Category: Uncategorized

  • Border Wars, Corruption Top Drug Stories for 2005

    Gunfights in Nuevo Laredo and police corruption top Scott Henson’s top
    ten list of Texas Drug War stories for 2005. The shooting wars at
    the border are about control of Interstate Highway 35, says
    Henson. Meanwhile a border sheriff stands convicted of favoring
    some drug operators while busting others. At this point we’d like
    to yawn and make reference to the Ginsberg thesis, that the drug war
    has always been a prohibition style war over who gets favored and who

    gets busted. It was the Reagan White House after all that was
    nearly outed for running a wholesale cocaine op under direction of Col.
    Norte.

    In Dallas, who got busted didn’t even depend on drugs at all, but a
    scam involving throwdown chalk! So the Governor has reined in
    renegade drug task forces has he? The Texas Civil Rights Review
    contributed a story to the effort, but we can’t help remembering that
    this means ultimate busting authority along Texas highways will soon be
    safely restored to the Department of Public Safety. Are we
    yawning again? Sorry. It’s quite early in the year still,
    and we’re having trouble waking up to the news.
    Henson’s top ten list at Grits for Breakfast

  • Barrientos: Erodes an Image

    “To

    continue the Legacy Program at A&M while removing race as a consideration for admission, in my mind,

    further erodes the image of this fine institution at a time that it needs to do more to attract

    minority students,” said Senator Gonzalo Barrientos. [Sen. Ellis Press Release

    1/7/2004].

  • Harrington: De-Segregation All Over Again

    Jim Harrington, a veteran civil rights lawyer who heads the Texas Civil Rights Project, said

    A&M needs to change its policy or “it’s going to be Brown vs. the board of regents of Texas A&M,” an

    allusion to the landmark desegregation case of the 1950s. [Todd Ackerman and Clay Robison chron.com

    1/8/2004]

  • Bledsoe: Inherently Discriminatory

    “More students were admitted because mom or dad went to A&M, than the total number of

    African Americans admitted,” said NAACP President Gary Bledsoe. “The Texas A&M legacy program is

    inherently discriminatory towards minorities, and based on nothing even resembling merit.” [Ellis

    press release Jan. 7, 2004]