Friday, June 19, 2026

RESIST TRUMP ERASING THE PEOPLE'S HISTORY, HAPPY JUNETEENTH!

  By Juan Montoya

Freedom took a little longer to arrive in Texas.

Even though President Abraham Lincoln issued his Emancipation Proclamation on January 1863, slavery wasn't outlawed in Texas until June 18, 1865 when Union General Gordon Granger arrived at Galveston Island with 2,000 federal troops to occupy  the state on behalf of the federal government.

By 1865, there were an estimated 250,000 slaves in Texas.
Image result for General Gordon Granger AND JUNETEENTH
On June 19, standing on the balcony of Galveston's Ashton Villa, Granger read aloud the contents of "General Order No. 3", announcing the total emancipation of of slaves:


"The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere."



There has been a debate about how many slaves lived in South Texas. Because of the proximity to the Rio Grande (and freedom in Mexico where the peculiar institution was prohibited), few slaves were kept along the border.

In fact, the 1860 Census indicates that seven slaves were registered in Cameron County and one inHidalgo. The proximity to the Rio Grande - and freedom - prevented slavery from flourishing here as in other parts of the confederacy. 

However, it's instructive to see that Brownsville "founder" Charles Stillman listed a slave as his property. Richard King - of King Ranch fame - owned two.( Click on graphic at right to enlarge.)

And of course, where there is human bondage there will always be buzzards trying to make a dollar. William Neale was one. He was the first mayor of Brownsville and also one of the most recognized runaway slave hunters in South Texas. Now the city is honoring his memory by allotting $490,000 to restore his house, which, by the way, is par for the course. The slave owner's (Stillman) Laurel Ranch restored  whore house will be in the same park in memory of that pioneer slaver.

What there was, however, was an active Underground Railroad helping slaves to escape to Mexico by crossing the Rio Grande.

Researchers have found that along the Rio Grande in Hidalgo County lay the Jackson Ranch once owned by Nathaniel Jackson, a loyal Unionist during the Civil War. 

They write that in the 1850’s, Jackson left Alabama with his African-American wife Matilda Hicks, his son Eli, and other adult children. They hoped to escape the intolerance of inter-racial marriage they had known in the South. Accompanying the Jacksons were eleven African-American freedmen. 

In 1857, Jackson founded his ranch on a former Spanish grant. His property is said to have become a refuge for runaway slaves from Texas and the Deep South. Today, many people know about the Underground Railroad that shepherded enslaved people to freedom in the northern states and Canada, but few know about the route to freedom in Mexico. 

The Jackson Ranch lay near the Military Highway between Fort Ringgold and Fort Brown, and would have been visited by Confederate and Union troops as they fought for control of the Lower Valley in 1863 and 1864. Jackson died in 1865, the same year that his son Eli established the family cemetery where members of the clan now rest. Nathaniel Jackson’s grave is unmarked.

Several African-American and bi-racially mixed families settled in South Texas including the Webber family.

John F. Webber was an Anglo who lived south of Austin, Texas. Originally from Vermont,  Webber was born around 1786. In the War of 1812 he served as a private in Capt. S. Dickinson's company, Thirty-first United States Infantry, from May 23, 1813, to May 31, 1814, during which time he fought in the battle of Shadage Woods.

He was in Austin's colony as early as 1826 and received a headright on June 22, 1832. Webber purchased a slave, Silvia Hector, and her son.

They fell in love and married, causing an uproar in their community. After their son was barred from school, and the tutor Webber had hired to teach the boy had been threatened, the Webber family moved near Donna, Texas. 

In 1853 Webber purchased nearly 9,000 acres of land near Donna and established the Webber Ranch with his wife and 11 children.

Weber's story has been documented by his numerous progeny and speak of a man who remained loyal to his black wife and children who in turn intermarried with local Mexican-Americans. The Webber clan is numerous and a recent family reunion included descendants from throughout the country. Below, one of her descendants sent us this bill of sale where Sally Hector was sold before she married Webber.

In her excellent paper on the underground railroad, Georgia Redonet, a teacher at Long Middle School, in Houston, states that "When Stephen F. Austin brought American settlers to Mexico in 1822, Mexican law stated that there could be – neither sale nor purchase of slaves who are brought to the empire; their children born in the empire shall be free at the age of 14."

Mexico had outlawed slavery but made this concession for Texas in its desire to populate the northern province. It put the new immigrants on notice that slavery was to be a temporary institution. In regards to the American slaveholders immigrating to Mexican Texas, Article 21 of the Law of October 14th, 1823 stated – 'foreigners who bring slaves with them, shall obey the laws established upon the matter, or which shall hereafter be established.'"

As clear as the prohibition was in Mexican law, the government was persuaded to give the newly-arrived settlers exemptions in order to keep them as a buffer between raiding Comanches and Apache Indians and the French encroaching from the east.

"From 1830 to 1860 there was a continual movement of runaway slaves into Mexico and although not as publicized, it was just as common as the movement of runaways into free northern territory and Canada. While there are no reliable estimates as to the number of fugitive slaves escaping to Mexico during this time period, it is safe to say – that the movement was considerable enough to have caused great irritation and financial hardships on Texas slave-owners...

"During the Texas Revolution, Jose Maria Tornel, Mexican Secretary of War, – denounced slavery and called attention to the astonishment of the civilized world at the support given to the maintenance of the institution by the United States. By contrast, he said, – Mexico considered all men brothers, created by our common father.

"Mexico refused to return any fugitive slaves after the revolt and based part of its refusal to recognize Texas independence on the slavery question. Knowledge of the Mexican attitude towards slavery probably encouraged Negroes to escape.

"In early 1846 Texas was formally admitted to the Union as a slave state. According to the first official Texas state census in 1847, the state‘s population counted 38,753 slaves and 102,961 whites. The plantations along the lower Colorado and Brazos rivers and those scattered throughout East Texas held the largest concentrations of enslaved persons. Runaway slaves had been a continual problem throughout the duration of the Republic and the new state sought to write laws aimed at curbing the exodus.

"In 1848 laws were passed by the state legislature aimed at punishing those who might help escaping slaves. Anyone helping slaves plan a rebellion would be punished with death. Ship captains assisting runaways would receive from two to ten years in the penitentiary. Anyone who would steal or entice away a slave from his or her owner would receive three to fifteen years of hard labor. Free persons of color who aided a slave in escaping would receive from three to five years in the penitentiary."

To read the rest of the Redonet paper on the South Texas Underground Railroad, click on link:
http://www.uh.edu/honors/Programs-Minors/honors-and-the-schools/houston-teachers-institute/curriculum-units/pdfs/2003/african-american-slavery/redonet-03-slavery.pdf

DO YOU STILL NEED HIM, DO YOU STILL HEAR HIM, WHEN HE'S 84?


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Happy 84th to Sir Paul McCartney — born June 18, 1942 in Liverpool, England!  Will you still need him, will you still feed him — when he's 84? Apparently, yes. The whole world still does. 

Did you know his first instrument wasn't even the guitar. His dad gave him a trumpet for his 14th birthday. Paul traded it in almost immediately — because you can't sing while playing trumpet, and singing was the whole point. 

He's left-handed, which meant he had to literally flip a right-handed guitar upside down and restring it just to play it properly. He figured it out after seeing a poster of Slim Whitman playing lefty. Imagine if he never saw that poster. 

"Yesterday" came to him in a DREAM — he woke up with the entire melody in his head and rushed to a piano before he could forget it. For weeks afterward he kept asking people if they recognized the tune, convinced he must have subconsciously stolen it from somewhere. He hadn't. It just came from him. 

And in 2005 he became the first musician ever to broadcast live music into outer space — performing for astronauts on the International Space Station during a concert in California. Paul McCartney has literally played for the cosmos. 

Eighty-four years old and he's STILL touring, STILL writing, STILL filling stadiums. Living legend doesn't even begin to cover it.

WORLD CUP WATCH: MEXICO WINS, USA PLAYS TODAY


AND AT 2 P.M. TODAY....USA! USA!

REFLECTIONS: I'M CHANGING, ARRANGING, I'M CHANGING, OH EVERYTHING AROUND ME...


The pool is the fifth tallest building in the world, that’s just ivy climbing the walls...

AND $14 MILLION DOWN THE REFLECTING POOL DRAIN, PAINT PEELING OFF

Thursday, June 18, 2026

AND JUST LIKE THAT THE UNJUSTIFIED RESACA FEE IS GONE...


WE WON! WE WON! WE WON ON THE FIRST DAY, I TELL YOU...


RICE AND BEANS, RICE AND BEANS, THE WORLD CUP REVOLVES AROUND RICE AND BEANS...

*8 p.m. Central Time

LITTLE MARCO GETS BOMBED IN TRUM'PS ALGAE-RIDDEN REFLECTING POOL

 

BREAKING: Donald Trump sends Secretary of State Marco Rubio out to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool to prove that the water is "perfectly safe and beautiful and clean. Unlike what the fake news and Dumocrats are saying."

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

WILL BROWNSVILLE APPLY FOR ANNEXATION BY STARBASE?

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Opinion

With billions of dollars in private investment flowing into the Brownsville region — and with the world' only trillionaire Elon Musk continuing to expand his footprint across the Valley — it is becoming increasingly clear why he chose to establish his own city rather than be annexed into the City of Brownsville.

Most CEOs seek decisive leadership from governing bodies and executive teams. Yet, until  today, the City Commission’s months-long inability to make a critical decision — selecting a City Manager — was on full display. This lack of direction sends a troubling signal, not only to residents but also to investors and partners watching closely.

Over the past several years, Brownsville has endured leadership marked more by personality than performance — where public relations campaigns, polished slogans, and TED Talk-style presentations took center stage, while the fundamental responsibility of delivering reliable public services to neighborhoods was too often sidelined.

For example, with two candidates from Brownsville – Asst. City Managers Doro Garcia and Felix Sauceda available – and possessing a wealth of knowledge of the city's culture, innerworkings, and its infrastructure, they chose another assistant city manager handpicked by former manager Helen Ramirez, Allan Gard, from upstate. 

 Remember that Ramirez brought Gard from Anna, Texas, a metropolis of  29,000 people while Brownsville's population is climbing toward 200,000 and is rapidly becoming an industrial trade center along an international border. And he had no experience as city manager. He was that city's finance director.

What message does this send to graduates of institutions like UTRGV, UTB, or TSC? The implication appears to be that local talent — individuals with deep roots, experience, and commitment to the community — are somehow not qualified to lead at the highest levels.

The irony is striking. The City Commission approved the expenditure of millions of dollars on leadership initiatives such as Total Alignment and One City, promoting the idea that every employee can be a leader. Yet when the opportunity arises to elevate a seasoned local professional to the City Manager role, that philosophy seems to fall short.

Meanwhile, within the organization are individuals with decades of municipal experience — professionals who understand the community, its infrastructure, and its needs. Still, a group of relatively inexperienced elected officials appears confident in overriding that institutional knowledge.

At some point, the question must be asked: if decisive leadership cannot be found within City Hall, where will it come from?

Or perhaps, in a moment of irony, Brownsville should consider asking whether Starbase might be willing to annex a city still searching for direction.

AMERICANS CHAFE UNDER PENTAGON PROPAGANDA MASKERADING AS PROMOTION


By Rev. Dr. Chuck Currie
Dear Regal Theaters: 
As a minister in the United Church of Christ, I am writing to Regal Theatres to demand that you immediately stop showing the war.gov promotional spot that appears before movies.

The video is a propaganda video. Nothing more, nothing less.

 While at Portland’s Regal Lloyd Center last night to watch Disclosure Day, our family was surprised that before the movie, we were forced to watch an advertisement touting the leadership of Donald Trump, Pete Hegseth, and the so-called Department of War.

It was like we were at a movie theater in Russia or North Korea. Democracies do not do this. The audience loudly booed.

We routinely see videos at Regal promoting careers in the military. This was not that.

This was an advertisement promoting the political views of Donald Trump. It was not promoting our military. It was not promoting America’s greatest strength: our diversity. This was a MAGA campaign commercial highlighting a fake cabinet agency, the Department of War, which is actually called the Defense Department, and the MAGA America First platform.

Regal’s decision to show this video can only be construed as an endorsement of Donald Trump, his failed war in Iran, and the white Christian nationalism advocated by Secretary Hegseth.

Again, I must demand that Regal stop showing this video immediately. Blessed are the peacemakers.

In Peace

THE BERNAL-RAMIREZ LEGACY CONTINUES AT CITY MANAGER'S SLOT

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Various Sources

The man who was hand picked by former City of Brownsville Manager Helen Ramirez – herself selected by her predecessor Noel Bernal – has been chosen for the position by the members of the city commission.

Alan Guard, named interim city manager last December 2025, was chosen by Mayor John Cowen and the commissioners during the regularly scheduled city commission meeting on Tuesday.

“Alan is the ideal candidate to serve as Brownsville’s City Manager because of the leadership he has demonstrated during his service as Interim City Manager,” said Cowen. 

“He understands where the City is today, where we are headed, and what needs to be done. We must remain focused on responsible growth, excellent public service, and meeting the needs of our residents, and he understands those priorities firsthand.”

Guard will enter into contract negotiations with Cowen following his selection. It is assumed that he will earn between $250,000 to $300,000 as did Ramirez and Bernal. Remember that Ramirez brought Gard from Ana, Texas, a metropolis of  29,000 people while Brownsville's population is climbing toward 200,000 and is becoming an industrial trade center along an international border. Ans he has no experience as city manager. He was the finance director.

“I am honored and ready to continue serving the people of Brownsville in this enhanced role,” said  Guard. “Brownsville is a City with tremendous momentum, and I look forward to working alongside the Mayor, City Commission, staff, and community to continue advancing the priorities that matter most to our residents.”

On May 26, the city approved a new organizational (consolation prizes) structure that creates two Co-Deputy City Manager positions. Current Assistant City Manager and Chief of Police Felix Sauceda, Jr. and Assistant City Manager Doroteo Garcia, Jr. will assume these roles, providing them with expanded responsibilities overseeing all City departments, opportunities for cross-training, and provides them the opportunity to pursue their ICMA-CM designation and Certified Government Finance Officer credentials.

The city statement hinted that both Brownsville natives' lack of that credential may have played a role in them not being selected. This continues the city's hiring of non-Brownsville native administrators at the city manager's position.

Current Chief of Staff Marina Zolezzi will serve as Interim Assistant City Manager, while the city will begin the process of hiring a new Chief of Police following Sauceda’s transition into his new role.

AND WITH TRUMP, JIMMY KIMMEL ONLY LOST HIS JOB...

By Marc Bennetts
The (London) Times
A Russian artist known for his grotesque caricatures of President Putin and the Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov has been shot dead in Poland.

Robert Kuzovkov, who used the pseudonym Semyon Skrepetsky, was shot five times in the head, chest and back in Biala Podlaska, a city close to Poland’s border with Belarus, officials said.

Last Friday Kuzovkov protested outside the Russian embassy in Berlin with a satirical painting of Putin and Joseph Stalin. It depicted a tiny Putin sitting on Stalin’s lap. He also stuffed a Russian flag into a bin during the protest, which was staged on the Russia Day national holiday.

The execution-style killing took place in a car park 600 metres from the consulate of Belarus, a key Russian ally, where a gunman approached Kuzovkov and fired two shots.
“When the victim fell to the ground, the perpetrator approached, fired three more shots and then quickly fled,” Marcin Kozak, a spokesman for the local district prosecutor’s office, said.

Two Belarusian citizens have been detained in connection with the killing. A Geco 9mm Luger bullet and shell casings were discovered at the scene.
 
On Saturday Kuzovkov posted a painting on Telegram showing Kadyrov and his teenage son, Adam,  as pigs. His work included sexually explicit images of Kadyrov that suggested the Chechen leader was gay. He also mocked Apti Alaudinov, the commander of Chechnya’s Akhmat special forces unit.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

COUNTY COMMISSION MAJORITY GRANTS SARONIC $100 MILLION TAX ABATEMENT: GARZA, RUIZ, CHICKENED OUT TO DISTANCE THEMSELVES FROM MAKING THE PUBLIC DECISION


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

With two Cameron County commissioners absent, the majority (3) voted to grant Saronic Technologies a 19-year tax abatement that could save the company up to $100 million in waived property taxes. 

The proposal was deeply controversial, sparking fierce debate. 

Despite that, Precinct 1 Brownsville commissioners Sofia Benavides and Joey Lopez Pct. 2 with Cameron County Judge Edie TreviƱo  – a bare majority – voted to pass the abatement and try to entice Saronic to  bring the plant and create 10,000 permanent jobs within the first 10 years of operation and bring an estimated $3.2 billion in capital improvement cost for the project.

Absent from the meeting were San Benito Pct. 3 commissioner David Garza and Pct. 4 Harlingen Gus Ruiz, a fact not lost on TreviƱo, who pointedly told myRGV.com that the decision had ben tabled several times before to give all commissioners an opportunity to voice their opposition if they so desired.

Instead, they stayed away to distance themselves from the public decision.

Project Details
Proposed Break: 95 percent waiver on property taxes.
Project Value: Estimated at $2.7 billion in tax property value over four phases.
Term: 19 years, expiring in 2048.
Promises: Up to 10,000 direct jobs over time, with nearly 2,000 created in the first phase. The county was considering a tax break for tha technology company that wants to build military and commercial ships at the Port of Brownsville.

Saronic Technologies is looking at the port as a possible site for the shipyard. The company is also considering a location in Virginia.

The county was scheduled to hold a public meeting in late May to discuss the proposal but rescheduled it for June 2. But it was until today that the item was placed on the agenda.

BACK IN THE DAY WHEN STUDENT ACTIVISM MEANT SOMETHING


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

We dug up this newsletter of the Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Atzlan (MEChA) published in March 1982 by the organization's chapter at the University of Wisconsin, Madison after we received an email from a former school mate living in El Paso.

That student was Wisconsin Law School graduate Mario Caballero, who now practices law in his hometown (He Badgers witnesses). He is pictured addressing the Wisconsin Council on Migrant Labor during their March 20, 1982 meeting to consider endorsing the proposal to grant in-state tuition to former migrants to that state. The majority of migrants in the state originated in Texas and across the Southwest. In those days La Raza was united.

Mario represented MEChA during the Council's meeting and was accompanied by several other members. Partly as a result of their testimony in Madison – where the university and the state capitol are located – the proposal, Assembly Bill 1051, which was then under consideration by the Assembly's Education Committee, was amended and passed.  

Today, the Universities of Wisconsin provide an exception that allows qualifying migrant workers, or their spouses and children, to pay in-state tuition. The University of Michigan, across Lake Michigan,  already provided the exception and the student reps took copies of the legislation to the Wisconsin Assembly.

The specific qualifying criteria for the nonresident tuition exemption include:
Worker Requirement: The prospective student or their parent/guardian must be a migrant worker who has been employed in agricultural labor in Wisconsin.
Frequency: The work must be performed on an annual basis in Wisconsin.
Dependents: Spouses and children of the qualified migrant worker are also eligible for the in-state tuition rate. 

To apply the tuition exception, prospective applicants need to complete a residency application and provide documentation verifying employment history. 

After receiving the email from our former classmate, we dug up a yellowing copy of El Portavoz, the MEChA student newsletter published monthly in Madison, and set him a copy of the front page. Since I (Juan Montoya) was a graduate journalism student, I was the coordinator for its publication. Those were heady days for student activism. Thanks for the memories, Mario. Saludos!. 

CITY SOURCES: THIS TIME WILL BE THE CHARM FOR CITY MANAGER CHOICE. WILL IT BE DORO?


EXECUTIVE SESSION

1) Closed session pursuant to Tex. Gov't. Code Sections 551.071 (Consultation with Attorney) and
551.074 (Personnel Matters) to deliberate the appointment, employment, or duties of a public
officer or employee, pertaining to the city manager. (City Commission/ Office of the City Attorney/
OD&HR Department)
Special Work Session and Regular Meeting, on June 16, 2026, at
4:00 PM, in the Commission Chambers.

The decision had been delayed due to indecision of commission and later the absence of the mayor and  two commissioners and was postponed. Even after a marathon executive session during the last meeting, no cigar. The eventual choice will permanently replace the former city manager Helen Ramirez, who left at the end of 2025.

Alan Gard, one of the candidates, is currently Interim City Manager. Doro Garcia, Asst. City Manager, an engineer, is also in the running. 

No decision has been made since April, when the item first appeared in the executive session section of the city agenda. However, inside sources indicate that the decision will be made at tonight's meeting.

The five candidates narrowed down from an original pool were Interim City Manager Alan Gard, Brownsville Police Chief/Asst. City Manager Felix Sauceda, Assistant City Manager Doroteo Garcia,  Steve Williams, City Manager of Schertz, Texas, Majed Al Ghafy, City Manager, DeSoto, Texas, and Edwina "Edy" Benites-LM, Interim Director of Economic Development, Jefferson County, West Virginia.

EIGHT CREW MEMBERS DEAD IN B-52 CRASH AT AIR FORCE BASE

 

Various Sources

The aircraft burst into flames on Monday morning shortly after takeoff from Edwards Air Force Base in California northeast of Los Angeles, on Monday morning, officials said. The cause is still under investigation.

It is the deadliest crash involving a B-52 bomber since 1982. In that crash, nine crew members died in test training at the Mather Air Force Base near Sacramento, The Associated Press reported at the time.

The B-52 Stratofortress in Monday’s crash was on a routine test mission that took off at 11:20 a.m. local time at the remote air base, officials said. It is now considered a recovery operation.

“It was tragic and unsurvivable,” Colonel James Hayes said at a news conference.

Teams are working to notify families about the deaths over the next several hours, Chief Master Sgt. Joshua T. Skarloken said. The crew was a mix of military officials, government civilians and government contractors, Skarloken said.

Boeing, the manufacturer of the plane, said two of its employees were on Monday’s flight. “We are in contact with their families and are offering support,” Boeing said in a statement.

Monday, June 15, 2026

SLOWLY, BUT SURELY, WORKMEN RESTORE SAN FERNANDO BUILDINGS WITH CIRCA 1880 BRICKS

INSCRIPTION ON MARKER:
Built beginning in 1877 for Victoriano Fernandez, the Border Brick style structures were built in stages, possibly accounting for the varying heights. The last of the three buildings was completed in 1886. They were designed as a combination commercial space/private residence, and originally housed Fernandez’s furniture store. Since then, the buildings have been occupied by the San Fernando Hotel, saloons and a variety of commercial establishments.

TRUMP-IRAN ANNOUNCE PRELIMINARY "DEAL" OVER CEASE FIRE


Key developments

Diplomatic breakthrough: The US and Iran say they have reached an agreement that will take effect on Friday. President Donald Trump said the US is lifting its naval blockade on Iranian ports, and that the Strait of Hormuz will reopen  after the agreement is signed. The full text has not yet been released.

What comes next: The US and Iran have offered conflicting accounts of the next steps after a signing ceremony on Friday. Iran’s deputy foreign minister said negotiations will begin when the U.S. releases billions in frozen funds, but an American official has rejected the claim.

Lebanon conflict: Israel has yet to comment on the agreement. Israeli forces launched aistrikes in Beirut earlier Sunday before news of the agreement. Trump criticized Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, calling him "a very difficult guy..."

Oil prices down: Brent crude and U.S. crude prices fell on Sunday after the agreement was announced.

RRUN-RRUN SURGES PAST 18 MILLION PAGEVIEWS: READ ALL ABOUT IT!


MORALS-CHALLENGED CRUZ, PAXTON, TAKE SHOTS AT TALARICO


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Ted Cruz said James Talarico isn't "masculine," and Talarico answered with a list of what real men never do. 

The smear came Monday on Fox News, where Cruz declared that if you were making a list of 1,000 adjectives to describe the Texas Democrat, "masculine" would not be one of them, then added that a stiff breeze would blow him over like a feather.

The attack was not a one-off. Since Talarico won the Democratic nomination and pulled ahead of Ken Paxton in the polls, the Republican machine has gone all in on manhood.

Paxton called him "too low-T for Texas." White House aide Stephen Miller falsely claimed Democrats had nominated "their first transgender senate candidate," a lie about a man who is neither transgender nor, for the record, the vegan they also keep insisting he is.

None of it touches his actual record. That is the point.

On MS NOW with Jen Psaki on Thursday, Talarico took the question head on, and he answered it with a lawn mower.

He told the story of Mark Talarico, the adoptive father who gave him his last name.
Every Saturday morning, rain or shine, whether he wanted to or not, his dad mowed the family's lawn. Then, without anyone asking, he walked next door and mowed the lawn of their neighbor, an elderly widow.

He never talked about it. He just did it.
That, Talarico said, is what a man does.

A man takes responsibility. A man upholds his commitments to his family and his neighbors. A man does what's right even when no one is watching.

Then came the other half. "They don't lie and cheat their way through life. They don't sell their soul to the highest bidder. They don't steal from other people in order to enrich themselves."

Real men serve others, he said. Weak men serve themselves. And he closed the door on his way out: he doesn't think Ken Paxton or Ted Cruz are in a position to tell anybody what a real man is.

The list reads differently considering who it was aimed at.

Cruz spent 2016 watching Donald Trump publicly mock his wife's appearance, then endorsed him and became one of his most loyal soldiers.

When a deadly winter storm froze Texas in 2021, Cruz boarded a flight to Cancun.

Paxton was impeached on bribery and corruption charges by his own Republican colleagues in the Texas House, and his wife filed for divorce last year citing adultery.

Mark Talarico never talked about the widow's lawn. He just mowed it. Some men do what's right when no one is watching.

Ted Cruz does Fox News.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

NO JOY IN SPURVILLE: SPURS FALL TO KNICKS 94-90 (4 GAMES TO 1)



Associated Press

San Antonio won 62 games to tie for the second-most victories in franchise history just two seasons after a second straight 22-win season.

There was much for the Spurs to celebrate this season, just not on Saturday night.

“Yeah, it’s a little early to go there,” San Antonio coach Mitch Johnson said.

The Spurs were seeking their sixth league championship and first since 2014 after missing the postseason for six straight seasons.

The lack of postseason success hurt San Antonio in the closing minutes of each loss as New York took advantage of every mistake to rally.

“The margin of error is very thin,” Spurs standout Victor Wembanyama said. “Our domination stats are absolute. We absolutely dominated for most of the series. But our errors, our mistakes, are punished so hard that we can’t have ups and downs like this.”

Along with Wembanyama, the Spurs have 21-year-old Stephon Castle and 20-year-old Dylan Harper to build around and now they have the anger and frustration of what might have been to add to it.

“I hope they take the same thing that we’ve taken from our success,” Johnson said. “I hope it leads to them be hungrier than they’ve ever been, and I hope it leads them to be more motivated than they’ve ever been, and hopefully that leads them to be more — yeah, just to continue to improve in every facet.”

FINAL VOTE: DE LEON WINS TSC PLACE 1 RUNOFF RACE

FINAL VOTE INCLUDING EARLY, MAIL-IN AND ELECTION DAY VOTING

TOTAL VOTE BREAKDOWN: MAIL-IN, EARLY VOTING AND ELECTION DAY 

THE DISMANTLING OF THE TRUMP PRESIDENCY BEGINS AT KENNEDY CENTER


Pete Kiehart for The New York Times
USA Today

Workers removed President Donald Trump's name from the Kennedy Center on June 13 after a federal judge ruled the renaming illegal, restoring the venue's original title honoring President John F. Kennedy.

After erecting scaffolding late on Friday, workers draped tarps over the temporary structure in the predawn hours and were seen removing letters around 3.10am in an operation that took about 30 minutes.

Key points:

U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper ruled on May 29, 2026 that adding Trump’s name to the Kennedy Center violated the 1964 law establishing the center to honor President John F. Kennedy.

The judge ordered the removal of Trump’s name from official materials and signage within 14 days, setting a deadline of June 12, 2026.

A construction crew began stripping the name from the building’s facade in the early hours of June 13, 2026 after appellate judges denied a stay request from the Justice Department.

The Kennedy Center’s board of trustees voted in December 2025 to rename the venue after Trump, citing his role in securing federal funding for the center’s transformation.

Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, filed the lawsuit that led to the judge’s order, challenging both the rebranding and a proposed two‑year closure for renovations.


RE-OPENING OF FREDDY FENDER MUSEUM IN SAN BENITO TODAY


Freddy Fender Museum Grand Re-OpeningJune 13, 2026
4 PM to 10 PM
Freddy Fender Museum
210 E. Heywood Street, San Benito, TX 78586

Events include the Freddy Fender tribute concert featuring @lostexmaniacs with special guest Rick TreviƱo, a $1,000 Freddy Fender look-alike contest, the Freddy Fender Memorial Ride and Bike Show, a songwriter showcase, museum exhibit pieces from Freddy’s life and career, and more.

Friday, June 12, 2026

SOMETIMES RIGHT AND WRONG IS A BLURRY CALICHE LINE

By Juan Montoya

A long time ago, when I was an administrative assistant with Cameron County Precinct 1, I remember dealing with the issue of undedicated roads.

Periodically, someone – usually someone driving by a road – would complain that the county crews were putting caliche on undedicated roads. Sometimes it was for politics. 

Other times, it was because the people needed a way out after rain storms gutted the existing road in their colonias. Usually, it never got to the level of state prosecution and the workers were disciplined and told not to do it again.

As the supervisor in the precinct, I was in the middle of demands by the resident that we at least send a grader to smooth out the dirt roads and the prohibition in the law that you didn't send crews, machinery, or materials to an undedicated road. Some wanted caliche, too, but they knew they couldn't demand it.

For the most part, I followed the law. But I must confess that sometimes I followed my moral compass and did what I though was right, and not necessarily legal. Let me explain.

Back before Sunny Skies, a colonia at the corner of Dockberry and Indiana roads in precinct 1 was legalized after a long and costly process by the county and the State of Texas, we could not enter the colonia. The residents shared one single spigot of water provided by the El Jardin Water District at the entrance to the colonia. The residents carried the water in buckets and barrels for their domestic use.

The Brownsville Independent School District administrators came to the county commissioners court asking that the county provide some caliche and machinery to spread it on the only dirt road that led into the colonia. The law, legal counsel said, prohibited us from doing that until the colonia was legalized and the road dedicated to the county road system. That meant that it would be years before we could service the residents even though they paid county taxes.

The BISD administrators said they wanted the caliche on the road in order for their buses to be able to pick up one Special Needs child who used a wheelchair and lived in a house at the very end of the cul-de-sac in the colonia and could not walk to the entrance of the colonia to be picked up by his bus. 

If their buses could not enter, the parents would have to negotiate though the mud and water puddles to bring him up to the entrance of the colonia at the edge of Indiana Road. Our hands were tied, we told them.

One day my road foreman( Joe Cuellar, el borrado) and I were driving along Dockberry and we happened to see the boy's parents pushing his wheelchair through the mud to bring him to the road to be picked up by the bus. Both were elderly and they labored through the grassy edge of the drive to push him along. They were exhausted and their clothes and shoes were muddy and the child's wheelchair and clothing were  splattered with muck. Right then and there we conspired to break the law.

It just so happened that the Villa Pancho Subdivision was about a mile south on Indiana and it had been scheduled for a caliche overlay. Villa Pancho was a long drive, about half a mile long. It took about 30 to 35 truckloads of caliche to cover it. I told our secretary (Rosie) to order an additional five truckloads for the job. 

During the course of the day when the trucks were arriving to deliver the caliche to Villa Pancho, as they passed by Sunny Skies, I told Cuellar to direct five of them to empty their loads of caliche in the Sunny Skies drive and to make sure that they got to the very end where the handicapped child lived.

If they were asked, the residents were to tell people that they had piggybacked on the county caliche contract and purchased the five caliche loads with their own money. 

They were to spread the caliche themselves because we could not have county machinery there. They happily agreed. The caliche lasted for five or six months until we had to redo Villa Pancho.

Years later, the Valley Morning Star had a story by reporter Raul Garcia Jr. where he quoted a 71-year-old resident of Freddie Gomez Road saying she was dearly appreciative that former Cameron County Judge Pete Sepulveda (and now county administrator) ordered the road crews of Precinct 4 to spread road millings on the undedicated road.

Garcia wrote:
Madelyn Fairbanks, who has lived on Freddie Gomez Road for many years, knows what the road used to be like. Fairbanks said she could stand in the potholes ankles deep. The water collected, and the mosquitoes bred in the potholes.

Last March, that all changed. More than 500 feet of the road was paved with mill to harden the dirt road, leaving a smooth surface for Fairbanks and her neighbors on which to drive."


Eventually, it led to his indictment and deferred adjudication. Today, he again is county administrator in charge of, among other things, the county's road system. And after years of laboring to straighten out the mess, the Sunny Skies colonia in Pct. 1 was accepted by the county and the road was dedicated and crews could enter the right-of-way to improve it. Eventually it was paved under commissioner Sofia Benavides.

Was Sepulveda wrong to help these elderly county taxpayers on Freddie Gomez Road?

What he did – and I, as well – clearly wasn't legal. I could have been easily indicted just as he was for what I did to help the parents and their handicapped child get to the school bus.

It wasn't legal. But up to today, I still feel that it was the right thing to do.

ADVISORS TO KING TRUMP: THE PEASANTS ARE REVOLTING. "YES, THEY ARE," HE SAID


Feminist News


Yes, he really said that.

For millions of Americans, the inflation numbers mean groceries are more expensive. Rent is harder to make. Credit card debt is harder to escape. Paychecks stretch less. Families who were already making impossible choices now have to make even more of them.

But Trump?
He LOVES the inflation.
That’s not a gaffe. And it’s not a joke.
None of this is funny.

It’s the sound of a billionaire president telling working people exactly how little their hardships matter to him.

Because while Americans are getting crushed by higher prices, Trump is busy staging spectacles for himself. Golf trips. Basketball games. UFC fights on the White House lawn. Ballroom plans. Reflecting pool upgrades. Military parades. Gold-plated monuments. His name slapped on anything he can get his hands on.

And it’s not just the vanity projects.
Trump’s chaos has consequences.

After he said he planned to hit Iran again “very hard,” oil prices spiked to their highest levels of the day. U.S. crude jumped 3.5% to more than $91 a barrel. Stocks fell to their lowest levels of the day, with the S&P 500 down 1% and the Nasdaq down 1.4%.
That is what instability costs.

In a 1992 debate, Bill Clinton famously told Americans, “I feel your pain.”
Trump’s message is closer to: I caused your pain; I’m profiting from your pain; and I don’t care.

Affordability is not a Democratic hoax. It’s not a media invention. And it’s not a talking point.
It’s the grocery receipt, the rent bill, and the prescription refill. It’s utilities and child care payments.

Trump knows Americans are hurting.

But for people like him, chaos is profitable.
For everyone else, it’s survival.

SALES TAX NUMBERS DON'T LIE: BROWNVILLE STILL LAGGING BEHIND MCALLEN

By Rudy Mireles
Valley Central

HARLINGEN, Texas — The Texas Comptroller’s Office on Wednesday released sales tax allocation numbers for the month of May.

The numbers show a snapshot of where consumer spending was the strongest across the Rio Grande Valley last month.

The allocations are based on sales taxes collected by businesses and may help indicate present and future economic trends.
May leadersAccording to the data, McAllen led sales in the Valley, getting more than $8.5 million back from the state for May. That represents a 12.93% increase compared to May of last year.

Rounding out the top five cities for May are Brownsville, Edinburg, Harlingen, and Pharr. However, three of the top five earners also appeared on the list of cities that earned less than the same time last year. McAllen and Pharr are the only two cities that saw growth in the same time period.
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