South Texas Chisme

A collection of South Texas Political gossip.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Will our government hold BP accountable?

Those Congressional hearings where big execs get humiliated is fun and all, but lets send the scoundrels to jail. If you commit fraud, go to jail. If you recklessly endanger lives, go to jail. If you're guilty of negligent homicide, go to jail. How hard is that?
BP, which calls itself the leader in deep-water offshore oil development in the Gulf of Mexico, began operations at the Atlantis platform in October 2007 at a site about 124 miles offshore in 7,000 feet of water and expanded production last year, according to government records and BP's annual report.

The allegations suggest the company rushed into production by skipping or skimping required engineering inspections, putting profits ahead of the need to protect workers from accidents and the environment from potentially catastrophic oil spills, according to allegations sent to regulators.

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DA and police give Corpus Christi mayor a pass on possible ethics violation

Ruben Morales will have to go to the Attorney General to see his complaint handled. Mayor Adame owns land near the Memorial Coliseum, yet he participated in some votes concerning the Coliseum's fate.

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Perry says something sane about Arizona's new law

Hmm. You just don't expect a Republican to be reasonable these days. Sure, law enforcement will suffer, if people hide from police. Perry knew that AND said it. Hmm. Perry's polling must show a need for Hispanic voters.

Here's a question for you. If Rick Perry and Sarah Palin are the 2012 GOP presidential candidates, will it be the PP ticket or the good hair ticket? Which one will be at the top of the ticket?

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Thursday, April 29, 2010

Everybody's talking about Arizona

David Ortiz has some informative thoughts on the constitutionality of the Arizona law and its emulators.

What are some of the Texas Progressive Alliance bloggers saying?

Bay Area Houston:
I've had enough of people like State Representative Debbie Riddle calling for legalized profiling of Hispanics instead of attempting to solve a very serious problem that her party has neglected for decades. Maybe it is time to take back Texas from these simple minded hillbillies.
Half Empty quotes from a Star Telegram story that reads like it came from the Onion. HE wonders if Texas can out Nazi Arizona?

Jobsanger notes the Arizona one-up manship, but doubts the Republicans can pull it off.

Off the Kuff wonders if these Republican antics will spur Latino turnout. Lets hope so.

Three Wise Men reminds us that Leo Burman and Debbie Riddle are still idiots. Yes, but why is their philosophy now main stream Republican political thought?

The traditional media weighs in, too, here, here,and here. The El Paso Times says hey! What are the Mexicans doing to US immigrants? The Texas Tribune notes the 'Sound and fury' echos of 2006. Times have changed drastically since 2006 when Bush was in office. Republicans are all about the racism and not about the greedy corporate profits coming from underpaying undocumented workers.

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Republicans want to balance the budget by decreasing retiree benefits

The Employees Retirement System of Texas circulated long-awaited details of the proposed benefit cuts at the Capitol this week, prompting howls in some quarters. The changes are caused by skyrocketing costs and lawmakers' underfunding of the health insurance pool for state employees.

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Would you want Bernie Madoff or someone like him owning your water supply?

How are you going to ensure that you and your family have a clean, safe water supply?
The Regional Water Planning Group P was emotional for residents as many voiced concerns about the potential for a second water reservoir to be built by damming the Lavaca River.

It was standing room only as Jason Afinowicz, a consultant for the Texas Water Development Board, opened the meeting explaining the significance of the regional planning process and the unique position of the Lavaca Planning Group P.

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8 Houston police officers seen on tape beating a black suspect

Sure, the new Arizona racial profiling law is a good idea.
Eight Houston police officers are on paid leave after a surveillance camera caught them beating up a black suspect, a well-known community activist said Tuesday.

Quanell X said he has seen the tape, which was taken on March 24 outside of Uncle Bob’s Self Storage located at 8450 Cook Rd.

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Should the police provide school discipline?

That doesn't sound fair or effective on a routine, minor offense case.
The criminal justice committee, chaired by Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, is examining the effect of school disciplinary laws on the juvenile justice system. Whitmire and others are calling for reform, saying schools are increasingly turning over routine disciplinary decisions to police and abandoning common sense when choosing punishments.

Texas' 1995 school disciplinary legislation came to be known as “zero-tolerance,” mandating punishments without regard for the circumstances surrounding an incident. But the policy was amended last summer to require principals to consider a student's intent and disciplinary history when handing down punishments.

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BP expects us to clean up their mess

Profits are king. Worker safety is just a cost of doing business. Workers are cheap. Who cares about our environment, as long as BP execs get and stay rich and richer.
A massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is even worse than believed and as the government grows concerned that the rig's operator is ill-equipped to contain it, officials are offering a military response to try to avert a massive environmental disaster along the ecologically fragile U.S. coastline.

Speaking Thursday on NBC's "Today" show, an executive for BP PLC, which operated the oil rig that exploded and sank last week, said the company would welcome help from the U.S. military.

"We'll take help from anyone," BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said.

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Texas law makers to reign in SBOE

Stop the revisionist, Christian white supremacist text book standards or else.
Black and Hispanic legislators, unhappy with the State Board of Education's attempts to revise history standards, said Wednesday that they could reduce the board's authority and even withhold money for textbooks.

...

He said lawmakers will look into whether the board incorporated nearly 300 amendments without working in conjunction with teachers groups and the public.

This, he said, could mean that the board overstepped its statutory authority when adopting the standards.
Go get 'em.

Video report here.

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Corpus Christi mayor in trouble over Memorial Coliseum discussions

Corpus Christi police are researching who would have jurisdiction over a complaint alleging that Mayor Joe Adame violated state law when he participated in City Council discussions about Memorial Coliseum.

It says he didn’t disclose a conflict of interest properly and shouldn’t have participated in related votes.

Police spokesman Capt. Todd Green said police took the complaint, but haven’t started investigating because they’re not sure who should be in charge. It might be referred to the Texas Rangers, the state attorney general or the district attorney’s office.
If they dither long enough, maybe it will all go away.

We the People has the story. More here.

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Texas may not get extra congressional seats after all

New York, California, Texas, Arizona and Florida — are perilously close to losing out on congressional seats because of lackluster participation in the U.S. census.

...

Responses from these states also raise a red flag because of their higher shares of residents who are Latinos. The Census Bureau has said one of its main concerns is whether tensions over immigration will discourage Latinos, and particularly illegal immigrants, from participating in the government count. That issue returned to the forefront after Arizona passed a tough immigration enforcement bill.
This is very bad news. Republican racist mission accomplished.

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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

DeLay back in money laundering trouble

Turns out a check is money after all.
The Austin appeals court erred in deciding that the state’s money-laundering statute - used to prosecute associates of former U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay - did not apply to transfers made via checks, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled today.

The court’s 9-0 decision also upheld the state’s election laws prohibiting corporations from making political contributions to candidates. DeLay’s associates - John Colyandro and Jim Ellis - had challenged the law as an unconstitutional infringement on First Amendment rights.
This may be fun.

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Debbie Riddle says Texas should be like Arizona

And, by that I'm sure she means racist. Don't forget this gem from Riddle:
As Republican State Rep Debbie Riddle said "Where did this idea come from that everybody deserves free education, free medical care, free whatever?" she demanded in a legislative hearing. "It comes from Moscow, from Russia. It comes straight out of the pit of hell." So, Republicans are trying to create us their version of hell on earth. Good job.
Yes, good job.
Riddle said she introduced a similar measure last legislative session — it stalled in committee — and said she'll do the same when the Legislature next meets in regular session in January.
Senator Van de Putte, like any sane person, is not amused.
Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, D-San Antonio, called the Arizona move “extremely damaging and hateful,” and said any attempt to replicate it in Texas wouldn't pass but would damage the GOP.

Any such measure that gains traction “just adds to the Democratic side,” said Van de Putte, adding she's scotched Arizona travel plans.

“I will not step into that state, and every single group that I'm a part of, if they plan a meeting there, I will not go, and I will ask all of my colleagues to please not go,” she said. “If my family would be treated differently just because of the color of their skin, then I don't want to be in that state.”

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Convicted judge doesn't want to go to prison

Boo hoo. Why? Because he's fighting other charges.
Convicted state judge Manuel Barraza is seeking a postponement of his federal prison term so that he can defend himself on a nepotism charge.

Barraza, 54, is scheduled to go on trial on May 10 at the El Paso County Courthouse. He is to be sentenced four days before that in federal court on three felony convictions.

If Barraza is sent to prison on May 6 -- and U.S. District Judge Frank Montalvo has promised him that's what will happen -- he will not be able to properly defend himself in state court, Barraza's lawyer stated in a motion seeking postponement of the sentencing.
See previous posts.

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Nobody llikes Arizona

Kuff suggests that sports programs boycott Arizona. It's been done to South Carolina for flying the Confederate flag. Valley Hispanics vow to help fight Arizona's law as well as stopping the enactment of a similar law in Texas. In Texas? You betcha!
The primary reaction from opponents is fear that state legislators will follow Arizona’s lead and attempt to pass comparable anti-immigration laws that criminalize the undocumented, as at least one Texas lawmaker has already indicated he would.

A television station in Austin reported Tuesday that State Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler, has said he would propose a bill similar to that enacted in Arizona, which would include one of the most controversial provisions of the new law—requiring local law enforcement authorities to check the immigration status of those they suspect are in the country illegally.
Solving problems like immigration reform or border security shouldn't start with the first racist idea in your head. That is, don't build a fence and don't send troops to harass the locals.
Dotty Griffith, public education director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, cited as an example programs like Operation Border Star, a security initiative launched under Gov. Rick Perry in September 2007 that increased the law enforcement presence along the border.

Such initiatives "are supposed to be for crime fighting but what they amount to is wholesale racial profiling. They have done little to stop crime and cost a lot of money.... We are poorer not safer," she said.
While Republicans complain about lack of Federal attention to immigration law, Congressional Republicans block it. They're posturing to their base in the lowest possible way. Thuggery and racism first, real thought later.
Senate Republicans will block any immigration reform bill until they're satisfied that borders are secure, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said Tuesday.
The best plan to secure the border is to legalize drugs. Take that in your pipe and smoke it, McCain.

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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Another workplace, another safety hazard

George Bush and his fellow Republicans believe that the free market works in all cases. So, if your buddy dies on an oil rig, just don't become an oil rig worker. So simple and so wrong. Lets hope the Obama administration returns the Labor department and OSHA back into the organizations they were meant to be.
Even before the April 20 explosion on the Deepwater Horizon, government investigators had cited myriad potential safety violations involving fires aboard other offshore drilling rigs and platforms that resulted in more than 20 injuries and two deaths since 2007, records and statistics show.

Although an official cause of the accident has not been determined, a critical unanswered question is exactly what triggered the fire, including the possibility of worker error, and whether it could have been prevented or contained by any safety or fire fighting measures.
Then, there's the question of pollution. Why is a crony's profit more important than lives, the environment or other people's health?

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Audit of Galveston Port director's time cards show he's owed vacay time

Here's a refreshing story. They checked out the guy's time cards and found out he didn't cheat.
Records show no evidence port Director Steve Cernak attempted to cheat his employer by not reporting vacation time he took and instead show he’s owed 48 hours of vacation time, according to a report by the port’s legal counsel.

The Wharves Board of Trustees, which governs the port, commissioned a review after International Longshoremen’s Association Local 20 President Ted O’Rourke and his wife, Charlotte, a former port trustee, alleged Cernak and other staff member were committing “time fraud.”

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National Civic League says El Paso could be that 'All America City'

El Paso is the only Texas city to be named to the list of 27 finalists for this year's All-America City awards given by the National Civic League.

Ten cities will be named winners on June 18. El Paso last won the award in 1969.

Mayor John Cook said this is one of the nation's more prestigious awards designed to honor cities for solving problems.

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Perry afraid to debate Bill White

Poor little Rickie.

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Did you know that 'science' was only partly responsible for Agua Dulce quake?

At least that's what political hack reporter Jaime Powell says. 'Quake's cause: Mix of science and chance' Powell rarely ever writes a decent political piece, why did the Corpus Christi Caller Times give her a science assignment? Oh, the consequences of cut backs.

Actually, this bizarre report gives us a look into the disturbed Republican mind. They actually believe that 'science', like facts, isn't that important. Magical thinking and rabid ideology is much easier and more rewarding for the lazy mind. How else do you explain George Bush, Glenn Beck or Sarah Palin?

Magic is so much better than blaming oil companies for the damage.
In South Texas, as in other places where oil drilling takes place, the quake also could have been man-made, University of Texas earthquake seismologist Cliff Frohlich said.

When oil is extracted from the ground, it can cause a shift underground that can lead to small earthquakes. Salt water that is injected into wells in the energy industry also can lubricate small faults and cause minor earthquakes.

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Monday, April 26, 2010

TPA blog roundup time!

The Texas Progressive Alliance can't believe that school is finishing up and summer will soon be upon us. Before it gets too hot, here's a look at what's been going on this past week.

This week on Left of College Station, Teddy takes a look at the beginning of the campaign for TX-17 between Chet Edwards and Bill Flores. Also, Teddy covers money in local politics by looking at the campaign finance reports of College Station and Bryan municipal candidates. Left of College Station also covers the week in headlines.

TXsharon stepped in DoodyGate this week! It appears Range Resources fabricated a toxic spill to cover up their illegal dump. When a toxic spill causes less hassle than doody, you know the Texas Railroad Commission "regulations" need updating. Will the City of Denton exercise their new found powers?

CouldBeTrue of South Texas Chisme urges you to tell the Texas Legislature that legalizing drugs will stop the border violence. No profit. No drug war.

WCNews at Eye On Williamson post on the Texas GOP's ploy to raise taxes next year, if they're left in power, and try to blame it on Obama - we won't let them! Dewhurst lets the cat out of the bag.

Help send the Texas Cloverleaf to Netroots Nation by voting on a DFA scholarship.

This week, McBlogger would like to send out a massive thank you to Hank Gilbert for standing up and actually calling out Toll Road Todd for beating up, yet again, on Teh Gays.

Just a few weeks after WhosPlayin wrote a blog pointng out Lewisville ISD's illegal "zero tolerance" policy, the school board unanimously overturned it. But WhosPlayin continues to look for answers.

Off the Kuff took a closer look at that Rasmussen poll from last week.

The same thing that caused the deaths of miners in the Upper Big Branch mine is the same thing that caused the bursting of the housing bubble, the Lehman crash, and the implosion of our financial system. Read more at PDiddie's Brains and Eggs post entitled Consumer regulation as coal mine canary".

There is an old saw which says it is a poor general who blames his soldiers for defeat. With the question of Texas public education still unresolved and hurling toward the latest crisis of funding and quality, lightseeker at TexasKaos takes on a San Antonio Express editorial which proceeds to bash teachers and unions as the overlooked villains in this recurring horror show. Check it out : On Teacher Bashing , or Beating Up the Easy Target on Educational Failures.

Neil at Texas Liberal is pleased to announce that the blog now has a New York City correspondent. Lyuba Halkyn, a daughter of Ukrainian immigrants, will now offer up her views for the blog reading public. This post also has a great picture of a blimp flying over Manhattan in the 1930's.

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Just call Farmers Branch 'Little Arizona'

As the national debate over illegal immigration reignites, Farmers Branch remains in the middle of the battle as city leaders refuse to accept the unconstitutionality of rules they put in place to prevent illegal immigrants from renting homes.

The Dallas suburb plans to appeal a court ruling against its ordinance, which would prevent landlords from renting houses or apartments to illegal immigrants -- and it hopes to serve as an example to other communities trying to deal with illegal immigration.

Read more:
How much of their taxpayers' money do they want to waste making the point that Farmers Branch hates brown people?

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Proyecto Azteca director likes Hidalgo's efforts on colonias

An expert in the building of affordable homes for low-income families says Hidalgo County deserves credit for its work in making sure colonia residents are protected.

“Hidalgo County works very hard at upholding the Model Subdivision Rules,” said Ann Cass, executive director of San Juan-based non profit Proyecto Azteca. “The County should be commended, not chastised for not following the rules. It shows how little folks north of I-10 know about life here in the Rio Grande Valley.”

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Should all Americans carry passports while strolling around their home towns?

The batsh*t crazy crowd has taken over Arizona. No doubt about that. Here's what I haven't heard in all of the reports about their new 'I hate brown people' law: what kind of papers do American citizens need to carry in case a police officer inquires? Does everyone have to have a passport? Should everyone carry a copy of their birth certificate? How hard is it to fake a birth certificate for the purposes of fooling a beat officer? Will Arizona begin issuing official citizen ID cards? Tattoos? ID chips under the skin?

Should brown people of any nationality take a chance and drive through Arizona? I wouldn't. Considering the number of times you might be stopped, Utah sounds nice.

Mexico's not too happy with Arizona.
"Although the Mexican government recognizes the sovereign rights of all countries to decide policies that apply in their own territories, nevertheless, we cannot remain indifferent over a law like (Arizona) Senate Bill 1070, which has the potential to affect the human rights of thousands of Mexican people," the statement said.

"Criminalization is not the way to resolve the phenomenon of undocumented immigration ... The Mexican government will use its resources to defend the rights and dignity of Mexicans in Arizona."
Early online El Paso Times readers think the 'I hate brown people' law is great. 65 votes so far with 60% for the law. Why is hate so popular?

More here.

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Sunday, April 25, 2010

Batsh*t crazy GOPers offend fellow a**hole

Jonathan Gurwitz produces a steady stream of propagandist sludge from the right wing a**hole factory. But, even Gurwitz is in a p*ssing contest with the batsh*t crazy crowd.
Like the fallacious red scare over “Brown Bear,” the foolish deletion of Jefferson and the Enlightenment is shameful for Texas and an embarrassment for conservatives. Rather than try to defend the indefensible, [SBOE chairwoman Gail] Lowe should be working with rational members of the board of education to restore Jefferson to his rightful place when a final vote is taken on the revisions next month.

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Got something you want to say about border security?

A panel of state legislators wants public input on how effective Texas has been in responding to Mexican drug violence.

Members of the Texas House’s Public Safety Committee and its Border and Intergovernmental Affairs Committee plan to have a joint hearing Thursday in McAllen on ongoing border security efforts.

In addition to comments from the community, lawmakers will hear testimony from local, state and federal authorities on their efforts to combat the potential for spillover violence.
Look. It's very simple. Just legalize drugs. Make the drugs as safe as you can. Tax them. Provide rehab. No profit motive, no drug lords.

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Let the Kemp's ridley adventure begin

The first Kemp's ridley sea turtle nest was found Saturday on the Texas Coast, Division of Sea Turtle Science and Recovery officials said.

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Earth quake reported near Alice

A magnitude 4 13 miles from Alice in Aqua Dulce. Kingsville, Corpus Christi or even Port Lavaca maybe shaking.

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Why is Rick Perry partying with Glenn Beck?

Tea partying with Glenn Beck to be precise. Rick Perry wants to ride the Tea Party to the White House. The only problem with that? The Tea Party is racing to the nut house.
Perry, who is running for a third full term in office, made a guest appearance Saturday night at the "Taking Back America" town hall event in Tyler hosted by conservative radio and television talk show host Glenn Beck.

Although he has denied the claims, speculation is swirling that Perry may consider a run for president in 2012. Experts say appearing with Beck keeps Perry in the minds of conservative voters.
No doubt. Who thinks America is missing a president from Texas?

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Saturday, April 24, 2010

Rick Perry's hand chosen crew did their job to delay forensics report in dealth penalty case

What's more important? The election of Rick Perry or the possible execution of an innocent man?
A state forensics panel on Friday assigned four of its members to review the arson case that resulted in the execution of Cameron Todd Willingham, who was convicted of killing his three children.

In a report prepared last year for the Texas Forensic Science Commission, fire expert Craig Beyler found fault in the investigation that led to Willingham’s conviction. But in September, two days before the commission was to discuss the report and question Beyler, Gov. Rick Perry replaced three of its members, including its chairman.

The new chairman, John Bradley, the Williamson County district attorney, canceled that meeting. Dr. Norma Jean Farley, chief forensic pathologist in Hidalgo and Cameron counties, was also among the governor’s new appointees.

Without Beyler’s finding, prosecutors have admitted it would have been hard to win a death sentence against Willingham.
Don't expect results before the November election. With handpicked puppets, can we expect honest results? I'm not holding my breath on that.
Stephen Saloom, policy director at the Innocence Project, the advocacy group that filed a complaint in the Willingham case, said after the meeting he was pleased that there was some small movement.

But he raised concerns that the Willingham panel is likely to work in private. The forensic science commission's discussions had all been open before Bradley joined, and he accused the new chairman of trying to take the investigation behind closed doors and continuing to hit the brakes.

"They haven't done an iota of work since he's come on," Saloom said, noting it's been four years since the initial complaints were filed.

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Former police chief, indicted for falsifying records, asked to get his job back

Good luck with that.
[La Marque] School board trustees voted against reversing a decision last month to fire Russell Washington, the district’s former police chief, after a grand jury indicted him in December on charges of falsifying records to obtain a vehicle title.

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Galveston police accused of profiling, harassing

Who likes to be thrown in jail for rolling through a stop sign?
According to police reports, [Patrick] Doyle was arrested about 11 p.m. April 16 in the 4100 block of Broadway for “traffic violations.” Doyle, who said he’s never been arrested before, said he spent 12 hours in jail after Galveston police officers working off-duty as security guards for Sandpiper Cove, 3916 Winnie, stopped him for rolling through a stop sign. He was charged with failing to signal a turn, police records state.

Doyle said he was pulled over after leaving a friend’s apartment in Sandpiper Cove, where he’d watched a movie. Two officers flanked the car and peppered him and his passenger with questions about where they’d been, where they were going, whether they had drugs or weapons and why they were in Sandpiper Cove, he said.

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UT personnel told to leave Mexico

The University of Texas System said on Friday that all students, faculty and staff in seven northern Mexico states should immediately return home.

UT System officials cited escalating violence in the Mexican states as the reason for recalling students attending university-sponsored programs in Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, Sonora, Tamaulipas, Baja California and Durango.

Officials said the system's nine universities and six health institutions are already planning the return of about 40 people.
Illegal US drug use is the fuel to this problem. Legalize drugs. Take away the profit motive. Simple.

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Arizona takes itself off the map

Gov. Jan Brewer ignored criticism from President Barack Obama on Friday and signed into law a bill supporters said would take handcuffs off police in dealing with illegal immigration in Arizona, the nation's busiest gateway for human and drug smuggling from Mexico.

As hundreds of protesters outside the state Capitol shouted that the bill would lead to civil-rights abuses, Brewer said that critics were "overreacting" and that she wouldn't tolerate racial profiling.
She wouldn't tolerate racial profiling? That is EXACTLY what this bill is all about. Republicans. They used to be against all of the national id card, sign of the beast stuff. Not anymore. Nope. Racism trumps end days.

If white Arizona gets what it wants and all brown people and people who like brown people leave, what economic impacts will rain down on Arizona? Lack of consumers, workers, tourists. No diversity. No vibrant, living, creative forces. Just dead, hateful withered fearful people cowering with their guns. Who else would want to live or work there?

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John Cornyn briefed on border situation. Await his political posturing.

John Cornyn, best remembered as one of one of the 30 white male Republican senators who voted to enable rapists, is your basic Republican office holder. You can predict his actions in any situation. Me first. Cronies second. Lockstep party obstructionist. With Cornyn, as with any other Republican in office, you will never find efforts to address real problems with real solutions. Everything, and I mean every little thing, is colored by 'what's in it for me?' 'How can I use this to my advantage?' I expect nothing more from Cornyn's look at the border.
Cornyn, R-Texas, spent most of the day getting an update on border security and the ongoing drug cartel war in Mexico, which has killed more than 20,000 people in the country and nearly 5,000 in Juárez alone.

On Monday, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst also will be in El Paso to speak with local, state and federal law enforcement about the growing violence in Mexico and preventing spillover into Texas, said Rich Parson, his spokesman.
I have no confidence or expectation that either Dewhurst or Cornyn will act in our best interests. Psst. Please note that Cornyn's first thoughts are about force - drones and the military. The El Paso Times has high hopes from Cornyn's visit. Really? Do you know the definition of insanity? More about Cornyn's visit here.

The solution to the drug war is just so simple, and doesn't not involve guns. Legalize drugs and take away the profit motive. It worked for alcohol.

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Friday, April 23, 2010

Racism and fear will kill last Sabal Palm forest

On Monday, Kiewit construction crews began clearing ground for yet another section of border wall on land that was, until last week, part of the Nature Conservancy’s Lennox Foundation Southmost Preserve.

The 18-foot tall steel wall will cut off 95 percent of the 1,034 acre preserve. As with the more than 400 other landowners whose property the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has condemned, the Nature Conservancy was only offered compensation for the exact footprint of the wall – a strip 60 feet wide and 6,000 feet long – not the land that will be behind the wall. In DHS’ limited view, $114,000 is “just compensation” for walling off lands purchased in 1999 for $2.6 million.
Insult meet injury. That d*mn fence does nothing but harm. Who needs a monument built to honor racism and fear?

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Bañales pulls judge from a murder case

People would like to know why.
Judge J. Manuel Bañales, who oversees the 5th Administrative Judicial Region, pulled Cornejo-Lopez from the case, an administrator in his Corpus Christi office confirmed late Thursday afternoon. The reason for the removal was unclear, and Cornejo-Lopez could not be reached for comment late Thursday.

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More people upset over sale of water

Add environmentalists to the list of people upset with Clayton Williams and his plans to take water from the Pecos. Water is the new gold. Actually, water is better than gold. People need it to live. Gold, not so much.

There are other cases to be fought.
When the Texas Supreme Court took up Edwards Aquifer Authority v. Day in January — a year after Day’s death and almost fifteen years after the original claim — representatives of water interests across the state began churning out amicus briefs. Now, after February’s oral arguments, they wait anxiously for the court to parse the 19 briefs currently on file. At the core of the case is how the court will interpret Texas law, which currently acknowledges not only landowners’ rights to water beneath the land but also the authority of groundwater districts to regulate it.
Since the Texas Supreme Court is crony central, I don't have high hopes for justice.

See previous posts.

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City Council slaps La Marque city manager

City council members gave City Manager Eric Gage a warning after the Galveston County district attorney last week told officials Gage violated two sections of the city charter.

The council unanimously agreed to send Gage a letter warning him for his decision last month to create and give the title director of public safety to Police Chief Randall Aragon without the council’s approval.
Does this mean that the city council members have made up and will play nice?

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UTEP students say no to sport fees increase

How about that. Who knew college wasn't just about sports. Good job!
The new fee would have increased students' tuition by $240 more a year beginning in the fall 2011 and up to $360 more by fall 2013. Annual tuition will already increase from $6,288 in fall 2009 to $6,568 in fall 2010 and $6,948 in fall 2011.

For now, the athletics department will have to do with $2 million it collects from students.
Now, only if the Republicans running our state would step up and actually fund our colleges at a decent rate. Tuition deregulation isn't cutting it.

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Nobody likes Rick Perry

Kay Bailey Hutchison voters don't. Toll road haters don't. People wary of Perry's accumulated power don't. Then, there's the 'sick of him' crowd. Smart campaigner, Bill White, is doing his version of the 50 state strategy by campaigning up in the panhandle. Go Bill.

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How do you marry immigration reform with health care reform?

The following story does just that.
With a terminally ill husband and no job to support his treatment, Norma Lidia Rodriguez allegedly turned to the one avenue she knew could make her some easy cash:

Undoing the work to which her spouse had devoted his career.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents arrested Rodriguez, 34, on April 15, after she allegedly attempted to bring an undocumented Mexican national across the Progreso International Bridge in exchange for cash.

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Please welcome a guest blogger from The Mahablog

bobrien is focused on educating us about health care issues. Check out her first STC post 'Health Care Reform: The Morning After'

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Thursday, April 22, 2010

Health Care Reform: The Morning After

Many politicians and pundits warned us that the health care reform (HCR) legislation that just became law will destroy America. Government bureaucrats will take over health care decisions, we were told. The old and infirm would be hauled away by death panels. Everything about the way we receive our medical care will change, and change drastically, they said.

Medicare recipients have been frightened by stories that their benefits will be cut. Middle-age people are worried they will lose their jobs when the law’s dreaded regulations, or taxes, or maybe regulations with taxes, would destroy their employers’ businesses.

The truth is, very little will change for most people. If you were insured by employee benefits before HCR, you will be insured by exactly the same policy in exactly the same way after HCR. You will have access to the same doctors on the same terms. “Government bureaucrats” will no more be involved in your health care than they were before.

And the same is true of Medicare, which of course is a government program, although many of the people who opposed the HCR bill don’t seem to know that.

Here are the “cataclysmic” changes to health care that are now in effect, or which will go into effect within the next six months for people who are already in group insurance plans:

• The law says you can’t lose your insurance coverage because you get sick. Before, in many states, if you were stricken with a severe illness such as mesothelioma cancer that would be expensive to treat, your insurer could use just about any excuse to cancel your coverage. That is over.

• HCR has ended lifetime limits on coverage. As long as you are receiving medical care, your insurer pays the bills.

• Your children can be covered on your existing policy until they are 26 years old.

• In six months, insurers cannot refuse to insure people under the age of 19 because of “pre-existing conditions.” This provision will go into effect for everyone in 2014.


And if you are on Medicare, you will be asked to struggle with the following:

• You get a free annual checkup.

• The co-pays and deductibles on many preventive care services are eliminated.

• If you are in the Medicare D “doughnut hole,” you will get a $250 rebate check in a few weeks. The hole itself will be closed gradually and will be gone by 2020.

But what about all those terrible regulations and taxes that are about to drive businesses out of business? Um, there really isn’t much to report. Oh, wait, here’s one — a 10 percent tax on indoor tanning services that use ultraviolet lamps will go into effect July 1. That’s about it.

However, beginning this year a tax credit will be available for some small businesses to help provide insurance coverage for employees.

Soon the politicians and pundits will start trying to frighten you about the provisions that will go into effect after this year. I assure you they are about as scary as the provisions that go into effect this year.

Gay divorce case goes to the Republican judges

What would the batsh*t crazy base do (wwbcbd)?
There is no timeline for the three judges who heard the case – all Republicans, with Filmore facing an election this year against Democrat Larry Praeger – to issue a ruling. Even then, a decision does not mean the case ends. Either JB or the attorney general could appeal the case to the Texas Supreme Court. The Texas Supreme Court is not required to hear the case if there is an appeal.

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Another politician says no to taking Pecos water

Laredo Mayor Raul Salinas says he and other border officials “will stand tall in staunch opposition” to efforts to extract billions of gallons of groundwater from the Pecos River watershed.

“I am in the process of contacting every political leader down-river from the Pecos,” Salinas told the Guardian, in a phone interview on Wednesday.

“I am contacting the Texas Border Coalition, both of our U.S. Senators, John Cornyn and Kay Bailey Hutchison, all of our elected federal and state legislators and senators and will be meeting personally with the mayor of Nuevo Laredo tomorrow.”
Water. The new gold. Clayton Williams, who famously joked that if a woman is being raped she should just relax and enjoy it, wants your water.

The Texas Tribune has more on this story.

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The AP loves its propaganda

'Millions face tax increases under Dems budget plan'

What they really mean is rich people may have to start paying their fair share. Bush's big wet kiss to the rich is not affordable.
The looming tax hikes result from the structure of President George W. Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax bills, whose provisions generally expire at the end of this year. Obama promises to fully extend them except for individuals earning more than $200,000 a year and couple making $250,000 a year. They include lower income tax rates, a $1,000 per-child tax credit, and tax breaks for investments and reductions in the estate tax, and their five-year cost of almost $800 billion would be covered by adding to the nation's $12.8 trillion debt.
Oh, those poor, poor folks making $200K a year.

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Rick Perry makes CREW's top 11 list

That's not a good thing. CREW listed the 11 least ethical governors.
Perry was cited for a number of things covered in newspaper reports: his trip to the Bahamas with campaign donors and conservative friends to ostensibly discuss school finances. That way his campaign could pay for the trip.
We could have told you.

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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

How does s registered sex offender just convicted of manslaughter escape from the court house?

Apparently, the judge had given him a $10K bond and he changed his clothing in the stairwell. What? They got him, but what was the judge thinking?
When [Victor Torkizadeh] failed to appear for the punishment phase, jurors were told Torkizadeh had left the court without authorization, said District Attorney John Healey.
What fun to be a juror in that case.

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Oil rig explosion leaves at least 11 missing in Gulf

See, the problem of worker safety is simple. It's just a business expense. Making workers safe can cost a lot of money and sometimes, it's just not worth it. You can always get another worker. Oh, to be a Republican with a Republican mind set.
At least 11 people were missing and seven injured after an explosion and fire at an oil drilling platform off the coast of Louisiana, the Coast Guard said Wednesday.
Lets hope Obama is cleaning up the labor department. By the way, Rick Perry is wrong again about Bush making us safe. We are reaping the rewards of a corporate/profit focused Bush labor department.

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Texas Republicans out to ban divorce

For gay people, anyway.
A precedent-setting case goes before a Dallas appeals court on Wednesday.

It involves two men, married in Massachusetts, who want a divorce in Texas.

The state is likely to argue at the George Allen Courthouse later today that if Texas does not recognize a same-sex marriage, how can it allow for a same-sex divorce?
On a heterosexual note, there are very unattractive guys unable to relate to women who use religion as a tool to bind women. Those guys would love to ban divorce for straight people, too.

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Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Democrats aim to keep Hispanic kids in school

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said Monday that he wanted his department to help cut dropout rates and boost college enrollment for Hispanic Americans.

The push for scholastic equality comes as President Barack Obama tries to improve the nation's educational system so that by 2020 the U.S. leads the world with its percentage of college graduates, as Duncan reiterated at a gathering of Hispanic college administrators. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that a quarter of the country's children younger than 5 are Hispanic, making Obama's goal almost impossible without their participation.

Read more:

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UTEP gives foia request the finger

Why do some public officials think that the public has no right to know how they use taxpayer money?
Travel expenses for University of Texas at El Paso President Diana Natalicio more than doubled from fiscal year 2008 to FY 2009, from $20,656 to $42,124. During the same period, travel costs for El Paso Community College President Richard Rhodes went up a mere $726. And travel costs for Texas Tech Regional Dean Jose Manuel de la Rosa actually decreased. The latter two are to be commended for being careful with costs. That's exactly what constituents want during these tough economic times.

...

First, Natalicio's increased travel expenses came during the same school year in which she initiated travel restrictions and a hiring freeze. She asked the faculty to reduce travel spending. A leader should lead by example, and her travel, however necessary, doesn't meet that criterion.

But something else was more bothersome. The El Paso Times submitted public records requests to all three institutions requesting information about their leaders' travel. The medical school and EPCC responded in a timely manner and didn't request any payment. UTEP pushed the limits set for responses to public records requests, eventually provided limited information and data that couldn't easily be interpreted -- and wanted to charge the Times nearly $1,000. UTEP's response gives the impression that there is something school officials wanted to hide, or at least were reluctant to have in the public's hands. What is it? What's the problem?

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Rick Perry lowers border cam goals. Viola! Goals met.

Got a problem with reality? Just ask a Republican to fix that for you.
The Texas Border Watch Program -- the Web-based border camera surveillance project Gov. Rick Perry launched in 2006 -- is meeting its goals for the first time since its inception. But that's only because the targets have been scaled back so dramatically that the program hardly resembles the wide-reaching virtual border neighborhood watch Perry initially promised.

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Monday, April 19, 2010

Did 2 Hispanic GOP Congressional wins signal no GOP racism?

The Dallas Morning News trumpets Flores win over Curnock for Chet Edward's seat and Canseco's win over Hurd for the one held by Ciro Rodriguez. Hurd had a plurality in the primary election, but lost in the runoff. I doubt that the Canseco/Hurd runoff in heavily Hispanic South Texas is a big indicator for all of the Texas GOP. Texas Kaos has a diary about the dirty race Flores/Curnock had. Hard to say what a Flores/Curnock win a runoff means with respect to GOP racism. Was Phil Gramm's endorsement that big?

The DMN goes on to examine the GOP's problem courting Hispanics.
Political experts say the GOP has had two recurring problems: inconsistency in its courtship of Hispanics and occasional setbacks from problems such as inflammatory rhetoric on immigration.
'... problems such as inflammatory rhetoric on immigration.' That snippet doesn't begin to cover the waves of hate one experiences over and over again.

Lets see what happens in November. I suspect that the R behind a name will count for more than racism to some Republicans. For others, maybe not.

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San Antonio Express News columnist exposes shadow city dealings

At City Hall, as with the circus, the best action doesn't always happen in the center ring. Better to keep one eye on the clowns doing their thing around the perimeter.

That was certainly the case last week when a City Council panel took up proposed revisions to the tree ordinance. It was off in the shadows that two lawyer-lobbyists haggled over a change in wording that may ultimately make their clients a lot of money. I say may because the outcome remains murky.

What made the exchange intriguing was that it left Richard Alles, leader of the Citizens Tree Coalition, fearing that he'd aided the enemy. Alles, you have to understand, is about the gentlest person you will find in the deep, dark waters of City Hall. He speaks in a voice vaguely reminiscent of Mister Rogers, and his only cause is trees.
I think Scott Stroud called the city council members clowns in his opening paragraph. Hmmm.

Meanwhile, Boerne has tree clearing ethics problems of its own.
In the first test of a local ethics ordinance hailed as one of the strictest in the state, a city councilman's bid to intervene in tree-clearing on a private lot has been found to breach conduct standards set in the 2008 code.

However, on split votes Wednesday, fellow officials declined to sanction Councilman Rob Ziegler for that violation and cleared him of another complaint filed over the Feb. 7 incident that reflects the local schism over how this community should grow.

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Hidalgo County remiss in colonia monitoring

Hidalgo County’s municipalities were in danger of losing millions of dollars if the county hadn’t fixed how it keeps an eye on colonias.

State agencies had found multiple violations of the state’s Model Subdivision Rules — most notably, requirements for only one home per lot — during a review of about a dozen colonias northeast of Weslaco.

The county implemented new enforcement procedures and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality cleared the county last week.

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Cuellar questions plans for Pecos water extraction

U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar says the proposed extraction of 41 million gallons per day of groundwater from the Pecos River watershed is a matter of “the utmost concern.”

The Laredo Democrat made his views on the issue known in a letter his office sent to the Laredo-based Rio Grande International Study Center (RGISC), elaborating further that his staff has contacted Gov. Rick Perry and the International Boundary and Water Commission.

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Rick Perry, livin' like it's 1855

'Perry: DC's grip on states must loosen'

Oh, the good old days. Really, really old days. When women, blacks and folks without land or money knew their places. Rich white men said jump and the aforementioned asked how high. Those were the days.

Then, there's this revisionist gem.
Q Do you consider Bush to have been a great president?

A At the end of the day, when the history books are written, I think George W. Bush will go down as a very, very good president. Approaching great? I don't know yet -- I mean, a year and a half after he's been out of office may be a little too early to write George's history. But here is why he was an incredibly good president: because the man kept America safe.
That is just 180 degrees, whole out lie, wrong! Remember he
  • Ignored 9/11 warnings like 'Osama Bin Laden determined to attack in the US'
  • Declined to prepare for Hurricane Katrina
  • Dismantled worker safety protections
  • Dismantled food and drug safety protections
  • Dismantled pollution controls
  • Severely weakened our military
  • All but destroyed our standing in the world with our allies
  • Severely weakened our economy by allowing fraud
I could go on, but you get the idea. No president ever has done so much to negatively effect the safety of every single American today. Even the rich ones.

See the entire Texas Tribune interview here.

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US Supreme Court doesn't care about even the appearance of fairness

Why would I say such a thing? Because the US Supreme Court just denied an appeal even though the judge at the defendant's trail (Vera Holland) was banging the prosecutor (Tom O'Connell) in the case. Lets just say that the affair had no effect on the judge's actions. It looks grossly unfair, improper and should be illegal. Here we have a case of right wing privilege meeting right wing justice. Fairness smairness. We live in a world where even innocence isn't a reason to stop a good old execution.

See previous posts.

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It's the weekly TPA blog post roundup!

Time for another roundup of the week's blog highlights from the Texas Progressive Alliance.

Something bubbles up from the ground in Bartonville. Could this be why so many dogs nearby have cancer? Since drilling toxins were found in Barnett Shale residents' blood and urine, maybe it's time to test the animals too. TXsharon struggles to keep pace with the latest Barnett Shale news at Bluedaze: DRILLING REFORM FOR TEXAS.

The Texas Cloverleaf highlights the case of the Christmas goose in Flower Mound.

Off the Kuff writes about the pitch from the gambling industry.

CouldBeTrue of South Texas Chisme wonders about the wisdom of building a silly, damaging border fence while allowing foreign companies to control our ports.

It was a wild week for the economy and, surprisingly, for economic history. McBlogger takes a look at one historical revisionist who like misrepresentation almost as much as Ayn Rand. Then he goes on to explain just what Goldman Sachs did.

Neil at Texas Liberal wrote a comprehensive preview post of the upcoming election in the United Kingdom. Election Day is May 6. The post is being updated daily with new developments and it took some time to write. So please give it a look if you find the topic to be interest.

Bay Area Houston finds another one of Bob Perry's bitches.

WCNews at Eye On Williamson shows that the 2006 Texas tax swap created a $5 billion annual budget hole, the bill is coming due next year, Texas Republicans created a budget shortfall to cut programs that help working Texans.

Over at TexasKaos, Libby Shaw catches up with Johnny Cronyn . He and Mitch McConnell "continue[s] to serve Wall St. breakfast in bed." More to the point, Libby explains the battle lines being drawn between Obama and the Dems and those lap dogs of the priveleged, the Republican Pary. Check it out John Cornyn, Mitch McConnell, the GOP Stand by Their Wall St. Man .

The TeaBaggers and the regular GOP nuts fought each other to a stand-off on Election Runoff Day. PDiddie at Brains and Eggs has the sordid details.

In Flower Mound, gas drillers have crossed the line into express advocacy in local elections, sending out a letter to mineral owners telling them who to vote for in a town council election.

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Sunday, April 18, 2010

Carla Vela further implicated in depletion of Bexar County Democratic funds

Nearly two years ago, Carla Vela and Dwayne Adams, the local Democratic Party's then-chairwoman and treasurer, respectively, began heavily using their party debit cards to pay what appear to be personal bills, according to a recently completed audit of the party's finances.

The spending started within weeks of a decision to give Vela $2,000 a year in discretionary funds.

Before that, the use of party-issued cards had been banned because of the potential for abuse. Vela said Adams proposed that the pair use debit cards to make it an easier process yet still maintain control of party funds.

Over the next 18 months, the audit found, the pair spent slightly more than $20,000 in restaurant and grocery bills, as well as $5,600 for gasoline.
The grown ups in the Bexar County Democratic Party did their best to keep Carla Vela out of office, when she made the runoff for Bexar County Clerk. Job well done.

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GI forum caves on destroying Memorial Coliseum

One of the two groups suing the city to block demolition of Memorial Coliseum ended its effort after city officials agreed to help establish another memorial to World War II veterans.

The decision by the Johnny Canales International Chapter of the American GI Forum, announced Friday, does not affect the lawsuit by Friends of the Coliseum, the group that obtained the 45-day injunction now delaying the demolition.

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Texas judge says State Farm can hide its greed from the public

A judge in Austin is blocking Texas regulators from publicizing some documents on two rate hikes by State Farm Insurance Cos.

District Judge Stephen Yelenosky issued a temporary order sought by State Farm, which cited competitive reasons to keep private the information on homeowners rates.

The Dallas Morning News reported Friday that the judge did not rule out changing his mind if Insurance Commissioner Mike Geeslin formally decides that the twin rate filings are “insufficient” without the documents.
That smells like crony Republican capitalism, doesn't it?

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BISD admins caught using illegal PHDs

Who knew a PHD could be illegal. Even, if it came in a cereal box. Bogus, sure. But, illegal?
Two Brownsville Independent School District administrators who made frequent and public use of their doctoral titles obtained the Ph.D.s from an online institution whose degrees are illegal in Texas, The Brownsville Herald has learned.

Oscar Cantu Sr., administrator of the district’s Adult Continuing Education Department, and his son, Oscar Cantu Jr., special assignment administrator assigned to Brownsville Early College High School, both cite degrees in educational administration from Canbourne University obtained in 2005, and represent themselves as having doctoral degrees, according to documents obtained by the Herald from BISD through a public information request.

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Saturday, April 17, 2010

Republicans want government to fail

You didn't think that all the incompetence was an accident? Well, maybe. Rick Perry is dumb as a box of rocks and doesn't really care about anything but himself.
Texas doesn't do government programs well, but can't it do a decent job of doling out federal rebates?

The appliance rebate program turned into a fiasco when it debuted April 7, locking out tens of thousands of residents and forcing others to wait hours to get on the rebate list. The state blamed the independent contractor for failing to handle 1,000 calls a minute and 2,400 hits a second on the Web site.

Put aside the obvious: that Comptroller Susan Combs chose the contractor, so she's responsible for the hire, regardless of the op-ed critique she sent to newspapers.

Read more:

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Is the El Paso Sheriff listening in on attorney/client converstations?

Lawyers say they are worried that telephones at the county jail's visitation booths could be bugged, creating a possible government intrusion on privileged conversations with their clients.

But El Paso County Sheriff Richard Wiles said Friday that no recording or monitoring occurred during visits to the jail by lawyers. He agreed to allow a full examination of the booths after county and federal public defenders said they wanted to investigate the sheriff's system.
Hey, the guy is letting them check.

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Men's health says Corpus Christi is the fattest city in US

Ouch.

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Who thinks the US is ready to elect another president from Texas?

Everybody is still smarting from that huge failure, George W. Bush. What didn't he trash when he ran the show? The AP is touting Rick Perry. Tout on.

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It pays to have crony friends on the Texas Supreme Court

Crony is as crony does for the Texas Supreme Court. Words to rule by.
The Texas Supreme Court on Friday struck down efforts by a Corpus Christi woman to pursue her claim that she is the unrecognized daughter of John G. Kenedy and heir to his fortune.

None of Ann Fernandez’s claims as an heir or for inheritance rights to the estate remain viable because they were past the statute of limitations, according to one of four written opinions issued Friday.

Kenedy died in 1948 and was believed to have had no known heirs. But Fernandez’s suit claims he had at least one child with Mary Rowland, a housekeeper.
A housekeeper's daughter has no standing compared to a powerful foundation.

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JWC DA will have a separate grand jury looking into his use of forfeiture funds

(A paid subscription required for this story.)
District Court Judge J. Manuel Banales will move forward with empaneling a separate grand jury to look into the forfeiture funds of former district attorney Joe Frank Garza, after denying his request to stop the creation of the separate grand jur
More from hack Jaime Powell here (at least it's free).

See previous posts.

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Friday, April 16, 2010

Should a foreign bank pick the operators of a US port?

While Republicans are worried about the security threat of wildlife refuges, the sane adults among us might think about subletting out the operations of our ports.
In a move that could reshape the fortunes of Galveston’s docks, Cernak will ask the port’s governing board April 26 to hire the Bank of Montreal to seek such a private partner.

Port managers hope third-party investment will help them rebuild and modernize obsolete, dilapidated facilities and possibly lead to a two-berth container terminal on the port’s west end.

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He said, he said over missing Port of Galveston cash

Port of Galveston senior staff members say they had no idea that $2,000 in emergency cash was unaccounted for or that Finance Director Wayne Byrd planned to write the money off against cruise parking refunds until public inquiries brought the issue to light, according to a report presented to the port’s governing board Thursday.

Byrd, however, told Wharves Board of Trustees on Thursday he notified some senior staff members, including Deputy Port Director Mike Mierzwa, of his plan.

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For Corpus Christi, ah, the smell of benzene in the morning

How's that helping the tourist and housing industry, never mind the health of the inhabitants? Equistar Chemicals got a TCEQ love tap fine.
$10,273, air violations, investigated May 29-July 31, 2008, for failure to prevent the unauthorized release of about 26 pounds of benzene, 5.421 pounds of carbon monoxide, 8,501 pounds of ethylene, 1,244 pounds of nitrogen oxide, 586 pounds of propylene, 24 pounds of methylacetylene propadiene, 85 pounds of volatile organic compounds and failure to submit an initial notification within 24 hours of discovery.

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We have to wait for Mauricio Celis' next trial

Mauricio Celis’ second trial has been delayed after a judge ruled the indictment must be amended.

Prosecutors accuse Celis of using a reserve deputy badge after his law enforcement commission was suspended. The case stems from a September 2007 incident in which a nude woman left Celis’ Kings Crossing home and went to a nearby convenience store, where a witness called police. Celis appeared on the scene flashing a Duval County badge, asking that the woman be turned over to him, according to police reports.
See previous posts.

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Duerr sees dirty tricks in congressional race loss

James Duerr, who lost a tight runoff for the Republican nomination for U.S. House District 27, is seeking an investigation into who took several signs that were supposed to identify polling places.

Duerr filed an affidavit with District Attorney Anna Jimenez's office Thursday afternoon asking her office to investigate. Jimenez had not yet reviewed Duerr's complaint later Thursday.
I suspect justice under Jimenez depends on your level of friendship with her. Can anyone say crony justice? Lets see what kind of crony Duerr is. Though, it is fun to watch Republicans fight.

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Republicans say to hell with wildlife refuges along the border

Must be time to puff up, swagger and do something war like and racist. You'd think that d*mn fence was a big enough monument to racism and fear. Nope. Time to rally up the tea party.
After a bill was introduced by House Republicans on Wednesday to transfer operational control of lands along the federal border to the Department of Homeland Security, the local spokesperson for these properties says that the plan is ill advised.

"Whenever two agencies collaborate it can only be better for the American people," said Nancy Brown, outreach specialist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Some House Republicans have claimed that federal land managers are more concerned with protecting wilderness and endangered species than securing U.S. borders.
If you're a Republican, what could be better than combining destruction of the environment with racism, war mongering and fear?

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Thursday, April 15, 2010

State Farm asks judge to hide its greed

State Farm Insurance today asked a state judge to block plans by the Texas Department of Insurance to publish online documents about the company's two recent rate hikes for homeowners insurance.

State Farm, Texas' largest property insurer, insists that the documents are confidential. They relate to a somewhat technical subject, reinsurance coverage. Reinsurance is purchased by an insurer to help cover unusually large losses related to a catastrophic event, such as a hurricane
.

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Census bureau says colonias will be covered

Sure. Now they will be.
U.S. Rep. Rubén Hinojosa says he has been assured there will be enough Census workers to count the tens of thousands of colonia residents in the Rio Grande Valley who did not receive Census forms.

Hinojosa spoke Tuesday with Tom Mesenbourg, deputy director of the U.S. Census Bureau about what must be done to ensure a proper 2010 Census count in the Valley.

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The Texas Tribune has a great story about Norma Chávez

Wonder what happened to the deposed HD76 Rep? Check out - 'Anatomy of a Meltdown'. Meanwhile, the El Paso Times has high hopes for HD76 winner, Naomi Gonzales.

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Tea Partiers trying to spruce up their image by ...

Bashing Liberals. You see, it isn't Tea Partiers spitting on members of Congress and calling them the n word or the f word. Oh, no. It's those unethical Liberals who infiltrated the Tea Party to make them look racist. Sure. Who's selling this Brooklyn Bridge? Why it's none other than Rick Perry echoing the new PR line. Republicans are super at PR and propaganda.

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What will Eliot Shapleigh find in the Asarco documents?

State Sen. Eliot Shapleigh is entitled to see certain documents involving communications between the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and Asarco, the Texas Court of Appeals, Third District, ruled.

The TCEQ, which granted Asarco an air quality permit to operate the smelter, had appealed a lower court's ruling in favor of Shapleigh, D-El Paso, who is seeking the documents.
Anyone want to bet on a stack of stinking crony Republican capitalism?

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New Bishop says 'keep keep faith in local religious leaders'

Are the days gone, when a Bishop says jump and the parishioners ask 'how high'?
A string of new child abuse scandals have hit the Catholic Church, including in Ireland, the United States, Germany and Malta. [Recently installed Bishop Daniel E.] Flores told The Brownsville Herald that it is important to both reach out to victims and keep faith in local religious leaders.
What is most important to Bishop Flores and most important to the Catholic hierarchy?

More here.

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The Caller Times continues its amateur hour favoritism, hearting Blake Farenthold

And, of course, hating anything Ortiz. What a load of tripe this editorial is. Blake Farenthold is Scott Brown? Really?

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Ballots impounded in Cameron County race

Ruben R. Peña, candidate for the Democratic Party’s nomination for Cameron County commissioner Pct. 2 suspects fraud regarding the mail-in votes cast in the race and he went to state district court Wednesday, seeking relief.

At Peña’s request, state District Judge Migdalia Lopez ordered Cameron County Sheriff Omar Lucio to impound the mail-in ballots cast in the March 2 primary and Tuesday’s runoff election in the Pct. 2 commissioner race and associated election materials. She also ordered the impoundment of ballots cast at Sharp Elementary School on Tuesday.
Psst, right wing ideologues. Voter ID cards do nothing to help with mail in ballot fraud. Nothing.

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Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Batsh*t crazy guy loses in GOP Texas Supreme Court race

Thank you. Thank you. I did not buy into the idea that Rick Green would make a great target for Jim Sharp. Any chance that Green would sit on our supreme court is too big.
In a runoff election pitting experience against ideology, Republican voters opted for experience Tuesday, selecting 22-year family law judge Debra Lehrmann as the party's nominee for a seat on the Texas Supreme Court.

The only statewide runoff for either party saw Lehrmann defeat Dripping Springs lawyer Rick Green, a former state legislator who campaigned as the more conservative candidate in the race — opposed to abortion, gay rights and court decisions hostile to prayer in public schools.

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Tea Party guy wins Victoria Republican Party chair

878 people voted for Michael Cloud who will promptly hold a Tea Party event Thursday.

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Corruption probe for City of Windcrest

The former city manager of Windcrest and his brother, a San Antonio developer, are facing allegations they conspired to defraud millions from the city and the tech company Rackspace Hosting Inc.

On Tuesday, Texas Rangers and the Bexar County district attorney’s office executed a search warrant at the offices of developer Gary Cain, looking for evidence that he and his brother, Ronnie Cain, who recently retired as Windcrest’s city manager, engaged in various financial crimes.
What would a scandal be without sex.
A police search affidavit includes some steamy allegations against Ronnie Cain, 60.

The document alleges he gave more than $20,000 in city funds to Tracy Freimarck, 33, the city secretary. The affidavit says he had a sexual relationship with her.

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Gilbert Sanchez loses election.

Everyone sighs with relief.
Norma Favela, a political newcomer, easily defeated incumbent Gilbert Sanchez in Tuesday's Democratic runoff election, ending his eight-year career as district clerk.

Favela, 48, took more than 70 percent of the vote.
Who are these people (the nearly 30%) who voted for Sanchez?
El Paso District Clerk Gilbert Sanchez made it to the Democratic primary runoff despite the fact the he is under indictment for bribery and mail fraud. He's been sued for sexual harassment and wrongful termination.
See previous posts.

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Del Mar College says Las Brisas doesn't have to pay taxes like everyone else

Del Mar College regents approved $27.6 million in property tax breaks Tuesday for the proposed Las Brisas Energy Center.

The decision came after a two-hour discussion in which eight members of the audience spoke for the power plant and seven spoke against it. The board voted 4-3 with one abstention.
Just because impartial judges recommended that the TCEQ deny Las Brisas a permit due to unresolved pollution issues is no reason not to play dirty (in every sense) crony politics. Pollution good. Taxes for community college bad.

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Another CraddickDem bites the dust.

Calling your opponent a Lesbian just doesn't have the sting it used to when Karl Rove ruled the world. You have to come up with fresh dirty tricks.
State Rep. Norma Chávez, the brawler of the El Paso delegation, lost the most important fight of her 14-year political career Tuesday night.

Assistant County Attorney Naomi Gonzalez ousted Chávez in a bitter, high-dollar runoff election for the House District 76 seat.

Personal attacks between the two Democrats were routine as they racked up contributions totaling nearly $1 million. Much of the money went for negative ads.

Gonzalez, 31, talked less about herself than her opponent. She made her campaign a referendum against Chávez, 49.
Now lets see what Naomi Gonzales can do. We'll be watching. Vince over at Capital Annex says Gonzales is the new tort reform candidate. Yuck. Gonzales has no opponent in November.

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Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Home insurers are making a profit in Texas

Were you worried? How could you be. They've gamed the system and turned the US into government for the corporations and by the corporations.
Texas home insurers returned to profitability in 2009, as property claims were nearly half of those lodged as a result of Hurricane Ike the previous year.
Don't you just love the personal interest stories about how the insurance companies suffered after Hurricane Ike?

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Colonia census fallout continues

Colonia residents asked to welcome census workers.
The various non-profit groups that work in Rio Grande Valley colonias have a simple message for residents – open your doors to the Census workers.

“We want everyone counted. We want colonia residents to have a voice, for them not to be afraid,” said Jose Medrano, of the START Center, the San Benito-based South Texas Adult Resource and Training Center.
Rubén Hinojosa wants to know about the colonia policy.
Congressman Rubén Hinojosa will hold a telephone conference call with Commerce Secretary Gary Locke today to voice concerns about the way the census is being counted in border colonias.

“I have to say that I am very disappointed in the fact that the vast majority of our residents living in colonias were not mailed 2010 Census forms,” Hinojosa told the Guardian on Monday.
Mr. Locke, meet the woodshed.

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Judge says questionable Starr County election was ok

But while the issue over who will be the next district clerk may now be resolved, Monday’s court hearing raised troubling questions about the sanctity of elections in Starr County.

“That election was fraught with irregularities, misconduct and possible corruption,” Jones’ attorney Orlando Jimenez said.

Jones — a 40-year-old bail bondsman who lost to Garcia by a 79-vote margin — filed suit earlier this month in hopes of having the results overturned and a new election called.

His petition came after the Texas Rangers and the Starr County District Attorney’s Office opened a criminal investigation into a batch of 56 mail-in ballots — all allegedly delivered by one man, Starr County Precinct 2 Commissioner Roy Peña — to the Rio Grande City Post Office on Feb. 26.
Psst. Note to batsh*t crazy folks. Voter id cards do not solve problems with mail-in ballots. Voter id cards will not help, if your electronic voting system malfunctions or is abused by a hacker or an insider.

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What does a county get for subsidizing a rich business venture?

Stuck with the debt. Who gets the profits? Rich cronies, of course.
More than a decade after its professional football and baseball teams moved out, the Astrodome carries as much as $32 million in debt — nearly as much as the original cost of construction.

Harris County, which owns the stadium, projects that it will take another generation to complete the $48 million in debt and interest payments to get it off the books.

The debt is so complex and has been refinanced enough times that county financial managers disagree as to how much the county owes. A second estimate put the debt at $19 million.

Either way, local government is on the hook for millions of dollars a year in debt payments and operating costs for a stadium the city has deemed unfit for occupancy.
Go Oilers/Astros. Really. Go. Go pay your own bills.

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DA brought into La Marque city council fight

The Galveston County District Attorney confirmed that his office is looking into allegations by Mayor Geraldine Sam that City Manager Eric Gage deleted e-mails sought in an open records request.

District Attorney Kurt Sistrunk said he also was looking into allegations that three council members violated the state’s open meetings laws.
See previous posts.

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Please go out and vote today

If you did not vote early, please take the time to help elect good people to office. The turnout in the Democratic primaries is expected to be light. Your vote will make a huge difference.

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Port of Corpus Christi wants to hide information about a possible suit

The Port of Corpus Christi is waiting to hear from the state’s attorney general whether information requested by the Caller-Times can be withheld from the public.

The newspaper in February requested information on the Naval Station Ingleside redevelopment effort. In March, the newspaper requested information on threatened litigation from a port user who objects to the recently increased wharfage charges.

An open records request was made Feb. 18 asking for all correspondence between John LaRue, the port’s executive director, and port commissioners. That information was released the following day. The same request also sought all correspondence between port officials and officials with the Texas A&M University System. The A&M system is acting as master developer for the Navy base property that will be ceded to the port.
Sleazy is as sleazy does.

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Henry's Turkey Service must tell how it treated workers

A judge has ordered Henry's Turkey Service to answer questions about the company's treatment of mentally retarded processing plant workers.

Between 1975 and 2009, Henry's transported dozens of mentally retarded men from Texas to eastern Iowa. The labor broker housed the men in an Atalissa bunkhouse and put them to work in a processing plant in nearby West Liberty.

Henry's now faces a $900,000 state fine for thousand of alleged labor-law violations tied to 30 of those workers. The company has appealed the fine, and an administrative hearing on the matter is scheduled for April 26.
What? You can't treat workers like tissue paper? Has anyone told mine disaster CEO Don Blankenship? Lets hope that Obama stops the Bush era abuse of the Labor department and returns it to being the advocate for labor it was designed to be.

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Monday, April 12, 2010

Its TPA blog roundup Monday!

Here are the weekly highlights from the Texas Progressive Alliance.

At Texas Vox, our thoughts remain with the victims of the West Virginia mining disaster, the worst mining accident in 25 years.

CouldBeTrue of South Texas Chisme wants to know why Republicans like Victoria's DA Steve Tyler, Nueces County's DA Anna Jimenez and (who could forget) Alberto Gonzales abuse their offices?

The Texas Cloverleaf thinks Rick Perry is eyeing 2012 before 2010 is even over with.

WhosPlayin is watching the situation in Flower Mound, where a group of citizens successfully petitioned to have an oil and gas drilling moratorium put on the ballot, only to get some mostly frivolous ethics charges filed against them by a former Town Councilman.

Continuing his examination of partisan voting trends, Off the Kuff looks at how voting changed in judicial races between 2002 and 2006.

WCNews at Eye On Williamson has an update as the runoff, to see who will challenge Rep. Diana Maldonado, approaches HD-52 GOP Runoff - issues take a back seat.

Bay Area Houston compares Sarah Palin's intelligence on safe sex and nuclear disarmament.

They're everywhere! They're everywhere! Emissions, which are really toxins, are throughout the entire Barnett Shale area. Bluedaze: DRILLING REFORM FOR TEXAS.

McBlogger loves it when Bill Hammond of the Texas Association of Business let's Teh Stupid flow freely.

FOX News' 24-hour "War of the Worlds"-styled fearmongering caught the attention of PDiddie at Brains and Eggs.

This week on Left of College Station, Teddy reports on the how the campaign in the Republican primary for Texas Congressional District 17 has turned negative. Also, Teddy takes a first look at the College Station City Council Place 2 candidates and at the Bryan City Council Single Member District 3 candidates. Left of College Station also covers the week in headlines.

Libby Shaw asks a simple question over at TexasKaos - So, How will Rick Perry deliver access to affordable health care to Texas? . She points out that "According to new federal regulations, Rick Perry and the health insurance companies in Texas have 90 days to deliver a plan that will cover uninsured Texans.

Neil at Texas Liberal posted on the history of disco music. Disco Inferno! Learn The Interesting History Of Disco Music Despite the bad historical reviews disco receives, a new book says that the music was an important social indicator in a time of societal gains for women and gays.

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Pharr police chief pokes union, promotes officer who didn't take sergeants' exam

What a way to make your department dysfunctional.
On April 1, officers at the Pharr Police Department learned officer Roy Padilla was named the department’s new assistant chief.

The vacancy had remained for nearly two years, and many lieutenants in the department had hoped they were in line for the promotion, said Castillo, president of the Pharr Police Officers Association — the department’s union.

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Rain made a better year for whooping cranes

Abundant rain and improved food sources made for a good year for the cranes, following downturns in their population, experts said.

The flock of whooping cranes that winters at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge and nearby is the only naturally occurring group. Their population has increased from 16 birds in the early 1940s to a high of 270 in spring 2008, before 57 died last year.

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This headline does not seem right

'Human trafficking experts gather at STC'

I hope that they really mean experts in stopping human trafficking are going to get together to figure out how stop it.

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Sunday, April 11, 2010

Obama's and Calderon's meeting won't change anything unless we legalize drugs

It's like prohibition all over again with the drug cartels acting the part of the Mafia. Why wait until the cartels have perfected their operations?
State Sen. Eliot Shapleigh says he expects an historic rewrite of U.S.-Mexico border security and economic development policies following an upcoming meeting between Presidents Obama and Calderon.

The El Paso Democrat bases his analysis on more than 80 hours of meetings he and other members of the Border Legislative Conference had in Mexico City three weeks ago. The five-day trip to the Mexican capital included visits with Mexico’s attorney general and foreign secretary, Senate leaders, federal agency chiefs and high ranking officials in the U.S. Embassy.

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With all that talk about Lesbians and bikers you'd think the HD76 race would be hot

The two candidates for Texas House District 76 have spent nearly $1 million campaigning, but they have managed to attract a trickle of voters, not a torrent.

State Rep. Norma Chávez and challenger Naomi Gonzalez were hunting for support Friday, the last day of early voting. One of them will emerge the winner Tuesday in the Democratic primary runoff election. The winner will not have Republican opposition on Nov. 2.
Maybe El Paso voters are just interested in the issues and having a representative who, get this, represents them. Would you want to have to choose between a gay bating, CraddickDem who took tort reform money or a second candidate who is taking tort reform money?
For her campaign, Gonzalez received $166,746 in contributions, of which $146,776, or 88 percent, came from the conservative Texans for Lawsuit Reform Political Action Committee, according to campaign finance reports.

Before this election year, TLR had supported Chavez.

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Perennial candidate against Congressional Rep Solomon Ortiz Sr. claims Republican challenger isn't anti-abortion enough

Republicans live at the corner of Hate and Crazy.
Former Republican U.S. House District 27 candidate Willie Vaden has gone from endorsing James Duerr to denouncing him and endorsing his opponent Blake Farenthold in Tuesday’s runoff.

Vaden questions Duerr’s work history, whether Duerr is anti-abortion enough to satisfy conservatives like himself and adds that Duerr has refused to take down online statements touting Vaden’s endorsement, despite repeated requests.

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Saturday, April 10, 2010

Even the judge says DA Steve 'Hissy Fit' Tyler should drop the case

Poor, poor Steve Tyler. How can anyone mess with his crony buddies and expect to get away with it? Here's the deal.
DA Steve Tyler's chief of staff, Michael Ratcliff, was arrested for raping a boy in his custody as Victoria Sheriff. Ratcliff got a sweet plea deal, but Tyler went after city officials who pushed for an investigation of Ratcliff. The DA charged the police chief for perjury for talking about the Ratcliff investigation to the media and lying about it to the grand jury. Neat. Perjury for shedding light on crony justice and perjury for raping a boy in your custody.
How's that pay back going since Tyler's office is dragging its feet?
A Victoria district judge today recommended dismissing the district attorney's appeal to prosecute the police chief.

District Judge Stephen Williams, in a document filed at 9:50 a.m., writes:

"... the State has effectively or constructively abandoned this appeal, particularly in light of the many opportunities the State has been given to file the brief. Consequently, this court respectfully recommends that the Court of Appeals dismiss this appeal for want of prosecution."

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San Antonio judge Monica Guerrero gets slapped again

What is it about tickets and Monica Guerrero? First there was the Southwest Airlines tickets and now it's Spurs tickets.
A judicial oversight commission has sanctioned County Court-at-Law No. 7 Judge Monica Guerrero, stating in a public admonition that her acceptance of a Spurs ticket cast “discredit on the judiciary.”

The ruling was signed in March but made public Friday by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct. The group also scolded Guerrero for writing a letter of recommendation for someone who had a driving while intoxicated charge pending in another court.

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Lawyers looking at census bureau's colonia treatment

Local political and community leaders feel strongly that they were misled by the U.S. Census Bureau into believing that census survey forms would be delivered by mail to most Rio Grande Valley residents.

This includes the huge colonia community that comprises approximately one quarter of the region’s population. Rather than send out questionnaires, the Census Bureau has “Update/Enumerate” workers going door-to-door in the “hard to count” areas.

There is probably little legal recourse; very little that can be done to obligate the Bureau to change its policy of sending enumerators, rather than census questionnaires, to a huge portion Rio Grande Valley colonias.

Such is the opinion of Luis Echeverria, attorney for the South Texas Civil Rights Project.

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'Train wreck' candidate Sanchez gets his trail postponed

A federal judge on Friday found District Clerk Gilbert Sanchez competent to stand trial, but still granted his motion for a postponement.

Sanchez and his co-defendant, Luther Jones, will go on trial June 21 on conspiracy charges, U.S. District Judge Frank Montalvo ruled. Their trial had been scheduled for May 3.

Montalvo did not explain why he granted the delay. He authorized it in writing just two hours after reviewing a psychiatric report on Sanchez and ruling that he was fit for trial.
See previous posts explaining Sanchez's unsavory past concerning sexual harassment and public corruption charges.

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Charges against former Cameron County DA is dismissed

This case had a certain aroma about it.
The indictments came after information was allegedly released by De Leon before the March 2008 primary election to District Attorney candidate Peter Zavaletta relating to the district attorney’s handling of formal complaints of sexual and other abuse of children. [Current Cameron County DA Armando] Villalobos claimed that the information is confidential.
I smell political gamesmanship.

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Friday, April 09, 2010

Glibert Sanchez is a train wreck candidate

El Paso District Clerk Gilbert Sanchez made it to the Democratic primary runoff despite the fact the he is under indictment for bribery and mail fraud. He's been sued for sexual harassment and wrongful termination. Sanchez claims exhaustion and a heart condition. To top it off, today is Sanchez's court ordered mental competency hearing.

Would you elect this guy?

See previous posts.

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Will an elected Texas official be kidnapped in Mexico

State lawmakers have been warned to take extra precautions and avoid travel south of the border in light of threats that a Mexican drug trafficking organization could be planning to abduct a U.S. elected official.

The Texas Department of Public Safety briefed several members of the Rio Grande Valley’s state legislative delegation about two weeks ago, offering extra security and advising them to change their routines, according to state officials.
Now can we talk about legalizing drugs? Take the profit motive away and the drug lords won't care about fancy Texas officials.

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Things are heating up for former DA Joe Frank Garza

With various governments taking in large amounts of money in the drug war, you can see why many may be reluctant to legalize drugs. (Paid subscription required for the story below).
An Order of Assignment was posted Thursday morning assigning 105th District Court Judge J. Manuel Banales as the presiding judge for the 79th District Court for the empanelling of a special grand jury to investigate the forfeiture fund under former 79th District Attorney Joe Frank Garza.
See previous posts.

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Thursday, April 08, 2010

Guns from US used in Mexican drug war

Feuding Mexican drug cartels are receiving new weapons in large shipments from the El Paso area, ATF officials said Wednesday.

It's a new trend fueled by a change in how the guns are being transported into Mexico, said Robert Champion, special agent for the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
The people who dealing in dreams and wishes instead of facts, say 'Who, me?".
“The No. 1 source for guns being recovered in Mexico from the U.S. has been the Houston area, and that’s largely because the size of the city, the number of licensed dealers there,” said Special Agent in Charge J. Dewey Webb. Webb manages the Houston Field Division field office, whose jurisdiction encompasses Del Rio, San Antonio, Waco, Austin, Beaumont, Corpus Christi, McAllen and Laredo. Dallas and the Rio Grande Valley are second and third, respectively, added Webb.

But those assessments have critics balking. They say the key word is “traceable.” They suspect the Mexican government — which submits the weapons that ATF traces — is funneling almost exclusively American weapons to the agency in order to deflect blame and spread responsibility for addressing the problem.
Psst. If a million guns are coming to Mexico from the US and that number, pick a number, is only 50% of the guns coming into Mexico, does that mean we don't have a problem? Nope. No way.

Sylvestre Reyes had this to say about his recent trip to Mexico.
"Today, I returned from Mexico City after leading a three-day congressional delegation to meet with President Felipe Calderon and senior Members of the Mexican Legislature to discuss the government's ongoing efforts to reduce drug-related violence and opportunities to expand U.S. cooperation and assistance," Reyes said in a statement. "I was joined by my colleagues, Congressmen Ed Pastor and Henry Cuellar. The continued violence in Mexico, particularly in the northern border region, poses a serious threat to our national security, and the United States has a shared responsibility to curb drug demand and the trafficking of weapons and money that fuel the violence by warring drug cartels. Our meetings with President Calderon and senior legislators come on the heels of high-level meetings in Mexico City with several members of President Obama's Cabinet and their counterparts in Mexico, and further reflect our countries' commitment to address this binational security threat collaboratively.
Reyes pushed the Merida initiative which lists the following areas of focus:
The initiative's next phase is supposed to cover four areas:
# Assistance to help Mexico continue to disrupt the capacity of the drug cartels.
# Efforts to strengthen Mexico's institutional capacity to enforce the rule of law.
# Investments in technologies and initiatives at U.S. ports of entry and border crossings to strengthen security without hindering cross-border trade and commerce.
# Investments in social and economic development for communities devastated by violence, and in efforts to curb drug demand.
Psst. How about legalizing drugs, making formerly illicit drugs as safe as possible, educate about the effects of drug, and make rehab desirable. Take the profit motive away and the drug wars stop. It is that simple.

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