Monthly Archives: October 2006

How To Stop The Trans-Texas Corridor

“How To Stop The Trans-Texas Corridor

I’ve been told that the Trans-Texas Corridor is just a “boring highway story.”

But if you plan on traveling through Texas between now and election day, Nov. 7, don’t be scared by the loud scissor sounds.

It’s probably the millions of Texas voters attempting to cut the strings of the political puppets that favor the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC).

This 4,000-mile-long, four-football-field-wide corridor is supposedly going to be designed to transport people, oil, gas, water, electricity, broadband data, and goods via truck, rail, and utility lines up from the Mexico-Texas border near Laredo to the Oklahoma border.

Proponents of the TTC say that the proposed superhighway is to make money for new highway projects, increase economic growth within the state, and alleviate the state’s growing traffic problems.

Opponents of the TTC say that should the road be constructed, an estimated million people would be displaced, 100,000 acres of prime land would be out of agricultural production, tens of thousands of jobs would be lost, property would be removed from the tax rolls, wildlife and hunting interests would be compromised, businesses in small towns would dry up, terrorists would have a huge ready-made target, and citizens would be taxed twice since they already pay for highways through gasoline taxes, vehicle registration fees, and at auto supply retailers.

In addition, Texas farmers, ranchers, small businesses, landowners, urban dwellers, environmentalists, Libertarians, Democrats, and even the state Republican Party are also supremely pissed over not being able to vote up or down on the TTC in the first place.

The man who hatched this “boondoggle” — Gov. Rick Perry — however, claims that voters did have an opportunity to vote for it in the form of a constitutional amendment, “Proposition 15,” back in 2001.

While Prop 15 passed with 67.3 percent of the vote, the wording on the ballot read:

“The constitutional amendment creating the Texas Mobility Fund and authorizing grants and loans of money and issuance of obligations for financing the construction, reconstruction, acquisition, operation, and expansion of state highways, turnpikes, toll roads, toll bridges, and other mobility projects.”

And as you can see, neither the ballot nor anywhere in the Texas House briefing on Prop 15 had any reference to the proposed construction of the super-transportation corridor, so argue the Texans opposed to the TTC.

According to comments made by Texas Transportation Commissioner Ric Williamson on June 27, 2002, it would seem that Gov. Perry had been hiding the TTC from the public all along:

“Once the Governor decided that this is where we needed to head, he wanted to remove it from the political flow of the state, he wanted it to become policy as opposed to politics, and that was one of the reasons he asked us to move so fast, and we’ve done an admirable job….”

So, to stop the TTC policy from becoming reality, the anti-TTC forces plan to remove the Republican governor and his corrupt henchmen in the Texas Legislature from public office this fall.

In Perry’s place, a host of anti-TTC and anti-toll road organizations have for the most part backed Carol Keeton Strayhorn, a Democrat turned Rep”

Rise And Fall Of Duke Of Duval


Rise And Fall Of Duke Of Duval


On Oct. 24, 1952, a leading Lone Star daily posed the election-eve question, “Can Parr tilt the vote for Adlai?”


If the infamous Duke of Duval could select a senator, it stood to reason that he just might be able to pick a president, too.


The Anglo clique that ran Duval County at the turn of the century relied upon violence to preserve their ruthless regime. The key to maintaining their political monopoly was keeping the massive Mexican majority away from the polls.


When three Mexicans tried to exercise their right to vote in 1911 at the county seat of San Diego, they were shot to death. A Spanish-speaking politician named Archie Parr stood up for the powerless pariahs, a gutsy move that earned their undying respect and blind loyalty.


Exploiting the old country culture of the Mexicans, Parr assumed the role of “patron” ostensibly taking care of his illiterate followers in return for their bloc vote. This unbeatable combination made the former cowboy the political boss of South Texas, whose word was law in Duval and several adjacent counties.


Parr moved up to the state senate in 1914 and took along 13-year-old George as his page. Twelve years later, Archie engineered the youth

Geographically Speaking, I Have No Idea What I


Geographically Speaking, I Have No Idea What I

Are You Tired Of This Campaign, Too?


Are You Tired Of This Campaign, Too?


For months, radio and television ads and billboards have assaulted us about various candidates and political issues for the upcoming mid-term election. It

Things I Can Do Without:


Things I Can Do Without:


if


if

Corruption Is Flourishing In Texas


Corruption Is Flourishing In Texas


Texans Must Reign-In Gov. Rick Perry and Hold Him and Other Violators Accountable!


Corruption starts at the Governor

Don


Don

My Own Ghost Story


My Own Ghost Story


It

Voting Machine Pinball … This Is NOT A Game!!!


Voting Machine Pinball … This Is NOT A Game!!!


There are already reports of voting machine screw-ups in Texas and other states as early voters go to the polls.


People vote for a Democrat, Green, Libertarian, or Independent and, strangely, the Republican gets the “X.”


So far, Congress has done virtually nothing to correct the problems that have plagued at least two elections.


And they haven

Letters To The Editor


Dear Editor:


As the November general election approaches, our mailboxes and airwaves will be overrun with promises from policymakers and the candidates challenging them to cut our taxes, improve our schools, get tough on crime, fix our roads, et cetera, ad nauseum.


Yet the silence has been deafening on the one issue that affects every family in Texas and threatens our state

Arthritis Walk Set For Waco


WACO

Religious Topics Top Lecture Series This November


AUSTIN

Study: Humans Consuming At Never-Before-Seen Levels


BEIJING, China

Economists Switch Views Over Minimum Wage: Study


WASHINGTON

Same-Sex Unions Gain N.J. Court


TRENTON, N.J.

Air Combat Returning To West Texas Skies


FORT HOOD

HOTWDB Symposium Set Nov. 13


HILLSBORO

Crawford


WACO

Endorsements


Endorsements


Governor: The Only Candidate With A Remote Chance
To Defeat Lying Texas Governor Tricky Ricky Perry, Chris Bell


Thinking Texans realize state government is as it always has been, a product of special interests.


While this isn

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