Wednesday, February 19, 2025

SAVE RGV DROPS WASTEWATER DUMPING LAWSUIT VS. SPACEX

SpaceX's launch pad on Boca Chica Beach. Gaige Davila /Texas Public Radio

By Lauren McGaughy
The Texas Newsroom

A South Texas environmental group is dropping a lawsuit that alleged SpaceX illegally polluted the water around its Starbase launch site near Brownsville.

Save RGV said in a two-page brief filed on Tuesday that it was voluntarily dismissing the case against Space Exploration Technologies Corp., founded by tech billionaire Elon Musk. One of the group’s lawyers, Lauren Ice, confirmed the dismissal but did not immediately explain why the decision was being made now.

“Plaintiff Save RGV has decided to drop the claims for now, but could decide to bring the claims again in the future (subject to other limitations that may exist at that time, of course, like statute of limitations),” Ice told The Texas Newsroom in an email.

There was a hearing in the case set for mid-April.

Save RGV, which bills itself as a group of concerned local citizens, sued SpaceX last year for allegedly polluting the waters at Boca Chica Beach. They asked a federal judge to force SpaceX to come into compliance or face fines.

SpaceX argued it was acting within the law and its permits, and said Save RGV did not prove they would suffer “irreparable harm” if the launches did not stop.

EPA fined SpaceX last year for violating the Clean Water Act at the site.

Save RGV board member Jim Chapman said they dropped the lawsuit because the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, the state’s environmental agency, granted SpaceX a permit that “moots” their lawsuit.

“We think we’re right,” Chapman said in a phone interview. “We just didn't feel like [the lawsuit] was going to move in a positive direction for us.”

Chapman added that Save RGV is still fighting a SpaceX request to be able to dump 200,000 gallons of treated wastewater to go into the bay every day.

Save RGV nd a number of other groups also filed another lawsuit in state court against the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality regarding SpaceX. The case is pending, according to online court records.

11-YEAR-OLD GIRL COMMITS SUICIDE AFTER CLASSMATES BULLY HER ABOUT PARENTS' DEPORTATION

By Deja Monet

A Texas mother is seeking answers after her 11-year-old daughter took her own life following relentless bullying about her family’s immigration status. The child, Jocelynn Rojo Carranza, was a sixth-grade student at Gainesville Intermediate School.

Her mother, Marbella Carranza, shared that Jocelynn was repeatedly harassed by classmates, who taunted her and threatened to call ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) to deport her family. The bullying was so severe that Jocelynn reportedly reported it to school authorities multiple times—yet no action was taken. Marbella added that she was not informed about the bullying until, after her daughter’s death, Univision reported

On February 3, after enduring months of bullying, Jocelynn made the devastating decision to end her life. She was rushed to an intensive care unit in Dallas, where she remained for five days before passing away on February 8, according to the family’s GoFundMe page.

The Gainesville ISD has yet to release a statement regarding Jocelynn’s death as her family seeks answers. Jocelynn Carranza Rojo’s tragic story highlights the real dangers of bullying and the fear immigrant families face daily. Her death has sparked a national conversation about how schools handle bullying –especially when it involves racial or immigration-related harassment.

A LETTER FROM GAZA PALESTINIANS TO DONALD TRUMP

Palestinians enjoy the beach on a hot day in Gaza City on July 17, 2023 [File: Mohammed Salem/Reuters]
Opinion
By Hassan Abo Qamar
MSN

Dear Mr. Trump,

I am writing to you as a Palestinian and a survivor of a genocide, who was born and raised in Gaza – a city of love and resilience.

I have read to your statements about Gaza and frankly, I am confused. You claim to be a “peace-maker” but encourage Israel to continue its genocide, calling for “all hell to break lose” if your demands are not fulfilled.

Mr Trump, we have already been through hell. We lost 60,000 martyrs in it.

You claim credit for the ceasefire deal, and yet your government – one of its guarantors – refuses to pressure Israel into fulfilling all its obligations under it. You call Gaza a “demolition site” but conveniently fail to name the criminal responsible – while simultaneously supplying it with more bombs, funding, and diplomatic cover.

You talk about Palestinians being “safe” and “happy”, yet you refer to us as if we are a burden to be offloaded onto Jordan, Egypt, or any country willing to take us.

You claim that we “only want to be in the Gaza Strip because [we] don’t know anything else.”

Mr Trump, I think you profoundly misunderstand who we are and what Gaza is to us.

You may think of us as a mere obstacle to your vision of luxury resorts, but we are a people with deep roots, long history, and unalienable rights. We are the rightful owners of our land.

Gaza is not your business venture, and it is not for sale. Gaza is our home, our land, our inheritance.

And no, it is not true that we want to stay here because we “know nothing else”. Although the 17-year-long Israeli siege has made life incredibly difficult for us, some of us have still managed to travel – for education, medical treatment or work. But these people still return because Gaza is home.

A powerful example is Dr Refaat Alareer, an inspiring figure, who the Israeli occupation targeted and killed in 2023. He earned his master’s degree in the UK and later completed his Ph.D at University Putra Malaysia.

Despite having the opportunity to stay abroad, he chose to return to Gaza, where he taught creative writing and literature at the Islamic University. He also co-founded We Are Not Numbers, an initiative that paired young Palestinian writers with experienced authors to amplify their voices and resist occupation through storytelling. One of these voices is mine.

Last spring, I, too, had the opportunity to leave, but I decided against it. I could not leave my family, friends and Gaza amid a genocidal war. However, like many others, I plan to travel to complete my education and then return to help rebuild and support my people.

This is the Palestinian way – we seek knowledge and opportunities, not to abandon our homeland, but to build and strengthen it.

Speaking of building – you talk about your plans to turn Gaza into “the Riviera of the Middle East”. The thing is, Gaza was the Riviera of the Middle East. Our ancestors built it into a flourishing trade hub, port city and cultural centre. It was “magnificent” – to use your words – until Israel was created and it started destroying it.

And yet, after every brutal Israeli assault on Gaza, Palestinians would rebuild. Despite all the Israeli violence, restrictions and thievery, Palestinians still made sure Gaza was a safe place with a cozy rhythm of life, where its youth were doing their best to pursue decent livelihoods, where families were happy and together, and where homes thrived.

Israel has now tried to reduce all of Gaza to rubble and death so we are no longer able to live in it. You have picked up on the idea, effectively endorsing our ethnic cleansing under the veneer of humanitarianism. No, Mr Trump, we will not be “happy” and “safe” elsewhere.

But I agree with you on something else you said: “You’ve got to learn from history.” Indeed, history teaches us that settler-colonialism in modern times is unsustainable. In this sense, your plans and Israel’s plans are doomed to fail.

We, the people of Gaza – like any Indigenous people – refuse to be uprooted. We refuse to be dispossessed. We refuse to be forced into exile so that our land can be handed to the highest bidder. We are not a problem to be solved; we are a people with the right to live in our homeland in freedom and dignity.

No amount of bombs, blockades, or tanks will make us forget that. We will not be relocated, resettled, or replaced.

Power and wealth will not decide the fate of Gaza. History is not written by thieves – it is written by those who resist, by the will of the people. No matter the pressure, our connection to this land will never be severed. Surrender and abandonment are not an option. We will honor our martyrs with resistance by nourishing this land with love, care and remembrance.

Wishing you all the best in your futile pursuits.

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

FAMILY ANNOUNCES FUNERAL SERVICES, BURIAL, FOR ERASMO


On Monday, Erasmo Castro’s family said on social media that viewing services will be Wednesday, Feb. 19 from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Funeraria del Angel in Brownsville.

Funeral services will begin on Thursday at 10 a.m., and the burial will be held at 11 a.m. at the same location.

LETTER OF HOLY FATHER FRANCIS TO THE BISHOPS OF THE U.S.A.: "JESUS ALSO CHOSE THE DRAMA OF IMMIGRATION."

Dear Brothers in the Episcopate,

I am writing today to address a few words to you in these delicate moments that you are living as Pastors of the People of God who walk together in the United States of America.

1. The journey from slavery to freedom that the People of Israel traveled, as narrated in the Book of Exodus, invites us to look at the reality of our time, so clearly marked by the phenomenon of migration, as a decisive moment in history to reaffirm not only our faith in a God who is always close, incarnate, migrant and refugee, but also the infinite and transcendent dignity of every human person. 

2. These words with which I begin are not an artificial construct. Even a cursory examination of the Church’s social doctrine emphatically shows that Jesus Christ is the true Emmanuel (cf. Mt 1:23); he did not live apart from the difficult experience of being expelled from his own land because of an imminent risk to his life, and from the experience of having to take refuge in a society and a culture foreign to his own. The Son of God, in becoming man, also chose to live the drama of immigration. I like to recall, among other things, the words with which Pope Pius XII began his Apostolic Constitution on the Care of Migrants, which is considered the “Magna Carta” of the Church’s thinking on migration:

“The family of Nazareth in exile, Jesus, Mary and Joseph, emigrants in Egypt and refugees there to escape the wrath of an ungodly king, are the model, the example and the consolation of emigrants and pilgrims of every age and country, of all refugees of every condition who, beset by persecution or necessity, are forced to leave their homeland, beloved family and dear friends for foreign lands."

3. Likewise, Jesus Christ, loving everyone with a universal love, educates us in the permanent recognition of the dignity of every human being, without exception. In fact, when we speak of “infinite and transcendent dignity,” we wish to emphasize that the most decisive value possessed by the human person surpasses and sustains every other juridical consideration that can be made to regulate life in society. Thus, all the Christian faithful and people of good will are called upon to consider the legitimacy of norms and public policies in the light of the dignity of the person and his or her fundamental rights, not vice versa.

4. I have followed closely the major crisis that is taking place in the United States with the initiation of a program of mass deportations. The rightly formed conscience cannot fail to make a critical judgment and express its disagreement with any measure that tacitly or explicitly identifies the illegal status of some migrants with criminality. At the same time, one must recognize the right of a nation to defend itself and keep communities safe from those who have committed violent or serious crimes while in the country or prior to arrival. That said, the act of deporting people who in many cases have left their own land for reasons of extreme poverty, insecurity, exploitation, persecution or serious deterioration of the environment, damages the dignity of many men and women, and of entire families, and places them in a state of particular vulnerability and defenselessness.

5. This is not a minor issue: an authentic rule of law is verified precisely in the dignified treatment that all people deserve, especially the poorest and most marginalized. The true common good is promoted when society and government, with creativity and strict respect for the rights of all — as I have affirmed on numerous occasions — welcomes, protects, promotes and integrates the most fragile, unprotected and vulnerable. This does not impede the development of a policy that regulates orderly and legal migration. However, this development cannot come about through the privilege of some and the sacrifice of others. What is built on the basis of force, and not on the truth about the equal dignity of every human being, begins badly and will end badly.

6. Christians know very well that it is only by affirming the infinite dignity of all that our own identity as persons and as communities reaches its maturity. Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups. In other words: the human person is not a mere individual, relatively expansive, with some philanthropic feelings! The human person is a subject with dignity who, through the constitutive relationship with all, especially with the poorest, can gradually mature in his identity and vocation. The true ordo amoris that must be promoted is that which we discover by meditating constantly on the parable of the “Good Samaritan” (cf. Lk 10:25-37), that is, by meditating on the love that builds a fraternity open to all, without exception. 

7. But worrying about personal, community or national identity, apart from these considerations, easily introduces an ideological criterion that distorts social life and imposes the will of the strongest as the criterion of truth.

8. I recognize your valuable efforts, dear brother bishops of the United States, as you work closely with migrants and refugees, proclaiming Jesus Christ and promoting fundamental human rights. God will richly reward all that you do for the protection and defense of those who are considered less valuable, less important or less human!

9. I exhort all the faithful of the Catholic Church, and all men and women of good will, not to give in to narratives that discriminate against and cause unnecessary suffering to our migrant and refugee brothers and sisters. With charity and clarity we are all called to live in solidarity and fraternity, to build bridges that bring us ever closer together, to avoid walls of ignominy and to learn to give our lives as Jesus Christ gave his for the salvation of all.

10. Let us ask Our Lady of Guadalupe to protect individuals and families who live in fear or pain due to migration and/or deportation. May the “Virgen morena”, who knew how to reconcile peoples when they were at enmity, grant us all to meet again as brothers and sisters, within her embrace, and thus take a step forward in the construction of a society that is more fraternal, inclusive and respectful of the dignity of all.

RESIDING OR COMING TO BROWNSVILLE? CAR THIEVES TARGET THESE




BPD RESPONSE TO RRUN-RRUN INFORMATION REQUEST
Brownsville, TX- The Brownsville Police Department has made numerous arrests of individuals involved in auto theft activities. 

We are sharing this to keep you informed of our ongoing efforts to address this issue.
It is important that you know that auto theft is still very much persistent in our area, but we are dedicated to deter this crime and pursue those responsible for these thefts. We strongly encourage you to take extra precautions to protect your vehicle, such as installing a kill-switch and using a steering wheel club.

We understand how frustrating and upsetting this issue can be, especially when you’ve worked hard to buy your dream car. Nevertheless, we want to express our appreciation to our community for their continued cooperation and we encourage anyone with information related to auto theft to contact our department.

MISERY LOVES COMPANY: ACCORDING TO MSN SURVEY, BROWNSVILLE, MCALLEN DUMBEST CITIES IN THE UNITED STATES

MSN
Least: Brownsville, Texas

©(Rschoenly, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons) https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d4/The_UT_SPH_Bronwsville_Regional_Campus.jpg

The second least educated city in the United States is Brownsville, Texas. They were ranked the lowest in the categories of the percentage of associate’s degrees or college experience and the lowest university quality in the United States. Out of 150, it's ranked on the bottom at 149.

They also ranked in the bottom five for lowest percentage of high school diplomas, bachelor’s degrees, and professional or graduate degrees. “Don’t mess with Texas” must mean with their education.


Least: McAllen, Texas

©(Anthony Acosta, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McAllen,_Texas#/media/File:Cityscape_of_McAllen,_Texas.jpg

McAllen, Texas, is located on the border with Mexico. It is ranked as the lowest percentage of high school diplomas in its population in the country, and it also has the lowest percentage of associate’s degrees or college experience, which tied with Brownsville. Out of 150, it's ranked on the bottom at 148.

On top of this, they were also in the bottom five for the lowest percentages of professional or graduate degrees. Many people cross the border into the United States for a better chance for education and employment, and that is available in McAllen, but it definitely isn’t the best that the United States has to offer.

JUST IN CASE YOU I.C.E. GUYS ARE BEHIND ME...

 

CONGRESSWOMAN: "IMMIGRANT" TAKING JOBS FROM US IS ELON MUSK

By David McAfee
RawStory

Texas Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett on Sunday made what she called an "admission to MAGA" about immigrants taking jobs.

Crockett, a Democratic lawmaker who has taken aim at Donald Trump as well as Marjorie Taylor Greene, took to X over the weekend to blast Elon Musk. Musk happens to own the social media site on which Crockett was posting.

"There’s an immigrant taking people’s jobs… his name is Elon Musk," the lawmaker wrote. 

"He’s snatching farms, government jobs (even those in which they manage our national security), and definitely those whose jobs are to root out fraud (inspector generals), & those that are keeping us safe (FAA), meals on wheels workers, head start, and the list goes on, so I’ll be the bigger person and admit to MAGA that I was wrong when I said immigrants wouldn’t take our jobs. You were 1000 percent correct."

When a critic called for Crockett to "stop government spending," the Democrat replied, "Don’t call for your social security, Medicaid, Medicare, passport, IRS refund, worry about the planes falling out or the sky, complain when the Ebola cases just found in NY spread like wildfire killing people, nor be upset when there’s no cancer medications because research has stopped, dare have a uniquely abled child because there will be no services for said child, complain about the cost or the lack of safety around our food, and def don’t complain when our enemies attack us."

"I could go on but you won’t care until something you care about ceases to be available and well that day is coming," the lawmaker added on Sunday. "It’s FAFO season… so we will wait for the rest of y’all to catch up."

Monday, February 17, 2025

WHAT IF NATIVE AMERICANS HAD AN IMMIGRATION SERVICE?


 

ENTITLED FREELOADER ROSE GOWEN NAMED CHAIR OF BCIC

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Guess who's back at her familiar place in the feeding trough as head of the Brownsville Community Improvement Corporation deciding where to funnel an annual $5 million-plus in sales tax revenue to her inner circle of silk-stocking friends?

Would you believe Brownsville Biggest Freeloader Dr. Rose Zavaletta-Gowen? 

Prevented from serving yet another term as city commissioner by voter-approved term limits, she has landed on all fours by getting herself appointed to the BCIC Board Chair and overseeing the disbursement of millions to her pet projects such as bike and hike trials, "wellness" projects, and dishing out "incentives" to what has become and incestuous cabal of local downtown developers.

As city commissioner, she funneled millions to subsidize such projects such as cyclobias, farmers' markets, and "bicycle friendly" businesses she claims have lowered diabetes and obesity rates in the city. Funny, but none of these claims have been documented or verified by state or local health authorities. 

One such subsidized business is the Seventh and Park bike and coffee shop which has taken over the parking in the linear park despite signs prohibiting private parking there. Gowen used that business to stage her numerus political campaign events and saw to it that they received "incentives" like free advertising through Cinemark at Sunrise Mall.

She will be joined by the usual suspects such as Cesar Lopez as Vice Chair, Sergio Martinez as Secretary, and Murad Abusalim as Treasurer. Lopez was one of the school district board members caught up in the Barbacoagate scandal which was squelched when the Food And Nutrition department head was found dead in his truck just before he was going to be interviewed by UDSA investigators. This trio has been happy to approve $100,000s to their well-heeled inner circle of friends and developers like the Fruias, former mayors Trey Mendez and  Tony Martinez, and the Limas brothers and others.

Why a freeloader? Until the last year of her reign as the At-Large B city commission position when she sold her home which is listed as a historical site, the Gowens paid no city taxes for more than a decade on the residence. When they sold the house, it carried the historical tax exemption as part of the bargain. It's probably genetic, though, since the Zavalettas – with a double T, mind you – have always felt entitled in Brownsville.

In other words, they felt they are entitled to spend Other People's Money (OPM). Often, their largesse has come on the backs of city residents and taxpayers. When she was last on the BCIC before she got on the city commission, Gowen was a leader in throwing millions of good money after bad in the white elephant Brownsville Sports Park, which started out at $12 million and ballooned to more than $24 million. Can we expect anything different now that she is once again the chair of the BCIC? 

Cori Peña, President & CEO of the BCIC, breathlessly announced that Gowen is "bringing her expertise and passion for community development" to the board. She also announced that the board voted on new policies "to enhance public access to meeting materials and financial transparency, ensuring BCIC remains a leader in responsible governance."

(Incidentally, when now-mayor John Cowen ran for city commissioner, one of his platform planks was that city commissioners would not serve on boards like the BCIC and the GBIC. He forgot that when the city commission disbanded the sitting board at GBIC and he was seated as chair like Gowen now at BCIC. What happened?)

As for the promise of "financial transparency and responsible governance," the proof will be in the pudding.

Will we get the audit that has been performed on the BCIC outlining how money flowed from the organization to the Fruias, Michael and Fabian Limas, of the Ramblas Hospitality Group and Benito Garcia, of  Solaris Management Solutions?

"How can they pretend to promote programs," asked a downtown business owner, "when they are never there and always the same people get the benefit?"

In the past we have pointed out that the BCIC board and its director Peña had been doling out "free" grant money to a select number of recipients, often their lifelong school chums and friends closely linked to certain socioeconomic circles. The track record of those projects funded by them is less than desirable, often going over budget and saddled with change orders which are almost always given a rubber stamp.

The Limas brothers (Michael and Fabian) have gone to that well often, as has Garcia, and both have used public money to speculate in downtown real estate and commercial ventures. In fact, the Limas have received the cash when Michael Limas was the BCIC board chair.

Others followed suit. The Fruias, former mayor Trey Mendez and his partner Ramiro Gonzalez have also gone often to that well, and the businesses associated with then-BCIC board member Arturo Treviño (Los Trevi's Drive-Thrus).

In one case involving a grant request from Mendez ($200,000) and the Limas brothers (a few thousands), the requests were withdrawn when Cameron County District Attorney Luis V. Saenz and his assistant prosecutors showed up at the meeting. The grant requests from a sitting mayor and its board members would have gone through if not for their presence. Mendez explained that the request was made "prematurely." Limas revealed that a grant request made by an applicant was actually renting from him for her business.

In any other town, this would have resulted in criminal indictments. But we're in Brownsville, and things here are a little different.

And just recently, the BCIC awarded a $200,000 grant to Emanuel Hernandez and wife Maren Fruia to "maintain and enhance the Cameron Hotel’s historical character."

It is interesting to note that a former city auditor who exposed the dismal performance of then-Greater Brownsville Incentives Corporation (GBIC) CEO Helen Ramirez – now city manager – which resulted in losses of more than $750,000 to space-related companies that resulted in zero jobs for local residents, was also more than halfway through a similar audit of the BCIC before she left the city.

What happened with the work product of that audit?

We suspect that it has been swept under the rug by Ramirez and BCIC's Peña and put someplace away from the public eye. What mismanagement and sweetheart deals among friends were in that audit? We'll dig a little more to secure the work product of the audit which the current city auditor promised to finish when he took over. 

Let's look under that rug.)

SUPPORT LOCAL PERFORMING ARTISTS: LAURO Y MANOLO

 

Contact:
Manuel Vela (956) 312-9458
Video Credit: Janks Productions
Live at the Jukebox Bar, 1225 E Adams Street 10 p.m. every Thursday



 

Sunday, February 16, 2025

WE'RE THE GENERATION WHO STOPPED A WAR. STOP TRUMP AND MUSK


WHO'S ON FIRST? 11 CANDIDATES FILE FOR THREE CITY POSITIONS

PRETTY FLOWER? LOOK CLOSER AT THE BUG POLLINATING IN THE MIDDLE

(Enlarge to see detail.)
(Ed.'s Note: As pretty as this winter rose appears, it is made more wonderous when you see the bug inside the bloom pollinating it. One of our eagle-eyed readers snapped this shot and did not notice the pollinator until much later when he was showing it to his friends.

This transfers pollen from an anther of a plant to the stigma of a plant, later enabling fertilization and the production of seeds. Pollinating agents can be animals such as insects, for example beetles or butterflies; birds, and bats; water; wind; and even plants themselves. Sometimes the beauty of the flower blinds us to the beauty of the science and biology all around us. 

Our thanks to this contributor.)

SPRUCING UP THE OLD FEDERAL COURTHOUSE/POST OFFICE/CITY HALL


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

City of Brownsville maintenance workers took advantage of good weather this Saturday to spruce up the former United States Court House, Custom House, and Post Office, also known as the Old Federal Courthouse. The building is a former courthouse of the United States Court for the Southern District of Texas and currently serves as Brownsville City Hall.
Completed in 1931, the building replaced the 1892 U.S. Courthouse and Custom House, and Post Office of Brownsville, which was razed in 1931. The four-story building is located at 1001 East Elizabeth Street, and still houses an office of the United States Postal Service.

Saturday, February 15, 2025

BISD BOARD PRESIDENT, LOCAL GADFLY ERASMO CASTRO, DIES

(Ed.'s Note: We have just received word that Brownsville Independent School District board president has lost his battle with pancreatic cancer. 

The last time we talked to him he said he would remain board president "until the end of my term, or the end of my life, whichever comes first."

Whether you agreed with his politics or viewpoints, the Cheez was a player in local politics and ran for numerous local, county, and state positions and always attracted a core of loyal followers.

Although hospitalized, Castro had attended the two previous board meetings through Zoom. He was unable to participate at Thursday night's special meeting due to to his grave condition.

A divided (3-3) board will probably not be able to make an appointment and it is possible that an election to serve his unexpired term will be in a November election. That's another $200,000 expense for the cash-strapped district.

But that's for the living to decide. Right now we send our deepest condolences to his friends and family. RIP. Peace be with you, Brother Erasmo.)

TEXAS HOUSE SPEAKER APPOINTS GAMEZ TO GENERAL INVESTIGATING COMMITTEE AND TO RESOURCES AND TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEES



AUSTIN – Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows announced the committee assignments for each House member for the 89th Texas Legislature. Representative Erin Elizabeth Gámez was named as Vice-Chair of the House Committee on General Investigating. She was also reappointed to serve on the House Committee on Natural Resources and the House Committee on Transportation. Rep. Gámez released the following statement:

"It is an honor to be appointed Vice-Chair of the House Committee on General Investigating and to continue serving on the House Committees on Natural Resources and Transportation. I would like to thank Speaker Burrows for these opportunities to serve.

I am humbled to be appointed as Vice-Chair of the House Committee on General Investigating. I will work to ensure accountability and transparency in state government by overseeing investigations into public issues, and protecting the integrity of our Legislature.

The House Committee on Natural Resources oversees water issues in the state of Texas, which are of critical importance to the Valley. I am excited to work with my colleagues to address the dire need for additional water resources required to continue industry and life in the Valley.

I am also thrilled to be reappointed to the House Committee on Transportation. I look forward to continuing to build on the momentum of last session, where we secured funding to deepen the Port of Brownsville, improve the I-69E corridor, and build the 2nd causeway to South Padre Island. I will ensure that Brownsville’s connection to Texas and the world continues to flourish.”

DIVIDED BISD BOARD FAILS TO PASS BOND ELECTION MOTION

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

With Erasmo Castro, the the president of the board of the Brownsville Independent School District hovering between life and death and Superintendent Jesus Chavez also out with a medical procedure, a divided board deadlocked on a motion to hold a $350 million bond election to implement a facilities renovation and upgrade plan put together by a 100-member citizens committee.

The tied vote means the bond proposal did not pass. If it had passed, the district was planning to hold the election this May.  The bond proposal the board failed to approve was option three among four presented to the Facilities Committee at those meetings.

The special meeting held Thursday revealed the acrimonious divide between the six board remaining board members with Carlos Elizondo, Minerva Peña and Frank Ortiz charging that the other three members were "rushing" the issue and charging that the bond election would place the burden "on the backs of taxpayers."

Elizondo accused the pro-bond members of having "prepared speeches" to confuse the public and push them into a corner. 

The other three board members, in turn, repeatedly stated that the passage of the bonds would not result in a tax rate increase, and chided the anti-bond members for circulating "misinformation" to the public.

"All we are doing is giving the people a voice to tell us what you want," said board member Jessica Gonzalez, supported by Denise Garza and Daniella Lopez-Valdez.

Approval would have resulted in a $350 million bond proposal to voters that set aside $25 million for a new Career and Technical Education center, prioritized the 42 most-urgent roofing and HVAC projects across the district totaling $263 million, and separately proposed a $62 million Performing Arts Center.

BISD last year sold the former Cummings Middle School, now the district’s CTE campus, to the city of Brownsville for $16 million to expand the Gladys Porter Zoo. The money is invested and BISD must move CTE operations elsewhere within five years.

Chief Financial Officer Alejandro Cespedes told the Facilities Committee on Monday that BISD has the lowest bonded debt among all districts in the Edinburg-based Region One Educational Service Center. If BISD proposes a bond election in November or May 2026, one key calculation will be the fact that one cent in I&S tax levy produces $14.5 million in tax revenue, Cespedes has said.

There is wide agreement that BISD facilities need roofing and HVAC upgrades. Air conditioning problems have been a recurring problem at several schools.

If BISD proposes a bond election in November or May 2026, one key calculation will be the fact that one cent in I&S tax levy produces $14.5 million in tax revenue, Cespedes has said.

There is wide agreement that BISD facilities need roofing and HVAC upgrades. Air conditioning problems have been a recurring problem at several schools.

“Ultimately, we voted against putting roofs and HVACs for our children,” Lopez Valdez told the Brownsville Herald Thursday, characterizing the failure to bring the bond proposal before the voters as a lost opportunity.

“It was a golden opportunity where all the stars aligned for us to be able to do this while not placing the burden of a tax increase on our community, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity where the citizens proposed what needed to be done. It was hours and hours of work that was done and was unfortunately voted against for, in my opinion, no reason. I think it’s important to commend the citizens committee because they worked all of this, they went to all the schools” and proposed what needs to be done.

Witnesses said that tempers flared after the meeting out of the ear of the public and that Elizondo traded insults with some of the BISD staff resulting in a near melee that spilled out of the board room.

Brownsville Observer publisher Jim Barton added in a later post that Elizondo had said he filed charges of assault against board secretary Patricia "Pat" Perez. El RrunRrun could only confirm that Perez had reacted to Elizondo's taunts and insults with a "F--k you" response.

Friday, February 14, 2025

THE CRIMINAL EXPOSURE OF ELON MUSK AND DOGE

TRUMP, MUSK'S SLASHING USAID HURTS WORLD'S POOR, U.S. FARMERS

By Sarah Charles

U.S. Agency for International Development employees who showed up Monday at their headquarters in Washington, D.C., were turned away because the Trump administration canceled USAID's lease. This is less than a month after the president signed an executive order ceasing all foreign aid ‒ setting off a cascade of suffering as millions of people worldwide are cut off from lifesaving work.

What most Americans don’t realize is that when USAID doors were shuttered, business across America also lost valuable income, and thousands of American citizens lost their livelihoods.

As the leader of the agency's Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance for three years, I am no stranger to the vital impact that USAID has on the lives of people around the world. But I am also no stranger to the vital impact that USAID has on the lives of Americans.

USAID sources food aid directly from American farmers

When USAID provides food aid to people in need, we source 41 percent of that food directly from American farmers ‒ approximately $2 billion in food aid purchased from American farms in states across the country: everything from wheat from Kansas, soybean oil from Iowa to peanut products from Georgia.

Now, these American-grown products are at risk of being wasted.


More than 500,000 tons of American food commodities ‒ valued at over $450 million ‒ are stuck. Grown by farmers in the country’s heartland, this food includes corn and cornmeal, lentils, pinto beans, sorghum, vegetable oil and yellow split peas.

The food has been purchased, but in the cruelty and chaos of the closure of USAID, those responsible for getting the food to the most needy are not getting paid: putting both the world’s poorest and American farms at risk.

And while some lifesaving food programs have received waivers in the past week, U.S. government funds remain unavailable.

In one instance, almost $200 million in emergency food aid bound for South Sudan ‒ where 729,000 children under five suffer from severe acute malnutrition ‒ is sitting undelivered in ports in Kenya.

Humanitarian partners, private contractors in the United States are now on furlough

On top of this, USAID works directly with humanitarian partners and private contracting companies based in the United States. These companies collectively employ thousands of American workers, many of whom have been furloughed ‒ with no knowledge of where their next paycheck will come from.

They come from all walks of life, and they are some of the most dedicated and patriotic Americans I’ve ever known. These men and women are doctors and nurses; social workers and wildland firefighters; logisticians and agronomists. About 12 percent are military veterans who, at USAID, found a way to continue public service when they left the military.

No matter their role, these folks share a simple mission: They came to work every day to help people and to save lives. They did this in challenging circumstances, far away from home. On behalf of the American people, they worked around the clock, often deploying with less than 24 hours notice to some of the most difficult and dangerous environments in the world – including in war zones.

During my time leading the Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance – and indeed, for decades before I came to USAID – Republicans and Democrats in Congress continuously supported USAID on a bipartisan basis. People in both parties agreed that providing aid to communities in their moments of greatest need is the right thing to do, and the smart thing as well – because it makes us safer, healthier and more prosperous here at home.

Supporters included new Secretary of State Marco Rubi , who's also now acting director of USAID.

COURT REVOKES "CAPT. BOB SANCHEZ'S" PROBATION, IN THE CLINK


Ed.'s Note: After a hearing before 103rd District Court Janet Leal, Robert Alejandro Sanchez (AKA Capt. Bob)'s probation on three felony counts was revoked and modified and he was placed in the custody of the Cameron County Sheriff's Dept. to serve 16 days in county jail; credit for 6 days, 30 Alcoholic Anonymous meetings and any and all other conditions deemed necessary by his probation officer.

Jail records indicate that Sanchez was placed in county jail Thursday and will serve the modified sentence with credit for six days. The probation modification was issued by Leal Thursday and jail records indicate he was sent to the Rucker-Carrizales Detention Center immediately after the hearing. During the hearing, the Cameron County District Attorney's Office showed the court that Sanchez had violated the terms of his probation and placed an email where an obviously inebriated Sanchez was judged to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol on the record.
THE OFFENSES 
\
THE PROBATION VIOLATIONS:

COURT REVOKES PROBATION, SANCHEZ JAILED


Thursday, February 13, 2025

WHAT'S IN A NAME? A GULF BY ANY OTHER NAME...

EL GOLFO DEL GRINGO LOCO
AND THE GULF OF AMERICA

KREMLIN EMBARRASSES TRUMP WITH MARC FOGEL'S RELEASE

By Liam Archacki
The Daily Beast

The deal Donald Trump brokered with Russia to release American school teacher Marc Fogel on Tuesday was, in fact, a prisoner swap – even though the president had tried to suggest otherwise.

The Russian man freed in the deal is Alexander Vinnick, 45, who stands accused of laundering billions through the digital currency exchange website he ran, an unnamed U.S. official told The New York Times on Wednesday. Fogel was convicted of introducing marihuana into Russia and sentenced to 14 years in prison.

A spokesperson for the Kremlin told reporters earlier on Wednesday that the U.S. had released a Russian citizen in exchange for Fogel, but declined to identify the person until they returned to their home country, according to the Associated Press.

The news comes after Trump on Tuesday evaded questions about what exactly the U.S. gave up to free Fogel. The president would only repeat his evaluation that the deal was “very fair.”

In an interview on NewsNation, Secretary of State Marco Rubio gloated – apparently erroneously – that Fogel’s release was “not in return for anything.”

“There wasn’t some deal here where we had to release, like, 10 spies,” Rubio added. “And I think it shows President Trump’s commitment to bringing home Americans.”

The White House did not immediately respond to the Daily Beast’s request for comment on whether the deal was a swap for Vinnik.

Vinnik, who ran the exchange BTC-e, was extradited to the U.S. after being arrested in Greece in 2017. He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering in May 2024.

Vinnik’s lawyer Frédéric Bélot confirmed to CNN that his client had been released, calling it “a real relief for my client and his family.”

Fogel, 63, was greeted by Trump upon his return from Russia on Wednesday. The Pennsylvania teacher had been in custody since 2021 after he brought medical marijuana into Russia.

(Fogel will journey to San Antonio, Texas to participate in the US government readjustment program on Wednesday, an attorney for Fogel told CNN, to help them acclimate after being imprisoned abroad.

Wrongful detainees returning to the US are given the option to take part in PISA, which stands for Post Isolation Support Activities. A former senior State Department official described the program as helpful for former detainees “to tell (their) story.”

Everything “will be new” and “surreal” for Fogel as he adjusts back to life in the US, according to Paul Whelan, an American wrongly held in Russia for more than five years until he was freed in a prisoner exchange last year.

“He’s waking up in the first world after spending three and a half in the third world. Everything will be new to him. Everything familiar will be a just a surreal experience,” he told CNN on Wednesday.)

“It’s great to have you back,” Trump told him.

Trump also said that he hopes the deal will help his aspiration to end Russia's war against Urkraine, a campaign promise that he has so far failed to fulfill.

“I think there’s good will, in terms of the war,” Trump said. “I think this … could be a big, important part in getting the war over.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov was more conservative about what the deal would do to ease tensions between Russia and the U.S.

“Such agreements can hardly serve as a turning point, but they are little steps toward building mutual confidence, which is at its lowest level,” he said, according to the AP.

REMEMBER WHEN U.S. COULDN'T GET ENOUGH MEXICAN WORKERS (BRACEROS)?


Carlos Francisco Jackson, “Departure: Braceros Departing Mexico City for California, 1943.” Courtesy of San Antonio Museum of Art. Gift from Harriett and Ricardo Romo. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

By Richard G. Santos

Zavala County Sentinel
richardgsantos@yahoo.com

Historically, political refugees and exiles are forced or voluntarily leave their homeland as a result of a revolution, or overthrow of the government with which they were associated.

Such was the case with numerous individuals and families of northeast Mexico with the fall and execution of Mexican Emperor Maximilian (1867), execution of Nuevo Leon-Tamaulipas and Coahuila Governor Santiago Vidaurri (1867), death of Benito Juarez (1872) and rise of Porfirio Diaz (1876).

Always thinking they would return to Mexico, the refugees and exiles settled in the townships, ranchos and farms along the Rio Grande with few venturing no more than fifty miles from the Texas-Mexican border. Their presence can be dated by the number of Mexican Masonic Lodges, Mutualista organizations and membership in socio-civic organizations including the Woodmen of the World chapters.

The building of rail lines from San Antonio and Corpus Christi to the Texas–Mexico border communities (1881-1883) energized the geographic area between the San Antonio River and Rio Grande as land owners now used the railways to move their horses, cattle, sheep, goats and agricultural products from the Winter Garden and South Texas to markets beyond San Antonio and Corpus Christi. Railroad work camps became loading sites which in turn became townships.

At the same time, older townships and communities skipped by the railroad became ghost towns. Lack of a labor force drove the land owners to recruit individuals and families from the Texas-Mexican border area and settle them in housing on the ranchos and farms where they were employed.

Few Mexican border laborers were settled at the railway loading townships but always in the segregated “across the tracks” or “across the main road/street” barrios. In time they established their own churches, civic, religious and social organizations, schools, “mom and pop stores”, bakeries, fruit stands and entertainment establishments (namely cantinas and dance halls).

Senior citizen “anglos” and “Mexican Texans” have told this writer how “in the old days grandpa would hitch the wagon and take all children at the ranch or farm to school. The “anglo” kids were the first to be taken to their school and then the others to the Mexican or Black schools across the tracks.

The same order was kept in picking up the kids after school. First the “anglo” kids, then the Mexican kids and finally the Black kids, if any. Although segregated at school, churches, cemeteries, movie theatres and such, at the ranch or farm all kids played together and got along fine.”

The Mexican Revolution of 1910 through 1929 saw an exodus of political refugees, exiles; anti-war people and members of defeated factions mass migrate to Texas and the United States.

The rebels in exile (Madero, Flores Magon, Reyes etc) who had been in Texas since 1904, were replaced by the followers of Porfirio Diaz when he abdicated in 1911 and thereafter by the followers or politically-militarily active members of the various governments between 1911 and 1929 including the devote Catholics forced to leave during the 1926 – 1929 Cristero Uprising.

The college educated, wealthy professionals gravitated to San Antonio and beyond away from the violence along the border. Many veterans, conscripts and Mexican labor class settled in the smaller communities in the Winter Garden area and South Texas.

A great number became migrant farm workers and more so during both World War I and World War II. The Corrido de Kansas of the 1920’s states “ya me voy pa’ pensilvania por no piscar algodon (I am going to Pennsylvania in order not to pick cotton). The ballad then related the trip by train, what they saw between “Forowes” (Fort Worth) and how they were greeted when they arrived at their destination. 

Many individuals and families stayed in the Midwestern states and communities where they can still be found today.
Far out numbering the Spanish Colonial Tejanos, it was and has been the Mexican families of the Revolution of 1910 that gave cohesiveness to the Hispanic Mexican American population of the United States and Texas.

They introduced the mariachi, quinceanera, Cinco de Mayo, Diezyseis de Septiembre, pinata, Our Lady of Guadalupe and initiated in 1911 the effort to establish English-Spanish Bilingual Education and the “Mexican culture” in the Texas public schools (Congreso Mexicanista; Laredo, Texas).

While waiting, they established the escuelitas (neighborhood school) also known as “the school of 400” (where pre-school and elementary aged children were taught the most basic 400 words of English they needed when attending school). 

Hundreds of photographs can still be found of the students of las escuelitas as well as socio-civic-religious organizations performing Christmas programs or celebrating the Fourth of July as well as Cinco de Mayo and the Diezyseis.

Today it is the grandchildren and great grandchildren of the refugees and exiles of the Mexican Revolution of 1910 that make up the vast majority of the Mexican Americans, Mexican Tejanos, Hispanics and Chicanos. They far outnumber the Spanish Colonial Tejanos.

Both groups, however, are fully fledged U.S. citizens, U.. S. English dominant, and most have never travel into Mexico beyond the border area. They are not to be confused with the individuals and families who have migrated to the U.S. since the Korean War and more so within the last twenty years.

In closing it should be stressed that as a rule in South Texas the term “Latino” is primarily used by Tejanos and Mexican Americans for Hispanics with a country of origin other than Mexico.

As stated at the beginning, once you understand the diversity and complexity of the ethnic group you begin to realize why we cannot agree on what to call the group and that there is not one thing all have in common. 

Members of the group come in all shapes, sizes and color of skin, eyes, hair type and anything else you may wish to cite. Incidentally, it is not true that all Spaniards are light skinned, have blue eyes and all Spanish women have a mustache and are as wide as they are tall.

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

PAN SPOKESMAN CLAIMS TAMAULIPAS GOVERNOR, MATA MORENA MAYOR'S FINANCIAL OPERATOR ARRESTED FOR COCAINE IN B'VILLE

From Latinus

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) arrested Edgar Alejandro Villarreal, alias “El Fresa”, in Brownsville, Texas, in possession of 8.8 kilograms of cocaine.

According to documents from the US authorities made public by Jorge Triana, spokesman for the National Action Party (PAN), he is accused of crimes such as conspiracy to distribute cocaine and possession of narcotics, in addition to being a repeat offender in drug trafficking.

On his X account, the PAN spokesman said this Saturday that “on January 27, Edgar Villarreal, alias “El Fresa”, financial operator of Américo Villarreal Jr. and the current Morena mayor of Matamoros, Tamaulipas, was arrested for drug trafficking.”

Both men quickly distanced themselves from Edgar Alejandro Villarreal and called the PAN representative's statements politically motivated, a claim reasserted by Triana.  

“And they still get indignant when they are called the narco-government,” stressed the former federal deputy of the PAN.

A PRIMER ON WHY IT'S CALLED THE GULF OF MEXICO


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The Gulf of Mexico has been named since the 16th century, when Spanish explorers began to map the region following the arrival of Hernán Cortes in 1519. The term arises because this vast expanse of water was located east of the lands we know today as Mexico, which were then dominated by the Mexican Empire.

Since when is it called the "Gulf of Mexico"?

XVI Century: The name "Gulf of Mexico" appears on maps and historical documents since the first Spanish explorations. European cartographers began to use it to designate this semi-finished basin, because of its proximity to the Mexican territory.

Although there was no Mexico as a country (independent since 1821), the name referred to the Mesoamerican region under Spanish control and linked to the Mexican empire.

It was named before the existence of the United States.

The name "Gulf of Mexico" was established long before the formation of the United States in 1776.
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the area that today includes the states of Texas, Louisiana, 
Alabama and Florida was part of Spanish and French colonial territories, and had no relation with the future country.

This reinforces that the Gulf of Mexico, both as a geographical region and nomenclature, has historical roots that precede the creation of the United States.

Conclusion
The Gulf of Mexico has carried its name for more than 500 years, long before the United States existed as a nation. This term reflects its historical and geographical connection with Mesoamerican lands, being a denomination that persists since the first maps elaborated by European colonizers.

Sunday, February 9, 2025

GOT YOUR PORRA NUMBERS READY? $1,000S TO BE BET, WON (AND LOST) TODAY


Ed.'s Note: It has to be the city's worst kept secret that $100,000s – maybe millions – will be bet and won (and also lost) by bettors who wage $100s on cuadritos, or betting squares, at $100, $50 or even $25 or $10 a pop.

There's even $1,000 squares, we are told. And it happens all over the country and the world just as it does here.

It is, of course, patently illegal, to engage in this kind of gambling, but there are Super Bowl pots put together in offices, workplaces, and local drinking establishments.

If your $100 square, for example like card on top above, sits at the intersection of the AFC Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles score of KC 14 and Eagles 7 ( last digit 4 on top and 7 on the side) at the end of any quarter or at the end of the game (no overtime), you hit a $1,000 winner, the right way. If the score is reversed (Eagles 14 and Chiefs 7 – the wrong way, you still win $500.

Even more confusing is the plus-five and minus-five (5 plus 4= 9, 5 plus 7= 12, then a 9 and 2 score will win you $300 the right way, and $200 the wrong way. Minus 5 works the same way.

Regardless, with every player paying $100 per square, the seller of the numbers starts with a kitty worth $10,000 before expenses like a dinner and door prizes held when the numbers are picked at random.

The prizes for these four winning categories each quarter amounts to close to $8,000, with $2,000 left for the square seller who has to collect the $100, $50, $25, or $10 entry fee per square depending on the size of the pot and entry fee.

Now that Houston and Dallas are out, who cares who wins as long as the scores land on your numbers. Let the games begin! And good luck! 

Saturday, February 8, 2025

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