Saturday, June 13, 2026

POLITICS TOOK AN UGLY TURN, AND DE LEON SHOULD NOT BE REWARDED WITH OUR VOTE

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Op-Ed

At first blush, it should have been a no-brainer: 

Would the voters in the Texas Southmost College community college district re-elect Place 1 board of trustees incumbent – and retired businesswoman and board president – Adela Garza, or her opponent in the runoff election J.J. De Leon, a mid-level administrator in the Brownsville Independent School District bureaucracy?

The results of the May 2 election gave Garza 44.16 percent of the vote (4,428), De Leon 30.69 percent (3,077), and Erica Garcia (2,522) or 25.15 percent. None of the candidates received the 50 percent plus 1 vote required to be declared a winner. Today is Election Day after the early voting period ended Tuesday, June 9.

But since the runoff was declared and campaigning started for today's election, the narrative has taken a disturbing nature characterized by another runoff election – that of the campaign for Cameron County Judge between incumbent Eddie Treviño and challenger Steve Guerra.

In that race, anonymous social media platforms published unsubstantiated innuendo painting Treviño as a rat who has personally overseen the turning over of Boca Chica Beach to Elon Musk's SpaceX, dark hints of "corruption" and personal enrichment as "kickbacks" for doing Musk's bidding and his role as an attorney whose law firm was hired as local counsel by the Brownsville Public Utilities Board (PUB) the law firm representing the failed Tenaska power plant.

This, and despite no complaints or criminal charges ever being filed against Treviño, his law firm partner Conrad Bodden, the BPUB, the City of Brownsville, or Tenaska itself, the pro-Guerra factions  with a nod and a wink from their candidate continued the coordinated assault. 

Guerra's personal social page, meanwhile, pushed "positive" messages including him posing with his family mouthing bland and vague notions of "infrastructure" and "prosperity" in contrast to the negativity of the anonymous pro-Guerra narrative, from which, disingenuously, he distanced himself.

The same pattern followed in the Garza-De Leon runoff campaign. In one instance, she is depicted as a puppet master controlling the individual board members, in another, as a co-conspirator in federal bribery charges with Dr. Sylvia Atkinson, who was convicted for demanding $10,000 from a FBI sting operation for a film approved by the board of the Brownsville Independent School District. 

Then, in another, a fake posting in an anonymous social media platform asserted that she had dropped out of the race and was endorsing her opponent. (See graphic at right)

All these were lies. The U.S. Attorney told her attorneys that the evidence in the case did not warrant that an indictment or charges and that they would not pursue any prosecution against Garza, who – like other local residents (this writer included) – were wiretapped by federal investigators in the course of their sting operation. 

Garza, like many others, was sent a letter informing them that their communications with Atkinson had been monitored to detect potential collusion or conspiracy in the bribery scheme. 

No one else was charged in the case and Atkinson was convicted and sentenced to serve prison time.

And Mario Saenz, a local political activist, posted a message by one Luis Villarreal hinting that early voters could be compensated for proving they had votes for De Leon:

Mario Saenz, FB
"Asking people to go out and vote for a particular candidate, I don't believe that is illegal. But asking your friends to do so and to report with your list of harvested votes for what appears to be a monetary compensation. Is that not illegal? Just asking for a friend."

No one had expected that a campaign to represent the public community college on a board whose mission is to provide an education and equip students with the skills and personal character traits to lead productive lives and improve their family's economic opportunities would descend to these squalid levels. After all, it was Garza who helped De Leon get on the board in a previous election after he had tried and came in a distant third in a past election to the TSC board.

Then, with trustee Alejandra Aldrete – who was also assisted by Garza to her first election on the board – as an ally, De Leon has sought to paint himself as an independent educational innovator. 

Yet, both have profited personally from their positions in the BISD bureaucracy as the district loses students to charter schools and an aging population and faces budget shortfalls that is forcing it to constrict. Will they bring their "skills" to TSC, which has struggled to shake of a disastrous 20-year "partnership" with the UT System and achieve institutional independence?

Under Garza, that has ben achieved, and more. For example, Garza outlines the progress made by TSC:

"The separation came and went and the opposition stood by, ready to watch us fail. But a Higher Power smiled upon us and our little college and drove us to work a little harder harder, and to persevere against the odds. Today, 13 years after we reestablished our independence as a stand-alone institution of higher education we have achieved this:

* We've reduced tuition and fees three (3) times to make TSC the most affordable college in the RGV

* We earned independent national accreditation despite the nay-sayers

* We've grown enrollment by over 130 percent

* We've built a state-of-the art workforce training program

* Today, TSC's graduation rate outpaces the state average  

The best years – our next Century of Progress – is still ahead. With your continued support, we can keep building what we started."

On balance, we don't believe that based on De Leon's track record and insidious campaign impugning Garza's character that he deserves to be elected to the TSC board. On the other hand, Garza has devoted herself to making it a successful independent community college and we will cast our vote to keep her there. We hope you join us today. 

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 Treviño, 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.
To read the whole story, click on link:

Thursday, June 11, 2026

A LAST- SECOND HEARTBREAKER IN NEW YORK FOR THE SPURS...MUST WIN NEXT IN S.A. SATURDAY

THE WRITING IS ON THE BLACKBOARD FOR TEXAS CHILDREN: DUMP ABBOTT


Team Gina

Texas public schools are in trouble. Big time. And Greg Abbott is making it worse.

This year, Texas public schools saw 76,000 fewer students enrolled for the first time in nearly four decades — a large portion of these kids being Hispanic.

Texas Tribune: Texas public schools see first non-pandemic enrollment drop in decades

Abbott loves to boast about investing in education, but even after last year’s one-time $8.5 billion funding package, Texas is still near the bottom nationally in per-student funding.

And now, with this voucher scheme that drains public dollars out of neighborhood schools towards students who are already in private school, it’s very clear who this scheme is meant to serve. And it’s definitely not working families.

Abbott has made it clear that protecting his own power matters more to him than protecting Texans.

Year after year, Abbott has doubled down on policies that benefit his biggest donors and political allies while everyday Texans pay the price.

He’s slashed funding for public schools, pushed culture wars instead of real solutions, and funneled taxpayer dollars to corporations and his own campaign donors. Meanwhile, hard-working Texans are struggling to afford groceries, healthcare, and child care, and classrooms are overcrowded and under-resourced.

The consequences of Abbott’s poor leadership are already here.
*Texas ranks near the bottom nationally in healthcare access and education.
*Millions of children have lost Medicaid coverage.
*Public schools are closing or losing millions in funding.

When leaders choose power over people, it’s our kids who suffer — not just today, but for generations to come. Abbott is subsidizing the wealthy, and we have a chance to change that this November.

I’m running for governor because Texas kids deserve a leader who will fight to fund public schools, pay educators what they’re worth, and stop selling out our communities to billionaires.

OH, YEAH! BUT IT IS ALL SLEEPY JOE BIDEN'S FAULT...

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

TRACES OF AZTEC CULTURE PRESERVED IN SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Aztalan Mounds — Jefferson, Wisconsin
43°03'59.09"N 88°51'40.67"W

LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) reveals the remarkable layout of Aztalan, one of the northernmost expressions of Mississippian culture in North America. Situated along the Crawfish River in southeastern Wisconsin, the site preserves a fortified ceremonial center occupied between approximately AD 1000 and 1300. 

The site predates the "discovery" of America by Cristopher Columbus in 1492.

Even today, the outlines of its massive earthen platform mounds, defensive walls, and carefully planned plaza remain clearly visible in the terrain.

The site covered roughly 20 acres and was enclosed by a stockade nearly half a mile in length. The original wooden palisade was reinforced by dozens of regularly spaced bastions, allowing defenders to observe and protect the settlement from multiple directions. Archaeological evidence indicates the walls were rebuilt several times during the site's occupation, suggesting the fortifications played an important role in community life.

Three major platform mounds dominate the site. The largest, located near the river, rises approximately 16 to 22 feet above the surrounding terrain and supported important ceremonial or administrative structures. Two additional platform mounds stand at opposite ends of the central plaza, connected by a carefully organized settlement layout that reflects influences from larger Mississippian centers farther south, particularly Cahokia in present-day Illinois.

Excavations have uncovered evidence of long-distance trade, agriculture, ceremonial activity, and large communal gatherings. 

Artifacts from the site include shell ornaments from the Gulf Coast (The Crawfish River is a tributary to the Rock River in the Mississippi River watershed, which empties into the Gulf of Mexico), copper objects, pottery, and stone tools, demonstrating connections to an extensive trade network that stretched across much of eastern North America and south to Mexico. The inhabitants cultivated maize, beans, and squash while maintaining cultural traditions distinct to the Upper Midwest.

Today, Aztalan State Park preserves one of the most important archaeological sites in Wisconsin. LiDAR highlights not only the surviving mounds but also the broader defensive and ceremonial landscape, allowing visitors to appreciate the scale and sophistication of a community that flourished along the Crawfish River more than 700 years ago.

"WAR IS PEACE. FREEDOM IS SLAVERY. IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH...'

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

WHY IS BROWNSVILLE CLINGING TO ITS SLAVER "HERITAGE"?

WILLIAM NEALE, BROWNSVILLE'S FIRST MAYOR, HUNTED RUNAWAY SLAVES INTO MEXICO FOR MONEY. CHARLES STILLMAN– THE CITY'S "FOUNDER" – OWNED ONE. WHY ARE WE SPENDING $100,000S IN PUBLIC MONEY - $495,000 FOR THE NEALE SHACK ALONE - TO REBUILD SLAVERS' HOUSES?
Honoring history should never come at the expense of justice or humanity. Remembering the truth means rejecting figures who caused harm and refusing to glorify oppression.

TODAY IS LAST DAY OF EARLY VOTING IN TSC RUNOFF: MAKE A DIFFERENCE

SPURS STAY ALIVE WITH FOUR-POINT WIN OVER NEW YORK KNICKS

By NBC News

The New York Knicks’ win streak is over — and drama in the NBA Finals has begun.

In front of a New York audience that included President Trump, countless celebrities and fans who shelled out thousands of dollars for tickets, the San Antonio Spurs won Game 3 on Monday, 115-111, to cut their series deficit to 2-1. They did it by overcoming one of the most raucous atmospheres in the history of Madison Square Garden.

San Antonio led by as many as 12 points in the first half but lost its lead before halftime and eventually trailed New York by seven points. Knicks role players including OG Anunoby and Josh Hart repeatedly made shots to offset a slow shooting start by star guard Jalen Brunson.

Yet behind Victor Wembanyama’s most complete, forceful performance of the series, the Spurs clung to a slight lead throughout the fourth quarter to ensure that the Spurs will at least avoid a sweep.

SAN BENE CELEBRATES ONE OF ITS OWN, FREDDY FENDER (BALDE HUERTA)

Celebrate FREDDY FENDER Day in San Benito, Texas, Saturday, June 13.

A major tribute to legendary FREDDY FENDER will take place this coming Saturday, June 13 in San Benito, Texas, the birthplace of a Texas music legend, FREDDY FENDER.

Among many others, his major hits "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights" and "Before the Next Teardrop Falls" are part of the American music catalog.

Grammy Award Winning MAX BACA and LOS TEXMANIACS will be joined by Country music recording star RICK TREVIÑO to pay homage to the unforgettable FREDDY FENDER in San Benito at the FREDDY FENDER Museum, 210 East Haywood Street.

See you there!

THE ONLY THING TALLER WOULD BE THE UNRELEASED EPSTEIN FILES...


 

Monday, June 8, 2026

DOWNTOWN CAPITOL THEATER SIGN BACK AFTER REPAIRS...


WITH J.J.'S CAMPAIGN IT'S BEEN ALL NEGATIVITY; WITH ADELA, ACCOMPLISHMENTS

 
Early voting continues today and ends Tuesday. Election Day is Saturday, June 13. 

By Derek Reyna, Attorney
Special to The Mchale Report
Reprinted by Permission of the Author

I respect powerful women. Besides being a lady, TSC Board Chairman Adela Garza is a strong woman. She is a leader. She has helped raise the junior college from the dead and it is thriving once again. Our students as well as our community owe her a great debt of gratitude.

I don't respect weak men. JJ De Leon, I think they call him "La Rana" other even less flattering names, "es una vieja" como dice la raza. He is a follower. I read in an article that Dr. G.F. McHale-Scully penned that JJ was an embarrassment to our education community both at BISD and TSC.

Former TSC Trustee Ruben Herrera, an outstanding a lawyer, was one of my role models when I started my legal career. I felt blessed that he took me under his wing because I was greener than the grass after one of our tropical rains.

He had nothing but the greatest admiration for Adela. To JJ's chagrin, Ruben considered him the worst politician to ever represent the people. I remember reading in one of the blogs (El Rrun-Rrun), since we don't have a legitimate newspaper these days, regarding Ruben's sentiments about the ball of goo.

He allegedly "saw J.J. De Leon as a petulant, petty and arrogant prima donna board member who was constantly trying to micromanage the administration and driving the staff crazy with his overbearing character and demanding manner."

I know that Ruben regretfully helped to get butterball elected, but the lawyer, after whom a TSC building bears his name, witnessed JJ forget that he was a servant of the people who expected the people to serve him.  

His sole contribution during his traitorous term was chaos and undermining the board's inability to work together as a team for the betterment of TSC. Before his untimely death, Ruben, recognizing his terrible error, publicly endorsed another candidate to replace the juvenile JJ.

When my own knowledge, combined with the expertise of Ruben and Dr. McHale-Scully, I wholeheartedly endorse Adela Garza. Based on her past and present accomplishments, I'm confident TSC's future is in good hands with her as part of the Magnificent Seven.

In their hysteria, JJ's masters have lost control of their emotions with their dirty campaigning and win-at-all-costs strategy. I'm astonished they can look themselves in the mirror as they are betraying Brownsville and, in particular, the college.

I love my home town and I want nothing but the best for our students, so they can prosper as I have via the commitment of outstanding educators.

For Adela, it's all about the kids. For JJ, nothing more than a big baby who likes to have his belly button tickled, it's all about him and all those shady shysters who pull his strings.

Wake up, fellow citizens. We already screwed up and disgraced our nation electing Trump the Tramp. Let's don't screw up a second time and disgrace our town by electing JJ the Clown.

TRUMP: WHERE ARE THOSE DAMN BONE SPURS WHEN YOU NEED THEM?

Kimmel gave Trump a new nickname after he said he’d attend the Knicks game: “Larry Turd.”

44 YEARS AGO THIS JUNE, WHEN THE HERALD WAS A REAL NEWSPAPER...



By Juan Montoya

It was a balmy Monday evening in Brownsville that June 26, 1978, almost 44 years ago. 

Fellow Brownsville Herald reporter Davis Crowder and yours truly were coming out of the old Palm Lounge (now the Hunky Dory) on Elizabeth Street and noticed a black cloud of smoke rising from the Matamoros side of the river and wondered what was burning on the "other side." 

Crowder was a silver-spoon kid from a rich suburb in Dallas. I had just graduated from J school at the U of Michigan the past May and our newshound instinct told us something was amiss over in Mata. We took it upon ourselves – even though it was after working hours – and without checking with our editor Bill Salter, to drive over and see what was shaking.

It turned out to be one of the biggest stories – if not the biggest – of the year.

Students had burned down city hall and stormed the CERESO (state jail) where one of their fellow students had been beaten to death by a cop. The city was under martial law for days. Crowder and I came back to the paper and had dark-room operator and photographer Ron Schade develop his pictures while I wrote the story and had it ready when the news staff came to work the following morning. By then, AP and UPI had swarmed to Brownsville and I guided them through Matamoros so they could write their stories. 

What took us hours to type and perfect on an IBM Selectric took AP's Ken Herman and UPI's Mack Sisk minutes on a manual typewriter. We looked on in wonder – and awe and respect – as they filed their stories from the Herald newsroom. Quick and without any typos on a manual. Priceless.

Our coverage – the first by any American newspaper or wire services – won us the 1978 first place award for spot reporting for newspaper under 25,000 circulation in the State of Texas for the now-defunct United Press International (UPI) wire service.

Salter, who was not above tooting his own horn, gave us a free hand in our writing and photo coverage. We took the hint and went for the gold. The result? Brownsville Herald readers got a first-hand account of what was happening next door, something we will probably never see again, given "the troubles" now in northern Tamaulipas.

Crowder ended up being an editor at the El Paso Times and I went to graduate school at the U of Wisconsin after a stint at the Corpus Christi Caller and – before grad school – the San Antonio Light. Salter ended up divorcing Becky and becoming editor of the Panama City, Fla. Freedom Newspaper.

When the Brownsville Herald was a real newspaper...

Sunday, June 7, 2026

SUNDAY FUN: AND EVERYWHERE THAT MARY WENT, THE LAMB WAS SURE TO GO...


 

MONDAY AND TUESDAY LAST DAYS TO VOTE EARLY IN TSC RUNOFF

ELECTION DAY IS SATURDAY, JUNE 13

BIDS OF A FEATHER, CORRUPT TOGETHER...AND TALARICO IS A (GASP!) VEGAN!

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Texas voters should be asking a very serious question:

Why did Donald Trump endorse Ken Paxton over John Cornyn?

Cornyn is a long-serving Republican senator. Paxton is a scandal-plagued MAGA loyalist who was impeached by the Republican-controlled Texas House, indicted on felony securities-fraud charges, and avoided trial through a pretrial deal — not an acquittal.

Yet Trump picked Paxton.

That tells us something important about today’s MAGA politics: loyalty to Trump appears to matter more than ethics, morality, competence, or good government.

This should concern Republicans, Democrats, independents, and anyone who believes public office is a public trust — not a reward for personal loyalty to one man.

On November 3, Texas voters can correct this mistake. Does your loyalty to Trump become more important in the GOP than ethics and public service? 

And the worse they can say about Democrat James Talarico is that he's a vegetarian, since proved false?

WHAT'S GOOD FOR THE COMMIE IS GOOD FOR THE FOX IMPERIALIST


 

Saturday, June 6, 2026

HAVE LUNCH AND TALK OVER THE FUTURE OF TSC WITH ADELA TODAY

AND THE STATE OF STREET DRAINAGE IN BROWNTOWN IS...MAYOR COWEN?

Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Brownsville Herald
Rrun-Rrun
MyRGV
Various Sources

WILL TRUE BLUE AMERICAN REPUBLICANS EVER REACH THEIR TRUMP TRESHOLD?

A MESSAGE TO ALL SANE REPUBLICANS:
He pardoned 1,600 violent criminals. 
You said nothing

He bulldozed the East wing.
You said nothing.

He interfered with the release of the Epstein files.
You said nothing.

He took over the Kennedy Center and renamed it after himself. 
You said nothing.

He accepted a $400 million airplane as a personal gift.
You said nothing.

He threatened Canada, Cuba, Denmark, Greenland, Venezuela, Columbia, and Brazil.
You said nothing.

He tarrifed just about everyone but Russia, causing inflation and instability worldwide.
You said nothing.

He attacked a nation during mediated negotiations.
You said nothing.
His ill-conceived war killed 175 children in one day.
You said nothing.

He alienated and insulted our allies.
You sad nothing.

His ICE Army terrorized and murdered American citizens.
You said nothing.
He cut off food assistance for 2.4 million needy people to give his billionaire friends tax cuts.
You said nothing.

He committed murder on the high seas.
You said nothing.

He co-opted the Justice Department and directed it to prosecute his political enemies.
You said nothing.
Isn't it time you start talking? 

QUICK DRAW TRUMPO JUMPS THE GUN...AGAIN


 

rita