches started being identified with the names and geographic characteristics of the livestock raised by the original 12 families .

For example, the ranch owned by Juan José Cisneros who was married to María Antonia Villarreal, was identified by locals as "Cabras Pintas".
Don Juan Nepomuceno Cisneros Villarreal, who was married to María Teresa Salinas, owned the ranch called "La Canasta."

Don Miguel Chapa, married to María Teresa Treviño, owned "El Chapeño."
Don Santiago Longoria, married to María Hinojosa, owned "El Longoreño.
Don José Antonio de la Garza Falcón, married to Josefa Villarreal, owned "El Falconeño."
Don Antonio de la Garza, married to María Salomé Sepúlveda, owned the now-famous "El Tahuachal."

Don Luis Antonio García Rodríguez, married to María Rosalía de la Garza, owned the horse ranch "Los Gachupines."
Don Ramón Longoria, married to Josefa García, owned "La Barranca" and "El Capote,"along with Marcelino Longoria and his wife Francisca de la Serna.

Don José de Hinojosa, married to Antonia Benavides, owned "La Palma."
Juan José Solís, married to María Gertrudis Hinojosa, owned "El Soliseño."
Nicolás de Vela, married to María García, were owners of the ranch "Las Animas" along with José Antonio Cavazos y Gertrudis Cantú.

Some of the original names that were given to these areas still persist.

YTURRIA'S BOOK ABOUT HIS ANCESTOR GAVE INSIGHTS INTO HIS LIFE

(Frank Yturria died at a Houston hospital on Nov. 26, 2018  at the age of 95. Yturria was a lawyer, but dedicated most of his life to his ranch and conservation projects, including huge easements to protect ocelots and other endangered species. He also had a flair for acting in westerns as a young man. His book about his ancestor "The Patriarch" gives an insight into his background. We reprint this review we published at the time.)


"The Patriarch"
By Frank D. Yturria
Pub. UTB-TSC
2006
319 pages

By Juan Montoya
Having known the author personally, I had hesitated to write a review of Frank's book.

It is a well-known fact that I consider Charles Stillman, Mifflin Kenedy and Richard King – all of the contemporaries and associates of his ancestor Francisco Yturria – as Robber Barons who ultimately dispossessed the rightful owners of their property in South Texas with the help of the Texas Rangers and have been portrayed as the saviors of civilization in paid narratives passing off as history.

Nonetheless, as I read Frank's book carefully, I came to the realization that writing about your ancestors forces your hand and gives you an insight of people's lives that you would otherwise see in a different light.

The first thing that strikes you as a contradiction in Yturria's book about his adoptive great-grandfather is that he wasn't his great-grandfather at all. And the next thing is that the book's title, "The Patriarch," is a misnomer of the first degree.

His ancestors Francisco and Felicitas Yturria could not bear children for four years after they married and despite traveling to New Orleans to get expert medical advice, were told to forget about having offspring. 

The current batch of "Yturrias" are the descendants of an ill-conceived offspring between an Irish soldier who came with the invading U.S. Army and a poor Mexican woman from old Guerrero, upriver from Brownsville.

Yturria himself relates this in his tale. After the couple found out they could have no children, a friend advised them to look for a likely child to adopt.

In 1858, Dan Sullivan, a San Antonio businessman, offered to help them adopt one. He was talking about a child born to a Dolores Serna from her relationship with Sullivan's business agent, an Irishman who came with Zachary Taylor's army, one Daniel Louis McGraw.

So in reality, Frank and his brother Fausto and the descendants of his grandfather Daniel are really McGraws.

"It took some persuading, but the arrangements finally were complete," Yturria writes of the couple's first adoption.

According to his account, the friend told Francisco that "You and your wife have so much to offer a child, much more than a poor family can...They might consider letting you adopt the child since you could give him all the things she never will be able to."
Francisco and Felicitas arranged for McGraw to deliver the boy – and named him Santiago – after Francisco's younger brother. The boy died from a fever a year later.

The boy's father had "moved on," and the couple contacted S. G. Cole, a friend in Edinburg, and "arranged" to adopt Dolores Serna's second child. She was "understandably hesitant" to part with her second child.
Negotiations continued until November 1860, when Yturria accompanied by a priest fetched the 18-month-old child. The boy's name was Daniel and he traveled with his mother to Brownsville because she was still breast feeding him. She remained with the boy for a short time and weaned him before returning to Guerrero.

He spent the closing months of the Civil War in 1865 with his mother before returning to Brownsville. After helping her financially "for at least a number of years," they ruptured all contact with the biological mother.
"As far as I know, my grandfather (Daniel) never reestablished contact with his birth mother, nor sought to discover her ultimate fate or that of his father," Yturria writes. "Neither did my father, nor have I, as yet."

Yturria outlines the methods used by his ancestor along with King, Kenedy and Stillman to acquire huge amounts of land. Even though he assures us that everything was on the up and up as they swallowed huge estates from the heirs of the original grant holders, most historians are not as charitable. They cite instances where "questionable" methods were used to cheat the heirs of their valuable lands.

However, Yturria insisted that his ancestor went the extra mile to convince the heirs of land-grant families like the Cavazos family to sell him and his partners thousands of acres for a song.

In the history books, Yturria is known as a "Civil War profiteer and banker," son of Capt. Manuel Maria and Paula Navarro (Ortuzu) Yturria, was born in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, on October 4, 1830. He was married to Felicitas Treviño, daughter of Ygnacio Treviño, an original Spanish land grantee in Cameron County, Texas. True to form, both Kenedy and King also married to daughters of families who inherited land grants and used that relationship to buy off the rest of the family members.

The original Yturria began his career in business by working as a clerk for Stillman, the founder of Brownsville, Texas, and by purchasing lands adjoining those of his wife's inheritance.

As a top aide to Stillman, Yturria was involved in the formation of Mifflin Kenedy and Company, the Rio Grande river boating monopoly that Stillman financed and that Kenedy and King operated. Yturria became the leading cotton broker of Matamoros during this time.

He not only established and operated the Francisco Yturria Bank of Brownsville under a private charter, he also owned and established a mercantile house in Matamoros.
For his business friends in Brownsville during the Civil War, Yturria became the registered owner of record of boats belonging to King, Kenedy, and Stillman, allowing their boats loaded with cotton and bound for European ports to sail past vessels of the Union blockade flying the Mexican flag.

In 1864 Emperor Maximilian of Mexico knighted Yturria and appointed him customs collector on the Rio Grande, a position he held until 1867.

When the Civil War ended, Stillman, King, and Kenedy fled to Matamoros and to Yturria's protection; in 1867 they returned to Brownsville, and Yturria fled to Europe to live in France. He returned to Brownsville two years later to again take over his many business enterprises and continue his service to his old friends Stillman, Kenedy, King, and others.

At the time of his death Yturria owned 130,000 acres in Cameron, Hidalgo, Willacy, Kenedy, and Starr counties.

The vast Punta del Monte Rancho was the headquarters of an 85,000-acre tract of land in Willacy and Kenedy counties, which produced 2,000 steers per year. Yturria would travel by boat to New Orleans and by train to Kansas, where he sold his cattle; he returned to Texas by way of New York, where he made his deposits in the Hanover National Bank.

He was one of the wealthiest and most influential men of his time in southwest Texas. Yturria died on June 12, 1912, in Brownsville. And his adoptive descendant Frank Yturria died at 95 on November 26, 2018. 

Monday, January 13, 2025

CANADA TO TRUMP MAKING IT 51'ST STATE: (POUSSE-LE) SHOVE IT!

By Jean Chrétien
Former Canadian Prime Minister

Today is my 91st birthday.

It’s a time to celebrate with family and friends. To look back on the life I’ve been privileged to lead. And to reflect on how this country we all love so much has grown and changed in my nine decades on this earth.

This year, I’ve also decided to give myself a birthday present. I’m going to do something in this piece that I don’t do very often anymore: address a major issue that affects the state of our nation and deeply concerns me and so many other Canadians. 

Of course, it’s the totally unacceptable insults and unprecedented threats to our sovereignty from Donald Trump.

I have two very clear and simple messages.
To Donald Trump, from one old man to another: wake up! What makes you think that Canadians would ever give up the greatest country in the world – and make no mistake, that is what we are – to join the United States?

I can tell you that Canadians value their independence. We love our country. We have built something here that is the envy of the world – in compassion, in understanding, in tolerance, and in finding a way for people of different backgrounds and beliefs to live together in harmony.

We have also built a strong social safety net – including public health care – that we are very proud of. It is not perfect, but it is based on the principle that the most vulnerable among us must be protected.

It may not be the “American way” or the “Trump way.” But it is the reality that I have witnessed and lived throughout my long life.

If you think that threatening and insulting us is going to change our minds, you really don’t know us. You don’t know that when it came to fighting two world wars for freedom, we signed up – both times – years before your country did. We fought and sacrificed enormously.

We also had the courage to say no to your country when it tried to drag us into a totally unjustified and destabilizing war in Iraq.

We built a nation on the most rugged and difficult terrain imaginable. And we did it against all odds. We may appear easygoing and gentle. But make no mistake, we are determined and tough.

A Message to Our Leaders
And that brings me to my second message, to all our leaders, federal and provincial – and to those who aspire to lead our country:

Start showing that determination and that tenacity. This is what Canadians want to see – this is what they need to see. This is what we call leadership. Canadians are ready to follow. You have to lead the way.

I know the spirit is there. Since Trump’s attacks, all political parties have come out in support of Canada. In fact, to my great satisfaction, even the Bloc Québécois is standing up for Canada!

But you don’t win a hockey game by playing defence alone. We all know that even if we meet one demand, President Trump will come back with another, bigger one. This is not diplomacy, this is blackmail.

We need a different approach. One that will break this cycle.

President Trump has accomplished one thing: he has unified Canadians more than ever before! All of our country’s leaders have come together in a determination to defend Canadian interests.

When I became Prime Minister, Canada was facing a crisis of national unity. The threat of Quebec separation was real. We acted to address that existential threat in a way that made Canadians, including Quebecers, stronger, more united, and even more proud of Canadian values.

Now there is another existential threat. And we must once again reduce our vulnerability. That is the challenge for this generation of political leaders.

And you won’t do it by using the same old approaches. Yes, telling Americans that we are their best friends and their closest trading partner is a good thing. So is the intense lobbying in Washington and state capitals, emphasizing that tariffs will also hurt their economies. As for retaliatory tariffs: when you are attacked, you must defend yourself.

Reducing our vulnerability

But we must also play offense. Let’s tell Trump that we have border problems with the United States, too. Canada has strict gun control laws, but illegal guns are flooding in from the United States.

We need to tell him that we expect the United States to act to reduce the number of firearms coming into Canada. We also want to protect the Arctic. But the United States refuses to recognize the Northwest Passage through the Canadian Arctic as Canadian waters and insists that it is an international waterway. We need the United States to recognize the Northwest Passage as Canadian waters.

We also need to reduce our vulnerability in the first place. We need to be stronger. There are more trade barriers between provinces than between Canada and the United States.

Let’s make it a national project to remove those barriers! Let’s strengthen the ties that bind this vast nation together – for example, by creating a real energy grid across the country.

We also need to understand that Donald Trump is not only threatening us, he is also targeting a growing number of other countries and the European Union itself. He is just getting started.

Canada should quickly convene a meeting of the leaders of Denmark, Panama, Mexico, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to formulate a plan to combat these threats. Every time Mr. Trump opens his mouth, he creates new allies for all of us. Let’s organize! To counter unreasonable, raw power, we need strength in numbers.


Respect for our adversaries
The challenge is not to wait in fear for Donald Trump’s next move, but to build a country and an international community that can resist him.

Canadians know me. They know that I am optimistic. That I am practical. And that I always speak my mind. I have made my share of mistakes in my long career, but I have never doubted the decency of my fellow Canadians – or my political adversaries.

The current – ​​and future – generation of political leaders should remember that they are not each other’s enemies, but adversaries. No one has ever loved the harshness of the political arena as much as I have. But I have always understood that each of us is trying to make a positive contribution to making our community and our country a better place.

That spirit is more important than ever as we face this new challenge. They should keep that in mind.
I am 91 years old today and in good health. And I stand on the ramparts to help defend our country’s independence as I have done all my life.

Long live Canada!

Sunday, January 12, 2025

IS GUERRA BUILDING AN EMPIRE OUT AT THE PORT OF B'VILLE? HAS ERIC GARZA FOUND A HOME AS PORT POLICE CHIEF?

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Some public entities, like the City of Brownsville and – most recently – the Cameron County Sheriff's Department, have been considered sieves of inside information. 

Que no se diga el Brownsville Independent School District (BISD).

For the most part, it is disaffected employees who are given no outlet for what they consider to be favoritism, unfair treatment, or who honestly believe that there is wrongdoing going on in their workplace that the public should know about.

Until Eric Garza left office at the beginning the year, the sheriff's department was the number one leak factory, and the scuttlebutt emanating from the CID, the jail, patrol, etc., was more like a torrent than a leak. With the local newspaper now just an advertising cash cow and published only two or three times a week, the preferred  media for the information have been social media, this one included.

Now we're hearing that out at the Brownsville Navigation District (the Port of Brownsville, AKA the Golden Ditch), its chair Esteban Guerra has started to build a personal empire by surrounding himself with family and political allies and putting them on the port's payroll.

Guerra, who has made no secret that he would like to occupy the Cameron County judge's seat now held by judge Eddie Treviño, has made inroads toward that goal by making himself appear indispensable to congressman Vicente Gonzalez in the last congressional election in his run at House District 34 against Mayra Flores.

But even before that, Guerra has been very, very busy trying to get his allies elected at the city and the county and to influence the races that send local candidates to Austin and to Washington, D.C.

But charity begins at home, and Guerra took a highly active part in getting port commissioner Ernesto Gutierrez elected to the BND board, and cementing his hold on that board. Then, when former Port Police chief  Oscar Garcia "retired" in 2022, Guerra – with a majority of the commission – placed William Dietrich, a retired Brownsville P.D. commander, as "interim" chief. 

They made the usual noises and paid lip service (and a national head hunter firm) to conduct a national search and spent thousands looking for a permanent chief of at the port police, and predictably choose Dietrich from among all the other applicants despite his reputation among his law enforcement colleagues and prosecutors as a surly, authoritarian bully with little to no people skills.

Before that, the rumor mill had begun to grind out rumors that Dietrich was romantically involved with one of Guerra's cousins and that the couple had been seen together in public events.   

Then came the "retirement" of former Port CEO Eddie Campirano. They made the usual national search noises and spent thousands looking for a port director. Hugely qualified applicants from all over the United States and other countries sent in their resumes and visited the port for interviews. 

Among the applications was none other's than that of retired police commander – and Guerra's BF – from Brownsville, one William Dietrich.

Well, after the national "dog and pony show" search for port director to replace Campirano was concluded, the majority of the board agreed that Dietrich, who had spent his life chasing crooks and fighting crime, was the perfect candidate to lead an international port of entry without the benefit of maritime cargo experience, international law, or maritime commerce. Based on such flimsy qualifications – and with a reputation for being an unrepentant hothead – Dietrich was chosen nonetheless.

All that was supposedly rumor, but turned out to be borne out by facts. What the chairman wants, the chairman gets. And what happens if you don't kowtow to Guerra's political directives? Ask Beto Torres, who ran against Guerra's wishes in the last election, and he'll give you a mouthful about political and commercial retaliation doled out to Guerra's "enemies." https://rrunrrun.blogspot.com/2024/11/at-port-of-brownsville-chairman-guerra.html

Now the port has no police chief, with Julio Romo, a port police lieutenant, viewed as "interim" police chief. Can we expect another "nationwide search" for police chief before Guerra's wishes are carried out?

About the only political contest that Guerra's candidate lost was the one where he supported former county sheriff Garza over eventual winner Manuel "Manny" Treviño, and he made no bones of his support of his opponent by openly bragging before Treviño's supporters that Garza would mop up the floor with the Primera police chief.

 Not only that, but Guerra had let it be known that he was eyeing making a run against county judge Treviño's for his seat. This, coming out when Gonzalez was nurturing Democrat unity to beat Flores, did not go over well and reached the ears of eventual congressional winner Gonzalez, who sought to tamp down the tempers on both sides of the issue.

And if you pick up the next copy of Port Matters, don't be surprised to see either Guerra or Dietrich featured in every other article spreading the good news that the current commissioners and port administrators are the best thing that has happened out there since sliced bread. We've never had it so good as under this crew, the publicly-paid de facto propaganda organ gushes monthly. 

Here's Steve handing out an award. Here's Dietrich announcing some wonderful statistic. Next thing we'll hear is that Noah's Ark made a landing at the port and that Noah imparted his blessings on the undeserving, awe-struck natives. 

So why is it that local longshoremen – the workers actually loading and unloading cargoes and making everyone but themselves rich – are the lowest paid longshoremen in the entire Gulf coast and the Eastern Seaboard? Is the Brownsville port the port that works, but for everyone else but the workers?  

Romo, the "interim" port police chief, has been seen representing the BND at some public events, but the rumor mill is once again grinding out its product and the latest tidbit is that the rejected sheriff Garza will find a home at the port's police chief position, elbowing out Romo.

Will this also turn out to be borne true by upcoming events? 

If we were Romo, we wouldn't get too comfy at the Port Police Department seat.

Saturday, January 11, 2025

SPACEX'S MUSK: TO BOCA CHICA STARBASE, AND BEYOND...

By J. David Goodman
New York Times

Over the past few years, Elon Musk has expanded his footprint in Texas, moving his companies from California and building offices, warehouses and manufacturing plants across a growing number of Texas counties. 

Now Mr. Musk is trying to do something that few, if any, titans of industry have done in a century: create his own company town. Mr. Musk has long talked about his desire to make a new town – which he hopes to call Starbase – in coastal South Texas, where his rocket launch company, SpaceX, is based.

For years, the plan did not appear to be moving forward in any official way, in part because creating a new municipality in Texas requires a certain number of residents and support from a majority of voters. But in that time, SpaceX employees have packed into newly refurbished midcentury homes and temporary housing – some of it in the form of silver Airstream trailers — in the shadow of the company’s rockets. 

Then this month, company employees who live around its offices and launch site took the first major step toward incorporating a town, gathering signatures and filing an official petition to hold an election. The petition, filed with top officials in Cameron County and shared with 
The New York Times based on a public records request, provides some of the first details on the size and the operation of the new city that Mr. Musk and his company are envisioning. 

If authorized by the county, the election would allow voters to cast a ballot for a slate of three new city officials, including the city’s first mayor. The petition suggests that the mayor will be SpaceX’s security manager, Gunnar Milburn.

“This is a very unique situation,” said Alan Bojorquez, a lawyer in Austin who specializes in helping groups of Texas residents through the process of incorporating new towns. He said he had never helped a company that wanted its employees to form their own town. The Starbase petition describes a community of around 500 current inhabitants, including at least 219 primary residents and more than 100 children, in an area at the very end of State Highway 4 by Boca Chica Beach, where SpaceX launches many of its rockets.

The town would be about 1.5 square miles, a little larger than Central Park but small by Texas standards.

Nearly everyone is a renter and works at SpaceX, according to the petition.

There are few examples in Texas of such company towns, though there is one north of Houston where the founder of the Texas Renaissance Festival created the town of Todd Mission and became its mayor. And Mr. Musk may not be content with just one new town. He has already looked into the possibility of housing employees in a development outside the town of Bastrop, near Austin. 

The area is home to a swiftly growing campus for Musk companies, including a manufacturing plant for SpaceX; the headquarters of the Boring Company, which is creating tunneling technology; and, soon, offices for the social media platform X. It was not clear from the petition why Mr. Musk and his company were seeking to create the new town of Starbase nor what benefit they might obtain from doing so.

Mr. Bojorquez said that most new towns were created by people who live in unincorporated areas and want to prevent their area from being gobbled up by an expanding city, or to keep a particularly undesirable business from moving in.

The new town being proposed by Mr. Musk could create its own police or fire departments, or issue its own ordinances. But it would not have to.

“Cities are required by law to do very little,” Mr. Bojorquez said. One of the biggest practical issues is road maintenance, which would no longer be handled by the county.

Of course, incorporation allows communities to elect their own local leaders, and also to create municipal utility systems, such as for water. As a city, Starbase would be eligible for state and federal grants, would have certain immunity from lawsuits and could also condemn property, Mr. Bojorquez said.

In a letter filed along with the petition, Kathryn Lueders, SpaceX’s general manager for Starbase, said that the company needed “the ability to grow Starbase as a community,” and noted that SpaceX “currently performs civil functions” because of its remote location, including managing utilities and providing schooling and medical care. “

“Incorporation would move the management of some of these functions to a more appropriate public body,” Ms. Lueders wrote in her letter to the Cameron County judge, who is the county’s top executive and must approve the petition if it meets all of the legal requirements.

For years, SpaceX has run into local opposition in Cameron County from environmental groups over the effect of large-scale and frequent launches on the nearby protected coastal ecology. And residents and officials from Brownsville, about 20 miles away, have at times complained that launches shut down roads and cut them off from the beach. Previously, the company had appeared interested only in having the area’s name changed for the purposes of postal delivery. An application to do so is pending before a federal agency. 

“We thought that was what they were really looking for, but I guess they wanted to extend that a little further,” the county judge, Eddie Treviño Jr., said in an interview. “Obviously, they think that there’s some advantage to it.”Mr. Treviño said that the county’s legal team and elections office were studying the petition to see if it met the legal requirements. “I’m waiting to hear back from them,” he said. An election could be scheduled next year.

The proposed new mayor, Mr. Milburn, declined to comment when reached by phone on Monday. So did others who signed the petition. Cayetana Polanco, who lives on Memes Street, which is within the proposed new town, said she was looking forward to the creation of the city of Starbase and hoped that it could be “a model of what new cities should be.” She said that she did not work for SpaceX but that her husband did.

“If all goes through with this petition, my baby might be the first child born in this city,” she added. “It would be pretty epic!”

Nearly all of the residents who live in the area work for SpaceX or have family members who do. Most live in company-owned houses clustered around the company’s main buildings, including at least one restaurant, open only to SpaceX employees.

“SpaceX is the predominant landowner in the proposed Starbase area and, with only a few exceptions, owns all the real property,” Richard Cardile, the senior manager of spaceport operations for SpaceX, wrote in an affidavit as part of the petition.

The company, he added, keeps “detailed records of all individuals who reside in each dwelling unit in the proposed city of Starbase.”
For those reasons, if county officials greenlight an election, voters appeared likely to be supportive.

One of them, presumably, would be Mr. Musk himself. He was not among those who signed the petition. But he has a residence in Cameron County, and has said he voted there in November.

BUCKEYES – THOSE WORTHLESS NUTS – HOOK THE HORNS: IT'S FIGHTING IRISH, OHIO STATE FOR NATIONAL COLLEGE TITLE

 

Friday, January 10, 2025

TCOLE'S BURRUSS BRINGS ROUND TABLE TO BROWNSVILLE AT TSC

Brownsville TCOLE commission member Patricia Garza Burruss (r) hosted the roundtable. 

By Juan Montoya

With 11-year veteran commission member Patricia Garza Burruss hosting the event at Texas Southmost College where her mother Adela Garza is board president , Gregory Stevens, the Executive Director of the Texas  Commission on Law Enforcement, held a wide-ranging round table discussion with area law enforcement entities on how best to collaborate to provide security to Texas residents.

With some 25 law enforcement officials in attendance representing local police departments, school districts, constables, the Cameron County Sheriff's Department, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the Cameron County District Attorney's Office, Willacy County, and the Port of Brownsville, Stevens said Friday that this was the first time ever that the TCOLE had held such an event in the city.

"We always enjoy coming to the Rio Grande Valley and we are excited to come to Brownsville,' Stevens, a 35-year law enforcement veteran, said, noting that previous meetings had been held in McAllen the past two years. The round table was held in a second-floor conference room at the Arnulfo Oliveira Student Center at Texas Southmost College.

Burruss opened the round table and introduced Stevens to the group, after which each attendee introduced themselves. Garza introduced herself as "her mother" and TSC president Jesus Roberto Rodriguez told the group that although he held three departments close to his heart, Criminal Justice was closest because "you keep our community safe. You don't call your English teacher or an electrician when something goes wrong. The people who keep our most vulnerable safe are you guys."

Brownsville Police Department Chief and Asst. City Manager Felix Sauceda welcomed Stevens and said the local department looked forward to collaborate with TCOLE to stay abreast of legislative changes that affect local departments and other law enforcement agencies.

His remarks were followed by Brownsville Independent School District Chief of Police Oscar Garcia who said that the roles of the Texas Education Agency (TEA) and TCOLE had to be synchronized so that school district departments could get a clear definition of their roles and obligations. Specifically, Garcia asked Stevens how TEA directives that require "guardians" in schools in response to active school shootings. Are "guardians" and "school marshals" the same?, Garcia asked. And were the TEA requirements the same as TCOLE's as far as training and certification?

During a recent athletic event, Garcia said that marshals from the visiting school showed up in full tactical gear, while BISD preferred them to exercise more discreetness as not to alarm the public.

This was followed by Cameron County Asst. District Attorney Edward Sandoval who told Rogers that in prosecuting active shooting cases, if a suspect was detained and held by a "guardian," would the rules of evidence and chain of custody required by courts the same? What is a guardian and what is a marshal? Can a guardian search children?

"We recently had a report of a student with a loaded gun at a school and a 'guardian' (under TEA rules) and he was detained by a teacher until the police arrived," he said. "What are the minimum standards which are needed to prosecute in a court?"

"A guardian could be a shop teacher who can lock the door and keep the students safe, while a marshal is a person who is well trained and has the authority to hunt down the school shooter and is required to attend an 80-hour program academy.," Stevens said. We need a consistent definition."

Toward that end, Stevens said the TCOLE has established three statewide committees to address the minimum standards on officer wellness, job standards, and define job descriptions.

What we have is a mess," Stevens said, as  some participants nodded in agreement. "We need to bring order back to these things. We need to bring order to these things."

"Citizens call law enforcement when everything goes sideways," he said. "When they call us what they expect is a uniformed law enforcement officer in  marked patrol unit to show up in a reasonable amount of time. How do we make this happen?"

"We appreciate our TCOLE Executive Director (Stevens) and commissioner Burruss for choosing to hold their Law Enforcement Round Table at TSC," said board president Garza. "This listening session is important to our entire law enforcement community, as it provides a unique opportunity to hold one-in-one discussions with the TCOLE leadership. Through this forum, our local law enforcement representatives have been invited to express their concerns and suggestions regarding topics such as policies, administrative issues, and training that will assist them in keeping our communities safe."

MAKE 'MERIKKKA GREAT AGAIN, AND AGAIN, AND AGAIN....


 

NOT TO BE UPSTAGED, TRUMP HOLDS HIS BIGGER, BETTER FUNERAL

La Cebolla

WASHINGTON—Peeking out of his coffin with one eye open, a jealous President-elect Donald Trump reportedly threw his own state funeral Thursday in an effort to upstage the late Jimmy Carter’s ceremony.

“I’m way deader than he is,” mumbled Trump, who lay at the opposite end of the National Cathedral as his senior aides attempted to persuade Carter funeral attendees to leave their seats and pay respects to the 45th president. 

“This coffin sure is impressive, isn’t it? The guy in here must be super beloved. We’re going to need way more than a national day of mourning. More like a month—but who knows, maybe my mourners will demand a year.”

At press time, reports confirmed Trump had sat up in the coffin to deliver his own eulogy.

A UNIQUE BROWNSVILLE INNOVATION: A CITY WARMING CENTER

(Ed.'s Note: We are always surprised at the creativity of local residents and care providers of the homeless to confront dire weather events like this recent cold snap. As can be seen above, someone hit upon the idea of recycling carboard from local dumpsters to construct a shelter to stave off the cold and rain. One of our seven readers tells us that this individual warming center is on the south side of the Good Neighbor Settlement House at Tyler and 13th streets to protect its occupants – a homeless man and his dog – from the northern gales and the elements.

With the access to three warm meals and shower just around the corner, the site was well chosen to give its occupants access. Notice the square black box – a rodent trap – in front of the carton structure, to ward off the pests.

Many years ago city voters approved a bond issue that included the construction of a homeless shelter where the Mother of Perpetual Home, but the money was diverted and it became a senior citizen assisted living center. The homeless, unwilling to travel all the way out to the Ozanam Center on Minnesota Road, looked for nooks and crannies in the empty downtown buildings and alleys, where they still remain. With the cold snap breaking, these "warming centers" will soon disappear until the next cold front.)

Thursday, January 9, 2025

THEN, YEARS AFTER SILVER DIES, LONE RANGER FEELS TONTO'S BETRAYAL

TODAY, JAN.9, 2025 NATIONAL DAY OF MOURNING FOR JIMMY


January 21, 1977
Draft evaders pardoned
Carter pardons Vietnam War draft evaders.

Emergency Natural Gas Act
Congress passes Emergency Natural Gas Act, authorizing the President to deregulate natural gas prices due to a shortage in supply. Carter signs the bill and announces plans to present an energy program to Congress. He later proposes the establishment of a cabinet-level Department of Energy.

February 15, 1977
Secretary of State travels to Middle East
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance travels to the Middle East in an attempt to reconvene the 1973 Geneva Conference.

February 17, 1977
Soviet dissident receives Carter’s support
Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov receives a written letter of support from President Carter.

April 18, 1977
Carter addresses nation on energy
In an address to the nation, Carter calls his program of energy conservation the “moral equivalent of war.”

May 22, 1977
Carter speaks at Notre Dame
Carter speaks at Notre Dame University, presenting a new direction in foreign policy which takes the focus off anti-Communism and emphasizes support for fundamental human rights.

June 20, 1977
Carter opposes B-1 bomber
Carter announces opposition to production of the B-1 strategic bomber.

July 19, 1977
Carter meets Israeli Prime Minister
Newly elected Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin meets with Carter in Washington.

December 29, 1977
Carter meets Geirek in Warsaw
Carter meets with Polish First Secretary Gierek in Warsaw.

December 31, 1977
Carter visits Shah of Iran
Carter visits the Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, in Tehran, calling Iran “an island of stability” in the Middle East.
Carter takes a tour
Carter travels to India, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, France, and Belgium.

March 9, 1978

Coal strike busted
Carter invokes the Taft-Hartley Act to end a strike by coal miners.

March 17, 1978
Potential Soviet threat
Carter warns of the Soviet threat in a foreign policy address at Wake Forest University.

June 7, 1978

Carter delivers graduation speech
Carter graduation speech at Annapolis emphasizes the importance of human rights in foreign policy.

September 5, 1978
Mediation at Camp David
Carter mediates talks between Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel and President Anwar Sadat of Egypt at Camp David, resulting in a peace treaty between the two nations.
Camp David Accords Signed

The peace treaty was officially signed in March 1979. It was a major breakthrough, perhaps the most significant by an American President dealing with Middle East affairs, and established a precedent for future high-level negotiations over these issues.

October 15, 1978

Congress passes energy, employment bills
Congress passes a revised energy bill eighteen months after Carter proposed it. Congress also passes the Humphrey-Hawkins full employment bill.

December 15, 1978
China granted diplomatic status
The Carter administration grants full diplomatic status to the People's Republic of China.

April 5, 1979
Phase two of energy plan
Carter announces his “phase two” energy plan calling for conservation and phasing out price controls on oil.

June 7, 1979
MX missile approved
Carter approves development of the MX missile.

June 18, 1979

Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty
Carter signs the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT II) with the USSR. The U.S. Senate never ratifies the controversial treaty, although both nations voluntarily comply with its terms.

July 15, 1979
A crisis of confidence
Carter delivers what becomes known as his “malaise speech,” blaming the problems of the nation on “a crisis of confidence.”

July 18, 1979
Five cabinet members resign
Carter accepts the resignations of five cabinet members and names Hamilton Jordan chief of staff.

September 14, 1979
Approval ratings low
A Washington Post poll gives Carter the lowest approval rating of any President in three decades.

October 17, 1979
Department of Education established
Carter signs a bill establishing the Department of Education and appoints Shirley Hufstedler as its secretary.

November 4, 1979

Americans taken hostage in Tehran
In the longest hostage situation in recorded history, Iranian students take fifty-two American diplomats and citizens hostage for 444 days at the American embassy in Tehran. The students were supporters of the Iranian Revolution and took the hostages in protest of the United States’ harboring of the Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi who was accused of numerous violent crimes against Iranian citizens. After several failed rescue attempts, the death of Pahlavi in Egypt, and Iraq’s invasion of Iran (beginning the Iran-Iraq War) Iran was forced to negotiate a release; the crisis ended with the signing of the Algiers Accords on January 20, 1981.

January 23, 1980
“Carter Doctrine”
Carter announces the “Carter Doctrine” in his State of the Union address, asserting that threats to the Persian Gulf region will be viewed as “an assault of the vital interests of the United States.”

March 14, 1980
Anti-inflation program
Carter announces his anti-inflation program which includes a proposal for a balanced budget for fiscal year 1981.

April 17, 1980
Economy in recession
Carter announces that the economy is in recession, with the inflation rates hitting ten percent and interest rates climbing to eighteen percent.

April 22, 1980
Summer Olympic Boycott
The U.S. Olympic Committee votes to boycott the Moscow Summer Olympics, supporting Carter in protesting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

April 25, 1980

“Desert One” failure
Carter announces the failure of “Desert One,” the mission to rescue the Iranian-held hostages, and that several American military personnel had been killed.

June 1, 1980
Approval low
Carter's approval rating reaches the lowest mark of any President since 1945.

November 4, 1980
Reagan wins election
Carter loses election to Ronald Reagan, winning only 49 electoral votes to Reagan's 489.

January 20, 1981
Reagan inaugurated
Ronald Reagan is inaugurated President, and Carter leaves Washington, D.C.

NOT TO MENTION THE CAMERON COUNTY TAX APPRAISAL DISTRICT


 

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

INJURED JAN. 6 COP: "WE WERE KEEPING OUR OATH. NOT THEM."

By Lauren Irwin
The Hill

Former Capitol Police Sergeant Aquilino Gonell in a new op-ed criticized President-elect Trump over his pledge to pardon supporters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, calling it “devastating.”

In the New York Times op-ed released Sunday, a day before the fourth anniversary of the attack, Gonell relived his day inside the halls of Congress attempting to keep lawmakers safe as a mob entered looking to stop the certification of the 2020 election results.

He detailed the beating he suffered, noting he thought he would die and “never make it home to see my wife and young son.”

“Over the last four years, it’s been devastating to me to hear Donald Trump repeat his promise to pardon insurrectionists on the first day he’s back in office,” Gonell wrote.

As Trump prepares to return to the White House for a second term, he’s stated one of the first things he would do back in office is pardon Jan. 6 defendants.

Gonell wrote that he sustained long-lasting injuries that required multiple surgeries and years of rehab for post-traumatic stress disorder. Yet in the op-ed, he calls himself one of the lucky responding officers.

“Although I left the Capitol Police force, I remain haunted by that day,” he wrote. “Now Mr. Trump’s promised actions could erase the justice we’ve risked everything for.”

He later added that he wonders why he risked his life for elected officials inspired by Trump “only to see him return to power stronger than ever.”

Gonell, who’s become an outspoken Trump critic and testified in court, also noted his fear of retribution from the new administration.

Ahead of the anniversary, Gonell also told MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart that it would be an “outrage” and a “desecration” to the sacrifice of those who died serving that day if Trump pardoned rioters.

Gonell noted on air that he’s applied for benefits for the trauma and financial burden he’s experienced since leaving his job that have yet to be approved.

He said he didn’t think four years ago that he would be on air in 2025 telling his story ahead of another Trump presidency.

Gonell in the op-ed called on Trump to let the Jan. 6 rioters’ convictions stand, saying it would help heal a divided nation.

“Those people, they attack us, the police officers. They are not warriors. They are not the victims,” Gonell said on MSNBC. “They chose to commit a crime because they were so gullible enough to believe the lies of Donald Trump without any evidence.”

“We were doing our job,” he continued. “We were keeping our oath. Not them.”

rita