Monday, April 6, 2026
IMAGINE ALL THE PEOPLE, LIVING LIFE IN PEACE...
The US military budget is larger than the military spending of the next nine largest countries combined. Trump wants it to be even bigger — a record $1.5 trillion. Meanwhile, he's asking for massive cuts to social and domestic programs. The priorities are clear.
Sunday, April 5, 2026
CARVED FROM MARBLE, A STUDY IN MOTHERLY LOVE...AND GRIEF
Saturday, April 4, 2026
REAL SOLDIERS – UNLIKE HEGSETH – DON'T DIE, THEY'RE PUSHED AWAY
General Randy George getting pushed out by Pete Hegseth in the middle of a war is exactly what happens when politics are allowed to matter more than experience, stability, and the lives of the people actually fighting.
Randy George is a career infantryman who enlisted in 1982, fought his way into West Point, bled in combat, and spent decades leading soldiers from platoon level all the way up to the entire U.S. Army.
Doing that in peacetime would be reckless; doing it in wartime, rips out continuity, disrupts planning, and tells every officer down the chain that loyalty to Trump matters more than competence and candor.
THE FIGHT NEVER ENDS TO SAVE OUR RGV
Hi Folks who love the RGV,
Just when you think you can rest, there is more! And we do this to put our “gotita de agua” and together we can make a difference!
Take Action: Rio Grande LNG Expansion!
If you missed the recent Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) public scoping sessions in Port Isabel, there’s still time to make your voice heard and submit a comment!
A natural gas train isn’t a vehicle—it’s a major industrial processing unit. Adding one is like adding an entire new production line, with real impacts on the surrounding environment and community.
As part of the environmental review process, FERC evaluates how a project could impact the environment and considers public concerns before making a decision. This early input phase is called “scoping.”
Approving a 6th train before any of the first 5 trains are even built and operating is premature and risky.
Without real-world data on the impacts of the initial trains, there is no responsible way to assess the true effects on:
*Environmental quality
*Community safety
*Local economy
At a minimum, a new, comprehensive Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is needed to evaluate the cumulative impacts of all current and proposed developments in the region.
Urge FERC to deny this request until the public has full transparency on the impacts of the first five trains.
How to Submit a CommentSubmit your comment here:
Public Scoping Session for the Rio Grande Expansion Project (PF26-3-000)
Here is How to Submit a Comment
View documents and community comments:
Visit FERC eLibrary and enter docket PF26-3-000
America First - A proposed crude oil refinery
Expanded SpaceX operations nearby with the acquisition of 712 acres of wildlife refuge land
These large projects will stress the availability of natural resources such as water, energy supply, and ship channel access. At the same time, SpaceX has approval for 25 annual launches and landings, and has expanded its footprint tremendously in the area not far from the Port, including a recent request for 712 acres of USFWS Refuge land surrounding their testing site. A new EIS is required to reassess these cumulative impacts.
Public input plays a critical role in holding decision-makers accountable. Taking a few minutes to submit a comment can help ensure that community health, safety, and environmental protections are not overlooked.
And Thank you for all you do!
DONATE (Every little bit helps!)
www.savergv.org
contact@savergv.org
https://www.facebook.com/saveRGVfromLNG
Membership (Consider becoming a member!)https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfEWmMSqieFLUBdDnAF...
ASTRONAUTS MISS CONNECTING FLIGHT TO MOON, STAY IN ATLANTA
La Cebolla
Friday, April 3, 2026
HURTLING ONWARD THROUGH THE FOG ON TRUMP'S TRAIN WRECK
By Cemal Tunçdemir*
“What the American public always wants is a tragedy with a happy ending,” the American critic William Dean Howells, who was a central figure in Gilded Age American literature, once said.
“The first time around, there was something almost thrilling about Donald Trump as president,” explains American historian and journalist Thomas Frank, “The respectable world came together against him with a gratifying unanimity: the legacy media, the nonprofits, the universities, the think tanks, the tech sector, the intelligence community. Insulting this imbecile became the most rewarding pastime on earth.”
The difference in the second term wasn’t just the lack of the thrilling or accidental comedic elements of the first term. Donald Trump viewed his return to the White House as a profound vindication. In his telling, his four years of exile had proven that he was right about everything.
Trump’s unrestrained mind is on full display in a recent letter he sent to the Prime Minister of Norway as he wrote, “Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace.”
“Donald Trump now genuinely lives in a different reality,” observes Anne Applebaum, “one in which neither grammar nor history nor the normal rules of human interaction now affect him.”
“Trump 2.0 is Trump 1.0 in some ways but on steroids,” compares Peter Baker, New York Times’s chief White House correspondent who have covered six US presidents, including Trump in his first term, “A lot of the things that he talked about doing or exploring in the first term -or tried but failed to do or was dissuaded from doing-he’s now doing and in spades.”
Unlike the first term, in the beginning of his second term, there was less confusion, more intent. And more so preparation. Trump has rolled out many of the Project 2025, 900-page Heritage Foundation-led blueprint, he once claimed he has nothing to do with.
By the end of 2025, some 317,000 federal employees were out of the government, according to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). This was the largest reduction of the federal workforce in American history. He even fired members and officials from various independent and bipartisan boards, agencies, and commissions, including dozens of inspectors general, key watchdogs for waste, fraud, and abuse across all government. (*) Cemal Tunçdemir is a New York–based veteran journalist with extensive experience covering US politics and international affairs.
Thursday, April 2, 2026
TORTILLAS, SALSAS FUEL ASTRONAUTS ON MOON-BOUND ARTEMIS
(NASA announced that the diet of the Artemis moon journey crew included almost five dozen tortillas that the crew had requested. We remember when kids would laugh at you if you pulled out a taco for lunch at the school cafeterias in the district. Those were the days when you could be punished for speaking Spanish on school grounds. Times, apparently, have changed. It reminded us of something that happened a few years ago. Have fun as you munch on a taco.)

TRUMP'S "BACK TO THE STONE AGE" RHETORIC FUELS OIL PRICES
WHETHER IN AMARILLO OR THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY, TEXANS WANT A BETTER LIFE, BETTER SCHOOLS FOR THEIR KIDS
Wow. A packed standing room at our event in Amarillo.
And that is exactly what Gina is doing on the campaign trail. Harlingen and South Texas is next.
She knows that issues differ all across the big state of Texas, which is why we’re visiting all communities — rural communities and big cities, in red areas and blue ones, because this campaign is for all of us.
We know the real fight in Texas has never been left versus right. It is the people of this state versus the powerful few who have rigged the system for themselves.
While Texans are working hard, a small group of wealthy insiders and political elites keep calling the shots — raising costs, underfunding public schools, stripping away freedoms, and making life harder for working families.
Gina is running for governor to change that.
She knows Texans are tired of being divided and ignored. And she knows that whether you live in Amarillo, Brownsville, Houston, Dallas, or a small town in between, most people want the same basic things.
That is why this campaign is showing up everywhere, talking to everyone, and building the kind of grassroots power it will take to win.
EL MUERTO Y EL ARRIMADO, A LOS TRES DIAS APESTAN
TRUMP'S LAWYER: UNSURE IF NATIVE AMERICANS ARE CITIZENS
John Sauer: Yes, yes. A tribal Indian, for example, gives up allegiance to...
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
THE FINAL BALLOT PLACES IN THE PORT, TSC ELECTIONS
BIGGER THAN YOUR INAUGURATION CROWD, AIN'T IT DON?
AFTER A BRIEF RESPITE, CHRIST RETURNS TO DOVETAIL JOINT
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
ABOUT TIME THAT MCDAVITT BLVD. GOT WIDENED, RIGHT COMMISSIONERS?
(Ed.'s Note: A woman, barely visible, sits on the sidewalk at rear right on the west side of McDavitt Blvd. nursing her head and crying after the SUV pictured above was struck by the silver truck that veered off and stopped front right. The crash created immediate congestion because part of the rear end blocked one lane and the rest of the traffic had to take turns going through. The inconsiderate nature of our local drivers made it worse. This happened at about 11:30 this morning. Hope everyone is well, if not a bit scared.)
ELIZONDO AND PENA: WE CAN'T WAIT UNTIL JUNE TO DUMP CHAVEZ
(After two years in the role, Brownsville ISD Superintendent Dr. Jesus Chavez announced he is retiring. Chavez made the announcement during a February school board meeting. He said he will finish out his contract — which ends in June 2026 — before retiring. A majority of the board at that meeting voted to approve his retirement then.)
Special to El Rrun-Rrun
This past February Brownsville Independent School District Superintendent Dr. Jesus Chavez announced – and a board majority accepted – his retirement effective June 30.
That acceptance, however, is now under challenge with two agenda items, to be heard in executive session, that Chavez be terminated immediately and an interim superintendent be appointed in his place.
The agenda items for Chavez's removal to be considered come as the BISD Board of Trustees had already begun the vetting process to select the next superintendent. The two trustees requesting the agenda item are Carlos Elizondo supported by Minerva Peña.
Elizondo and Peña are usually joined by trustee Frank Ortiz. Sources say that board members Denise Garza and Neida Ruth Soto-Grantland are "on the fence."
So far, neither Elizondo nor Peña have made public their choice for Chavez interim replacement.
TRUMP'S POLL NUMBERS UP WITH DICTATORS, RACISTS, AND BILLIONAIRES
Dear Leader's new poll numbers are out. Looks like he's still got a strong following in certain segments of society.
FALLEN ANGEL: TRUTH, PAIN, AND RESPONSIBILITY IN CHAVEZ'S LEGACY
The news of the abuse of women and children by César Chávez came as a shock to many—especially to those of us who had invested so much of our lives, our hopes, and our sacrifices in the success of the United Farm Workers.
Faced with these horrifying headlines and the painful details now emerging, the UFW and the César Chávez Foundation made the difficult but necessary decision to cancel the national celebrations traditionally held on March 31 to honor César’s birthday.
Like many others, I joined the union as a young dreamer searching for justice and freedom. In 1970, I began my journey as a full-time organizer, earning five dollars a week in wages and ten dollars for food. Thousands of us sacrificed deeply to win union contracts and to build what felt like a foundation of hope.
César died in 1993. By 1994, I became the founding director of the César E. Chávez Foundation.
As a human rights activist, I have witnessed many movements where leaders abused the power entrusted to them. Still, reading that César abused UFW cofounder Dolores Huerta, and that he abused children in the 1970s, was devastating—hard to read, harder to absorb.
Over the years, I had written more than once that César was neither a god nor a saint. I challenged him and the union on several issues and came close to being fired more than once for doing so. I believed then, as I do now, that movements must allow for truth, dissent, and accountability.
I hope that all who were abused can now feel safe enough to come forward. And when they do, we must meet them not with doubt or defensiveness, but with love, respect, and a genuine commitment to help them heal. In doing so, perhaps we may also find a way to heal ourselves.
Dolores Huerta struggled for decades as a powerful woman leader within a movement dominated by men and burdened by a heavy cloud of machismo.
The UFW built a national movement that empowered farmworkers and their allies to confront large growers and their right-wing supporters. Through boycotts of lettuce and grapes, the union won contracts that transformed lives. Activists like myself learned how to organize, challenge a racist system, and fight for justice without violence. The sacrifices were immense—and many of us continue that fight for human rights to this day.
Now, efforts are already underway to remove César’s name from buildings and schools. This moment is painful not only for the movement, but for the Chávez family, and especially for the victims who have come forward. We should not be surprised if more victims emerge.
As we move forward, we must ensure that the rights of young girls and women are protected, and that our response to victims and their families is thoughtful, compassionate, and just.
The enemies of the union—of Chávez, of farmworkers, of Mexican Americans—will call for a public lynching and the total destruction of a movement that, despite its flaws, has accomplished profound good. We must not allow their hatred to define this moment.
Instead, we must commit ourselves to honest leadership and to building safeguards that protect everyone, without exception.
Many of us will feel anger, disappointment, and regret. We will search for the rainbow we so desperately need right now.
They say that when one star disappears, it makes room for three others to appear.
Monday, March 30, 2026
LAID OFF AT TRICO? CAMERON WORKFORCE WANTS TO HELP
THRIVING, MAYOR? REALLY? HAVE YOU ASKED DOWNTOWN BUSINESSES?
Rio Grande Guardian
BROWNSVILLE, Texas - Mayor John Cowen, Jr., held his 2026 State of the City Address at Texas Southmost College’s Performing Arts Center..
It was titled “Prosperity and Purpose.”
During his address he spoke about his city’s rapid growth, economic strength, and rising nationalrecognition.
To support that growth, the city is investing heavily in infrastructure. Cowen said an historic $215 million capital improvement plan is underway, focusing on road reconstruction, drainage enhancements, and smart traffic systems aimed at improving safety and reducing congestion.
“Brownsville is not just growing—we are thriving. And people across the country are taking notice,” Cowen said.
Cowen pointed out that for every one person leaving Brownsville, three new residents are choosing to move in. He said this underscored the city’s increasing appeal.
“Brownsville is growing at an unprecedented pace, with more people choosing to move here than leave, driven by billions in investment and a strong focus on infrastructure, public safety, and quality of life to build a thriving, future-ready city,” Cowen said.
EVERY TIME THE EPSTEIN AFFAIR RESURFACES, BOMBS EXPLODE SOMEWHERE
"Every time the Epstein affair resurfaces, bombs explode somewhere in the world and cause a distraction." Senator Claude Malhuret stood up in the French Senate this week and systematically torched every single member of Trump's cabinet.
Then he pulled back and went bigger.





