Friday, April 4, 2025
JAVIER RUIZ, OWNER OF ICONIC 14TH ST. 123 BAR, CHECKS OUT AT 83
Thursday, April 3, 2025
ELIZONDO AND PENA FAIL IN EFFORT TO REMOVE BISD SUPER
By Alejandra Yanez and Derick Garcia
Without an explanation, there was a failed attempt to terminate Jesus H. Chavez.
CBS4’s Derick Garcia was at the meeting Tuesday night and reported that many teachers from the district stood up for Chavez. They also called the attempt by several board members “petty” and “unnecessary.”
“We have individuals who want to waste our time on this consuming and weird and intense focus on firing the superintendent,” Adina Alegria, a TVEA executive director, said.
Board trustees Carlos Elizondo and Minerva Pena pushed to have Chavez’s termination on Tuesday’s agenda.
When asked if she believes there is an agenda behind this, Alegria replied, “Yes. I firmly believe that there is. I don’t think that there would be such a witch hunt and now it has just become weird.”
LONGTIME CAMERON COUNTY COUNTY CLERK JOE RIVERA DIES
MUSK, TRUMP REJECTED BY NATIVE INTELLIGENCE, CHEESEHEADS
FIRST THE OLMECS...
Mexican artist Chavis Mármol created a piece of art titled "Neo-tameme" featuring a 9-ton replica of an Olmec head crushing a Tesla Model 3, which Mármol stated was intended as a "troll" of Elon Musk and the capitalist system.Here's a more detailed look at the art piece and its context:
Mármol's "Neo-tameme" series, which includes the Tesla-crushing piece, explores themes of identity, cultural roots, and the relationship between the pre-Columbian past and the modern world.
The Olmec Head:
The sculpture features a massive replica of an Olmec head, a prominent symbol of the Olmec civilization, who flourished in Mesoamerica around 1500 to 400 B.C.
Tesla as as a Target:
The artist used a Tesla Model 3 as the object of the Olmec head's crushing, suggesting a critique of technology, consumerism, and the capitalist system.
The Artist's Intent:
Mármol stated that his intention was to create a piece of art that "trolls" Elon Musk and the capitalist system by juxtaposing the ancient Olmec culture with modern technology.
By Wisconsin's Working Families Party
WISCONSIN – Voters strongly voiced their opposition to Elon Musk and Donald Trump and their politics today in Wisconsin where they have elected Judge Susan Crawford to the Wisconsin Supreme Court despite Musk dumping more than $25 million – approximately one-fifth of the total spending in the race.
Voters rejected Musk and his money as well as Brad Schimel’s “tough on crime” message. But Schimel’s reliance on the Trump/Musk/Republican fearmongering playbook rang hollow for state residents. By contrast, Wisconsin Working Families Party’s messaging on public safety resonated with voters, along with calls to protect investments in public education, affordable housing, and accessible healthcare.
“Two favorite Republican tactics failed – unrestricted money and fearmongering. Brad Schimel and his enablers couldn’t buy this election and they couldn’t scare Wisconsinites into voting against the things we care about – public safety, reproductive freedom, and affordable healthcare and housing,” said Corinne Rosen, State Director of the Wisconsin Working Families Party. “Wisconsin voters denied Musk’s money in what will be the first in many defeats as voters realize and exercise our people power.”
Wednesday, April 2, 2025
TRUMP, MAGA, WILL FIND THEIR TARIFFS WORK AGAINST U.S.
Tariffs raise the cost of doing business outside the United States. Yet even firms that manufacture in the United States can be affected, since many rely on foreign parts and materials as intermediate goods.
Whether consumers ultimately feel the impact of those higher costs can vary by industry and product.
Lots of negotiation occurs among a U.S. importer, an overseas producer and any middlemen before a tariff is collected, said Craig Fuller, CEO of FreightWaves, a supply-chain consultancy.
Some companies, including Target, Best Buy and Hyundai, have said they would pass some of the higher costs of the tariffs along to their customers. Walmart, meanwhile, has sought to pressure its Chinese suppliers to lower their costs in anticipation of the tariffs — and has been met with resistance.
Other companies, especially luxury-goods sellers, charge enormous markups on goods they import into the United States and may ultimately decide they can live with hits to already-high profit margins, Fuller said. Other firms that enjoy large market shares will also decide whether they will absorb higher costs to maintain their dominant positions.
Even for companies that absorb the cost of the tariffs and don’t raise prices, there will still be a cost. Those companies will have less money to invest in growing their businesses, which can have a negative impact on the labor market if it leads to laying off workers or not adding jobs.
European Union: The EU has responded to those metals duties with counter-tariffs on $28 billion in U.S. goods from April. However, the EU delayed the implementation of some of those tariffs until mid-April — including a 50 percent duty on American whiskey, which had prompted Trump to threaten a 200 percent tariff on European spirits.
Canada and Mexico: Trump's across-the-board tariffs on its U.S. neighbors went into effect on Tuesday, March 4. Just two days later, Trump confirmed the US would pause tariffs on goods and services compliant with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) until April 2. For its part, Canada retaliated to the steel and aluminum tariffs with new duties on about $20 billion of US goods.
China: Trump has enacted new blanket tariffs of around 20 percent on top of existing 10 percent duties that went into place during Trump's first term. China has responded with up to 15 percent duties on US farm goods such as chicken and pork, which went into effect Monday, March 10.
Venezuela: Trump said the US will impose a "secondary tariff" on Venezuela, to take effect on April 2 — any country that buys oil or gas from Venezuela would face a 25 percent tariff when trading with the US.
Bringing manufacturing to the United States can also increase the cost of production, because labor,regulatory and building costs are higher in the United States, which in turn could raise the prices of end products for consumers. If companies do bring production to the United States, the number of jobs could also be limited because manufacturing has become more automated. Auto plants or steel mills that once employed tens of thousands of workers now employ just several thousand.
Building manufacturing plants in the United States could get even more expensive as a result of the tariffs, because it would cost more to import the building materials, parts and equipment needed for the plants.
It could be nearly impossible to make other products, like shoes or T-shirts, in the United States at competitive prices because the United States doesn’t have the available labor or supply chains to make them on a large scale.
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
A TEXT FROM HONDURAN ISLAND REMINDED US OF FREEDOM
(Ed.'s Note: We received a text and photo from two of our friends who spent a few days in Central America, Honduras, to be exact. They texted us that they were spending a week on the Island of Guanaja, off Honduras' eastern coast. This set us thinking that we had come across that island in the past during our recounting of Central American history. We looked, and we had. It was here that a group of captured natives was being taken to enslavement aboard a Spanish caravele, at that time the most advanced sailing vessel that had crossed the Atlantic to the New World. Incredibly, the natives – used to canoes – seized control of the ship and sailed back home, to the shock of their captors. We post that story and thank our intrepid travelers for reminding us.)
By Juan MontoyaThe year was 1515.

In a letter he wrote then to Diego Columbus in Santo Domingo, Velasquez told the Admiral's son about an incident that had happened when a ship and a bark were sent from Santiago to hunt slaves in the Guanaja Islands (the Bay Islands off Honduras discovered by Columbus in 1502).
Bartolome de Las Casas quotes from the letter which was later copied and published by Herrera in Decade, II, Bk. 2, ch. 7.
"The bark remained to hunt more Indians, and the ship returned to the port of Carenas (the present Havana), with its captured Indians confined below.
"How could they learn how to do that if they were kept in the ship's hold all the time?" asked another. "Were they watching the Spaniards from below after they were captured and made slaves?"
One can only imagine what the more timid souls among the natives argued, but some of their objections to strike a blow for freedom are predictable. "What if we can't sail it? What if we sink? What if we are punished? What if slavery turns out to be not so bad compared to the unknowns?"
Monday, March 31, 2025
U. OF HOUSTON IN THE FINAL FOUR! LET'S GO COOGS!
Sunday, March 30, 2025
SURVEILLANCE SHOWS CHILLING VIDEO OF FEMALE TUFTS GRADUATE STUDENT FROM TURKEY BEING DETAINED
Trump news: It’s hard to believe this video was filmed in the United States. It no longer should be. This is the future republicans want for us. In the words of the judge overseeing this blatant disregard for the constitution. "Nazis had more due process than these students." El Pais is reporting that the dictator in El Salvador is taking these people in exchange for trump sending back the “leaders of the MS 13” who were supposed to stay in prison- turns out he made a pact with the gangs.)
They surround her. Then, one by one, they pull their neck gaiters up to cover their faces. “You don’t look like police,” a voice off screen says. “Why are you hiding your faces?” The questions continue, but the figures don’t respond. Instead, they cuff Ozturk, cross the street, and put her in an unmarked SUV. She is gone.
The video is haunting. You can see Ozturk’s panic set in, and the clear impunity the agents feel in taking her and vanishing with no explanation. Just days after the Trump administration successfully pressured Columbia University to ban masks at campus demonstrations, these agents concealed their identities and arrived in an unmarked vehicle, asserting only that they were the authorities, period.
Ozturk’s lawyer later said she hadn’t been able to contact her and had no idea of her whereabouts; the New York Times reported she appeared to have been moved to a facility in central Louisiana, as with Mahmoud Khalil, whose own shadowy deportation case has been at the forefront of a constitutional crisis. (Khalil, a Columbia graduate and lawful permanent U.S. resident, was detained and accused —again without evidence — of supporting Hamas. His green card was revoked, and he was taken away from his eight-months-pregnant wife, a U.S. citizen. He too also briefly disappeared.)
It would be hard to believe this scene was happening in the United States if this was not the explicit and proud policy of the Trump administration. A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson later claimed Ozturk “engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organization.” The person said Ozturk, who is from Turkey, had had her student visa revoked.
To be perfectly clear, Ozturk is not accused of breaking the law. The Department of Homeland Security hasn’t bothered to explain its reasoning, but several outlets reported that Ozturk co-authored a student opinion piece urging Tufts to recognize the International Court of Justice’s declaration of a “plausible risk of genocide” unfolding in Gaza and to divest from Israel. You can read the article if you like. It does not mention Hamas.
As a Muslim American, in moments like these, it feels like there isn’t much else left to say. The Trump administration is trying to normalize a disquieting new chapter of something that’s happened now for nearly three decades. In that time, we’ve watched our communities surveilled, detained, blacklisted, and interrogated under the guise of national security.
SAN BENE WINS ELECTION CASE, NO $100,000 FOR RIOS
Saturday, March 29, 2025
SAN BENE SUES TO STOP TEXAS REGIONAL BANK LIEN
SAN BENITO — Locked in a year-long legal battle with the developer of San Benito’s first resaca-side commercial development, officials are going to court against Texas Regional Bank, accusing the financial institution of placing a “fraudulent” $3.4 million lien on city-owned land.
In the lawsuit filed in Hidalgo County, the city’s Economic Development Corporation claims the bank did not receive the agency’s approval when it placed the lien on 9.8 acres on which sits the Resaca Village development.
About two weeks ago, a Texas Regional Bank representative notified EDC officials the bank had placed the lien on the agency-owned land in 2023, Micheal Pruneda, the EDC’s attorney, said during a news conference Thursday.
In the lawsuit, the EDC, a bank customer, demands a jury trial while seeking $1 million in damages.
On Thursday, Jacque Kruppa, Texas Regional Bank’s chief legal officer, did not respond to messages requesting comment.Now, the EDC’s requesting the court remove the bank’s lien.
“SBEDC, the landowner subject to the fraudulently filed (lien), seeks an order from the court that would result in the removal from all records, public and private, (the lien) recorded by TRB with the knowledge that the document was a fraudulent lien against real property and interests, filed with the intent that the lien be given the same legal effect as a valid lien and recorded knowing that it would cause financial injury,” the EDC states in the lawsuit.
The EDC argues the bank placed the lien on the property “without the lawful consent of the SBEDC’s board of directors and the elected governing body, resulting in a breach of its fiduciary duties” and “against the interests, financial and otherwise, of SBEDC.”
In the lawsuit, officials accuse the bank of negligence, claiming “it knew or should have known that SBEDC would suffer harm from the breach of the duties that it owed to SBEDC proximately resulting in actual damages to SBEDC.”
The lawsuit also argues the bank violated its relationship with the EDC as its customer.
“TRB, as a depository of SBEDC, was in a fiduciary relationship with SBEDC and owed it certain fundamental and non-waivable duties in connection with its administration of accounts, assets and interests,” the lawsuit claims.
The lawsuit argues the bank violated its responsibilities to the EDC including its duties “not to exceed the authority granted to it, … to make and timely disclose conflicts of interest, … to make and timely disclose material facts that might affect SBEDC’s interests, … to treat SBEDC fairly and impartially” and “to act competently.”

Among Texas Regional Bank’s board of directors is Carlos Varela, who is a partner at VARCO.
At Resaca Village, the bank’s branch office anchors the development nearing completion.
In court, the city and VARCO are disputing the Resaca Village’s ownership.
In April 2024, VARCO filed a lawsuit against the city, claiming San Benito’s economic arm breached the parties’ contracts surrounding the development of Resaca Village, failing to "honor its obligations" under an agreement extending its construction timeline while claiming its amendments “void” because city commissioners had not approved them.
In response, the city filed counter suit claiming VARCO breached its contract when the company failed to comply with the city’s agreements granting extensions on the project’s completion, originally set for 2022.
Friday, March 28, 2025
UNANIMOUS TSC BOARD NAMES LEGAL CENTER AFTER RUBEN HERRERA
FUNERAL SERVICES SET FOR FORMER BPD CHIEF ANDY VEGA
He was genuinely dedicated to the love of his life, Olivia. Married for 64 years, they were always together for family functions, attending their children's sports and band events, church events, and other community activities.
Andy was born in Brownsville, Texas, on February 26, 1937, and was raised in Los Fresnos, Texas, where he attended school and graduated from Los Fresnos High School in 1955.
He served the United States Armed Forces, 7th Army from 1957 to 1959, stationed in West Germany, and received an Honorable Discharge on April 30, 1963.
He graduated in 1963 from the Rio Grande Valley Police Academy. He began his law enforcement career with the Brownsville Police Department. From 1963 to 1972, he was a Uniformed Patrol Officer, Criminal Investigations Detective, Special Intelligence Service, District Attorney Case Preparation and Liaison Officer, and Director of Narcotics - Intelligence Services.
In 1972, he was promoted to Acting Police Chief, and later that year, he earned the position of Police Chief, which he held until 1989. While serving as Chief, he attended Texas Southmost College and earned an Associate of Applied Science Degree. He attended Pan American University, and earned Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice (Magna Cum Laude) in 1979. He continued his education in crime, law enforcement and criminology, community policing, and forensics, to name a few. He attended the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, and attended crime and criminal justice seminars. He was a member of the Texas Police Association, serving as President from 1982 through 1983.
From November 1989 to April 1990, Andy served as Brownsville Acting Texas City Manager, from April 1990 to 1993 as Assistant City Manager, and from 1993 to 1997 as City Manager.
He is survived by his wife: Olivia G. Vega; his children: Andres Angel Vega (Lisa) and Cynthia Stella Vega; his siblings: Maria Esparza, Anita Vega (Allen), Brigida 'Nena' Dominguez (Leroy) and Alfredo Vega (Amparo); his grandchildren: Andres Aaron Vega and Adrienne Estella Vega.
He was preceded in death by his parents: Andres Vega, † and Nicolasa Salazar Vega †; his siblings: Vicente Espinoza †, Jose Macario Vega †, Antonio Vega † and Maria de la Luz Vega †.
WITH ELECTIONS NOT AN OPTION, BISD MUST APPOINT BY AUGUST 14
Ironically, leading the charge against the appointment and insisting that an election be held were Carlos Elizondo and Minerva Peña, apparently unaware that by then voting against the following agenda item to hold the election this May they were, in effect, denying the voters a chance to elect their choice.
Thursday, March 27, 2025
NO BENCHES OR SHELTERS FOR THEM LIKE FOR THE BIKE RIDERS
The elderly, children and entire families weather the elements to take their purchases to their homes. BUS released a list of the next sites to have a bus shelter, and this one is not included. The owner of the house once placed a sofa at the stop for people to sit while they wait, but a city maintenance crew removed it.
How about it Rose? Now that you got yourself appointed to the chairmanship of the Brownsville Community Improvement Corporation with it's annual $6 million in sales tax revenue, sister can you spare a few bucks and a dime from your pet projects and throw them a crumb and have a shelter put up there? After all, it's from sales tax, and as you can see, they're kicking in into the kitty so it's also their money.)
A BISD BUS, LIKE THE BOARD, STUCK OFF THE BEATEN PATH
(Ed.'s Note: One of our seven readers sent us this photo of a Brownsville Independent School District buses that veered off the road and ended in the backyard of a home near the corner of Boca Chica and Monroe. Once in the rain-soaked back yard, it got stuck in the muck and had to have assistance from Transportation to get out. The BISD board, stuck at a 3-3 impasse, may also need a little help to get going.)