Wednesday, October 1, 2025

5-TIME DRAFT DODGER AND A FAILED TV HOST LECTURE REAL SOLDIERS

A failed TV host and a 5-time army dodger came to lecture decorated U.S. generals who went through several wars, on “warrior ethos.”
Trump and Hegseth’s show today clearly embarrassed the U.S. military leadership.

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

A lot of medals of valor in that room — and not the kind you get for fake bone spurs.

Obviously, Donald Trump picked Peter Hegseth because he wanted someone like him in the position of the “Secretary of War.”

Which tells you everything you need to know about both of them.

When a sitting president stands before a room full of generals and calls their own citizens “the enemy within,” it signals a crisis far deeper than we dared imagine. The January 6th insurrection should have been the moment that led to accountability and prison time NOT a political comeback. Allowing that assault on our democracy to go unpunished now threatens the sanctity of our way of life, our liberty, and everything we have ever known as a nation.

A SLURRYING GLASSY EYED TRUMP :

“We’re under invasion from within,” Trump said. “No different than a foreign enemy, but more difficult in many ways because they don’t wear uniforms.”

He added: “In our inner cities – which we’re going to be talking about because it’s a big part of war now. It’s a big part of war.”

At another point: “I told Pete, we should use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military – National Guard, but military. Because we’re going into Chicago very soon.”

ONCE MORE TO THE SWAMP: DAY 1 OF GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The Blame Game
The last two Government shutdowns happened under Trump with Republicans holding a majority in the House and Senate.

January 2018: 3 days
December 2018- January 2019: 35 days
Today: ?

These people do not know how to govern. They only know how to break everything, run up the debt, give hand-outs to their billionaire friends, and leave the American people on the hook for the bill.

Quote from Trump in 2013: "When they talk about the government shutdown, they’re going to be talking about the president of the United States, who the president was at that time. They’re not going to be talking about who was the head of the House, the head the Senate, who’s running things in Washington. So I really think the pressure is on the president."


Social Security is Safe

The Social Security Administration (SSA) has released its updated contingency plan as the federal government shutdown begins.

According to the agency, Social Security payments will continue without interruption to senior citizens and other beneficiaries even though lawmakers failed to pass a new spending bill by last night’s deadline. 

The SSA says it will also continue handling new applications, appeals, and certain key services during a shutdown. However, some internal functions will be put on hold. That could mean longer wait times for recipients to learn how much their monthly payments will increase next year, as the annual cost-of-living adjustment announcement may face delays.

Congress had until midnight Tuesday to reach an agreement on a new federal spending bill. Without a deal, nonessential government functions will shut down, though critical benefits like Social Security are expected to remain in place.

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

ON NATIONAL COFFEE DAY, A PIQUANT REMEMBRANCE

 By Juan Montoya


Many years ago, before Starbucks was a national chain, and before specialty coffee shops came into vogue, about the only exotic coffee one could get locally was from the coffee and peanut store next to the Mercado Juarez in Matamoros.

(For those uninitiated souls among our readers, Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, is right across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Texas, USA.)

The aroma of the roasting coffee beans and goobers wafted through the entire block and Brownsville residents often went to the mercado every weekend to get their kids haircuts, and to bring a kilo of the freshly roasted and ground coffee and perhaps half a kilo (about a pound) of peanuts for the kids.

It was next to impossible – if you wanted to get coffee grown in Jamaica, some Central American countries, or Africa or other exotic locale – to find the varieties of coffee we now have coming from all parts of the world.

That's why his friends were interested to hear Guicho, a local wag who used to know his way around the city, when he sat and told his group of friends about the time he was able to get a full, unopened bag of coffee from El Salvador. 

Guicho was married to a woman from there, "a guanaca", as they call themselves. At one time South Texas was awash in Salvadoran refugees escaping the civil war. Some, like Guicho's wife, stayed. He said he came across the bag of Salvadoran coffee as a gift from one of  his friends who used to work as a waiter for banquets at a luxury hotel at South Padre Island.

The hotel held conferences for professional groups, political groups and candidates, and for celebrities, from throughout the Texas and the United States. As such, the hotel management brought the best of the best for these gatherings. When the confab was over, instead of throwing some of the fine wine bottles, cheeses, and other delicacies purchased for the banquets, management allowed the banquet workers to take what they wanted for themselves.

One of Guicho's friends, Polo, had brought the coffee – among other items – to his home and when he found out that his friend was married to a Salvadoran lady, he offered it to him as a gift. Guicho was delighted and the next morning woke up early to brew a cup of Salvadoran coffee for her. But there was only one problem: The bag contained only whole roasted coffee beans. He tried the blender, but it pulverized them and didn't grind the coffee well, and he didn't have a coffee grinder. 

So he looked around the kitchen and hit upon an idea. He would grind enough for  couple of cups of coffee with a molcajete (a pumice grinding bowl used to grind spices) kept largely unused in their pantry. In no time, he had the coffee maker brewing and surprised his wife with a fresh cup when she was attracted by the distinctive smell from coffee grown in her homeland.

As they sat there sipping on the coffee, Guicho marveled at the taste of the exotic coffee and the curious tingling of this tongue. Soon both were sweating profusely and blowing at their cups to cool it a bit so they could drink it.

That's when she asked Guicho where he had gotten the coffee and then, how he had ground it to brew it.

Guicho looked around and pointed at the kitchen counter where the molcajete – in which some ground coffee still remained – and told her that was what he had used.

"Menso," she said, and burst out laughing. "That's what I use to make salsa from the piquines I pick from the plants outside. Nos estamos enchilando!"

WORDS COME BACK TO HAUNT, BUT DOES HE REALLY CARE?

On the GOP if it doesn’t get resolved in time

FARMERS OUT $13 BILLION THANKS TO ART-OF-THE-DEAL CLOWN




Special to El Rrun-Rrun

'"No better negotiator than me! I know more about soybeans than the farmers do'” Trump's famous last words...Allan Ritchie

"Now we move to "Art of the Deal"... Chapter 11... How to file Bankruptcy"... Not Your F'n Safe Space

"I guess those farmers are getting the leader they voted for"...Cindy Bom-Stein

"That's gonna require a whole lotta bailout"...William T. Jones

"Farmers in the 'Find Out' phase"..Travis Benham

"The Golden Age is almost upon us. Oh wait all the gold is on the walls in the Oval. I think Liberace had a seizure in there"...Michael Haney

"They buy them from Argentina now, who we are bailing out too"... Ruben Diaz

COMING TO A BORDER PATROL SECTOR NEARER TO YOU

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Trump's Tiny Hands


Look at this propaganda. Straight from the U.S. Border Patrol and U.S. Attorney’s office:
“Assault on a Federal Agent – 18 U.S.C. 111 (FELONY). Penalty: up to 20 years in federal prison, possible $250,000 fine.”

And then they throw in the scare-line for maximum effect:
“Let it be known: if you lay a hand on an officer, deputy, or federal agent, [the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Texas] will do whatever it can to put you in federal prison for as long as the law will allow. You’ve been warned.” – Nicholas J. Ganjei, U.S. Attorney.

This is the message: if you so much as oppose them, antagonize them, or bruise their egos, they’ll flip the script and call it you assaulting them. If they put their hands on you and hurt themselves in the process, suddenly it’s a felony on your head. And if you’re poor, or an immigrant, good luck finding a lawyer who can stand up to the machine.

This isn’t about protecting anyone. It’s about scaring people into silence while handing out “red meat” to their political base. And behind the curtain?

That base cheers not because they’re safer, but because someone else is being hurt. That cruelty is the point. Meanwhile, the “green meat” is the dollars funneling into the pockets of private prison companies that profit off every head they lock up.

And to make sure no one misses it, they stamp the whole thing with Border Patrol branding and hashtags like #HonorFirst #LawEnforcement #WeAreNotDone — like we’re supposed to clap for the idea of warehousing human beings for profit.

This is not justice. This is not honor. This is propaganda — designed to terrify the vulnerable, enrich private prison buddies, and give a base obsessed with punishment something to cheer about.

Monday, September 29, 2025

CELEBRATING NATIONAL COFFEE DAY: A STORY OF CAFFEINE DIPLOMACY

By Juan Montoya

Have you had your cup of coffee yet?

The first mention of the plant was made by Turkish caravans traveling across Ethiopia in the 6th Century.

The story is lost in the mists of history, but it involves a goat-herd, Kaldi, who, noticing the energizing effects when his flock nibbled on the bright red berries of a certain bush, chewed on the seeds himself. His exhilaration prompted him to bring the berries to a monk in a nearby monastery. But the monk disapproved of their use and threw them into the fire, from which an enticing aroma billowed and the other monks came out to investigate. 

The Turkish caravans seized on the plants and and spread it to Europe. It soon made its way across the world.

Coffee's use as a cultural bridge was made apparent to me when I went to Chiapas for the Brownsville Herald to trace the origins of the Central American refugees who flooded into South Texas during the early 1980s. Literally thousands of them overflowed the Casa Romero on Minnesota Road and spilled over into adjoining empty lots.

At that time, the Herald considered itself a real newspaper and didn't blink twice when I made the proposal before the editors and the publisher. Soon I found myself on a Mexican jetliner that departed from the Matamoros airport en route to Mexico City, and then on to Chiapas.

I didn't really know what part of Chiapas – on the border with Guatemala – was where the refugees were encamped. But at the time former Herald writer Bob Rivard was the Newsweek editor covering the strife in Central America and he and his wife were gracious enough to let me stay with them overnight in the Hotel Cortez in Mexico City and make my inquiries with the U.S. embassy to get my bearings.

The embassy, trying not to antagonize the host country, sent me on a snipe hunt to Tapachula, a city on the Pacific Ocean side and far removed from the mass exodus of villagers from the Guatemalan countryside who were being driven across into Mexico by their government's policy of establishing a 40-mile free-fire zone to fight anti-government rebels.

At Tapachula, colegas (and they take this term very seriously down there) working an ancient press in a shop the size of a small garage set me straight and directed me to the area south of Comitan where the refugees had taxed the local government's ability to sustain the sudden onrush of entire Guatemalan villages full of poor campesinos and their families fleeing the indiscriminate massacres going on in the killing rain forest in the northern Guatemala cordillera.

I flew on to Tuxtla-Gutierrez, was given the run around for three days by state government officials there, and finally set out by popular bus through San Cristobal de las Casas, and on to Comitan. I learned that campamentos of refugees were located at the Parque Natural Montes Azules where the world-famous Lagos de Montebello are located.

An area inside the national park in the municipio La Trinitaria named Colonia Cuahutemoc was where I learned that hundreds of refugees were being housed awaiting for conditions to improve in their country in hopes of returning to their villages. Many never would.

The place was incredibly beautiful. At Lagos de Montebello, a number of lakes were inter-,connected, and they were all a different color. I had also learned that the Chiapanecos were very proud of their state and its heritage, including their locally-grown coffee.

I had elicited gasps of horror from patrons at a restaurant in Tuxtla-Gutierez - the state capital - when I had asked a waitress for milk or cream to put in my coffee. Any Chiapaneco knows that apart from the unrefined brown sugar, one does not spoil the taste of the homegrown coffee by desecrating it with milk. Milk! What a barbarian, they must have thought.


With the only taxi in Comitan at my disposal, I arrived in La Trinitaria to get a pass from the mayor so I could go to the colonia where the refugees were located. 

However, Sunday morning was the time of the week that the mayor hosted teachers at his home who were working in the villages of the outlying settlements to gather information of the progress of their charges and of local politics and events.

When I go to his home, I had to wait my turn as he spoke with a teacher. Being in a hurry, as most reporters are by nature, I chafed at being detained from going on to the refugee site. Then I detected the smell of freshly roasted coffee being prepared for the men in the kitchen next door to his study.

"Es local el cafe?," I asked. (Is that locally-grown coffee?) "Huele muy rico. (It smells very good.)"
You could see the man visibly swell with pride as he answered pointing to some coffee trees outside his window.

"Lo crecemos alli afuera. Gusta una tasa?(We grow it right outside. Would you like a cup?")
To make the long story short, over a cup (and it was good), I told him the nature of my visit and he sent for his secretary to give me a letter of introduction that was critical for me to enter the campamento.

And that's how a cup of fragrant coffee helped me open the doors to do a five-part series on the Guatemalan refugee exodus into southern Mexico and further north to the U.S. -Mexico border. Or – as the mayor gently corrected me over his steaming cup – "nuestros desafortunados hermanos Centroamericanos."

MICHIGAN "LEFTIST RADICAL" WHO SHOT UP CHURCH WAS A MAGANUT

Like clockwork, it turns out the shooter was MAGA. Yet AGAIN

Trump blames The Left.
But to be blunt, Trump's mouth will ultimately be his undoing. He is a uniquely fragile and insecure man, and these weaknesses, coupled with an undeniable narcissism and an obsession for power, amount to a very dangerous combination of characteristics. He thinks he knows what he's doing, but his words indicate otherwise. Keep talking, Donnie Cheeto. It will be your downfall.

SUPPORT OUR TEXAS BEST ELEMENTARY AND H. S. CONJUNTO GROUPS

To help OUR youngsters, call Carlo Hernandez at 956-592-4475

Sunday, September 28, 2025

MORENA FEDERAL REP. HELD BY CUSTOMS AGENTS, VISA REVOKED


Federal deputy Mario López was held for 14 hours by U.S. border agents and returned to Mexico with a cancelled visa. Courtesy photo
By Mauro de la Fuente
El Norte

Federal Representative Mario López Hernández, a Morena party member, was detained for approximately 14 hours by U.S. border agents at an international bridge connecting Matamoros, Tamaulipas, with Brownsville, Texas, and was returned to Mexico yesterday morning with his visa canceled.

Sources familiar with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operation agreed that a detention as prolonged as the one imposed on the former mayor of Matamoros is unusual.

After seeking to deny the situation in a statement, alleging "rumors," López acknowledged, in an interview with Grupo REFORMA, the detention and the revocation of his visa. However, he denied that he had lost the document for any crime and argued that the agents revoked it because he was "badly treated" and needed to renew it.

Driving unaccompanied in his white armored SUV, the legislator arrived at the Matamoros-Brownsville international crossing, better known as the "Old Bridge," at 9 p.m. on Friday. His vehicle was taken into an inspection zone, and López was eventually taken to a private area for questioning.

After 10 a.m. yesterday, CBP agents took him to the bridge exit to return to Mexico, a situation that was captured in photos and videos.

Last April, Matamoros Mayor Alberto Granados, also a Morena member, publicly denied reports that his visa had been revoked, as had been the case with other Morena politicians in Tamaulipas and throughout the country. However, he never showed the document.

Saturday, September 27, 2025

CAMERON DEMOCRATS SAY THEY'RE UNITED WITH TALARICO

(Photo courtesy of Attorney John Shergold, at left.)

SMUGGLER WHO LEFT DEAD IMMIGRANT ON MAVERICK RD. PLEADS GUILTY


By Matt Richards
MYTEXASDAILY.COM

BROWNSVILLE, Texas — A 24-year-old Mexican national residing illegally in Edinburg has pleaded guilty to transporting illegal aliens, resulting in death, according to U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei. Victor Manuel Martinez-Gallegos admitted to picking up several aliens in Brownsville on May 27, 2024, and driving them to a stash house.

The investigation revealed that one of the aliens, a Guatemalan national, was in visible distress and later died at the location. Martinez-Gallegos confessed to leaving the body near Maverick Road in Brownsville, where authorities later discovered human remains identified as the missing victim, according to the press release.

“Human smuggling is a depraved, dangerous business, and one where the smugglers often show no mercy or compassion to those they transport,” said Ganjei. “I implore anyone considering hiring a smuggler - either for themselves or their loved ones - to think twice. Stay home and stay safe.”

The investigation was conducted by Border Patrol with assistance from the Cameron County Sheriff’s Office and the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ana C. Cano is prosecuting the case.

MAGA GOP CONTINUE RUNNING INTERFERENCE FOR TRUMP ON EPSTEIN FILES



"Sheeeesh! Mike's really fighting hard... Like HE was in those files or something."

"Did anyone ask Johnson why Walkinshaw got fast tracked and why we are suddenly sticklers for "standard practice"?"

"That’s weird it’s almost like they’re trying to hide something."

"Tell me your leader is guilty without telling me he’s guilt."

Reich Wing Watch's Post

Recently-elected Arizona Democrat Adelita Grijalva could deliver the tie-breaking vote to release the government’s files on alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. That is, if House Speaker Mike Johnson doesn’t delay her swearing in – and it looks like he’s planning to.

Grijalva, who won 68 percent of the vote in a special election for Arizona’s 7th congressional district earlier this week, is set to tip the scales for Democrats and their few Republican allies hoping to force the government’s hand on the long-awaited release of documents on Epstein. But when exactly she’ll be sworn-in isn’t set, and it’s cause for concern.

Grijalva could be sworn in when Congress is back in session on October 7, but if Johnson waits for Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes to deliver the official vote certification she will have to wait until at least October 14, and be sidelined during the vote.

“I think that maybe it has to do with the fact that I am the 218th signer to push for a vote on the release of the Epstein files,” Grijalva told KGUN 9, adding that she planned to head to Washington next week to caucus with Democrats.

“I am going, even though I have no official capacity there yet, it is very clear I won this election by nearly 40 points,” Grijalva said.

She also pointed out that when Representative James Walkinshaw of Virginia won a special election just a few weeks ago, he was sworn in without having to wait for certification.

In a statement, Johnson’s office said that the House would proceed with “standard practice” and wait for the “appropriate paperwork from the state.” So far, Congress has only received a letter from Fontes’s office saying that unofficial results show Grijalva the clear winner.

Representatives Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna are just one signature shy on their bipartisan bid to force a vote – which would likely go to the House floor and pass with Grijalva’s signature.

A MEXICAN FAMILY STORY: TED WILLIAMS MEXICAN AMERICAN

Friday, September 26, 2025

LLEVA LOS BEBITOS, Y LOS VIEJITOS AND EVERYONE GO TO TALARICO'S

Brownsville VIP Meet & Greet
Friday, Sept. 26 at 6:15PM
Las Ramblas (1101 E Washington)

(Before public rally at Market Square Event Hall at 7PM)

NETANYAHU FACES MASS WALKOUT PROTEST AT U.N.

LIFE'S LESSONS: KNOWING YOUR LIMITATIONS

By Juan Montoya

It is sometimes humbling to realize that as we age, we are growingly limited in performing physical activities.

Our friends and family members are always telling us that we are no longer spring chickens and that we should refrain from undertaking physical acts we were able to perform in our younger years. For the most part, we shrug them of and continue as if we were still 18.

That is, until life steps in and in no uncertain terms lets us know that is no longer true.

I received such a wake up call a few years go when I volunteered to trim off the dry tops of three trees at the old homestead where my 94-year-old mother and a brother still live. There had been a hard freeze a few years back and the entire city bore the dry remnants of the freeze with dry branches where the cold had killed the tops of the trees.  

In my younger years I would think nothing of throwing on some shorts and sneakers and running off from our home on Weslaco Road, west on FM 802 and up to U.S. 281 (Military Highway) and back, roughly five miles. When I got out of the Marines it was a breeze, whether it was a nice cool day or at noon on a 90-plus degree summer day. I was, as they used to say in the Midwest, full of piss and vinegar.

(By contrast, now that I nurse a bum knee, I have to take a break after barely walking two blocks.) 

So climbing a 40-foot aluminum extension ladder hauling an electric chain saw to cut off the dry tops of the trees didn't seem such a daunting task to me at the time.

But time had passed, as we shall see.

The first tree, a tamarind, was not exactly easy, but the dry top came hurtling down when the chain saw sliced through its soft trunk. I made a note to remember that the branch, as it hurtled down, might hit the ladder, so I held on to the trunk and the ladder when it cracked.
I climbed down, trimmed the branches to standard size and piled them in a heap on a spot used by the neighborhood for city brush pickup.

The next was a little more difficult because it was a harder palo blanco and there was the neighbor's wooden fence below it. It was also a little taller. As I tried to get a good angle on the leaning dry branches, I told myself "You know, you're getting a little old to be doing this kind of stuff, atop a tall ladder with an electric chain saw..." But I had promised my mom I'd do it and I managed to down the branches to the ground and narrowly missed them hitting the fence.

The third turned out to be the charm. The main branch did not extend straight from the top, but rather, at an angle which forced me to contort atop the ladder to get a straight cut. I had almost achieved this but only managed to cut the large branch partially so that it dangled next to the ladder held only by a thin sliver of wood and bark. 

Since I was at the very top of the ladder, I decided to hold on to the top rung with my left hand and use only my right to finish off the remaining sliver of wood and bark holding up the hanging branch.

But no sooner had the chain touched the branch, but that it slid through it like the proverbial hot knife through butter...bringing the heavy branch crashing down beside the ladder...and the churning chain saw blade straight on to the top of my left hand holding to the top of the ladder. I couldn't let go, but winced in pain and thought about throwing the saw to the ground and climbing down the ladder to get some medical attention to my hand which was now gushing with blood. It felt hideous and looked even worse.

Since it was my dad's chain saw and I would have certainly have had to answer to him for his smashed up saw, I didn't and climbed down to lay it gingerly on the ground below. I had left my cell phone on the ground before I went up the tree and forgot all about it. I started to the gate to drive myself to the hospital on Alton Gloor. But it was a Saturday and neighborhood kids were out on the street and I thought some of them might come into our yard and grab the saw and play with it and possibly hurt themselves. So I walked back, hand bleeding profusely, disconnected the saw, and placed it in a tool shed, closing the door.

I then drove myself to Valley Regional and walked into the emergency room. A lady and her provider were the only ones in line and I dimly heard them complain to the intake clerk that the older lady had occasional headaches and fainting spells. I held up my bloody hand to the clerk and she immediately opened the door and guided me to a cubicle and called medical personnel to assist me. A gusher from between my thumb and forefinger periodically emitted a stream of blood.

"We need to stuture that wound, but the way it's bleeding looks like you hit an artery and we don't have the time to give you anesthesia," a young doctor said. "You ready?"
"Go for  it," I said, and watched as he threaded his curved needle and pushed it through my living flesh to stitch the cuts, because when the chainsaw hit, it had jumped and gnashed at the flesh at different angles. 

As he and an assistant worked, they looked at me and asked me on a scale of 1 to 10 how much it hurt.










"About 0.5," I answered. They looked surprised and to tell you the truth, so was I. Even as they stitched living flesh, it didn't hurt. My hand just trembled. When they got to the thumb area they said that the skin was thicker there and they needed a thicker needle and heavier thread. Did I want to wait until they could give me anesthesia?

"No, just get on with it," I said and watched as they dug the thicker needle into my flesh. "You're lucky the saw didn't cut off a finger or hit your wrist and cut the veins," they said. In less than a half hour, they were done and I walked out with a gauzed-up hand in a white latex glove.
I drove home and picked up the phone below the offending tree. The large branch was on the ground and there was a trail of blood from the ladder to the gate, back to the tree, and then to the shed and out the gate.

I pretended it was nothing and told my mom it had been just a scratch and left and drove myself to my house. I called my sister and told her I didn't have my phone since they had tried to call me when my mom had gone to check on me and saw the trail of blood. I took the picture above and sent it to her. She had been a medical clinic administrator and I couldn't fool her. I told her not to show the picture to my mom, which, of course, she did immediately. 

There followed a couple of months of learning to tie shoelaces with one hand, pulling on pants, and taking a shower protecting the injured hand, etc... 

Of course, to add insult to injury, she told me I was too old to be doing that kind of s--t. "Pay someone, don't be a tightwad," she said.

I had to agree. But it had taken that life experience to make me realize que ya no estamos pa' esos trotes anymore.  

Thursday, September 25, 2025

NEW U.S. A.G. BONDI FLUNKED CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 101

"IN 7 MONTHS I'VE ENDED 7 WARS. AND I'M ANGRY WITH PUTIN..."

ANTIFA DEMONIZED BY TRUMP AND INCLUDES TAKING PICTURES OF I.C.E.

THIS is the original ANTIFA logo from WW2.
THIS is their mission. They have been the good guys for 80 years...until Sean Hannity decided that you can't have a resistance to right wing fascism.
"As part of Patton’s Third Army, my father chased the bastards from Normandy to Czechoslovakia, Sep 1944-May 1945. The Greatest Generation was proudly Antifa."

"So anyone know where the local chapter of Antifa meets? How much are membership dues? How can I sign up? And will there be cake?"

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

BREAKING: Trump signs TERRIFYING executive order cracking down on our right to protest and free speech!

Donald Trump signed an executive order designating “antifa” a domestic terrorist organization. Of course, there is no such thing as the “antifa” group; antifascism is an ideal that we’d once thought everyone aspired to and there IS no “antifa” group or organized structure that exists in America.

Trump knows this, and is exploiting the decentralized nature of antifa to crack down on ANYONE and everyone. 

The executive order worded so that anyone protesting ICE agents, filming or asking them for ID, or informing people of their rights, can be charged as a domestic terrorist.

You read that right. 

Domestic terrorism charges for filming ICE agents abusing innocent people.

The terrorist group designation has previously only been used for foreign terror groups, and it’s unclear whether Trump can legally designate a domestic group that doesn’t actually exist as a terror group, but since when has legality or logic applied to Trump and his cronies?

Trump says that “antifa is a militarist, anarchist enterprise that explicitly calls for the overthrow of the United States Government, law enforcement authorities, and our system of law,” but cites no evidence of any of those claims because THEY’RE ALL MADE UP!

Ironically, they’re admitting that what ICE and the Trump administration are doing is fascist, because anyone protesting or otherwise resisting is now labeled an anti-fascist — but the terrorism charges they’re going to bring against brave people standing up for what’s right are terrifying.

We cannot sit idly by as Trump and his fascist cronies roll back our rights one by one. Keep protesting, keep filming, resist at every opportunity, and VOTE!

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

REMEMBERING ANOTHER IMMIGRANT PATRIOT. OORAH!

Rafael Peralta was born in Mexico and entered the United States illegally to attend school in San Diego, in order to avoid gang violence in Tijuana. Inspired to become a U.S. Marine, he enlisted the same day he received his “Green Card” and earned his citizenship while serving in the Marine Corps. 

His bedroom wall bore only three neatly-framed paper documents: The U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and Rafael’s Marine Corps graduation certificate. He was nominated for the Medal of Honor based upon the eye witness statement of the five Marines whose lives he saved. In a highly controversial move, the Secretary of Defense downgraded the award to the Navy Cross. 

Efforts continue by those whose lives he saved, as well as many other Marines, to see Rafael Peralta ultimately awarded the Medal of Honor for this action.

COMMENDATION

The President of the United States of America takes pride in presenting the Navy Cross (Posthumously) to Sergeant Rafael Peralta, United States Marine Corps, for extraordinary heroism while serving as Platoon Guide with 1st Platoon, Company A, First Battalion, Third Marines, Regimental Combat Team 7, FIRST Marine Division, in action against Anti-Coalition Forces in support of Operation AL FAJAR, in Fallujah, Iraq, on 15 November 2004. 
  • The squad returned fire, wounding one insurgent. While attempting to maneuver out of the line of fire, Sergeant Peralta was shot and fell mortally wounded. After the initial exchange of gunfire, the insurgents broke contact, throwing a fragmentation grenade as they fled the building. The grenade came to rest near Sergeant Peralta’s head. Without hesitation and with complete disregard for his own personal safety, Sergeant Peralta reached out and pulled the grenade to his body, absorbing the brunt of the blast and shielding fellow Marines only feet away. 
  • Sergeant Peralta succumbed to his wounds. By his undaunted courage, intrepid fighting spirit, and unwavering devotion to duty, Sergeant Peralta reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and the United States Naval Service.

"NOT TONIGHT, DEAR. I'VE GOT AN EPSTEIN HEADACHE..."

"Pluto was also discovered in 1911. Pluto causes autism not Tylenol."

"So we have now moved from baby vaccinations to Tylenol."

TEXAS HYPOCRISY ON FREE SPEECH: KIRK LAUDED, STUDENTS PUNISHED

Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks to members of the news media, after attending an event where U.S. President Donald Trump signed signed executive order banning transgender girls and women from participating in women's sports, at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 5, 2025. REUTERS/Leah Millis

By Eleanort Klibanoff
The Texas Tribune

Last week, as Texas State students gathered to mourn the assassination of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk, another student began taunting them.

“Hi, my name is Charlie Kirk,” he announced, before collapsing to the ground, pretending to be shot. As he walked away, someone on video can be heard saying, “You’re going to get expelled, dude.”

Gov. Greg Abbott agreed, telling the university on social media to “expel this student immediately. Mocking assassination must have consequences.” Texas State President Kelly Damphouse later confirmed that the student was no longer enrolled, explaining in a statement that the university “will not tolerate behavior that mocks, trivializes, or promotes violence.”

Eugene Volokh, a First Amendment expert at UCLA and Stanford, read those statements skeptically.

“Mocking assassination is protected by the First Amendment,” he said. “Speech that mocks, trivializes or promotes violence is protected by the First Amendment, generally speaking.”

Even as Texas’ Republican leaders have vowed to continue Kirk’s fight for free speech on college campuses, many have also demanded consequences for people who have reacted to his death by expressing sentiments they disagree with. Their actions may run afoul of the First Amendment, although the specific facts would have to be litigated in court, legal experts say.

This comes amid a broader sea change in Texas Republicans’ approach to free speech and academic freedom. This year, lawmakers walked back some free speech protections enshrined in state law in 2019; gave governor-appointed university regents greater oversight of curriculum; and recently helped oust a professor for what she taught in the classroom.

This pendulum swing, especially apparent in the response to Kirk’s death, reflects a larger hypocrisy in free speech enforcement, said Adam Steinbaugh, senior attorney with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.

“Free speech is as American as apple pie. Everyone says that they love it, but it gets a lot harder for people when it is speech that they find offensive,” Steinbaugh said. “At that point, they start looking for the exits, for any way that they can stretch one of the exceptions of the First Amendment to reach the speech that they don't like.”
The pendulum swing

In 2017, after a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, turned violent, a Texas man put out a press release: “TODAY CHARLOTTESVILLE TOMORROW TEXAS A&M.” Alt-right speaker Richard Spencer signed on to speak at the rally in College Station, before the university cancelled it, citing safety concerns.

This decision came at a time when universities, in Texas and nationally, were facing significant blowback for restricting or cancelling appearances by conservative speakers, fueling a narrative that right-leaning voices were being unfairly silenced.

This outrage made its way to the Texas Legislature, which in 2019 passed a bill requiring that all outdoor spaces on university campuses be designated as open forums for public speech, and prohibiting universities from considering anticipated controversy when deciding whether to allow a speaker on campus.

“Our college students, our future leaders, they should be exposed to all ideas, I don’t care how liberal they are or how conservative they are,” state Sen. Joan Huffman, the Houston Republican who authored the bill, said at a hearing. “Sometimes we feel offended by what someone else says, and that’s just too bad in my book.”

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

SUPPORT OUR ELEMENTARY AND HIGH SCHOOL CONJUNTO GROUPS

To help OUR youngsters, call Carlo Hernandez at 956-592-4475

U.S. REP. VICENTE GONZALEZ ON REMOVAL OF SGT. FREDDY GONZALEZ...

STARVE THEM, KILL THEM, DENY THEM REST AND SHELTER...

"Let the little children come to Me" is a quote from Jesus recorded in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke (Matthew 19:14, Mark 10:14, and Luke 18:16). 

In these passages, Jesus rebukes his disciples for trying to prevent people from bringing their children to him, stating that the Kingdom of Heaven belongs to such as these. The event highlights the importance of children and sets a precedent for receiving the kingdom with humility and trust, similar to a child's qualities.

Monday, September 22, 2025

FOR DEAD INMATE'S FAMILY, CLOSURE AFTER 2 YEARS FROM OVERDOSE DEATH

By Juan Montoya
Various Sources

It took almost two years, but the family of a 21-year-old who died of a fentanyl over dose while she was an inmate at the Cameron County Rucker-Carrizalez Detention Center in October 2023 finally got closure.

A jury found 45-year-old Brandy Ann Brown Daniels guilty of introducing the drug into the jail and providing it to Jacqueline Barocio, a single mother held on drug charges.

Brown was sentenced to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to providing fentanyl to the female inmate causing her death.

According to an indictment Brown delivered fentanyl to Barocio on October 21, 2023. As previously reported, Barocio was found dead in her cell the same day she received the narcotics.

Daniels will receive 705 days of jail credit, according to court records.

After toxicology results showed that the female inmate who was found dead in her Cameron County jail cell in October died of an overdose of fentanyl, an investigation conducted by the Texas Rangers is said to have revealed that she had acquired what she believed methamphetamine from Brown.

Instead, the substance turned out to be a mixture of meth laced with deadly fentanyl, according to sources in the department. The admission she had died from the illegal drug was made in a press release by then-Cameron County Sheriff Eric Garza's office at the time. The release issued by the Sheriff’s Office confirmed that she “had fentanyl in her system at the time of death.”

Barocio was in custody at the Carrizales-Rucker Detention Center on charges of aggravated assault and possession of drugs when she was found dead on Oct. 21. A court had assented to have her attend  substance treatment and she was waiting for an opening in the program facility.

The subsequent Texas Ranger investigation found that the deadly mixture was missed during a search on the day of her incarceration. She was charged with murder on March 12, according to booking documents.

"Apparently, jailers discovered some drugs under her bra when she was jailed , but did not conduct a vaginal search and that's what authorities suspect killed the other inmate," said a source with the sheriff's department. 

In December, Cameron County Assistant District Attorney Edward Sandoval said a new state law provides for a murder charge.

“A new law went into effect that was passed in the last legislative session that made it murder to intentionally give someone fentanyl — and it results in their death. If there's a crime that's occurred, we're going to make sure that we seek justice for the people that are hurt and the laws that are broken."

Brown, who was originally charged with manufacture and delivery of a controlled substance and unlawful possession of a firearm after her arrest October 10, was charged with illegally introducing a prohibited substance/item into a correctional facility on October 30 after the substance was analyzed.

According to Barocio's family, she had been held at the jail and had complained of a painful toothache for about two months before her death was reported by a jailer when she was found unresponsive in her cell. A jail mate said she complained of a painful toothache the night before she died and said was given medication by a jail nurse.

“We thought she would be safe there, but… she's dead now,” Jacqueline’s mother – Veronica Aguilera  – said at the time her death was reported..

Jacqueline’s sister and Aguilera said they got a call from the sheriff’s office informing them of her death. When they asked what happened, they said they were told “she had passed away this morning, and he had no information to give us."

Esmeralda Barocio says she spoke with Jacqueline the night before, and she had been in pain from her wisdom tooth. Aguilera said Jacqueline had been dealing with this problem for two months, but the guards wouldn’t get her medical attention.

A nurse at the infirmary reportedly gave her antibiotics on the night before she was found unresponsive in her cell.

A news release from the Cameron County Sheriff’s Office said toxicology reports revealed Barocio “had fentanyl in her system at the time of death.”

Barocio’s family previously told Channel 5 News she was in jail on charges of aggravated assault and possession of drugs. Brown was said to have been romantically involved with a suspected  drug dealer in Harlingen responsible for the recent overdoses outbreak there, according to law enforcement sources.

Another woman involved in passing the drug from Brown to Barocio's cell denied that she had any knowledge that the substance contained fentanyl. It's unknown whether any charges will be filed against that inmate. She was not identified at the time.

Cameron County District Attorney Luis V. Saenz, as October 2022 – after a spate of fentanyl-related deaths because of overdoses in the county – addressed the issue in a press conference.

"Having fentanyl is a first-degree felony. If you are delivering fentanyl-laced drugs and those drugs lead to the death of a user, then that person can be charged with first-degree murder," he said then.

Barocio left behind two children who were one and six at the time of her death 

U.S. PROSECUTOR RESIGNS WHEN TRUMP COMPLAINS HE DIDN'T PROSECUTE HIS "ENEMIES": TRUMP CLAIMS HE FIRED HIM

By Adam Downer
The Daily Beast

Donald Trump took to Truth Social in the middle of the night to claim that he fired Erik Siebert, his hand-picked attorney for the Eastern District of Virgina, even though Siebert had resigned hours prior.

“He didn’t quit, I fired him!,” wrote Trump at 12:14 a.m.

Siebert reportedly faced political pressure to bring mortgage fraud charges against New York Attorney General Letitia James, a longtime target of Trump who had successfully sued the president for fraud.

In April, Bill Pulte, the administration’s director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, encouraged Trump to go after James. The administration directed Siebert to investigate whether James listed her Virginia home as her primary residence to get more favorable loan terms.

After months of investigation, investigators found that James only listed the home as a primary residence on a limited power of attorney form that allowed her niece and co-purchaser to sign documents on her behalf. Unable to make a prosecutable case against James, Siebert declined to press charges. On Wednesday, ABC News reported that Trump was expected to fire him. 

At 7:53 p.m., four and a half hours before Trump’s Truth Social rant, ABC reported that Siebert had tendered his resignation to staff via email. His email made no mention of the Letitia James investigation.

Two hours before that, Trump told reporters in an Oval Office photo op that he was “not following” the case very closely, but was suspicious of Siebert because he had been approved by Virginia’s Dem. Senators Tim Kaine and Mark Warner.

“They voted for this guy, and I have other people, judges, and U.S. Attorneys from other states who have the same situation, and they can’t get approved,” he told ABC’s Jonathan Karl.

“So when I learned that they voted [for Siebert], I said, I don’t really want him.”

Trump nominated Siebert for the position in May.

University of Richmond Law Professor Carl Tobias was surprised by Trump’s displeasure with Siebert. On Friday, Tobias told Richmond.com that Siebert has otherwise been effectively carrying out Trump’s agenda in other areas, pointing to the district’s high number of ICE arrests.

“He’s certainly carrying out something that the president wants, and that (Gov. Glenn) Youngkin has strongly supported,” said Tobias. “It’s not as if he’s a renegade.”

Sunday, September 21, 2025

THE WEEK IN REVIEW: DEAD CANARIES WARN OF POISONOUS TIMES

TOO MANY CANARIES IN THIS CAVE...

IF YOU CAN'T STAND THE HEAT...
                              Obama and Biden were class acts… unlike the orange

These two presidents were adults with integrity who understood being in their positions would not only bring praises but criticism. Anyone in the public eye especially politics will have supporters and critics. Sometimes political satire can work in constructive ways. It's a non violent outlet for those who disagree.

rita