Saturday, March 21, 2026

LAGUNA VISTA MAYOR CARTER: THE TRUTH ON UTRGV CLINIC CLOSING MATTERS


By Mike Carter
Mayor, Laguna Vista

The truth matters.
Laguna Vista residents deserve the truth, and I’ve had enough of the misinformation and false allegations surrounding the UTRGV clinic. What follows is not opinion, it’s a factual account backed by documentation and firsthand involvement.

I met with UTRGV officials and community members in an open forum on October 10, 2023 to discuss the situation, address concerns, and answer questions about the future of healthcare in Laguna Vista. 

I did not avoid the issue, I engaged it directly with both leadership and residents. A news article from the Port Isabel Press documents this meeting. (Link: https://www.portisabelsouthpadre.com/2023/10/12/laguna-vista-utrgv-clinic-closing/

Along with Laguna Vista resident Ralston Creswell, I personally met with UTRGV officials and was told directly that the clinic was operating at a significant financial loss and that patient volume was too low to sustain operations. 

Additionally, local funding support had been exhausted, which meant taxpayers could have been responsible for $250,000 or more annually to keep the clinic open.

This was not a sudden decision, and it was not caused by any one person.

It is also important to clarify that I was not the mayor at the time Rendie Gonzalez was hired, and I voted against her employment as city manager for Laguna Vista.

After the closure, I was instrumental in helping bring a new healthcare option to Laguna Vista quickly, ensuring residents were not left without access to care.

There is also a letter (left, click to enlarge) dated October 6, 2023, addressed to Donald Haydon from UTRGV’s School of Medicine. It confirms the same facts:
*The clinic was operating at a significant financial loss.
*Patient volume was too low to sustain operations.
*Local funding support was exhausted.
*These issues were discussed publicly long before closure. 

Despite having access to this information that came directly from UTRGV’s Dean of Medicine Dr. Michael Hocker, Donald Haydon continues to push a one sided narrative that disregards documented facts and has misled the public since October 2023.

will continue to address any false accusations regarding the clinic situation moving forward. I am proud of the work I have done to provide this community with the healthcare options they deserve.
That kind of rhetoric does not inform the public, it divides the community.

Laguna Vista deserves honest conversations grounded in facts, not selective narratives designed to mislead residents or rewrite history.

At the end of the day, this election is about trust.
Vote for leadership that tells you the whole truth.
Vote for leadership you can trust.
Vote for Mike Carter.

Early Voting April 20-28
Election Day May 2

CAUGHT IN ANOTHER LIE: TRUMP KNEW ABOUT GAS FIELD BOMBING

By Scott Waldman, Eli Stokols, Dasha Burns, and Sophia Cai 
Politico 

The widening attacks on energy infrastructure in the Middle East have created a rift between the White House and its Gulf allies while increasing fears of a global recession.

Israel’s targeting of the South Pars gas field in Iran on Wednesday set off a wave of Iranian reprisals that caused extensive damage to the world’s largest liquefied natural gas exporting facility in Qatar. It’s a major escalation in the war and one that energy industry observers have most feared because the destruction of oil and gas facilities could take years to repair and turbocharge the economic disruption already ensnaring the globe.

President Donald Trump quickly distanced his administration from the attack, and a person familiar with the White House’s thinking, granted anonymity to discuss private discussion, said the strike unsettled the administration.

“Israelis have been very reckless,” the person said, adding that Qatar reached out to U.S. officials to say Israel’s targeting of energy infrastructure needs to be stopped. “Lots of frustration with them.”

(Fire and plumes of smoke rise after a drone struck a fuel tank near Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates on Monday.) | AP

The attack, which caused oil prices to continue their climb, laid bare the growing daylight between Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as the war closes in on its third week.

On Thursday, Trump told reporters at the White House that he called Netanyahu to tell him that Israel should not target energy infrastructure.

“I told him don’t do that,” Trump said. “We’re independent but we get along great. It’s coordinated. But on occasion he’ll do something and I don’t like it. And so we’re not doing that anymore.”

The president also promised on Truth Social on Wednesday night that, “NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL pertaining to this extremely important and valuable South Pars Field.” A person familiar with the White House’s Middle East strategy said the post was written to assuage the Qataris.

Trump’s pledges come as he has threatened to take or destroy Kharg Island, through which 90 percent of Iran’s crude oil is exported.

Trump spoke to Qatari leaders on Wednesday and told them he was unaware of Israel’s plans to attack South Pars and that he does not support the strategy, said a person familiar with the conversation and granted anonymity to discuss it.

“The only way Trump is going to snap out of this is to realize that Bibi Netanyahu is playing him,” the person said. “This war is hurting the U.S., it’s bruising the Gulf region and it’s straining relationships with allies in Europe and the Gulf. The only person who’s benefitting is Netanyahu.”

To read rest of story, click on link: https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/19/strike-on-key-iranian-gas-field-is-a-new-phase-of-the-war-trump-blames-israel-00837052

Friday, March 20, 2026

BLUE TIDE RISING, JOIN YOUR FELLOW DEMOCRATS SATURDAY

TREVINO: TRANSPARENCY, ENVIRONMENTAL RESPONSIBILITY AND NO TAX INCENTIVES FOR REFINERY


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

County Judge emphasizes economic opportunity while urging careful planning and public
accountability.

Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño Jr. today released a statement addressing the proposed refinery project at the Port of Brownsville, emphasizing both the potential economic opportunity and the need for transparency, environmental protection, and responsible planning as the region prepares for possible rapid growth.

Judge Treviño said the development could bring significant economic activity and jobs to South Texas, but he cautioned that the community must take time to fully understand the scale and implications of the project.

“I took my time to digest this before making a statement, because we need to pause for a moment and truly analyze what may be about to happen in Cameron County,” Treviño said. “Let me be clear. I am in favor of this. This could be a good thing for Cameron County and could bring significant investment and opportunity to our region.”

The proposed refinery has been described as the first new U.S. refinery in nearly 50 years and could create thousands of construction and permanent jobs if completed.However, Treviño stressed that a project of this magnitude would fundamentally change the region.

“If developments like this move forward as expected, Cameron County is on the path to becoming a major metropolitan area, much like Houston, Dallas, or San Antonio,” Treviño said.

“That means more opportunity, but it also means more people, higher home values, more demand on infrastructure, and greater pressure on housing and property taxes.”

Treviño also emphasized that environmental protection must remain a priority as the project moves forward. 

“We must also be mindful of the environmental impact that a project of this scale could have on our region,” he said. “We must remain vigilant in protecting our land, our air, and our water, The County Judge also raised concerns about transparency surrounding the project’s announcement, noting that port officials have indicated the refinery has been under discussion for years.

“If this project has truly  ben in the works for many years, it is fair to the citizens of Cameron County to ask why the community is only now hearing about it in such a sudden way,” Treviño said. “Projects of this magnitude do not happen overnight. Our residents deserve to be informed and engaged in conversations that will shape the future of our region.”

Treviño also pointed to inconsistencies in how the scale of the project has been communicated.
“Numbers shift from hundred of billions to billions, people deserve clear and honest answers.”

The County Judge also made clear that he does not support offering tax incentives to the project.
“And let me be clear on one more thing: I will not support tax incentives for this project. Since this project has been announced and is supposedly coming to the Port of Brownsville and we are no longer competing with any other area for this project; it should stand on its own, without asking taxpayers to subsidize it.”

Treviño concluded by emphasizing that progress of this scale is the result of years of work by many leaders across the region. 

“This is also not the work of any one person. Progress of this magnitude is always the result of years of effort by many, from local leaders and institutions to state and federal partners. No single individual should claim credit for a project of this size.”

“As we look ahead, we must reflect on both the promise and the responsibility that comes with this opportunity,” Treviño said. “This could be a historic moment for Cameron County, but only if we prepare responsibly, communicate transparently, and move forward together as a community.”

IN CESAR CHAVEZ'S CASE, WE CAN'T BE SELECTIVE IN OUR OUTRAGE

By Juan Montoya

The rage and controversy surroundings the disclosures that Cesar Chavez – the leader and founder of the United Farm Workers Union – who died 33 years ago,  groomed and sexually abused women in the movement came as a shock and a huge disappointment to his followers and admirers.

Suddenly, those of us who looked up to him and supported his movement to give migrants and farm workers a decent wage and improved conditions in the fields are confronted with a growing body of evidence that our idol had feet of clay. That he was a flawed human being. 

And no one argues that if these allegations are true, it is reprehensible and unacceptable behavior and should have never been permitted.

There are now calls to remove his name from streets, buildings,  to cancel the national holiday bearing his name, and to cancel events celebrating his accomplishments to give farm workers better wages, protections, and working conditions.

But let's take a proportional perspective of this. Many of our founding fathers and other people who are enshrined in our culture also had their flaws, and over time, their shortcomings have been eclipsed by the worth of their accomplishments. 

For example, many have pointed out that George Washington, our first president, had slaves that remained slaves after he died. In fact, when a female domestic servant fled to the Northeast, he sent a slave catcher to retrieve his "property."

And Thomas Jefferson was not only a slave holder like Washington and other founding fathers, but also owned a female slave named Sally Hemings who served as a nursemaid and companion to his daughters. Beginning in Paris, they began a long-term sexual relationship lasting nearly four decades, resulting in six children. DNA evidence and historical analysis confirm Jefferson fathered these children. Is there any question that Jefferson was in a position of power over this slave woman and abused it to dominate a vulnerable human being?

And Martin Luther King, who dedicated his life to bettering the lot of African Americans in this country, was spied on by Edgar Hoover's FBI and recorded having extra-marital affairs with women in the movement to the point that they threatened him with blackmail to abandon his struggle and even suggested that he commit suicide.

JFK, another hero to the Mexican American population, was known for this philandering ways and rumors existed that he even had a fling with Marylin Monroe. 

Bill Clinton, more recently, was discovered to have consorted with White House intern Monica Lewinsky between 1995 and 1997 and later admitted to "inappropriate intimate contact," leading to his impeachment by the House for perjury and obstruction of justice, though he was acquitted by the Senate

And need we point out that our current president is a 34-times convicted felon, a grifter, and has been closely linked to Jeffrey Epstein who ran a pedophile and international call girl ring. What else is there in the grotesque covered-up Epstein files?

Should their names be erased from our national conscience? And should all the buildings, streets, monuments, and holidays, and city names associated with them also be removed? One can't be selective in our outrage at the revelations about Chavez. What's good for the goose, should be good for the gander.

I have sisters and daughters, and nieces and am revolted at the thought of someone abusing them, no matter who they are. But if we are going to be outraged at what Chavez is said to have done, shouldn't the same measure be applied to all the others? 

We can't be selective in our outrage, but it should make us as a nation even more determined to stamp out this plague of criminal behavior and sexual abuse. And the UFW should think of instituting some sort of reparations to the victims or their families if they are still with us.

As a former migrant farm worker, I personally saw the improved working conditions brought about by Chavez and the UFW. Simple things like having drinking water and sanitary facilities in the fields, promoting education for migrant kids, living wages, and forcing corporations to shoulder up to their responsibilities for using pesticides in our food, are noteworthy accomplishments that benefitted many poor workers and the country as a whole. We're a better nation for it.

The Founding Fathers, MLK, JFK and Chavez – for all their human frailties – enriched our culture and improved the lives of many people in this nation. Let's have a proportional perspective on their crimes and misdeeds and pledge ourselves to eradicating this type of behavior making it clear that it's indefensible while recognizing their contributions.

THE DANGER OF OUTSOURCING SIGNS TO MATAMOROS

(Ed.'s Note: The misspelled word "commissioner" in a Brownsville Navigation District sign points to the danger of going across the river to get them cheaper than on this side of the river. It's not only embarrassing, but it will also be costly to correct the mistake. Who was the proof reader who approved the wording on this candidate's campaign signs? On the other hand, maybe it will attract more voters who detected the mistake. But then again, maybe not.)

Thursday, March 19, 2026

SCENES FROM THE WORLD BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIP


 

THE LONG TORTURED HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE OF IRAN

 
By Tammy Bright

> 70 years ago, Iran looked just like any Western country.
> Short skirts, rock’n’roll, open universities.

> It’s 1953. Iran elects a secular socialist: Mohammad Mossadegh.
> He nationalizes oil. That pisses off British Petroleum.
> Cold War excuse.
> CIA and MI6 stage a coup. Operation Ajax.
> Mossadegh is overthrown.

> They install the Shah, a brutal US-backed dictator.
> Secret police. Torture chambers.
> Iran turns into a puppet state.
> People are that desperate, they turn to Khomeini, an exiled cleric, promising independence and dignity.
> 1979: Islamic Revolution.
> The Shah flees.

> US embassy stormed. Hostage crisis.
> America never forgives.
> Arms Saddam Hussein.
> Iraq invades Iran.
> US provides chemical weapons, satellite intel, logistics.
> 1 million Iranians die.
> Iranian kids sent into minefields with plastic keys around their necks.
> US shoots down Iran Air Flight 655
> 290 civilians dead.

> No apology.
> Fast forward today, Israel attacks Iran.
> The U.S. immediately says “we stand with Israel.”
> They talk about “regime change.”
> They say that Iranians “deserve freedom.”

> No mention of the coup they started.
> No mention of the dictator they installed.
> No mention of the war they fueled.
> No mention of the decades of sanctions and sabotage.

> They created the monster, and now they attacked it because it was still breathing.
> Watch who they try to put on the throne next.
> The son of the Shah is already being presented as the “alternative.”
> The same dynasty.
> The same foreign backing.
>The same promises of stability.

> History will repeats itself.
> And it’s not gonna end well.

PURO PINCHE PEDO; Y TODAVIA SE LA TRAGAN LOS MAGAS

I support my brother Joe Kent. The fact that this administration is now saying pejorative statements about Joe lets you know how pathetic they truly are. Trump called him “WEAK”.

 A fat pussy who avoided military service like the plague is calling my brother with 20 years in special ops, 15 combat tours and lost his WIFE to and IED supporting the war in Syria weak! 

Fuck you Trump, you ran on “No New Wars” and the veterans that gave our youth to the GWOT believed you, then you go back on your word and think you can insult us? 

Very clear you’re nothing more than Netanyahu Cuck.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

VENEZUELA VANQUISHES TEAM USA, TAKES WORLD BASEBALL CLASSIC CHAMPIONSHIP

Special  to El Rrun-Rrun

Venezuela’s dominant pitching and timely hitting shocked the United States, 3-2, to capture the World Baseball Classic (WBC) title for the first time in team history.

Only Team USA, Japan and the Dominican Republic have been able to call themselves WBC champions. Venezuela, using its momentum from a semifinal victory over Italy on Monday night, had eyes set on history.

But no one could’ve expected what transpired at loanDepot Park in Miami, as the U.S. was held to just two hits and four total baserunners.

TRUMP: FORGET IRAN, "I CAN DO WITH CUBA WHATEVER I WANT."


Reuters

The threatening statements come even as Cuba and the United States have opened talks aimed at improving their largely adverse relations, which have reached one of their most contentious moments in the ​67 years since Fidel Castro overthrew what had been a close U.S. ally.

"I do believe I'll be...having the honor ​of taking Cuba. That's a big honor. Taking Cuba in some form," Trump told reporters as ⁠the island faces an unprecedented economic crisis, exacerbated by an oil blockade the U.S. imposed after capturing former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

"I ​mean, whether I free it, take it. Think I can do anything I want with it. You want to know the truth," ​Trump told reporters at a signing event in the Oval Office.

After Trump spoke, the New York Times reported that removing Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel from office is a key U.S. objective in the bilateral talks. Citing four people familiar with the talks, the Times said the Americans have signaled to Cuban negotiators ​that Diaz-Canel must go but are leaving the next steps up to the Cubans.

CONFIRMED: ACCUSED MATA KILLER DEAD FROM APPARENT SUICIDE

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Initial reports – first published in El Rrun-Rrun and now confirmed – indicate that the Texas Rangers have been called to investigate the Friday morning death of  Joel Uriegas Izaguirre, accused of capital murder in the deaths of his wife and her aunt, found hanging in his cell Friday March 13, while being held in custody in the Cameron County Rucker-Carrizalez Correction Center in Olmito.

Yaguirre was charged in connection with the death of the two women in Brownsville after authorities said he admitted to the killings. They said he had used a wooden club to bludgeon them to death.

The victims were identified as his wife Norma Alicia Garza Espinoza's and his wife's aunt Idalia Carrizales, who was 58, said Cameron County Sheriff Manuel Trevino during a  press conference.

Izaguirre, 48, from Matamoros, was charged with two counts of capital murder and issued no bond. During Izaguirre's arraignment, the judge declared him a flight risk as he left to Matamoros after the killings.

The murder was reported on December 14, 2025. The killings happened in the 6200 block of Tecate Street.

During a press conference, Trevino said this was not a random act of violence and instead was planned. A motive for the killing was Izaguirre had a mistress in Matamoros and possibly killed his wife to be with her. News reports indicate that a custodial death report listed the cause of death as asphyxia due to hanging.

The report stated that Izagurre was found unresponsive in his cell at approximately 9 a.m. on Friday. Medical staff on scene attempted CPR, but confirmed that he had no pulse.

The report goes on to say that Izaguirre used a mattress cover sheet to hang himself. He reportedly used plastic material from the mattress and the mattress sheet to form a ligature for his hanging. A letter written by Izaguirre was also found in his cell. He was 48-years-old at the time of his death.

Justice of the Peace Mary Esther Sorola ordered a full autopsy.

After his arrest, Izaguirre, who was from Matamoros, had told investigators that he’d planned to kill his wife because he had wanted to start a new life with his girlfriend from work. He said that he’d tried to deceive authorities by planting his border crossing card on her lifeless body.

Monday, March 16, 2026

LIKE IT OR NOT, LITTLE SISTER: HAPPY BIRTHDAY...

(Ed.'s Note: She is reticent about being made over, but we couldn't help but to extend her our heart-felt wishes for a happy birthday. We won't say how old the little darling in the photo is today, other than to say we are lucky as a family to have her as a companion on this often trying journey and how appreciative we are to the Big Guy upstairs to have brought us together. Happy Birthday, Sis. God Bless you and yours. Many more!)

EVERYBODY SAID THEY'D STAND BEHIND ME WHEN THE GAME GOT ROUGH, BUT THE JOKE WAS ON ME THERE WAS NOBODY EVEN THERE TO CALL MY BLUFF...


By Ravi Mattu
New York Times

President Trump has urged China, Britain, France, Japan and South Korea to send warships to help reopen the waterway, even though they are not involved in the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran.

President Trump’s call for some countries not involved in the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran to send ships to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz has received cautious responses.

Mr. Trump named China, Britain, France, Japan and South Korea in a social media post on Saturday, urging them to join an effort to guard the waterway, a conduit for a fifth of the world’s oil shipments.

On Sunday, he warned that NATO faced a “very bad” future if members of the alliance did not help to open the Strait of Hormuz, adding that Europe was more reliant on Middle Eastern oil than the United States. “It’s only appropriate that people who are the beneficiaries of the Strait will help to make sure that nothing bad happens there,” he told the Financial Times.

Mr. Trump also threatened to delay a summit with China’s leader, Xi Jinping, which is expected to begin at the end of the month in Beijing.

Here is how governments have responded so far:

Germany: Germany rejected the U.S. demand. “This is not our war; we did not start it,” Boris Pistorius said at a news conference in Berlin on Monday. “We want diplomatic solutions and a swift end to the conflict, but sending more warships to the region will likely not help achieve that,” he added.

European Union: “It is in our interest to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, and that’s why we are also discussing what we can do in this regard,” Kaja Kallas, the top E.U. diplomat, told reporters on Monday. She was speaking before a meeting of European foreign ministers, who were expected to discuss what E.U. countries can do to protect the strait.

Britain: Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Monday that his government was working with allies on a viable plan to reopen the strait but cautioned that Britain would not be “drawn into wider war,” a day after speaking with Mr. Trump about the strait and the disruptions to global shipping. Mr. Starmer did not say if Britain would send warships to the Gulf, but he urged a “swift resolution” to the conflict.

Australia: Australia does not intend to send ships to the Strait of Hormuz, Catherine King, the transport minister, said on Monday. “We know how incredibly important that is, but that’s not something that we’ve been asked or that we’re contributing to,” Ms. King told Australia’s national broadcaster.

Japan: Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi told Parliament on Monday that Japan had no plans to send warships to the Persian Gulf. Japan’s pacifist constitution limits military engagement in wars and a senior Japanese official had previously warned that any decision to deploy warships would face “high hurdles.” Takayuki Kobayashi, policy chief of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, told the Japanese public broadcaster NHK on Sunday that the country would have to be cautious. The issue may come up during Ms. Takaichi’s planned meeting with Mr. Trump in Washington on Thursday.

China: China, the biggest buyer of Iranian oil, has not responded directly to Mr. Trump’s remarks but has previously called for the cessation of hostilities. On Monday, Lin Jian, a spokesman for China’s foreign ministry, said the two sides were still discussing Mr. Trump’s planned visit to Beijing. The spokesman reiterated that China was committed to de-escalating the conflict.

France: France has also not responded directly to Mr. Trump’s call publicly. President Emmanuel Macron has said that he would be willing to use the French navy to escort ships but only if the conflict stabilized. On Sunday, Mr. Macron wrote on social media that he had  spoken with President Masoud Pezeshkian of Iran and told him that Tehran needed to ensure freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz and reopen it to shipping.

South Korea: The office of President Lee Jae Myung of South Korea said in a statement that it would “communicate closely with the United States,” but did not make any commitments.


Ravi Mattu is the managing editor of DealBook, based in London. He joined The New York Times in 2022 from the Financial Times, where he held a number of senior roles in Hong Kong and London.

REPORTS INDICATE MURDER SUSPECT COMMITTED SUICIDE


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Reports, officially unconfirmed, are indicating that Joel Uriegas Izaguirre, accused of capital murder in the deaths of his wife and her aunt, has committed suicide by hanging Friday March 13, while being held in custody in the Cameron County Rucker-Carrizalez Correction Center.

Yaguirre was charged in connection with the death of two women in Brownsville after authorities said he admitted to the killings.

Izaguirre, 48, from Matamoros, was charged with two counts of capital murder and issued no bond. During Izaguirre's arraignment, the judge declared him a flight risk as he left to Matamoros after the killings.

The murder was reported on December 14, 2025.

The victims were identified as his wife Norma Alicia Garza Espinoza's and his wife's aunt Idalia Carrizales, who was 58, said Cameron County Sheriff Manuel Trevino during a  press conference.

The killings happened in the 6200 block of Tecate Street..

During a press conference, Trevino said this was not a random act of violence and instead was planned. A motive for the killing was Izaguirre had a mistress in Matamoros and possibly killed his wife to be with her.

The sheriff's office has not made a statement on the reported suicide. This is a developing story and we will update the story as more information becomes available.

EVEN THE GUV KNOWS THE BLUE WAVE IS COMING


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Republican incumbent Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is sounding the alarm about a potential blue wave in the state after Democrats continue to surge in elections.

In  a campaign donation email, his campaign noted "the numbers are in, and here’s a gut-punch reality check."

The Abbott campaign stated: Texas House Democrats posted record-shattering fundraising numbers for 2025, with money pouring in from all 50 states.

Democrat voter enthusiasm is surging – they’re motivated, angry, and ready to swarm the polls.
In many of the most important races across the nation, Democrats are outraising Republicans by huge margins.

Let's go Gina!


 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

SPRING IS SPRINGING ACROSS EL VALLE AND SOUTH TEXAS

When springtime comes to South Texas
Dour, gray and thorny huisaches
Sprout riotous, fuzzy dandelions

And the sedate mesquite adorns itself with verdant ferns for leaves
And blooms that look like a plague of fuzzy yellow caterpillars
Jostling in the wind for space on its limbs and branches
And the prickly olive green cactus
Sprouts, elegant golden blooms
That turn to purple-meat tuna/pears in the summer coming

Even the eternal ebony fortresses
Sport their blooms before they become pods
And their yellow pollen dust floats on the dark street asphalt
In eddies...
Like Monet water lilies

The chaste and demure desert olive - la anacahuita - now screams out at you
With its wanton loud white flowers
Look at me!

And strews its petals of purity on the sidewalk
Like maidens did before the feet of
Aztec emperor Montezuma
In his strolls
Along the causeways of Tenochtitlan 
There are no seasons in this valley
Just a constant temperate with a short cold snap

And you know it's Spring
When the perpetually sullen trees
And prickly-mouth cacti 
Flourish and talk
In late March and early April

DO ONTO OTHERS AS YOU WOULD HAVE THEN DO ONTO YOU...

President Truman in unearthed letter to Eleanor Roosevelt and separate note (both 1947) compares Zionists to Hitler & Stalin: “US Zionists will eventually prejudice everyone [against them]... Jews are like all under dogs - when they get on top they are just as intolerant and as cruel as the people were to them when they were underneath.”

Saturday, March 14, 2026

MARK YOUR CALENDAR TO SUPPORT YOUNG CONJUNTO MUSICIANS!

THE U.S. ARMY AND STILLMAN: "THE LAND DIDN'T BELONG TO ANYBODY..."

 

(Ed.'s Note: Ever since we were children, we have been told that when Gen. Zachary Taylor arrived on the site of present-day Brownsville, he found nothing but barren land and upon that land he built Fort Texas, afterwards named Ft. Brown for Major Jacob Brown, killed after being struck in the knee by a Mexican cannon ball that bounced off  a wall. Brown did die, but when the U.S. Army came upon the land, there was a prosperous rancho, growing cotton, sugar cane and beans, etc., and at least 12 "substantial" buildings and strong fencing. The U.S. entered into a rental agreement with its owner Miguel Salinas, who now lies buried in the Santa Rosalia Cemetery.

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.)

By Juan Montoya

51st Congress, First Session
April 21, 1890.
Committee on War Claims

The Committee on War Claims, to whom was referred the bill (H. B. 3433) for the relief of the heirs of Miguel Salinas, have had the same under consideration, and respectfully report:

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. 

The lands were very extensive, and at the time of occupation by the Army, as above stated, had growing upon them very large crops of cotton, corn, sugar cane, beans, about half matured.

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.

It was also further stipulated in the said contract that if any alterations were found necessary to be made while occupied by the Government, it would only be done with the consent of the owner, and should not detract from their value. A fort was built upon the plantation of said Miguel Salinas; and called Fort  (Texas), later Brown, after the officer in command. In order to render it bomb-proof, Assistant Quartermaster Captain Crossman ordered all the fences on the place hauled to the fort and used by Captain and Engineer Mansfield for that purpose. The work gave great protection to the troops, and part of the fencing was also used by them for fuel.

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. 

He made subsequent applications, but met with no success.

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.

After the receipt of the above report from Major Crossman, General Thomas S. Jesup (Quartermaster General) writes to Conrad, Secretary of War, under the date of August 13, 1852, as follows, in reference to this claim:

"As far as the public agents entered into contracts we are unquestionably bound in good faith. to fulfill  them, but the contracts were limited to a compensation of $1.50 a day for the houses and cattle-pen on the land when it was occupied and these contracts probably terminated with the destruction of the buildings; but, having rented them, it is a question whether we are not bound to pay for them, they having been destroyed by order of the commanding officer.

I submit a report of Major Crossman giving the facts in relationship to the original establishment of the troops upon the site and the contract with Mr. Salinas; also a report of Major Crossman in relation to the arrangement with Mr. (Charles) Stillman, whose title has merged in that of Mr. Cavazos."

The heirs of Salinas, being wholly unfamiliar with the English language, and having to depend upon the attorneys for Cavazos, who were also interested in the suits, and the incidental change of' counsel by death, removal from the country, and other circumstances, left claimants wholly at their mercy and the delay by the Government in the settlement of the accounts of the claimants is one which otherwise can be regarded than seriously unjust, and should be immediately remedied, as the title to the ownership of the various claimants to the land has been settled by a recent opinion of the Attorney General, and which pretext the Government has availed itself of heretofore refusing payment.

Then, in January 31, 1891, the Committee on Military Affairs contradicted the 1846 contract and earlier report by Quartermaster Crossman and the value of the Salinas ranch, buildings and improvements by stating that: 

(To read about the theft of Miguel Salinas' land by the U.S. Government, and later, by Charles Stillman, click on link below. The author, Sara C. Bronin, is a property law professor at Cornell University and a direct descendant of Miguel Salinas.)
https://www.latinobookreview.com/8203land-grab-the-untold-story-of-fort-brown-by-sara-c-bronin--latino-book-review.html

SUCKERS AND LOSERS ARE DELAYING MY TEE TIME, DAGNAMMIT!

GENETICS? WAS TRUMP TALKING ABOUT HAITIANS, OR S. AFRICANS?

Friday, March 13, 2026

ES VIERNES. BUENO EL FISH! THE HAPPY LIFE OF CRABS IN A BUCKET...


La Cebolla

NEW BEDFORD, MA—Expressing deep gratitude to find himself surrounded by those so dear to his heart, local crab Dan Herscher told reporters Wednesday that he was just happy to be in a bucket with all his friends. 

“Yes, sir, there’s nothing better than hanging out in a plastic bucket and clambering all over a couple dozen of my best buds,” said Herscher, adding that the warm, convivial atmosphere fostered by the bucket was such that he couldn’t help but pull back any comrades attempting to escape over the edge and give them a big, crabby hug.

 “Hey, where are you going, pal? Get back in here. This party’s just getting started! Just a perfect afternoon forming a writhing mass with the boys. We never really got together like this out in the ocean, but this bucket has brought us all so much closer. Nowhere else I’d rather be, fellas. Ah, jeez, I just love every last one of you is all. Bucket buddies for life!” 

At press time, witnesses reported that Herscher had also hit it off with a gloved hand reaching in to pluck him from the bucket.

GINA PULLS EVEN IN THE BELLY OF THE BEAST: YOU GO GIRL!

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

A new poll shows Gina tied with Abbott in TX-23, a district Trump won by 15 points in 2024.

That is a real sign that Texans are paying attention. They’re tired of Greg Abbott’s poor leadership, tired of paying more and having less, and tired of paying the Greg Abbott Corruption Tax.

This is huge. Not only did Democrats outvote Republicans in a midterm primary for the first time in 24 years, but Abbott’s support is plummeting.

I’ve been traveling across the state, meeting voters where they are, and everywhere I go, I hear the same thing: Texans are tired of working more and getting less because they’re paying the Greg Abbott Corruption Tax.

Voters in districts like this are telling us they’re ready for change — they’re rejecting the corruption that has made Greg Abbott and a few of his billionaire buddies rich while the rest of us pay the price.

This campaign isn’t about left vs. right, it’s about electing a governor that will put working families first by fighting for strong schools, lower costs, and a Texas that actually works for Texans.

If we’re tied with Abbott in a district this red, we know we can close the gap statewide and win in November — but we’re going to need your help to get there.

Over the next several months, we need to meet with voters in communities across Texas, make sure they hear directly from Gina, and keep building the grassroots campaign it takes to beat Abbott in the fall.

Rush in any amount right now to help us close the gap in TX-23 and other deep-red districts in Texas and defeat Greg Abbott in November →

FRIDAY FUNNIES NOT SO FUNNY: IF ONLY BOMBS COULD TALK


 

rita