AUSTIN, TX—Touting the party-line vote as a major victory for the Second Amendment, the Texas House of Representatives successfully blocked a bill last week that would have prevented gun stores from operating inside of hospital psychiatric wards.
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
TEXAS SHOOTS DOWN GUN SALES BAN TO PSYCHIATRIC WARDS
AUSTIN, TX—Touting the party-line vote as a major victory for the Second Amendment, the Texas House of Representatives successfully blocked a bill last week that would have prevented gun stores from operating inside of hospital psychiatric wards.
HUACHICOL ARRESTS EXTEND TO MATAMOROS, REYNOSA, LAREDO
The customs employees who will be prosecuted are not only civilians but also military personnel, as well as businesspeople, including the former governor of Baja California and member of the National Action Party (PAN), Ernesto Ruffo Appel.
According to federal sources close to EL UNIVERSAL, the arrest warrants began being filed on August 1, 2025, through the Attorney General's Office (FGR) and local prosecutors' offices before judges across the country.
Some of the requests have already been issued, and others will be granted by judges in the coming months, although due to the confidentiality of the investigation, not all will be announced publicly.
This past July 7, local and federal authorities seized 15 million liters of illegal fuel in Coahuila. Courtesy PhotoOn August 14, El Gran Diario de México reported on the progress of this mega-operation to combat fuel theft at the highest level, detailing that, to date, personnel at the customs offices of Ciudad Juárez, Matamoros, Reynosa, Nuevo Laredo, Tampico, and Ensenada had been dismissed from their duties, in addition to the suspension of two customs agents for alleged collusion in gasoline smuggling.
Also, this Sunday, the Secretary of Security and Citizen Protection, Omar García Harfuch, announced the arrest of 14 people linked to fuel smuggling following the massive seizure of 20 million liters of diesel in Tampico, Tamaulipas, last March.
At a press conference, the federal official confirmed the arrest of three businessmen, five active and one retired marine, as well as five former customs officials.
According to information obtained by El Gran Diario de México, warrants will be issued next week against legal entities also involved in fuel theft.
Of particular note is an arrest warrant against the former governor of Baja California and PAN member, Ernesto Guillermo Ruffo Appel, who serves as the majority shareholder of the company Ingemar, S.A. de C.V., involved in the massive seizure of 15 million liters of fuel theft in Coahuila on July 7.
To read the rest of the article (Spanish), click on link: https://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/solicitan-200-ordenes-de-aprehension-por-huachicol-van-por-agentes-aduanales-y-militares/
UNLIKE THE ELEPHANT PARTY MASCOT, REPUBLICANS HAVE SHORT MEMORIES
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene shouts 'liar' during the State of the Union. Images via CNN Newsource.
THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME: THE TRUMP-EPSTEIN SCANDAL
CNN
Among the many weird things Donald Trump and his administration have said and done vis-a-vis Jeffrey Epstein in recent weeks is the president’s curious denial of writing the disgraced financier a lewd birthday letter two decades ago.
We knew Trump and Epstein were friends around this time. We also know Trump has said plenty of lewd things.
But Trump not only denied writing the letter, he also sued the Wall Street Journal over initial report about it. He suggested someone else could’ve written it and signed his name.
That denial suffered another significant blow on Monday.
The House Oversight Committee received a copy of the “birthday book” containing the letter in question, and it matches the Journal’s description of the letter. It’s a page long and features a silhouette of a woman’s body with an apparently imagined conversation between Trump and Epstein inside the drawing. Below it is a signature line that feature’s Trump’s name and a cursive “Donald” in an area made to look like a woman’s pubic area.
The key fact here is that this comes from Epstein’s estate. In other words, for this letter to have been fake, someone would have had to plant it in Epstein’s possessions a long time ago, somehow.
Trump has called the letter a “FAKE” and flatly denied authoring it. And plenty of allies lined up behind that denial. Vice President JD Vance called the Journal’s report “complete and utter bullshit.”
But even at the time, Trump’s denials were quickly called into question.
Part of Trump’s denial rested on the idea that it wasn’t in his character to draw a picture like the one in the letter.
“I never wrote a picture in my life,” Trump said at one point. “I don’t draw pictures,” he added at another.
But it wasn’t hard to find doodles Trump had drawn around the same time. In fact, Trump donated an autographed doodle every year a charity. A charity director also told CNN that Trump provided two signed drawings in 2004. That would have been the year after the 2003 birthday letter.
THE LATE BETTY WHITE WAS FRIEND TO GLADYS PORTER, ZOO FOUNDER
By Dina Arrevalo
South Texas Reporter
MySA
Betty White is perhaps best known for playing the charmingly clueless and slightly spacey Rose Nylund on the hit 1980s TV show, The Golden Girls. When she died at 99 years old on New Year's Eve in 2021, numerous tributes poured in celebrating the life she spent not just bringing joy to others but as a staunch animal advocate.
Like White, Gladys Porter was an animal lover. Porter was the daughter of the late Earl C. Sams, cofounder, president and longtime chairman of the board of the J.C. Penny Company. Sams’ success as a businessman afforded his daughter – a businesswoman in her own right – the ability to become philanthropists.
Porter grew up in New York but eventually moved to the Valley after meeting and falling in love with Valley native Dean Porter, according to Brownsville District 2 City Commissioner Linda C. Macias, who earlier this year posted a video on Facebook recounting the zoo’s founding.
“While vacationing in Florida, Gladys met Dean Porter, from Olmito, Texas, whose father was a developer,” Macias says in the video.
Porter’s interest in animal conservation was first sparked during wildlife excursions to Africa during the 1960s, according to archives maintained by the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. Ultimately, that passion drove Porter to found the Brownsville zoo that would go on to bear her name. Porter and her husband began building the zoo in 1968. The zoo opened in 1971. And just a few years later, Porter’s good friend, Betty White, began paying visits to the Valley to help fundraise for the zoo.
In 2018, zoo officials posted a throwback to those early days on the Gladys Porter Zoo Facebook page. The post features a black and white photograph of Porter, White and her husband, game show host Allen Ludden, grinning ear to ear while standing next to an ostrich. The bird is so tall that its head and feet extend past the frame of the photograph.
“TBT to when Betty White attended one of our earliest fundraisers, the ‘Zoo Ball,’ in 1975,” the post reads.
“The world lost an incredible human being. Betty White… was an advocate for conservation and the good work that zoos do. She was a longtime friend of Gladys Porter and great supporter of this zoo and many others,” reads a December 3, 2021 post on the zoo’s Facebook page.
Monday, September 8, 2025
BISD BONDS WILL DEPEND ON WHAT VOTERS DECIDE NOV. 4
At 6 percent for 30 years
$ 2,697,997.33
Total interest
$ 521,271,850.75
Total to be paid thru 2056
$ 971,271,851.00
Sunday, September 7, 2025
UNAWARE OF SCIENCE: TARANTULAS VERSUS CHUPAHUESOS
By Juan Montoya
Rainy days sometimes take me back to when I was a boy attending Cromack Elementary in the Southmost barrio.We used to live literally on the other side of the railroad tracks (now gone) north of the old Lopez Supermarket where the new Melrose shopping center is now.
In those days (1964?), there was no Lopez, no police substation. Nor was there the water tower that was torn down to make room for the satellite Cameron County Tax Assessor-Collector office. In fact, there was only the old Ruenes Drive-In across 30th Street from Cromack, and an overgrown empty lot across Southmost that stretched out to the railroad (now abandoned), where the numbered streets (28th, 29th, 30th) continued after the interruption by the empty lot and railway grade.
We used to walk from our house on the north side of the railroad, through paths across the large empty lot, cross Southmost, and to Cromack. The subdivision where we lived was noteworthy because all the roofing was blue, so they were called las casas azules.
Joe Hinojosa (hey, coach!) used to live there as did the Walkers (Zambranos) , the Zamarripas (Betin), Raul Salinas (ROTC), and Tony Rocha (La Peca's son). When it rained, we would sometimes come across large tarantulas that crawled out of their flooded holes and onto the path. They were terrifying, some black, huge, usually with their front legs poised for attack, some with orange tints, others almost yellow. We would, of course, throw stones or dirt clods at them to kill them or scare them away.
But soon, we noticed that large bluish, almost black wasps with opaque, rust colored wings would sometimes tangle with the tarantulas and were marveled that such a small wasp could take on and dominate the large scary spiders. We called them chupahuesos to indicate their lethal power.
Soon, as kids are wont to do, we developed a game to make them fight.
One of us (I don't remember who) got a clear glass container with a lid and used a branch to knock down one of the fearsome wasps and trapped it in the jar.
What we didn't know at the time was that the wasp going after the spider in the hole was as natural as mosquitoes biting you in the South Texas evenings. Much, much later, while browsing through some book I got from a thrift store, I came upon an article that described the relationship between the wasp (called a tarantula hawk wasp, not a chupahuesos) and tarantulas.
According to the author, the wasps he described seek the specific tarantula, go into its hole and after inspecting it thoroughly make sure it's the right kind of spider, digs a hole (grave) while the spider stands nearby watching, and then seeks the soft spot where her leg joins her abdomen to pierce it with its stinger. Once it succeeds and the poison renders it immobile, the digger wasp drags it to the grave hole, lays one of her eggs and attaches it to the spider with a sticky secretion and then covers it up and tramples the ground to keep out prowlers. Other species – like our tarantula hawk wasps – only seek the spiders to eat them.
The digger wasp's eggs hatch, the larvae live off the spider (which is not dead, but immobile) until all that remains is the skeletal remains, and the wasp's descendant gets safely started in life.
As kids, we had no idea of the natural relationship between the chupahuesos and tarantulas or what tarantula species they were. We though it was great sport to watch the little wasp go against the big spider. In our ignorance, we made them fight, unaware that we were merely mimicking a relationship going back into the mists of millenia.
(Ed.'s Note: After this story first appeared, we were told by people who know that "The gorgeous wasp on the picture is not a "digger wasp", it is a "tarantula hawk wasp", the difference being is that Diggers are yellow and black, wings transparent and stout legs (for an insect) while Tarantula Hawks are amber winged, black/blue and strong spindly legs that can pull the bigger tarantulas alive into their grave." Thanks for the lesson, guys.)
NO MORE "WOKE" PIECES OF ART AT THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
Saturday, September 6, 2025
GET YOUR BRAKES FIXED, OIL CHANGED, AND NEVER LEAVE HOME!
THIS IS THE GUY IN CHARGE OF U.S. PUBLIC HEALTH?
By Travis Loller
Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told a personal story of his own heroin addiction, spiritual awakening and recovery at a conference on drug addiction Thursday and emphasized that young people need a sense of purpose in their lives to prevent them from turning to drugs.
Kennedy called addiction “a source of misery, but also a symptom of misery.” In a speech that mentioned God more than 20 times, he pointed to his own experience feeling as though he had been born with a hole inside of himself that he needed to fill.
“Every addict feels that way in one way or another — that they have to fix what’s wrong with them, and the only thing that works are drugs. And so threats that you might die, that you’re going to ruin your life are completely meaningless,” he said.
Speaking to about 3,000 people at the Rx and Illicit Drug Summit in Nashville, Tennessee, Kennedy did not address recent budget and personnel cuts or agency reorganizations that many experts believe could jeopardize public health, including recent progress on overdose deaths.
Kennedy drew cheers when he said that we need to do “practical things” to help people with addictions, like providing them with Suboxone and methadone. He also said there should be rehabilitation facilities available for anyone who is ready to seek help. But he focused on the idea of prevention, signaling his view of addiction as a problem fueled by deteriorating family, community and spiritual life.
“We have this whole generation of kids who’ve lost hope in their future,” he said. “They’ve lost their ties to the community.”
Kennedy said policy changes could help reestablish both of those things. Though Kennedy offered few concrete ideas, he recommended educating parents on the value of having meals without cellphones and providing opportunities for service for their children.
The best way to overcome depression and hopelessness, he said, is to wake up each morning and pray “please make me useful to another human being today. ”
He suggested that cellphones are a pernicious influence on young people and that banning them in schools could help decrease drug addiction. He cited a recent visit to a Virginia school that had banned cellphones, saying that grades were up, violence was down and kids were talking to one another in the cafeteria.
Kennedy told attendees that he was addicted to heroin for 14 years, beginning when he was a teenager. During those years, he was constantly making promises to quit, both to himself and to his family.
HEADS WILL ROLL (AGAIN) IF JOBS NUMBERS AREN'T "IMPROVED"
Friday, September 5, 2025
ANATOMY OF A TOW TRUCK IN ACTION IN A DOWNTOWN PARKING LOT...
Thursday, September 4, 2025
RUNYON'S COLLECTIONS OF LOCAL HISTORY, FLORA, NEED TO COME HOME
(Ed.'s Note: I ran into a recent arrival to our city who is a biology major and he asked me about some of the unique aspects of local history and botany. I recalled that one of our former mayors was also a botanist and photographer. He was Robert Runyon and we publish this post to enlighten visitors to our city on the unique history to be found here.)
By Juan Montoya
In one of my former lifetimes when I was a newspaper reporter for the Brownsville Herald we used to have something called a "Lifestyle" page assignment.
Time has since past and now we know that the Runyon family donated the entire collection now called the Robert Runyon Photograph Collection of the South Texas Border Area and made up of the a collection of over 8,000 items.
The Runyons donated the collection to the Center for American History in 1986 and it includes glass negatives, lantern slides, nitrate negatives, prints, and postcards, representing Robert Runyon's life's work.

In Matamoros, Runyon photographed the Constitutionalist armies as well as the major military figures of the campaign.
The specific epithet honors Runyon who collected the type specimen from a stand of four trees discovered by Harvey Stiles on the banks of the Resaca del Rancho Viejo, Texas, in 1929.
(We went to look for the tree in preparing this post, but we could no longer find it. Does anyone know whether it was cut down?)

TRUMP'S ELEVATES CHERRY PICKING HIS LIES TO AN ART FORM
Yet cities in their states all have higher rates of violent crime than the nation’s capital.
ARE RGV PRO-TRUMP HISPANICS HAVING 2ND THOUGHTS?
It was one of the biggest surprises of the 2024 presidential election. The traditionally Democratic Rio Grande Valley, home to a majority Hispanic population, voted for Trump in each of its four counties in South Texas. Since then, a wave of immigration raids has created fear and anxiety and decimated the local economy, with some businesses reporting a 90 percent drop in customers.
Now a weakened economy and deep cuts to popular social programs are causing some South Texas Trump supporters to reconsider their vote, especially as the region braces for cuts to after-school programs, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps), Medicaid, college tuition grants, and more – all thanks to Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill.” Additional funding cuts to federal programs by Elon Musk, the Trump-appointed former head of DOGE, will further slash local programs across housing, agriculture, libraries, and more.
On top of these cuts, the administration announced its plan last week to end college funding for the federal “Hispanic Serving Institutions” program, of which the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley is a member and grant recipient.
Instead, billions in taxpayer money are being transferred to the military and the Department of Homeland Security to build detention camps, hire more armed agents, build border walls, and further militarize communities. In June, the banks of the Rio Grande were declared a military zone by the Trump administration, even as cities in the region remain some of the safest in the country and migrant crossings hit the lowest numbers “in recorded history,” according to DHS. Rio Grande Valley families who previously camped on the banks of the river or kayaked in its waters for generations may lose access as the military has installed signs declaring the river off-limits.
Eric Holguin, state director for UnidosUS – a nonpartisan national policy and advocacy organization for Hispanic issues—says that while it will take time to feel the full effects of mass deportations and social program cuts, voters in the Rio Grande Valley are already aware of the implications. The mood in the region among Trump supporters has notably shifted since November.
“They’re angry about a lot of it, and it also stems from the blatant corruption that they saw happening with Elon Musk and Trump previously that’s still probably going on,” said Holguin. “These are people who have the traditional John McCain and Bush Republican values, and they see those values being completely obliterated by the current iteration of the Republican Party.”
Last week, Holguin joined a roundtable of border officials and industry leaders hosted by the American Business Immigration Coalition, which included key stakeholders in agriculture, construction, and real estate. The participants urged Trump “to pass sensible federal immigration solutions” for the region.
The discussion included the Republican mayor of McAllen, Javier Villalobos, who said in June that the “general consensus” in the Rio Grande Valley is that “people posing a danger to our national security” should be deported, but that “people on either side of the political spectrum have quickly realized that we need human labor.”
In the Rio Grande Valley, about 65 percent of workers in agriculture and construction are foreign born, according to an analysis released in September by the American Immigration Council, a national nonprofit that provides research and advocacy on immigration issues. The organization also reported that about 130,000 workers without legal status in the Rio Grande Valley contribute upwards of $144 million in yearly taxes and $1.6 billion in spending to the local community.
The dramatic increase in ICE raids in the Rio Grande Valley has brought a chilling effect, not just to undocumented workers but to mixed-status Hispanic families, damaging the local economy. Recently, the Trump administration argued in court that ICE should be allowed to arrest people based on the fact that they speak Spanish or speak English with an accent.
“You have an undocumented population who, if they’re still working, are coming straight home,” said Holguin. “They’re not stopping at Whataburger or the taquerias anymore. And because those businesses are suffering, sales tax revenues that are supposed to be coming to the municipalities are declining pretty rapidly.”
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
RFK'S GUTTING OF THE CDC ENDANGERS ALL OF U.S.
By William Foege, William Roper, David Satcher, Jeffrey Koplan, Richard Besser,Tom Frieden, Anne Schuchat, Rochelle P. Walensky and Mandy K. Cohen
(The authors previously led the C.D.C., as directors or acting directors under Republican and Democratic administrations.)
We have each had the honor and privilege of serving as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, either in a permanent or an acting capacity, dating back to 1977. Collectively, we spent more than 100 years working at the C.D.C., the world’s pre-eminent public health agency. We served under multiple Republican and Democratic administrations – every president from Jimmy Carter to Donald Trump – alongside thousands of dedicated staff members who shared our commitment to saving lives and improving health.
What the health and human services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has done to the C.D.C. and to our nation’s public health system over the past several months – culminating in his decision to fire Dr. Susan Monarez as C.D.C. director days ago – is unlike anything we had ever seen at the agency and unlike anything our country had ever experienced.
Mr. Kennedy has:
We are worried about the wide-ranging impact that all these decisions will have on America's health security. Residents of rural communities and people with disabilities will have even more limited access to health care. Families with low incomes who rely most heavily on community health clinics and support from state and local health departments will have fewer resources available to them. Children risk losing access to lifesaving vaccines because of the cost.
This is unacceptable, and it should alarm every American, regardless of political leanings.
The C.D.C. is an agency under Health and Human Services. During our C.D.C. tenures, we did not always agree with our leaders, but they never gave us reason to doubt that they would rely on data-driven insights for our protection or that they would support public health workers. We need only look to Operation Warp Speed during the first Trump administration – which produced highly effective and safe vaccines that saved millions of lives during the Covid-19 pandemic – as a shining example of what Health and Human Services can accomplish when health and science are at the forefront of its mission.
The current department leadership, however, operates under a very different set of rules. When Mr. Kennedy administered the oath of office to Dr. Monarez on July 31, he called her “a public health expert with unimpeachable scientific credentials.” But when she refused weeks later to rubber-stamp his dangerous and unfounded vaccine recommendations or heed his demand to fire senior C.D.C. staff members, he decided she was expendable.
These are not typical requests from a health secretary to a C.D.C. director. Not even close. None of us would have agreed to the secretary’s demands, and we applaud Dr. Monarez for standing up for the agency and the health of our communities.
When the C.D.C. was created in 1946, the average life expectancy in the United States was around 66 years. Today it is more than 78 years. While medical advances have helped, it is public health that has played the biggest role in improving both the length and the quality of life in our nation.
The C.D.C. is not perfect. What institution is? But over its history, regardless of which party has controlled the White House or Congress, the agency has not wavered from its mission. To those on the C.D.C. staff who continue to perform their jobs heroically in the face of the excruciating circumstances, we offer our sincere thanks and appreciation.
We have a message for the rest of the nation as well. This is a time to rally to protect the health of every American. Congress must exercise its oversight authority over Health and Human Services. State and local governments must fill funding gaps where they can. Philanthropy and the private sector must step up their community investments. Medical groups must continue to stand up for science and truth. Physicians must continue to support their patients with sound guidance and empathy.
And each of us must do what public health does best: look out for one another.
The men and women who have joined the C.D.C. across generations have done so not for prestige or power but because they believe deeply in the call to service. They deserve a health and human services secretary who stands up for health, supports science and has their back. So, too, does our country.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
TRUMP HONORING JAN. 6 INSURRECTIONIST IS AN OBSCENITY
ON JULY 1, 1971, I STOOD ON THE PLAIN at the United States Military Academy and raised my right hand for the first time. Along with hundreds of other new cadets, I swore an oath every service member takes: “to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”
I was nervous about what lay ahead of me as a cadet. But even in those circumstances, I listened closely to the oath I was asked to repeat, as it was a seminal moment in a young officer’s career.
The place mattered. West Point was the post that Benedict Arnold once tried to sell to the British during the Revolution, nearly surrendering its defenses and betraying the American cause. And on that day in 1971, we stood in the shadow of Battle Monument, on Trophy Point, overlooking the Hudson River and beneath the granite obelisk etched with the names of Union soldiers who gave their lives in the Civil War.
The oath we took, the monument that towered over us, the history embedded in that place – all carried a single message: Service means loyalty to the Constitution and the rule of law. Violation of laws and betrayal of the oath means forfeiting honor.
Like all soldiers, I was honored to repeat that oath many times during my career – when I was promoted, and when I promoted others. And I saw that oath honored in ways that still break my heart.
I remember all of them. But one in particular remains with me. A young soldier, standing guard at a gate, protecting the entry point to a base where his comrades lived and slept. A suicide bomber drove a car packed with explosives into that checkpoint. The soldier died at his post, saving lives by giving his own.
That is service. That is sacrifice. That is fidelity to the oath – defending others, defending principles, defending the mission, even at the cost of life itself.
Because the oath is not just about fighting the enemy – it is about upholding standards, protecting civilians, and showing the world what honorable service in defense of our Constitution looks like.And that is why I am infuriated that the Air Force (granted) military funeral honors to Ashli Babbitt. She did not die defending the Constitution. She died trying to overturn it. She was not protecting lives at a gate in Iraq; she was forcing her way through windows in the Capitol to stop the peaceful transfer of power, one of the most sacred traditions of our Republic.
To pretend that her death deserves the same recognition as the young soldier at the gate is obscene. It is a betrayal of the oath she once swore and a desecration of the sacrifice made by so many who kept faith with theirs.
This granting of military honors for an individual who did not live up to her oath is not about honoring service. It is about politics. It is about assuaging a politician’s base – a politician who never served a day in uniform, who never risked anything for his country, and who has shown no understanding of true sacrifice for others. To dress up the events of January 6th in the trappings of military honor is not patriotism. It is propaganda.
The impulse behind honoring Babbitt treats service as a partisan token, not a sacred covenant. It blurs the line between lawful sacrifice and unlawful violence. It tells those who gave their lives in defense of the Constitution that their oath was no more meaningful than the motivations of the mob that attacked the Constitution.
Anyone who has stood at Arlington, or at any military cemetery, while a widow or a bereaved mother clutches a folded flag knows the depth of that moment – the silence, the tears, the weight of a nation acknowledging sacrifice. These are not empty rituals. They are affirmations of truth and service to the values and ideals of our country.
To equate those sacred honors with the violence of January 6th is not only wrong. It is dangerous. It risks dividing the military against itself, eroding the trust that holds our armed forces together, and convincing the public that the honor held by those who wear the cloth of our country is no longer meaningful.
Here’s the truth we cannot escape: (Now that Babbitt has been) honored, then few things are sacred. If loyalty to the Constitution and an attempt to overthrow it are treated as equal, we lose the very meaning of service – and with it, we are closer to losing the Republic the oath was meant to protect.
https://www.thebulwark.com/p/honoring-ashli-babbitt-dishonors-military-january-6-funeral?utm_source=fb_page&utm_medium=The%2BBulwark&utm_campaign=publer
D-2 COMMISH MACIAS PUSHES FOR ROBINHOOD PARK COMPLEX
