Friday, July 10, 2026
WINNER OF SPAIN VS. BELGIUM WILL FACE FRANCE JULY 14
WHY ARE WE STILL AT WAR WHEN WE HAVE ALREADY "WON" MANY TIMES?
TEXAS SUCKS UNDER ABBOTT, AND WE LIKE IT THAT WAY, STRANGER
MASSIVE PUBLIC OUTCRY DRIVES FEDERAL NAMES PANEL TO REJECT BOCA CHICA NAME CHANGE TO TESLA CYBER BEACH
By an 11–0 vote, the The U.S. Board of Geographic Names Domestic Names Committee rejected a petition from SpaceX and Tesla superfan Josh Hazel from Mississippi to rename the popular beach in honor of a small group of self-described "enthusiasts" he belongs to, who regularly travel to South Texas in their Cybertrucks to watch Starship launches from the shoreline.
However, officials from across the federal government who attended Thursday's meeting noted that the committee had received more than 20,000 emails opposing the "Cyber Beach" rename over the last day.
The U.S. Board on Geographic Names Domestic Names Committee voted against the proposal during its monthly meeting. The decision means Boca Chica Beach will remain the official name used on federal maps and records.
Boca Chica Beach sits at the southern tip of Texas near the mouth of the Rio Grande. The beach has carried its current official name since 1936 and has long been a destination for fishing and camping along the Texas Gulf Coast.
In recent years, however, it’s become the center of SpaceX's growing footprint throughout the region. The public beach sits next to the company's Starbase launch and production complex, where SpaceX builds and tests its Starship rockets.
The name-change proposal was submitted in late 2024 by Hazel, who said the new name would recognize the beach's role in spaceflight development at SpaceX’s nearby Starbase launch site. The area has become the focus of ongoing debates over public beach access, environmental protections and Elon Musk's expanded influence in the region, particularly after voters approved incorporating the company town of Starbase in May 2025.
Thursday, July 9, 2026
RESPONSE OVERWHELMINGLY NEGATIVE TO RENAME BOCA CHICA BEACH TO CYBER BEACH AFTER TESLA TRUCK BRAND TODAY
Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Various Sources
A Mississipi man's proposal to rename Boca Chica Beach as "a nod to the Tesla Cybertruck" will be considered today on whether to change South Texas’ Boca Chica Beach to Cyber Beach is being vehemently opposed by residents and local, state and federal officials, including city administrators of Elon Musk's City of Starbase.
Along with Starbase, Cameron County, Texas Geographic Names Committee and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service all oppose the proposal. The Texas Geographic Names Committee with the U.S. Board on Geographic Names will meet at 2 p.m. today in Austin to consider the proposal.
The affected area encompasses parts of the city of Starbase and private land as well as parts of the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge and Boca Chica State Park, according to the Board on Geographic Names.
According to news reports, the proposal to rename the beach was submitted to the committee by Josh Hazel of Hattiesburg, Miss. November 2024, and it made the body’s quarterly review list in January. Hazel is said to be of SpaceX and Musk fans who meet up at the beach with their Austin-made Tesla pickups in the days leading up to Starship launches. They camp at the beach and have hosted light shows with the stainless-steel trucks.
Those same reports indicate that Hazel wrote that the Cybertruck is made of the same material as SpaceX’s Starship and also has “often been likened to a ‘vehicle from Mars.'"
The announcement that a name change was to be considered today caught several lawmakers by surprise and they fired off letters opposing the name change.
Texas D-27 Senator Adam Hinojosa wrote that "The proposed name, Cyber Beach, does not reflect the history, culture, or identity of Cameron County. Boca Chica Beach has identified this stretch of the Texas coast for nearly a century. It is part of our local heritage and remains meaningful to the people who call this region home.
"As the elected State Senator for this area, I respectfully urge the Committee to reject the proposal to rename Boca Chica Beach as Cyber Beach. Historic place names should not be set aside when they continue to hold deep significance for the communities they represent. Preserving the name Boca Chica Beach respects the history of Cameron County while ensuring that future generations inherit the same connection to this place that generations before them have known."
Likewise, Texas Representative Erin Gamez (D-38), Brownsville, wrote the committee that "Boca Chica Beach has been known by that name for generations. According to U.S. government records, the name dates back at least to 1936, and to my knowledge the beach has never been officially known by any other name. While many residents affectionately refer to it as 'the People's Beach,' that nickname complements rather than replaces its historic name.
"Boca Chica Beach is part of the cultural and historical identity of our community, and that identity deserves to be preserved."
Bekah Hinojosa of the South Texas Environmental Justice Network, also fired of a response to the proposal. “Renaming Boca Chica Beach is an insult to the families with deep cultural ties to the region, who have been swimming, fishing, and recreating there for generations. It’s an insult to my mother and my grandfather, who grew up visiting and swimming on Boca Chica...Boca Chica Beach is meant for the people, not for Elon Musk and his fanatics to colonize, pollute with rockets, and push out long-time local families. We reject Cyber Beach."
They urge that residents contact the committee by emailing their dissent to the change at:
Environmental activists have also launched a petition to stop the name change. So far – at 4:51 a.m., they report that 4,445 letters have been sent to the committee, just short of their 6,400 goal. To join the petition, click on link below. El Rrun-Rrun sent ours a few minutes ago. Update: By 9 a.m., they had exceeded the 6,400 and were shooting for 12,800. By 1:15 p.m. the count stood at 14,760.
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
"WITH THESE LEAK-PROOF LIDS, YOUR EMOLUMENTS WILL STAY FRESH..."
La Cebolla
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
OBAMA DERANGEMENT SYNDROME (ODS): TRUMP SHOWS OBAMAS OWN A CONDOMINIUM IN HIS HEAD, POSTS RACIST MEME
US President Donald Trump has posted a falsified image of former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle Obama, waving before boarding an Air Force One that had been spray-painted with graffiti.
It came months after another racist post by the president that showed the couple as primates in a jungle. That one was deleted after stiff, bipartisan backlash.
The latest image, posted on Sunday (local time), shows the Obamas smiling and waving at the top of stairs alongside a baby blue and white presidential plane with graffiti painted on it that included the Democrat's campaign slogan Yes We Can, Obama and BLM, short for Black Lives Matter. The post also shows graffiti in Arabic on the plane that says the phrase alhamdulillah, which means praise be to God or thank God.
The use of graffiti is a coded message to remind people of crime and urban decay and has been used in racist messaging against Black people in the past.
Trump has a years-long record of intensely personal criticism of the Obamas, and of using incendiary, sometimes racist, rhetoric. That included everything from feeding the lie that Obama was not born in the United States to crude generalizations about majority-Black countries and posts that have sparked anger on his Truth Social website.
Monday, July 6, 2026
BEER JOINT BLUES: LAS SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS DE LA CATORCE
Sunday, July 5, 2026
Saturday, July 4, 2026
Friday, July 3, 2026
TRUMP CALLS IN BOMB THREAT TO COVER UP LOW FAIR ATTENDANCE
La Cebolla
BROWNSVILLE, MATAMOROS KEY CITIES FOR HUACHICOL FUEL CARTEL SCHEMES: WHO'S NEXT ON THE FBI LIST?
eltejanorgv.com
El Tejano has learned that Jesus Juraidini of Brownsville and Carlos Juraidini are relatives of the man Treasury froze on June 30, 2026. His name is Oscar Guillermo Juraidini Silva. He is a Matamoros accountant. Treasury says he ran the money side of CJNG. That is the Jalisco cartel.
Jesus Juraidini said in federal court he was the Gulf Cartel's main extortion man in the Rio Grande Valley. He paid $2.5 million in cartel cash for homes and buildings across Hidalgo County. A federal judge gave him three years of probation in November 2023. He did not go to prison.
His relative in Matamoros was building a fuel theft empire. For a rival cartel. On June 30, 2026, the U.S. froze every company he ran. Six firms in Matamoros. One shell company in London named Cucumber Sweet Waves.
That is not the story Treasury told. This is the story behind it.
What the Government Knew and When
Six years before the June 30 sanctions, the FBI was already watching one of the men named that day.
In early 2020, a Mexican trucking firm called Jomadi Logistics and Cargo signed a deal with Venezuela. Jomadi would supply high-octane gasoline to Venezuela. In exchange for five million barrels of Venezuelan crude oil. Venezuela needed gas. Its leader, Nicolas Maduro, was blocked by U.S. sanctions. The deal was set up to dodge those sanctions.
By May 2020, a news report said the FBI and Treasury were looking at Jomadi and its boss, J. Refugio Ruiz Villagomez. They were looking at him for helping Maduro break U.S. law.
No charges. No freeze. No action.
Jomadi kept moving fuel.
By 2026, Jomadi had a new client. Same trucks. Same fake paperwork. Same border. But now the fuel was moving for CJNG. The U.S. called CJNG a terrorist group in February 2025.
The June 30 action left one question open. Why did it take six years to freeze a man and a company the FBI had already looked at?
The fuel theft scheme in this case has a name. Huachicol fiscal. Fiscal fuel theft.
The whole scheme is a tax lie. Mexico charges a fuel tax called IEPS on every liter of gas sold there. Cartel traders found a way to skip it. Here is how.Fuel traders in the United States buy gas and diesel at legal export spots. They load it on trucks, train cars, and ships. They drive it toward Mexico. At the border, they give agents fake papers. The papers say the load is "waste oil" or some other item that does not need permits. The fuel gets in. The tax never gets paid. The cartel keeps the tax money. The gas ends up at cartel-run stations.
The cash flows back north. Through trucking firms, cash exchanges, real estate deals, and shell companies.
Reports say between one quarter and one third of all gas sold in Mexico comes from fraud like this. Mexico loses $11 billion a year in taxes to it.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said this is now the second biggest way cartels make money. Right behind drugs.
Oscar Guillermo Juraidini Silva is 41 years old. He was born in Tamaulipas. He is an accountant. The U.S. says he built the money system for CJNG's fuel ring.
His companies had different jobs.
Centro Cambiario La Peseta opened in Matamoros in 2012. It is a cash exchange. A cash exchange inside a cartel network does one thing: it makes dirty money look like clean business income.
OF Transportes ran a white truck fleet. Ogui Fletes ran a blue freight line. Its trucks roll through Matamoros with the company name on the door.
OJ Living Trust, RK Real King, and Soma Transporte y Servicios handled real estate and money services.
All six are in Matamoros. All six are now frozen.
The seventh company was in London.
Cucumber Sweet Waves Ltd was set up in London on September 2, 2024. The address: 27 Old Gloucester Street. Juraidini was named its director on January 8, 2025. A UK firm checked his ID in January 2026. The company filed papers that same month saying it did no business. A cartel accountant. A London shell company. Filed as dormant. Then frozen on June 30, 2026.
Jesus Juraidini pleaded guilty in federal court in McAllen on March 22, 2021.
Court records show the scheme ran from January 2010 through November 2018. He paid more than $2.5 million in cash to a Mission builder named Delfino Gaona. Gaona bought and built at least six homes and shops in Hidalgo County with that cash. He broke the cash into smaller amounts. That way no report had to be filed.
A lawyer for a co-defendant said in open court that Jesus Juraidini told the FBI he was the Gulf Cartel's main extortion man. He also washed millions for them. The government did not push back.
Jesus Juraidini helped the FBI. He agreed to pay back $2,519,000. He gave up 10 properties in Hidalgo County.
The FBI, DEA, Texas DPS, the Hidalgo County Sheriff, and police in McAllen and Pharr all worked it.
On November 9, 2023, Chief U.S. District Judge Randy Crane sentenced Jesus Juraidini to three years of probation.
He did not go to prison.
After a May 2025 alert, banks filed 160 reports in one year. All tied to CJNG's fuel ring. Those reports covered $7 billion in suspect cash. Texas was the top state. Florida was second.
In Texas, the reports were heavy in border cities. Brownsville was listed first. Then Mission. Then Eagle Pass. Then McAllen. Most of the businesses flagged were in oil, gas, and trucking.
The South Texas Homeland Security Task Force led the case. The DEA, FBI, HSI, the IRS, and Border Patrol all worked it.
CJNG's top boss died in February 2026. The money machine did not stop. It kept running. It does not need any one boss. It runs on money men and truck firms. On cash shops and fake companies. On false papers and border crossings.
Two cartels. One family. Six years of watching Jomadi. One bridge.
The FinCEN report named Brownsville first.
El Tejano will continue to follow this story.
THE U.S. ARMY AND STILLMAN: "THE LAND DIDN'T BELONG TO ANYBODY..."
Army engineers used his fencing to fortify the earthworks, and then, to prevent Mexican soldiers from using the buildings as cover, they demolished them. Neither Salinas nor his heirs ever got paid for his land, the buildings or for the crops destroyed by the soldiers at Ft. Brown. Below is a record of the hearings before the U.S. House Committee on War Claims on the Salinas family claim, some 40 yeas after the government took their land. Then Charles Stillman and his lawyers tied up the title in court and eventually sold the land without clear title to establish the town. We thank Dr. Marie Theresa Hernandez Ramirez, Professor and Researcher of World Cultures and Literatures from the University of Houston for providing us with this document.)
This bill was presented in the Fiftieth Congress, first session, and favorably reported from the Committee on War Claims. The report of that committee is concurred in and adopted by this committee. Miguel Salinas was the owner and occupant.of a large plantation on the Rio Grande, in Cameron County, Texas, and had been for twenty years prior to 1840. That year, in the month of March, the United States troops, commanded by General Zachary Taylor, encamped upon this plantation, which
was an exceedingly valuable one, and at this time, as in prior years, in a high state of cultivation.
There were also twelve houses, and built of concrete brick, some of them being very large and commodious, and all of them substantial and serviceable. Three of these were the permanent residence of Miguel Salinas and his family, and the others were used by the servants and for store-houses. There was also a wind-mill, a large and very strong cattle-pen, a great amount of fencing in perfect condition and with upright posts, together with farming utensils and other belongings necessary for conducting the operations of so large a ranch.
The troops took possession of all the houses on the plantation, and on the 14th of April, 1846, Capt. G. H. Crossman, assistant quarter-master U. S. Army, rented seven of them, by contract with Miguel
Salinas, at $1.50 a day each, for as long a time as the Government thought proper to occupy them. This contract was approved by the commanding officer General General Zachary Taylor, and the original is now on file with the Comptroller's office; a copy herewith.
There was also one cattle pen or corral used by the troops, which was of the best material and strongly built. The houses were used for the storage of supplies for the troops, officers' quarters, hospital purposes, and quarters for the men who were not furnished with tents. In the attack upon Fort (Texas), Major Brown who was in charge of the fort, ordered the destruction of these houses as a matter of safety to our men who were then working on the fort.
This was done with the approval of General Taylor, who had previously given instructions to Major Brown, before the battle of Palo Alto was fought, to destroy these houses if he found they were in anywise an impediment to the operations of the fort.
The occupancy by the United States Army of the plantation of the said Miguel Salinas, the building of Fort Brown thereon, the burning of his houses, together with the destruction of his crop, fences, and
corral, etc., nearly beggared him, and he was compelled to procure a home for himself and family in Matamoros, as everything on his plantation was swept away completely.
He was in undisputed possession of the said lands for twenty years previous to the Mexican War, and yet but $11.12 (and that amount was paid in pork by Captain G.H. Crossman) did he ever receive from the Government for or on account of rent of his houses or compensation for damages and loss of all his property.
While litigation has caused delay to determine ownership of several undivided interests of the grant of land of which his plantation is a part, and the Government has hitherto declined to pass on his accounts for rent notwithstanding its contract with the said Miguel Salinas, it is conclusively shown that the latter acquired his right by purchase and his claim against the United States has continuously remained unchallenged, by anyone.
At the close of the war with Mexico a permanent garrison was established on a portion of these grounds. In 1848 the Government refused the first-time payment of rent for the same, as there were numerous claimants for title. The contestants went into court, and the matter was not finally adjudicated until October, 1879, when time United States Supreme Court decreed in a favor of Cavazos (see volume 100, page 138, of United States Supreme Court Reports); and Miguel Salinas holds title to his land from Cavazos by Purchase. Salinas again presented this claim in 1849, only to be again advised that settlement of disputed title caused further delay.
This claim was presented in 1849 to Quartermaster-General Thomas S. Jesup and in August of that year that officer wrote to Major Crossman, who made the contract with Salinas for the renting of the buildings requesting him to furnish information regarding this claim and others for rest of grounds.
Thursday, July 2, 2026
MCALLEN ATTORNEY, 5 CO-DEFENDANTS, INDICTED FOR ENGAGING IN ORGANIZED CRIMINAL ACTIVITY, FORGERY OF COURT DOCUMENTS, PERJURY
"Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive..."
WAS NAVARRO A TRUE-BLUE TEXAN, OR A DUPE OF ANGLO FILIBUSTERS?
Lonestar Receipts
Navarro County bears his name. So does a street in downtown San Antonio, a school, and a state historic site at the home where he lived and died. His descendants still gather every year to celebrate his birthday.
USA MNT BEATS BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA, FACES BELGIUM MONDAY IN ROUND OF 16
CBS
It's been 24 years since the United States won a knockout stage game at a World Cup, and despite needing to finish the match with 10 men due to a red card to star player Folarin Balogun, the US Men's National Team kept their composure to win 2-0. Balogun scored right before the half, hitting the LeBron James silencer celebration, and it seemed like the USMNT would be off and running, but they'd have to face adversity after a strong start in order to see the match out.
After a VAR review, Balogun was sent off in the 64th minute after a challenge on a Bosnian player but between Sebastian Berhalter and Ricardo Pepi entering to provide balance and the USMNT keeping their attacking midset, it was enough to see the game out as late, Malik Tillman caught Bosnia and Herzegovina keeper Nikola Vasilj cheating on a free kick to give the USMNT a much needed insurance goal.
Christian Pulisic and Sergino Dest weren't at their best, and the USMNT finished with 10, but this is the kind of game where their mentality under Pochettino shows. They never gave up despite adversity, and now they've accomplished something that hasn't been done since 2002 under Bruce Arena, while having the pressure of playing on home soil on them. Now, they'll play in the round of 16 on July 6 at Lumen Field in Seattle, facing a familiar foe in Belgium.

