Publicación 1204 de SAN ANTONIO – Revista Digital 17 de junio – 23 de junio / 2021
BANDA EL RECODO DE CRUZ LIZÁRRAGA… Trae para disfrute del público: “SONES”
La gran fiesta del jaripeo llegó con este disco de colección, que ‘La Madre de todas las Bandas”, interpreta a lo largo de su gira “Toros + Música = Tradición y Cultura” junto al Grupo Los Destructores de Memo Ocampo.
Son 10 sones y huapangos instrumentales que forman parte de nuestra cultura musical, armonías que se mezclan y se funda en gran algarabía al lado de la Banda El Recodo de Cruz Lizárraga.
Escuchar : ‘Sones Raíces’ https://fonovisa.lnk.to/sCeFwQacMB
Gerardo Ortiz – EL Perro
Denle comida a ese perro
Que trae hambre y la avaricia
Lo hace meterse en lo ajeno
Y ya robó hasta a sus amigos
Y parece que no hay lleno
Le faltó mucho para eso
Fueron otros intereses
Porque los movía el dinero
Hoy la cosa es diferente
Pues yo mismo piloteo
Y es lo menos que me importa
Muerdes al que te dio de comer
Y va a ladrar y va a tirar toda su envidia
Perro que se fue cuando no había
En esta mesa no va a comer
Yo soy hombre, no un payaso
Vas a conocer el pez
Cuando lleguen los chingazos
Ya me llené de traiciones
Y firmes siguen mis pasos
Por si miro zopilotes
Gustos o en un deportivo
Y ahorita no hay quién me toque
Van a seguir los jonrones
Ahora en las ligas mayores
Y es lo menos que me importa
Muerdes al que te dio de comer
Y va a ladrar y va a tirar toda su envidia
Perro que se fue cuando no había
En esta mesa no va a comer
June is National Men’s Health Month
St. Joseph Medical Center is teaming up with M-K-T Heights for National Men’s Health Month with its inaugural “Tune-Up for Life” event on Saturday, June 19.
“If you’ve been putting off medical screenings and appointments because of the pandemic or you decided to re-commit yourself to leading a healthier lifestyle during quarantine, plan on joining for our Tune-Up for a Life event,” said Kim Bassett, RN, MBA, President of St. Joseph Medical Center.
Attendees can stroll the grounds at M-K-T Heights and peruse classic cars while participating in a variety of health screenings that parallel car care regimes.
Men of all ages are encouraged to come out and attendees will have the opportunity to tune up their bodies with free health checks. St. Joseph Medical Center will have stations set up so men can check “under the hood” to identify any potential problems to ensure their bodies continue running as they should.
Some of the stations will include:
- Meet Your Mechanic – Meet your neighborhood primary care physicians from St. Joseph Medical Center and receive a free blood pressure screening. It’s essential to know your numbers.
- Check Your Tires – Are your feet killing you? Our team of podiatrists will be on hand to help.
- Gas Emission Check – Come by and meet our GI physician and pick up a colorectal screening kit while supplies last.
- Chassis Check – Do your joints hurt? Visit with the St. Joseph Medical Center orthopedic and sports medicine team.
- Flat Tire Suspension Inspection – Pain got you flat on your back? Stop by and meet our pain medicine staff who can help.
- Ask the Service Manager – Do you have some questions about your medication? Stop by and chat with our pharmacy team.
- Car Detailing – Paint job fading? Too much sun? Consult with our specialists in plastic surgery
- Circuit Burnout – Learn more about the signs and symptoms of a stroke and how to prevent them.
- Fuel Ejection – Receive a free blood glucose screening and learn how you can better control your diabetes or keep it at bay.
- Noisy Muffler – Have your snoring score checked and speak with our pulmonologist to ensure you’re getting adequate rest.
- Belt and Fluid Check – Weight got you down? Come by and pick up information on our weight loss and nutritional program at St. Joseph Medical Center.
The event is free to the public, but registration is required to make sure there are plenty of supplies on hand. For more information about the event and to register, call 713-979-0334 or email: register@tuneupforlife.org.
For more information, visit www.tuneupforlife.org.
About St. Joseph Medical Center
St. Joseph Medical Center (SJMC), in partnership with physician owners and part of Steward Health Care network, is a full service, general acute care hospital located in downtown Houston. Celebrated as Houston’s first hospital and the only hospital downtown, SJMC has been providing a wide range of services to greater Houston area residents for more than 130 years. Services include a 24-hour Level III Emergency Center, behavioral medicine, cardiovascular surgery, cancer care, bariatric and general surgery, orthopedics, sports medicine, women’s health services and more. For information about SJMC’s programs and services, visit sjmctx.org.
About Steward Medical Group
Steward Health Care is the largest private, for-profit health care network in the United States. The company is owned and led by a management team of Steward physicians.
Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, Steward employs more than 40,000 health care professionals and operates 35 hospitals across the United States and in the country of Malta which regularly receive top awards for quality and safety. The Steward network includes multiple urgent care centers and skilled nursing facilities, substantial behavioral health services, more than 7,000 beds under management, and approximately 2.2 million full risks covered lives through the company’s managed care and health insurance services.
The Steward Health Care Network includes more than 5,000 physicians across 800 communities who provide more than 12 million patient encounters annually. Steward Medical Group, the company’s employed physician group, provides more than six million patient encounters per year. The Steward Hospital Group operates hospitals in Malta and nine states across the U.S., including Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Utah. For more information, visit www.steward.org.
Governor Abbott Announces Border Wall Construction Strategy
Governor Greg Abbott today held a press conference in Austin where he announced several key components of the State of Texas’ plan to build a border wall. The press conference follows the Governor’s Border Security Summit last week in Del Rio, which brought together law enforcement, city and county officials, and landowners to discuss strategies to secure the border and keep communities safe.
The Governor was joined by Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, Speaker Dade Phelan, Senate Finance and House Appropriations Chairs Jane Nelson and Greg Bonnen, and members of the legislature.
“The Biden Administration has abandoned its responsibilities to secure the border and Texans are suffering as a result,” said Governor Abbott. “The problems along the border are only getting worse due to President Biden’s inaction. Property is being destroyed, deadly drugs and illegal weapons are being smuggled into communities throughout the state, law enforcement is having to redirect their resources, and county judges and mayors are facing skyrocketing expenses. Texas is doing more than any state has ever done to protect the border, but it is clear that more is needed. In the Biden Administration’s absence, Texas is stepping up to get the job done by building the border wall. Through this comprehensive public safety effort, we will secure the border, slow the influx of unlawful immigrants, and restore order in our border communities.”
During the press conference, the Governor signed a letter to the Texas Facilities Commission directing them to hire a project manager to oversee construction of the Texas border wall. This program manager will lead the process of planning and executing the project, and will hire the contractors and subcontractors needed to build the wall. Once hired, the program manager and contractors will identify state land and land that private landowners and local governments can volunteer for the wall.
Additionally, the Governor, Lieutenant Governor Patrick, Speaker Phelan, and Senator Nelson, and Representative Bonnen signed a letter during the press conference authorizing the transfer for $250 million as a down payment to launch the construction of the border wall and hire a program manager and contractors. Governor Abbott also noted that the state budget allocates 1.1 billion dollars towards border security — a record for the State of Texas.
The Governor also signed a letter to President Joe Biden demanding the immediate return of any land taken by the federal government to build the border wall. Once returned, Texas will talk to those property owners about the possibility of Texas using that land to build the wall.
Governor Abbott also announced a donation page, www.borderwall.texas.gov, where anyone can voluntarily donate to the construction of the border wall. The fund will be maintained by the Texas Division of Emergency Management.
Source: gov.texas.gov
Governor Abbott Names Pate Chair Of The Texas Racing Commission
Governor Greg Abbott has named Robert C. Pate to serve as the chairman of the Texas Racing Commission. The commission oversees pari-mutuel wagering on horse and greyhound racing.
Robert C. Pate of Corpus Christi is an attorney and former judge of the 28th Judicial District Court and the 148th Judicial District Court in Nueces County. In addition to his law license and membership in the State Bar of Texas, he is also a licensed Certified Public Accountant. Governor Abbott first appointed Pate to the Texas Racing Commission in April 2019. Pate received a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Professional Accounting in taxation from The University of Texas at Austin and a Juris Doctor degree from Southern Methodist University.
Source: gov.texas.gov
Texans can carry handguns without a license or training starting Sept. 1
Texans can carry handguns without a license or training starting Sept. 1, after Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday signed the permitless carry bill into law.
House Bill 1927 eliminates the requirement for Texas residents to obtain a license to carry handguns if they’re not prohibited by state or federal law from possessing a gun. The signing was reported by the Texas Legislature’s official website, which tracks the progress of legislation. Abbott’s office has announced a ceremonial signing of the bill and other gun-related legislation at 11 a.m. Thursday.
Abbott’s signature seals a win to conservative activists who have long sought the measure without success. Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, and other Republicans who were initially noncommittal about the bill were under immense political pressure this session from conservatives and gun rights advocates, who have long lobbied the Texas Legislature for permitless carry but historically struggled to win support.
Before approving the bill, the Senate tacked on several amendments to address concerns by law enforcement groups that opposed permitless carry, worried it would endanger officers and make it easier for criminals to get guns.
The compromise lawmakers reached behind closed doors kept intact a number of changes the Senate made to the House bill, including striking a provision that would have barred officers from questioning people based only on their possession of a handgun.
The deal also preserves a Senate amendment enhancing the criminal penalties for felons and family violence offenders caught carrying. Among other Senate changes that made it into the law was a requirement that the Texas Department of Public Safety offers a free online course on gun safety.
Proponents of what Republicans call “constitutional carry” argued that Texas should follow the lead of at least 20 other states with similar laws on the books. Meanwhile, gun control advocates are disappointed the Legislature made it easier to carry firearms after repeated instances of gun violence — including the 2019 massacres in El Paso and Midland Odessa that left 30 people dead.
“The permitless carry bill will cause more violence and loss,” said U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-El Paso, in a statement Wednesday. “Despite overwhelming support for common-sense gun violence prevention legislation like universal background checks, Texas Republicans, led by a cowardly governor, are more interested in groveling for the gun lobby’s attention than they are in preventing gun violence and honoring victims and survivors in El Paso and across Texas.”
A solid majority of Texas voters don’t think permitless carry should be allowed, according to an April University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll.
Before the permitless carry law was signed, Texans generally needed to be licensed to carry handguns openly or concealed. Applicants had to submit fingerprints, complete four to six hours of training, and pass a written exam and a shooting proficiency test. Texas does not require a license to openly carry a rifle in public.
The permitless carry movement saw a breakthrough in April when the House passed HB 1927. Patrick initially said the Senate did not have the votes for permitless carry, but he created a new committee, referred HB 1927 to it, and got it to the floor, where it passed in early May.
Some Democrats and state lawmakers from El Paso have denounced the bill, which came during the first legislative session since the 2019 massacres. Abbott and Patrick softened their tones on gun control after those shootings but have been quiet on the issue since.
In 2019, Abbott swore to do “everything we can to make sure a crime like this doesn’t happen again,” raising concerns about state laws allowing private gun sales between strangers without background checks. Patrick went so far as to say he was “willing to take an arrow” from the gun lobby in order to pursue the change.
But this legislative session, Texas Republicans moved in the opposite direction, pushing to loosen gun laws and vowing to defy any new federal gun rules. Laying out his policy priorities in February, Abbott made no mention of either shooting. He said Texas must become a “Second Amendment sanctuary state.”
“We need to erect a complete barrier against any government official anywhere from treading on gun rights in Texas,” Abbott said during his speech.
Of the dozens of gun safety bills lawmakers filed to codify state leaders’ 2019 calls for action, few have advanced.
Source: www.click2houston.com
Vice President Kamala Harris says Texas is key example of why a new federal elections law is needed
Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday pointed to Texas Republicans’ push for sweeping new voting restrictions as a key illustration of the need to restore federal oversight of elections.
While meeting at the White House with a group of Democratic members of the Texas Legislature, Harris pointed to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling to nullify the lynchpin of the landmark Voting Rights Act that kept states like Texas under “preclearance” of its voting laws to safeguard the rights of voters of color — a measure Democrats are hoping to bring back with new federal legislation.
“We have seen exactly what we feared when that case came down in 2013. Because that case was an opening of a door to allow states to do what otherwise we have protected against, which is states putting in place laws that are designed, in many cases quite intentionally, to make it difficult for people to vote,” Harris said. “And so this is what we’ve seen over and over again, and what’s happening right now in Texas is, of course, a very clear and current example of that.”
Harris’ remarks came at the start of a meeting with 16 Democratic members of the Texas Legislature. The vice president, who is leading the Biden administration’s voting rights efforts, invited the lawmakers to the White House after state representatives in May staged an 11th hour walk out of the state Capitol to break quorum and prevent a final vote on what is considered one of the most restrictive GOP-backed state voting bills following the 2020 election. On Wednesday, Harris called the Democrats “courageous leaders” and “American patriots.”
The bill Democrats defeated, Senate Bill 7, would have brought sweeping changes to Texas elections by restricting voting hours, narrowing local officials’ control of elections, further tightening the rules for voting by mail, and bolstering access for partisan poll watchers, among several other provisions.
It is just one of a series of Republican-backed bills that have been proposed in state legislatures across the country following the 2020 election during which former President Donald Trump pushed false and baseless claims of voter fraud. In Texas, Republicans have defended SB 7 as an “election integrity” measure meant to combat fraudulent votes, even though there is no evidence of widespread fraud.
In a series of meetings with U.S. senators and congressional leaders, Democrats have been using the trip — and the national attention their quorum break garnered — to push for a pair of federal bills that could preempt portions of the Texas legislation they temporarily prevented from becoming law and restore expansive protections for voters of color. With Republicans in full control of the Legislature, Gov. Greg Abbott has vowed to call lawmakers back this summer for a special legislative session to pass the bill into law.
The far-reaching federal For the People Act would overhaul elections, requiring states like Texas to offer automatic and same-day voter registration. Under the law, Texas would also have to drop its tight eligibility requirements for voting by mail, among several other changes to state law. The more narrowly tailored John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act could place Texas back under federal oversight so its election laws could not go into effect before the federal government ensured they wouldn’t undermine the voting rights of people of color.
Under preclearance, various sets of political maps and voting restrictions were placed on hold with federal courts repeatedly finding Texas lawmakers intentionally discriminated against voters of color in drawing them up.
“The many Democratic legislators here today in Washington, D.C. are the latest in a long line of Texans who have come to our nation’s capital to fight for election access and equality and to ask for federal oversight in order to protect the right to vote,” state Rep. Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston, said in a statement after the meeting. “Two weeks ago, in our state Capitol, Texas House and Senate Democrats stood united to stop a harmful voter suppression measure from becoming law. We’ve done our part. Now, we need Congress to do theirs.”
While several Texas Democrats expressed hope this week that their trip to Washington moved the ball forward in passing the legislation, it remains to be seen whether their efforts will do anything to break the stranglehold Republicans have on moving the Democratic agenda.
While the For the People Act has passed the House, it is short Democratic votes in the U.S. Senate. Both pieces of legislation also face a Senate procedural hurdle known as the filibuster, which sets a 60-vote threshold to bring the legislation up for a vote. Democrats have been unable to overcome that requirement, and two Democratic senators — U.S. Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona — remain as holdouts to eliminating the filibuster.
“We know we have a great challenge in front of us and therefore a fight, which is to fight for every American’s right,” Harris said on Wednesday, flanked by Thompson and state Rep. Gina Hinojosa of Austin in the Roosevelt Room.
Texas U.S. Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz both oppose the legislation, criticizing the Democratic push behind them as an effort to diminish the state’s control of elections.
“The theme that came out of it is that we need to continue to build a broad-based coalition and really let Americans of all stripes understand the precarious nature of our democracy and the importance of our right to vote,” said state Rep. Rafael Anchía, D-Dallas, who chairs the Mexican American Legislative Caucus.
Source: www.click2houston.com
U.S. Supreme Court rejects Trump-backed challenge to Obamacare
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a Republican bid that had been backed by former President Donald Trump’s administration to invalidate Obamacare, preserving the landmark healthcare law for the third time since its 2010 enactment.
The 7-2 ruling declared that Texas and other challengers had no legal standing to file their lawsuit seeking to nullify a law, formally called the Affordable Care Act, that has enabled millions of Americans to obtain medical coverage either through public programs or private insurers. The decision was authored by liberal Justice Stephen Breyer.
The justices did not decide broader legal questions raised in the case about whether a key Obamacare provision was unconstitutional and, if so, whether the rest of the statute should be struck down. The provision, called the “individual mandate,” originally required Americans to obtain health insurance or pay a financial penalty.
“A big win for the American people,” Democratic President Joe Biden, whose administration opposed the lawsuit, wrote in a Twitter post, adding that millions of people rely upon the law for healthcare coverage while encouraging others to sign up.
The law was Democratic former President Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement. Biden served as vice president under Obama.
Breyer wrote that none of the challengers, including Texas and 17 other states and individual plaintiffs, could trace a legal injury to the individual mandate, partly because a Republican-backed tax law signed by Trump in 2017 had wiped out the financial penalty.
“Unsurprisingly, the states have not demonstrated that an unenforceable mandate will cause their residents to enroll invaluable benefits programs that they would otherwise forgo,” Breyer wrote.
After Texas and other states sued, a coalition of 20 states including Democratic-governed California and New York, and the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives intervened in the case to try to preserve Obamacare after Trump refused to defend the law.
“For more than a decade, the Affordable Care Act has been the law of the land, providing health coverage and a multitude of protections to tens of millions of Americans across the nation, and today’s decision solidifies those protections for generations to come,” said New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat.
Conservative Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch dissented from the ruling. Alito wrote that the individual mandate was “clearly unconstitutional” and called the court’s ruling preserving the law an example of “judicial inventiveness.”

Biden’s administration in February urged the Supreme Court to uphold Obamacare, reversing the position taken by the government under Trump, who left office in January.
‘RELENTLESS EFFORTS’
If Obamacare had been struck down, up to 20 million Americans stood to lose their medical insurance and insurers could have once again refused to cover people with pre-existing medical conditions. Obamacare expanded the Medicaid state-federal healthcare program and created marketplaces for private insurance.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, called the ruling a “landmark victory for Democrats’ work to defend protections for people with pre-existing conditions against Republicans’ relentless efforts to dismantle them.”
Biden has pledged to expand healthcare access and buttress Obamacare. Biden and other Democrats had criticized Republican efforts to strike down the law at a time when the United States was grappling with a deadly coronavirus pandemic.
The Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority but the Republican Obamacare challengers still came away disappointed in a ruling in which all three liberal justices were joined by four of the six conservative justices.
Republicans fiercely opposed Obamacare when it was proposed, failed to repeal it when they controlled both chambers of Congress, and have been unsuccessful in getting courts to invalidate the law. The Trump administration did take steps to hobble the law.
Opposition to Obamacare seems to have receded as a political issue for Republicans as the party has emphasized other matters such as immigration, voting restrictions, and hot-button cultural issues.
The Supreme Court previously upheld Obamacare by deeming the financial penalty under the individual mandate a tax permissible under the U.S. Constitution’s language empowering Congress to levy taxes. The penalty’s elimination under the 2017 tax law meant the individual mandate could no longer be interpreted as a tax provision and was therefore unlawful, the Republican challengers argued.
DIE IN A GUNFIGHT (Lionsgate) con Diego Boneta estrena trailer. !No te lo pierdas!
En Die in a Gunfight, Mary (Alexandra Daddario) y Ben (Diego Boneta) son las desafortunadas ovejas negras de dos poderosas familias envueltas en una disputa desde hace cientos de años ––y están a punto de reanudar su romance tras muchos años de separación––. El amor prohibido entre ellos tendrá un efecto dominó y atraerá a Mukul (Wade Allain-Marcus), el mejor amigo de Ben, con quien tiene una deuda de por vida; a Terrence (Justin Chatwin), el protector de Mary convertido en acosador; a Wayne (Travis Fimmel), un asesino a sueldo de Australia con una mente abierta y un código ético; y a su novia Barbie (Emmanuelle Chriqui), todo un espíritu libre. Cuando comiencen los puñetazos y los balazos, será evidente que el placer de la violencia tendrá finales violentos.
Dirigida por Collin Schiffli el elenco incluye a Alexandra Daddario (Mary Rathcart), Diego Boneta (Ben Gibbon), Justin Chatwin (Terrence Uberahl), Wade Allain-Marcus (Mukul), Billy Crudup (Narrator) con Emmanuelle Chriqui (Barbie) y Travis Fimmel (Wayne).