Monday, August 25, 2025

MONDAY QUIZ: WHO HOLDS ALL-TIME TOP SPOT ON BILLBOARD?


Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The Beatles: Still #1 on the Billboard 200 – and by a landslide

According to Billboard’s latest tally, The Beatles have spent 132 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart – more than any other artist in history.

For perspective:

• Taylor Swift is in 2nd with 86 weeks.

• Elvis Presley, the King himself, is at 67.

• Even Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston, Adele, and Elton John don’t come close.

• And yes – the Rolling Stones, their eternal rivals, sit tied for 11th with 38 weeks.

The gap is staggering. Nearly three years at No. 1, across multiple albums and generations, and the records are still standing. No streaming boosts, no social media – just vinyl, radio, and Beatlemania.

Proof once again that the Beatles didn’t just break records – they set the standard.

What do you think?

Will anyone ever catch The Beatles’ 132 weeks at the top – or is this one record that will stand forever?
Thanks to Boardroom for this image.
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Sunday, August 24, 2025

WEEKLY HARD SCRABBLE SUNDAY MORNINGS AT LA CARTA

Image result for la carta brava, brownsville, ,rrun rrun

By Juan Montoya

They start queuing up as early as 9 a.m. Sunday when the normal people are heading for church.

The bells at Immaculate Conception Cathedral are pealing and the evangelical crowd at the fountain in the city's market square is just coming together as the hermanos are laying out their tables for the free lunch at noon. But first, the small group of believers must ingest a generous dose of religion.

But that is the second helping after the mandatory pozole at La Carta Brava, or more recently los taquitos de barbacha (barbacoa).
Image result for pozole in a styrofoam cup
In fact, if you do not accept the Styrofoam bowl of pozole and one of tortilla chips they can't serve you beer. The doors open at 10 a.m. and as Ceci, Blanca, or one of the girls gets the place ready, a small stream of people come in to imbibe the hair of the dog that bit them Saturday night en el bailongo.

The crack queens are next, stretching out their limbs in the morning heat and venturing out from their holes or abandoned houses or vacant buildings where they spent the night. For them, life is a constant hustle, a constant measuring up of likely marks who will feel sorry for their gaunt cheeks, haunted eyes and second-hand outfits they gleaned from the dumpsters behind the segundas all over downtown.

"You should have seen her and her sister when they were younger," says one of the early birds as he pops open a can of cold beer. "Estaban bien guenas hasta que le hicieron a la piedra. Nunca se bajaron del avion. Pobrecitas."

Image result for beto quintanilla albumsThe juke box is an open scream as Beto Quintanilla (Cantinillas) belts out a song that sounds suspiciously just like all his other songs, with fake gunfire accentuating the offbeat like a counter melody. "Uno sabe donde nace, pero nunca donde acaba Estado pegado al norte, Tamaulipas tierra brava, (bang, bang, bang)..."

A few conjuntos sometimes wander in, but that is usually later at night. For now, it's just what's available en la chillona.

(You won't hear Kris Kristofferson singing about Sunday Morning Coming Down at La Carta.)

The pool players are next, like perpetual doormen standing around the table leaning on their cue sticks. Here all the shots are called and slop isn't permitted.

"Cantaditas, no guevas," they call out before the game. "Y es last pocket."

Some of the ladies are still wearing last night's outfit, usually gold lame shoes with leopard print blouses a bit too tight for the sagging flesh. If it looks like they have been slept in, it's because they probably were. But hey, in the semi darkness of the Carta, no one notices or even cares. And no one cares if you scream.

In their corner, veterans and retired cops pass judgment on the crowd and keep to themselves.

The panhandlers start hustling beers from some of the patrons they know from many days of hanging out at the joint.

"Prestame dos bolas, bro, maƱana te pago."

Of course, everyone knows that they will never remember to pay their marks, but in a way, the loan is like an investment. One of these days it might be you wanting a beer and feeling your empty pockets. One good turn...

After everyone who wanted to eat a bowl of pozole has taken his, some pass their filled ones to appreciative homeless as noon approaches. Noon means that a football game will be on at the Sportsman Lounge and small groups of customers drift over to Elizabeth Street behind the old HEB parking lot to see one, or to see the soccer game of La Ligua MX and shoot the breeze with the regulars there.

For those with more refined tastes, a small number of trendy joints are available early afternoon where loud rock and canned music is the fare. But after a while, the $3.75 beers lose their appeal and they drift back to the $2.00 brews at La Carta, the Sportsman or – before it burned – down the alley at El Barril. More daring patrons sometimes drift off to 14th Street.

By 3 p.m. if they are playing – and usually losing – the Dallas Cowboys will be on the air. From there on, it'll be suds and football until dusk turns into night and people start drifting toward home and the work week begins again. And so, another day goes by in the underbelly of this border city.

And if you get a hangover, well, the high-rise elderly dwellers know that the Sportsman and La Carta opens at 10 a.m. pa curarse la cruda and start all over again.

MILD, MEDIUM OR HOT? CAREFUL WHAT YOU ASK FOR!

Saturday, August 23, 2025

SATURDAY FUNNIES: CAN'T GET A GOOD SHOT OF THE MONUMENT, DAMN IT!


La Cebolla

WASHINGTON — Emphasizing that he wasn’t going to leave the nation’s capital without getting one good photograph, D.C. tourist Stan Jacobs expressed frustration Friday after atrocities kept getting in the frame of his shot. 

“All right, everyone, looking good — just wait two more seconds until all those military guys finish shooting their assault rifles and hop back into their big armored tank,” said a visibly impatient Jacobs, who asked his family to give him a “big smile” and “say cheese” just as several National Guardsmen, FBI agents, and DHS officers sprinted into the foreground and began physically assaulting dozens of people. 

“Excuse me, sir? I know you have to do your job and brutalize American citizens, but could you just do it a few feet to the right? I only need two seconds without it looking like I live under a fascist police state. 

"Actually. Could you take our picture? Just try not to get any blood on the lens.”

At press time, Jacobs was reportedly struggling to crop in on the photo to hide the fact that an active member of the U.S. military had just shot him in the chest several times.

DISMAL BUS SHELTER PLANNING MARS BROWNTOWN'S ALL-AMERICAN CITY IMAGE

(Ed.'s Note: Our seven readers are probably tired of us harping on Brownsville Metro (or is it Brownsville Urban System) for not providing bus shelters for its riders. At any one time, people waiting for a bus in the midday heat climbing toward 100 degrees or in the middle of a blue cold front have used milk crates, bricks, boards, etc., to fashion out seats. Nearby trees provide some respite from the sun.

And today, in the middle of Dog Days, bus riders like the ones above waiting across Old Port Isabel Road with their purchases from the Walmart across the street for the bus to take them back downtown, still have to endure the elements using whatever they can for a seat (in this case a brick wall), or huddle under a tree on the private property. 

Sometimes, riders have resorted to carrying their own folding chairs.

Metro defenders say that there is already a shelter on the other side of OPI ( a four-lane street) and that the riders can wait there until they see the bus going south. But that shelter is for arriving passengers coming north from the city before they make their purchases at the store. Can you imagine carrying the bags of merchandise, kids, the elderly, etc. to dash across the busy street dodging traffic as not to miss the bus? 

Why not build another one on that side of the street for riders to wait after they have made their purchases and are heading back to the city? 

The property owner where the flags are flying could well tell the riders to leave his property and wait on the side of the road where the sign indicates the bus will stop. But in the past, he has even placed a used sofa for them to sit while they wait. The city carried it off once we published a photo in this blog. But a shelter has not been built there and it doesn't appear in Metro's to-do list.

So how about it Metro, or the city commission? Can you provide these shoppers – who are contributing to our quality of life budget with their sales taxes - a place for them to sit and take some shelter from the elements? Or should they – as Queen Rose Gowen used to say – "let them ride bikes!")

CONFUSING DOWNTOWN PARKING PUZZLE: CAN I OR CAN'T I PARK?


Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Take a gander at what looks like a rather innocuous photo of a street corner above. 

With construction snarling up traffic in the downtown area and streets blocked off without any notice, a parking space is at premium. When you come across an empty one – like this one at the corner of Elizabeth and ninth streets on the east side of the Cameron County building fenced parking lot – the tendency is to jump on it before the next desperate parking-space hunter beats you to it.

But then you stop and think: If I park here, will I be in violation of the red curb paint prohibiting the parking of cars in a space reserved for emergency vehicles? Or does the parking space outlined with the white paint on the street trump the emergency space?

That puzzled one of our readers who sent us this photo. What guides here?, they asked. Does the red prohibition of the painted curb, or the parking space white paint lines on the street?

That puzzled us, too, and after futilely calling the Brownsville Help line (546-HELP) and placed on hold while a recording tried to convince us for close to a half hour that our call was important, we reached out to District 4 commissioner Pedro Cardenas, with our question: What trumps here, the red curb paint or the parking lines? 

"I was confused, too," he responded through text on his cell phone. "Let me see if we can fix that."

That was Thursday morning and we expected the usual foot dragging by the city.

But then lo and behold! The following day (Friday) that we passed through the same spot, city crews had moved to clarify the issue by painting over the red line with gray where it came level with the white parking line on the street.

"We've got a couple of corners like that and the city crews are looking for them to correct the confusion," Cardenas texted. "Thanks for pointing that out to us. Please be patient and we'll get it fixed."

So there you have it. If everything goes as Cardenas says, the confusion over where you can or can't park will be cleared. Happy motoring!

Friday, August 22, 2025

FEDERAL JUDGE ORDERS ALLIGATOR ALCATRAZ TO STOP TAKING DETAINEES


By Devon M. Sayers and Isabel Rosales
CNN

A federal judge has ordered the remote detention camp in the Florida Everglades known as “Alligator Alcatraz” to stop taking detainees and remove infrastructure added to the original airport site.

US District Judge Kathleen Williams issued the preliminary injunction in a federal lawsuit filed by environmental groups and a Native American tribe who are concerned about the impact the facility will have on the environmentally sensitive area.

The order mandates no detainees beyond those currently housed at the facility can be moved there.

“The project creates irreparable harm in the form of habitat loss and increased mortality to endangered species in the area,” Williams said in the order.

Lighting, fencing and “all generators, gas, sewage, and other waste and waste receptacles that were installed to support this project” and added to Collier Dade Training and Transition Airport must be removed within 60 days of the order, Williams said, effectively shutting the facility that’s become a centerpiece of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown – which Americans largely oppose.

A preliminary injunction is a temporary order put in place until a court can make a final decision in a case. The state will appeal the judge’s order, a spokesperson for the Florida attorney general said in a a post on X.

“The deportations will continue until morale improves,” Gov. Ron DeSantis’ spokesperson, Alex Lanfranconi, told CNN...

US Rep. Frederica Wilson, a Democrat from Florida, celebrated the ruling, saying on X “it’s about damn time!”

“It was cruel, careless, and destructive from the start and should have never been built,” added Wilson, who represents South Florida’s 24th congressional district. “I’m glad it’s closing, and we must never repeat the mistakes made at this facility anywhere else!”

This lawsuit against the facility is one of two working its way through the federal court system. A second lawsuit focuses on legal access for those detained at the facility.

HUNGRY SCHOOL KIDS TO GOP: "PLEASE SIR, I WANT SOME MORE..."

TEXAS, STATE WITH 2ND HIGHEST FOOD INSECURITY RATE, KEEPS ON CUTTING


From Houston Public Media

Texas has been called the second hungriest state in the country, having the highest food insecurity rate nationwide, according to the nonprofit  Feeding America. One in six Texans regularly goes hungry, a third of whom are children. That’s more than 3 percent above the national average.

Federal and state programs designed to ease hunger and poverty, like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, provide a lifeline for families – sometimes determining whether a child has food on their plate...

Changes to SNAP requirements and cuts in funding to the program were signed into law July 4 by President Donald Trump as part of the massive tax-and-spending package known as the "Big Beautiful Bill." The signature legislation includes $4.5 trillion in tax cuts, paid for in part by cuts to SNAP, health care, and student loan programs. 

The bill is expected to add more than $3.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, more than a 10 increase from the nation’s current debt.

SNAP’s budget will be cut by nearly $187 billion, or about 20 percent according to a Houston Public Mediaanalysis of Congressional Budget Office estimates and SNAP spending. The law makes major changes to who qualifies for food assistance, adding stricter work requirements and reporting mandates that Republicans say are intended to limit abuse of the program by those who are able to work.

Rep. Glenn “GT” Thomas (R-PA), chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, which oversees SNAP, said in an April hearing that restrictions needed to be tightened.

“We must preserve benefits for those truly in need, but also ensure that SNAP guides participants to independence and self-sufficiency,” Thomas said. “There is dignity in work and it provides more opportunities than just a paycheck. Americans thrive when every family has the opportunity to work and succeed independently from the government.”
New work requirements ‘misguided’

The added requirements are expected to heavily impact the 12 percent of the U.S. population that use SNAP, and Houstonians are no exception. One in every 10 Texans uses SNAP, and 22 percent of those people live in the Houston area, according to Katherine Byers, the Houston Food Bank’s governmental relations officer.

“When we really bring it down to the individual level, folks are barely able to afford nutritious food with the benefits they’re getting now,” Byers said. “Now, it’s going to be even harder to access those benefits.”

Byers said in the Houston area, 92,000 people with school-aged children could lose benefits entirely under the new law, and more than 42,000 people between 55 and 64 years old could lose portions of their benefits – both because of the added work requirements she called “misguided.”

“The other narrative around all this is, ‘Well, that’s OK, because folks need to work, and these folks aren’t incentivized to work,'” Byers said. “The majority of SNAP participants, the majority of individuals who receive Medicaid, are working. So, you’re left with these very vulnerable populations.”

In addition to the reduction in the number of people eligible for SNAP, changes to the program require states to fund much larger portions of the program to cover administrative and food costs. 

In Texas, Byers said the state Legislature would need to allocate around $806 million annually to cover the lost funds, a hefty sum that she warned could lead legislators to cut costs by reducing individuals’ spending allotment. That move, Byers said, would threaten Texans’ ability to access nutritional food.

“One of the administration’s priorities is making America healthy again,” Byers said. “Folks have to have access to nutritious food to be healthy.”

Currently, single Texans on average must make less than $2,071 a month to qualify for SNAP. They receive about $9 per day for food, according to the Texas Department of Health and Human Services. .

Houston-area Rep. Lizzie Fletcher (D-TX) voted against the “Big, Beautiful Bill.” She raised concerns over the law’s reliance on state commitments, which she said many may not have faith in after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed a bipartisan program that would have funded summer food assistance for children who don’t have access to free or reduced lunches when school is out.

“We’re not seeing that the state is going to make up the gap here,” Fletcher told Houston Public Media. “I think there’s every reason to be concerned that the people in our community who are doing the work to try to help others in our community who are hungry and who are in need are going to feel the brunt of this and have more resources taken away.”

The Texas Legislature allocated $60 million toward funding the program, known as Summer EBT, as part of the state budget, which one nonprofit said would cover the state’s cost four times over. It would have given eligible families $120 per child to be used on approved food items over the summer break. It was the only item that Abbott line-item vetoed in the budget, providing a two-sentence explanation.

“There is significant uncertainty regarding federal matching rates for (Summer EBT) and other similar programs,” Abbott wrote in his veto proclamation. “Once there is more clarity about the long-term fiscal ramifications for creating such a program, the legislature can reconsider funding this item.”

Stacie Sanchez Hare, the director of No Kid Hungry Texas, a nonprofit combating childhood food insecurity in the state, said the governor’s explanation is unfounded. Summer EBT is part of a national program run through the USDA that guarantees matching federal contributions. Currently, 37 states and numerous districts and territories participate in the program. Summer EBT and SNAP funding are separate. Sanchez Hare said if anything, the Summer EBT program is needed now more than ever.

“Concerns about potential SNAP reductions make participation even more essential, right?” Sanchez Hare said. “Both sides of the aisle came to get together to support the smart policy. That money would have fed 3.75 million Texas children.”

Democratic Houston state Rep. Armando Walle, a leading advocate for Summer EBT funding, told Houston Public Media Abbott’s office didn’t express any concern with the item when the Legislature was in session.

“We thought we were in the driver’s seat, especially when the lieutenant governor and the speaker included (Summer EBT) in the final budget,” Walle said.

Sanchez Hare said the program would have relieved some of the burden on the state’s food banks and would have helped offset potential impacts of SNAP cuts, which she said could especially hurt Texas.

ABBOTT CONGRATULATES BROWNSVILLE ON TOURIST FRIENDLY DESIGNATION

By Greg Abbott
Office of the Texas Governor

Governor Greg Abbott today congratulated the City of Brownsville on being designated as a Tourism Friendly Texas Certified Community by Travel Texas after completing the multi-step certification process. 

The Tourism Friendly Texas Certified Community designation shows Visit Brownsville’s commitment to further develop tourism as an economic growth strategy, boost local job creation, and draw more visitors to their community and to Texas from across the nation and around the world.

“Tourism is critical to both our local and state economies,” said Governor Abbott. “Travelers to and within Texas generate almost $200 billion in annual economic impact and support 1.3 million jobs across the state. I congratulate the City of Brownsville and Visit Brownsville on earning this designation. All Texas communities are encouraged to apply to become a Tourism Friendly Texas Certified Community to further grow local tourism and jobs across our great state.”

“We are honored to receive the Tourism Friendly Texas Certified Community designation from Travel Texas,” said City of Brownsville Mayor John Cowen, Jr. “This recognition resonates with our commitment to creating warm and memorable experiences for those who choose to make Brownsville their vacation spot in South Texas. Visitors to our city can enjoy the launch of Starship rockets at SpaceX to our world-renowned Gladys Porter Zoo and unique Mexican cuisine. And Brownsville remains the gateway to South Padre Island — right on the Gulf.”

“Brownsville’s growing tourism industry is driven by strong collaboration between our local businesses, hospitality partners, and cultural institutions,” said Brownsville City Manager Helen Ramirez. “We are all united by a shared goal of creating unforgettable experiences for our guests. Our Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) plays a vital role in showcasing the rich diversity of attractions that define our city. I congratulate our CVB team for helping us achieve the Tourism Friendly Texas Certified Community designation."

EL RRUN-RRUN EATS CROW: POSTED WRONG PICTURE OF SPI COMMISSIONER

(Ed's Note: We have received a gmail from South Padre Island City Commissioner Kerry Schwartz that reads:  

"On August 6, 2025, you published an article entitled "Complaint: SPI IS BEING RUN BY BULLIES...FOR SELF BENEFIT."
This article was very critical of three SPI officials asserting allegations of "bullying" and ethics violations. The article also included pictures of the three individuals. The picture you published representing Joe Ricco is not correct. You postied my picture instead of Mr. Ricco's which has brought unwarrented, very negative attention to me and is harming my reputation.
I am requesting that you immediately remove my photo and issue an apology for wrongfully publishing my photo in the article."
John Kerry Schwartz"

Upon checking the post, we found out that we inadvertently did post the wrong photo on the press release placed on social media by Dolcefino Media, a Texas-based investigative media firm, who filed formal complaints  against key public officials on South Padre Island with the Cameron County District Attorney and the town’s ethics board. Having never met or known the city commission members, we can only own up to the extrapolated photo that we mistakenly posted with the Dolcefino release. Mr. Schwartz's name was never mentioned in the published Dolcefino press release or in the ethics complaint alleging wrongdoing.

We received his gmail at about 5 p.m. yesterday and have removed Mr. Schwartz's photo from the post as he requested and extend our apologies for our regrettable error. We removed his photo and inserted the right one of Mr. Ricco. To read the  Dolcefino Media press release with the right photo, click on link https://rrunrrun.blogspot.com/2025/08/complaint-spi-is-being-run-by-bulliesto.html

El Rrun-Rrun regrets the error.)

Thursday, August 21, 2025

TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT OF GARZA'S ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE 107TH

BEFORE CIVIL WAR IT WAS A CRIME TO BE IN TEXAS WHILE (A FREE) BLACK

The Matagorda Gazette. (Matagorda, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 18, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 25, 1860:

By Juan Montoya
Special to El Rrun-Rrun

For all of those who yearn back for the years when the South was the South and get all nostalgic for the era when one could actually live out this great southern "heritage," take a gander at this clipping sent to us by one of our seven readers who came across it while researching for other subjects. 

The clipping notes the arrest and sentencing of a free negro who had come into the state at Galveston against the laws of Texas.

The man, who had passed himself off as a negro minstrel, was sentenced to six months of labor to the highest bidder and, after expenses, was given enough money to leave the state. If he didn't leave within the 30 days dictated by law, the sentence would increase to five years.

If you were a free black person, you were not allowed in the state under penalty of law. This was even before the Civil War.

His crime?
Being free.

Aggravating circumstances?
Being free, and black.

Punishment: working for a pittance for a white man. In other words, to make you a slave again. Show you your place.

Deterrence: An example for black slaves who might have harbored the seditious dream of freedom.

Later that year, on December 20, 1860, South Carolina – under the justification that the Union was abridging the sovereign rights of states to have the freedom to do with your "property" (black human beings) as they pleased – declared their secession from the United States of America. Within the next six months, ten other southern states would secede from the Union:

Mississippi - January 9, 1861
Florida - January 10, 1861
Alabama - January 11, 1861
Georgia - January 19, 1861
Louisiana - January 26, 1861
Texas - February 1, 1861
**April 12, 1861, the Civil War begins with the attack of Fort Sumter.**
Virginia - April 17, 1861
Arkansas - May 6, 1861
North Carolina - May 20, 1861
Tennessee - June 8, 1861


In the slaughter that followed, 750,000 soldiers died, more than half of those from the North.  The Union was preserved at a huge human cost. And the South has never acknowledged it was whipped in defense of this "noble cause." 

But, oh, for the good old days, uh? Do you still wonder why people want to do away with any vestige of this insidious Texas and southern "heritage"? )
Pro-Southern "rebs" are still allowed to attend Memorial Day Silent March at Brownsville's Veterans Park

BONE-SPUR TRUMP CALLS NETANYAHU, HIMSELF, WAR HEROES


By Alex Gangitano

President Trump said he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are war heroes, touting the U.S. strikes against three Iranian nuclear facilities in June.

The president praised Netanyahu in a Tuesday interview on “The Mark Levin Show,” then referenced the strikes that he has said obliterated Tehran’s nuclear capabilities and set back the country’s nuclear program for years.

“Bibi is a good man. He’s in there fighting. He’s fighting. You know, they’re trying to put him in jail on top of everything else. How about that?” Trump told Levin. “He’s a war hero, because we work together. He’s a war hero. I guess I am, too.”

(So far, war hero Netanyahu's Israeli Defense Force, Air Force, and Navy, has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians – who have none of the three – in his assault of Gaza. The majority have ben civilians, women and children. Many are now starving.) 

The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu in November in November, accusing him of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza.

The president, who never fought in a war, added, “The pilots came. I rewarded them. I brought them all to the Oval Office. The people having to do with that whole operation, which was so perfect, which was a total of, you know, just an obliteration.”

The B-2 pilots who carried out the strike visited the White House for the Fourth of July holiday. The pilots carried out the unprecedented attack on Iran, dubbed Operation Midnight Hammer, dropping 30,000-pound bombs on underground nuclear enrichment facilities from “bunker busters” that took off undetected from a base in Missouri.

Following the attack, Trump hit back at an initial Pentagon assessment that damage to the three nuclear facilities only set the Iranians’ nuclear program back a few months.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

REPUBLICAN TEXAS LEGISLATURE RIGS DISTRICTS TO KEEP MAJORITY; DEMOCRATS VOW COURT FIGHT OVER NEW MAP

 


KHOU-11

The Texas House passed aggressively partisan redistricting maps intended to help the G.O.P. win 5 more U.S. House seats in the midterm elections. The State Senate is expected to vote on the maps on Thursday.

In complete control of the redistricting process, Republicans designed a map that will tighten their hold on diversifying parts of the state where the party’s grip on power was waning and lock in the GOP’s majority in the 38-seat delegation for the U.S. House.

The map also incorporates two additional House seats the state gained, the most of any state in this year’s reapportionment. 

Though Texas received those districts because of explosive population growth – 95 percent of it attributable to people of color – Republicans opted to give white voters effective control of both, which were drawn in the Houston and Austin areas.

The Senate approved the map on an 18-13 vote. The House followed with an 84-59 vote.

Republicans carved a new path for the party in CD-15, anchored in the Rio Grande Valley, by flipping it from a district that Biden narrowly won to one that Trump would’ve carried by 2.8 points. The "fajita" district stretches all the way from the Rio Grande to San Antonio diluting the Hispanic vote of the Rio Grande Valley across mostly white rural counties.

That shores up neighboring CD-34, which was unexpectedly close in 2020 but would have had a healthy Democratic margin of victory under the new map. The final version of the map draws CD-15 incumbent, U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-McAllen, into the reconfigured CD-34 where the incumbent is retiring.

IS YOUR BUDGET TAKING A MID-SUMMER UTILITY BILL HIT? COUNTY VETERANS OPERATION LIGHTHOUSE CAN HELP

Cameron County Veterans Service Office, 1124 E. Madison St., Brownsville

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The Cameron County Veterans Service Office has announced that they have procured a $300,000 grant to assist needy veterans struggling with their utility bills and will soon expand to rental assistance, restorative dental car and funeral cost balances.

According to Veterans Service Office director Dr. Martin Rodriguez, the county received notice that it was receiving the additional funds through Operation Lighthouse, a grant from the Texas Veterans Commission offering one-time financial assistance to Cameron County veterans and their spouses.

""We got word that our grant was approved and we're starting with utility assistance," Rodriguez said. "You just have to provide some basic information and fill out the application in person or online."

Assistant VSO Eliazar Gonzalez said the office is now reaching out to local landlords and apartment owners to set up the process for rental assistance and to dental providers to make those services available to veterans and their surviving spouses if the veteran has passed away. The program also helps pay for funeral balances.

 Among the required documents for the utility assistance are the Operation Lighthouse Application, their DD-214 honorable discharge, a current drivers license or state ID, and a current or outstanding itemized bill.

"The utility bill should be in the veteran's name," Gonzalez said. 

Surviving spouses need the same documentation plus a marriage license and/or death certificate if it applies.

Any Cameron County veteran or surviving spouse is eligible to apply. Assistance is provided on a one-time per need.

For more information, call Gonzalez at the CC VSO at (956) 544-0811 or (956) 641-0662.

To get the application online, click on link: https://www.cameroncountytx.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Lighhouse-02.pdf  

DOONESBURY EXPERIENCES A DAY WITHOUT A MEXICAN...

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

FROM THE OUTSIDE LOOKING IN, THE UKRAINE TRUMP-PUTIN LOVEFEST

Graphic by Morton Morland, London Sunday Times

"Hosting peace talks with a war criminal and failing to invite the other side is not a peace talk; it is a strategy session."
-Dan Rather

BENAVIDES GIVES WATER-DELIVERY REPRIEVE TO STARBASE, RURAL AREAS

 By Juan Montoya

After two decades of delivering household-use water to rural residents and homeowners in what is now Starbase-by-the-Boca, Cameron County Pct. 1 commissioner Sofia Benavides has granted them a reprieve until Nov. 15.

In a letter mailed to residents at Starbase – previously Koepernik Shores – Benavides stated that "Effective Nov. 15, 2025, the delivery of non-potable water will be permanently discontinued..."

Her reprieve overturns a decision by Cameron County Administrator Pete Sepulveda made last June to abruptly stop the delivery of water to top off the tanks at the residences there and other rural homes and ranchitos along Highway 4. 

Originally, the deliveries by the road-and-bridge precinct started as a goodwill gesture in the early 1990s which the county initiated in combination with their monthly cleaning of trash at Boca Chica in accordance with an agreement with the Texas General Land Office.

That prompted an outcry from rural residents and other Starbase residents who have become used to having the water delivered for a $15 monthly fee to pay the Brownsville Public Utility Board (PUB) for the water.

But the delivery – started as humanitarian gesture for the isolated subdivision by then-commissioner Lucino Rosenbaum Jr. – is now considered an entitlement by some residents who said the cutoff left them "high and dry" and demanded that they be reinstated. They have lobbied state officials in Austin, including State Senator Adam Hinojosa, (D-27), demanding that the service be restored. 

"Cameron County is not a water utility, nor a TCEQ (Texas Commission on Environmental Quality) authorized water delivery service, and is not required to provide non-potable water to anyone living in Cameron County whether it be in Precinct 1 or any other rural area," Benavides' wrote. 

"The service was performed as a courtesy...without any requirement to do so or expectation of reimbursement by county residents. While it has been our privilege to serve the community in this way, we are no longer able to continue the delivery of non-potable water, unfortunately...We appreciate your understanding and cooperation as we transition away from this service."

In the letter, Benavides recommends that rural residents contact Starbase – now incorporated into a city – to make arrangements to to get non-potable water or "contact any of the water-delivery companies" in the county to set up service for water.

Coincidentally, the Starbase city council has scheduled a meeting for this Wednesday where the agenda includes a presentation by the city manager to address the availability of water in the city.

"Neither the state or the county are obligated to provide water delivery services to the rural residents out there," said Zeke Silva, Senator Hinojosa's community outreach representative. "They knew that there was no water out there when they decided to live in that rural area. They have to make the arrangements to take care of the problem for themselves until Starbase finalizes its plans to provide water services for the residents there. We'll assist them in any way we can."

The Starbase city meeting is scheduled to be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday, August 20 at 39046 LBJ Boulevard.

RENAMING OF THE TSC LEGAL CENTER AFTER RUBEN HERRERA

Monday, August 18, 2025

HEART-FELT TRIBUTE TO NEW RISING SUN BLUESMAN JOE SHULL

"I WOULDN'T RECOMMEND ARGUING WITH HIM NOW, OFFICER."

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

A policeman pulls over a car with a man driving without a seat belt on.
As he walks up he notices a woman in the car with him.

He tells the man he is going to get a ticket for the seat belt violation.
The man starts arguing that he had the seat belt on and just took it off when he spotted him.

So the policeman leans in and says:
"Ma'am you look like a honest woman. Did he have his seat belt on?"

She looks a the policeman and says:
"Officer, I have made it a policy of mine to never argue with him when he's been drinking."

PUTIN PLAYED DONNIE TRUMPUDO LIKE A BALALAIKA

"Hosting peace talks with a war criminal and failing to invite the other side is not a peace talk; it is a strategy session."
-Dan Rather

"When the aggressor is given the stage and the victim is excluded, the goal isn’t peace; it’s control, and the host is complicit in rewriting the terms."

“Pootie, I want the Nobel Prize. What do you want? I’ll do anything!"
 

MARK YOUR CALENDAR: THURSDAY'S NOE'S ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 107TH


 

Sunday, August 17, 2025

GERRY SPENCER, CRUSADING ATTORNEY FOR THE COMMON MAN, DIES; STIRS FOND MEMORIES OF LOCAL ATTORNEY

By Mead Gruver
The Associated Press
Various Sources

When news of the death of crusading attorney Gerry Spence became known, it stirred memories in local attorney Cesar De Leon, who attended one of his month-long legal seminar/retreats at Thunderhead Ranch, Wyoming.

He summed up Spence's legal philosophy in a Lakota (Teton Sioux) saying:

“Tell me, and I will listen. Show me, and I will understand. Involve me, and I will learn."

"Gerry Spence's legacy endures through those shaped by the Trial Lawyers College that he founded. Spending a month at the college transforms you, not just as a lawyer, but as a human being, " De Leon said.

"We stand committed to justice for the poor, the injured, the forgotten, and the voiceless, those who need it most. May his legacy live on, and may he rest in peace knowing we carry the baton."

Spence, the the fringe jacket-wearing trial lawyer from Wyoming known for a string of major court wins starting with a multimillion-dollar judgment against a plutonium processor in the landmark Karen Silkwood case, has died.

Spence, 96, died late Wednesday surrounded by family at his home in Montecito, California, according to a family statement.

Spence dedicated his life to fighting for the rights and freedom of ordinary people, colleague Joseph H. Low IV said in a statement.

“No lawyer has done as much to free the people of this country from the slavery of its new corporate masters,” said Low, vice president and chief instructor at the Gerry Spence Method school for trial lawyers.

"He began building his army of constitutional warriors when he opened his ranch in Wyoming up in 1994 to training lawyers on how to find their voice and how to fight for those who cannot fight for themselves. He has passed his teachings on to us all and his ranch continues to shape and meld hard, warriors for the battles fought throughout courtrooms across the world.

"He will be greatly missed but his spirit lives on Thunderhead Ranch where lawyers will continue to be trained in the art and science of trial. Where lawyers train to become warriors."

A polished raconteur with a gravelly voice whose trademark suede fringe jacket advertised his Wyoming roots, Spence was once among the nation’s most recognizable trial attorneys.

He achieved fame in 1979 with a $10.5 million verdict against Oklahoma City-based Kerr-McGee on behalf of the estate of Silkwood, a nuclear worker tainted with plutonium who died in a car wreck a week later. Silkwood’s father accused the company of negligently handling the plutonium that contaminated his daughter.

An appeals court reversed the verdict and the two sides later agreed to an out-of-court settlement of $1.3 million.

The events became the basis for the 1983 movie “Silkwood” starring Meryl Streep.

All HELL BREAKS LOOSE AS TRUMP'S HORRORS UNCOVERED


Trump horrors are being unveiled, one by one. 

He frequently states it’s not he who is doing these things, that other people are in charge.

No, Trump, you give these people permission or they would be fired and prosecuted. 

You inspire them, and you allow them to follow their deepest ugliest instincts, and tell us they are fine people doing an excellent job, and that it’s all Biden's fault. The ICE thugs are acting like Stormtroopers, like Gestapo, like the secret police of a dictatorship. No warrants, no identification, no court orders, masks on their faces, and just sheer brutality, sneering, boasting, gloating , threats and bullying. 

Assault weapons, explosives, tear gas, tasers, against , not hardened criminals, but women, children, hard working men, and even American citizens. This would not have happened under any other president, because any other president would have STOPPED IT!

You have built concentration camps and given the people who are employed there permission to act however they wish. Those who cannot stomach the abuse, are resigning and becoming whistle blowers. 

Not your fault you say. 

Rubbish….you praise Alligator Alcatraz, you praise the staff, you praise that horrific facility and want to build lots more. The courts rule against your sending people to prisons in countries that are not their countries, and too often they are the wrong people.

The courts even make you bring them back, so you do the next best thing, and replicate horrific foreign prisons on American soil, and your people pay for the construction of those horrific places. You GLOAT ABOUT IT, YOU HAVE PHOTO SHOOTS THERE. HOW ABOUT YOU LIVE THERE FOR A FEW DAYS, TRUMP. 

You’re the felon, not those people.

Saturday, August 16, 2025

SAD END TO A BLUES FRIEND: JOSEPH SHULL EXITS STAGE

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

It was with a heavy heart that we learned of the death of a good friend of rock-and-roll, the blues and all musicians, Joe Shull. He was 90, according to statements made by his son on a video posted on FB.

Some of his contemporaries say he was more like 82.

Unfortunately, the news came somewhat indecorously with his own son posting a video online as the first responders of the City of Brownsville vainly tried to administer aid to him. In it a responder tells his son that after 15 minutes without any CPR or any other first aid he had no heart activity when they arrived. We will not post the video, just this still, out of respect to his kin.

Who doesn't remember walking into his new Rising Sun out on Central Blvd. wall-papered with original album covers and the wooden stage out in the back with conveniently concealing trees on the property line to shelter those who had more intoxicating pursuits? 

Many a local musician cut his teeth on his stage in the back lot of the bar. He welcomed them all and sometimes joined in for a jam. His jukebox was a treasure lode of blues.

El carnal era de la Cuatro(21) and also a U.S. Marine. Excellent bluesman. A brother. 

Needless to say, we live in different times now. Our condolences to his family and friends. RIP Joe. Peace be with you. Rock on.
 

BISD GRADED 87 BY EDUCATION AGENCY, GARDEN PARK EXCELS AT 92


(Ed.'s Note: The Texas Education Agency (TEA) has released its school district and individual campus ratings. 

We have always had a soft spot for Garden Park Elementary on the city's west side, one of those schools that – like Palm Grove on the extreme eastern part of the Brownsville Independent School District – was one of those "forgotten" barrio schools that at one time consisted of refurbished military barracks for classrooms. It was the first school that this blog's editor attended while living in the impoverished Las Prietas barrio in the early 1960s. Our principal then was Mrs. Nell Palmer. 

But since then, sanitary sewers have replaced the septic tanks used for the bathrooms and permanent brick buildings have replaced the old barracks. Garden Park has consistently won chess tournaments against "better" schools of rich districts across the state. Congrats to its students, teachers, staff and administrators. Go Tigers! Go BISD!)
Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Various Sources

Brownsville Independent School District is the largest district in the Rio Grande Valley, and they had the exact same score two years in a row.

Out of 100 they scored an 87 both years. While that overall score stayed the same, their campuses did see improvements.

The TEA released these grades after a two-year legal battle. The district says the school ratings are a way to see how they performed following the STAAR test.

To find out what your child's school TEA rating is, click here.

rita