DEBATE: "I was told to be a good girl, sit down, and be quiet" recounts Strayhorn when she criticized Perry's tax increases

Kudos to Karen Collins of McKinney for the Trans Texas Corridor question. First, Perry tried to explain away his land grabbing toll road nightmare by comparing public opposition to when the interstate system was built. Tonight he tried to compare the TTC to instituting farm to market roads (which are usually 2 lanes, 4 max. not 10 lanes with right of way 4 football fields wide).

Nice try, Perry, but a MASSIVE superhighway whose primary purpose is to transport foreign goods at Texans’ expense and putting it under foreign control is LIKE NO OTHER ROAD PLAN IN TEXAS HISTORY! He also reiterated that Texans voted on this. See the text of Prop 15 (to which he is referring, here, scroll down to Prop. 15) and then tell me if you think you voted on this…Perry continues to demonstrate total arrogance on this issue and his total disconnect with those who elected him.

The most telling exchange in the debate was when Strayhorn was asked about her switching parties (it should be noted Perry used to be a Democrat before he was a Republican, along with many others). Her answer: “I was told to be a good girl, sit down, and be quiet” when she dared to criticize Perry and the Legislature’s tax increases in 2003. She didn’t abandon the Party, the Party abandoned her. She’s the only TRUE FISCAL CONSERVATIVE in this race and the only candidate with the integrity to stick to her guns in the face of threats and intimidation by the establishment!
NO KNOCKOUT PUNCHES IN SURPRISINGLY ENGAGING GUBERNATORIAL DEBATE
By Harvey Kronberg
Quorum Report
October 6, 2006

Each challenger lands a few, takes a few as they try to separate themselves from the pack; Perry ducks post-debate press avail

In a debate that surpassed expectations with often lively exchanges, all four main contenders for Governor managed to stay on message, presenting to voters what they clearly think is their best side.

For Gov. Rick Perry, that included what might have been his clearest explanation yet for why his much maligned Trans Texas Corridor is necessary for the state. He’s said on multiple occasions that the TTC is designed as a long term fix, so it was a telling detail to make the comparison between the current debate with the debate over the creation of the Farm to Market system.

Perry said that he was told by former Gov. Dolph Briscoe that the creation of the FM road system was heavily opposed by farmers but that the new roads were eventually accepted and applauded. The implication was that farmers who now oppose the TTC because they might lose land to the project would eventually welcome the long term benefits of alleviating congestion on Interstate 35.

Chris Bell was asked several times about his serious demeanor and his perceived invisibility as a campaigner. Bell, though, stuck to his guns as the policy wonk of the group.

Carole Keeton Strayhorn was challenged on the perception that she’s an opportunist, but she stuck with her message of being outside the Austin establishment. That might be a tough sell for the politician who earned the most votes statewide in 2002, but she illustrated her point with an intriguing anecdote. When she criticized the Legislature for balancing the budget in 2003 through $2.7 billion in added fees, she said that she was “told to be a good girl, sit down and keep quiet.” Will that kind of statement earn her more support from women voters who likewise have run into barriers at work? Maybe. But it was interesting to see her play the gender card, possibly the safest way to establish outsider credentials.

Kinky Friedman, of course, has no problems with establishing his outsider credentials. He had precious few new lines tonight but he made clear that he was not going to play “go along to get along” in order to win votes. He didn’t back down from his use of racial epithets in the past nor did he promise to be a better role model for the kids by putting down his cigar if elected. He simply promised that he wouldn’t be the politically correct choice for governor. That said, he wasn’t the bad boy that maybe debate planners feared when they decided on a five-second delay on the television broadcast. He did not use any foul language himself and except for calling politicians “blood sucking parasites” and calling Gov. Sam Houston an opium addict and drunkard (when asked whether or not governors should be role models), Friedman kept his discourse civil.

Larson reveals history of raiding highway funds

Link to WOAI article here. Note how Jeff Wentworth has agreed to introduce a bill to prevent this looting. However, he’s known for introducing bills and letting them die. Wentworth doesn’t fight for his legislation, he introduces things to pacify his constituents so he can say, “See, I tried.” Well, when it comes to tolling us for what we’ve already paid for, “I tried” doesn’t cut it.

Also, it’s hard to believe Wentworth cares a stitch about this issue when his own law firm has multiple clients from the highway lobby (persue this web site for more) and their web site claims to secure favorable legislation for their clients. Wentworth also voted for all the toll road legislation and has taken and continues to take heaps of cash from the highway lobby including Zachry…

State Highway Construction Fund Looted
Nearly $10 billion removed from the fund to pay for lawmakers’ pet projects
By Jim Forsyth
WOAI Radio
October 3, 2006

Ever wonder why the Texas Department of Transportation suddenly has no money to build and improve highways, and all of a sudden every new road or highway improvement has to be a toll road?

Documents released by toll road opponent Bexar County Commissioner Lyle Larson, indicate that over the last twenty years, some $10 billion has been systematically looted from the state gasoline tax fund, which is supposed to pay for new highway construction, often placed into programs that have nothing to do with highways.

“As a result of the continuous diversion of the fund, toll roads and pass-through financing have become the most viable funding alternatives for Tex-DOT,” Larson said. “Clearly the cannibalization of this fund has contributed to the transportation funding shortfall and the need for creative funding alternatives.”

The list of programs highway construction money has been diverted to reads like a legislative Christmas Tree. They include cemetery construction, tourism promotions, and maintaining the grounds of the State Capitol Building.

$3.4 million dollars in highway construction money has gone for a computer system in the State Comptroller’s office, according to Larson’s figures. Thirteen million has gone to the state department of Mental Health Mental Retardation.

One hundred thousand went to pave a parking lot at the San Antonio Chest Hospital.

Amazingly, $9.6 million in money that is supposed to fund highway construction has been diverted to the Texas Historical Commission and the Texas Commission on the Arts.

More than half of the total money diverted from road construction, $5.4 billion, went to fund the operations of the Department of Public Safety. One-hundred and fifteen million simply went into the state’s general fund.

Larson says State Senator Jeff Wentworth (R-San Antonio) has agreed to sponsor a measure in the coming session of the legislature that would outlaw the diversion of money from State Highway Fund 6, the motor fuel tax fund, into any project other than new highway construction.

“The diversion of state motor fuel tax money into items such as the State Department of Commerce for tourism packages and the Texas Historical and Arts Commission have contributed to the state highway shortfall,” Larson said.

Port security bill falls short, lack of teeth threatens San Antonio's inland port at Kelly

Link to Wall Street Journal article here.

In case you’re wondering how ports connect to the toll roads, here’s how. The County Judge, Mayor, TxDOT, tolling authority, Greater Chamber, and San Antonio Free Trade Alliance have all promoted the NAFTA Superhighway (read more here and here) known as the Trans Texas Corridor (a 4,000 mile network of toll roads to transport foreign goods imported into the U.S.) in Texas.

This corridor purposely connects to existing I-35 south of San Antonio so that foreign cargo can stop at San Antonio’s new inland port, literally called the Port of San Antonio (noted in the San Antonio Business Journal, October 2005), at Kelly USA. In so doing, our politicians and the globalist free trade camp are inviting untold crime and drug smuggling to San Antonio. Read on…

On the Waterfront–Still
Why did Congress kill a measure to keep felons out of U.S. ports?
By John Fund
Wall Street Journal
October 2, 2006

Congress is patting itself on the back for passing the Port Security Act last Saturday. But the day before, a House-Senate conference committee stripped out a provision that would have barred serious felons from working in sensitive dock security jobs. Port security isn’t just about checking the contents of cargo containers, it also means checking the background of the 400,000 workers on our docks.

U.S. harbors are filled with workers convicted of serious crimes. Just last year the Justice Department filed a RICO suit charging that the 65,000-member East Coast-based International Longshoremen’s Association is a “vehicle for organized crime.”

But the House-Senate conference drastically watered down a Senate-passed requirement that aligned the standards for hiring dock workers with those used at airports and nuclear plants. The statute still bans workers who have been convicted of treason, espionage and terror-related offenses–a mere handful at most. But a seven-year time-out period on hiring those who’ve committed crimes such as murder, bribery, identity fraud and the illegal use of firearms was dropped in the dead of night at the behest of unions fearful that too many of their members could lose their jobs.

“The security stakes are too high to trust serious felons who could be manipulated or bribed by people trying to smuggle a nuclear device or chemical weapon into our ports,” says Sen. Jim DeMint, sponsor of the dropped provision. Security analysts echo his fears. They say terrorists working with truck drivers could plant a bomb aboard a cruise ship or pack a 40-foot cargo container with explosives. Stephen Flynn, a former U.S. Customs official now with the Council on Foreign Relations, told ABC News that “if a bomb went off in a seaport, we would likely see a closing of the seaports, bringing the global trade system to a halt and potentially putting our economy into recession.”

Officials at several ports echo these concerns. “There is a gaping hole in port security,” Byron Miller of the Charleston, S.C., port, the nation’s sixth largest, told me. “Right now, by law we cannot do background checks on 8,000 people who work at this port.” He noted that a state bill to provide for background checks was killed last year after unions applied a full-court press against it.

The problem is massive. The Department of Homeland Security recently investigated the ports of New York and New Jersey and found that of 9,000 truckers checked, nearly half had criminal records. They included murderers, drug dealers, arsonists and members of the deadly MS-13 gang. It concluded that these security gaps represent “vulnerabilities that could be capitalized by terrorist organizations.” A dock worker who has been convicted of smuggling drugs is a potential danger. “Instead of bringing in 50 kilograms of heroin, what would stop them from bringing in five kilograms of plutonium?” asks Joseph King, a former Customs Service agent who now teaches criminal justice at New York University.

All this explains why the Department of Homeland Security supported Mr. DeMint’s bill even while it prepares its own administrative rules that would track much of the DeMint amendment’s ban on hiring serious felons for dock employment. “It’s important the restriction on felon hiring be codified into law,” one department official told me. “If it’s in a statute, we can’t then be pressured to weaken our regs during the upcoming rule-making period, activist judges will be less able to throw them out and a future president can’t alter them as part of a political deal.”

That such a political deal is possible can be seen by the clout of the unions who were able to gut the felon ban in the House-Senate conference committee. Sen. Daniel Inouye, a Hawaii Democrat, assured colleagues he would fight for the ban in conference but in reality fought to have it weakened. His staff even called Port of Charleston officials and told them their port would be shut down if the DeMint amendment became law. Mr. Miller can’t confirm the call was made, but other port officials remember it. Mr. Inouye’s office declined to respond to my questions about his role other than to send me an e-mail claiming the senator “supported the [DeMint] provision.”

Other legislators were also involved in smothering the DeMint provision. The staffs of three members of Congress told me that Republican Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, a close friend of Mr. Inouye, also fought the measure, although his staff declined to publicly discuss the senator’s position on the bill. New York’s Rep. Peter King, the pro-union Republican who chairs the Homeland Security Committee, told the House that the list of proposed criminal offenses “includes vague and overly broad crimes” and supported the move “to narrow and limit the list.” Mississippi’s Rep. Bennie Thompson, the ranking Democrat on Homeland Security, told colleagues that “we should not play judge and jury” and opposed even the final statutory ban on felons convicted of treason and terror-related crimes. Steve Stallone, the communications director for the West Coast-based International Longshore and Warehouse Union, told the Daily Labor Report that barring felons from jobs at secure dock facilities would be “double jeopardy” and could push them back into crime to make a living.

But too many elements of the unions that now control the docks are already involved in crime. The DeMint amendment would also have had the added benefit of going a long way to cleaning up the Mafia control of many of our nation’s harbors. Too little has changed since 1954, when “On the Waterfront” depicted union corruption and violence. While less brutal today, tight union control of the ports remains a fact of life. Just ask the factory owners who had to endure parts shortages just months after 9/11 in 2002 as ports from Seattle to San Diego were forced to shut after a union slowdown paralyzed operations.

The Justice Department’s massive 400-page civil complaint against the International Longshoremen’s Association outlines the decades-long stranglehold the mob has exercised over docks from New York to Miami. The Associated Press review of the complaint concluded that “America already has a fifth column, of sorts, at work on its dock: gangsters who have made the piers friendly territory for drug smugglers and cargo thieves.”

The complaint details how since the late 1950s, two organized-crime families have controlled much of the business of the nation’s ports. The Justice Department complaint asserts that “the Gambino family exercises its influence at commercial shipping terminals in Brooklyn and Staten Island, and the Genovese family primarily controlling those in Manhattan, New Jersey and the Port of Miami.” The mob exacts its vengeance on those it suspects of ratting on them. Last October, reputed Genovese mobster Lawrence Ricci vanished while on trial on charges he directed International Longshoremen’s Association contracts to a mobbed-up drug company. There is speculation he was cooperating with authorities on the side. Whatever the motive of his killers, his body was discovered in the trunk of a car outside a New Jersey diner two months later.

Mob influence over the ports is so taken for granted that it even became a topic of discussion in one “Sopranos” episode, in which fictional boss Tony Soprano bemoaned the inadequacies of Newark, N.J., port security that he knew represented a potential threat to his own children.

Federal prosecutors want to oust the union’s longtime president, 83-year-old John Bowers, and three other members of the union’s executive committee and then have a court put the union into trusteeship, similar to the one the Teamsters has operated under for over 15 years. Union dissidents who have long unsuccessfully championed the right of union members to directly elect the executive committee have been supportive of the Justice suit.

Ever since congressional pressure killed the deal that would have turned over management–but not operation–of some U.S. port terminals to a Dubai company with a clean law-enforcement record, everyone has known that port security is a hot-button issue with the public. Pollster David Winston reported to members of Congress this summer that of all the proposed measures they would consider this fall the public most supported “strengthening port security with background checks for port employees.” Yet some of the same congressmen who whooped up public hysteria over the Dubai Ports deal decided to cave in when it came to cleaning up the waterfront of criminal elements.

The last time member of Congress kowtowed to union pressure on a national-security issue was in 2002, when then-Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle led an effort to block creation of the Department of Homeland Security unless federal union work rules applied to its employees. The ensuing political backlash became an issue in that year’s fall elections and helped defeat several members. Will someone dare to object to the bizarre favoritism Congress has just shown felons at our nation’s ports, or will the issue be swept under the legislative rug?

Con. Ron Paul sponsors bill against NAFTA highways

Link to article here.

North American Union threat gets attention of congressmen
Resolution aimed at blocking merger, funding of ‘NAFTA superhighways’
October 1, 2006
WorldNetDaily.com

WASHINGTON – While several members of Congress have denied any knowledge of efforts to build “NAFTA superhighways” or move America closer to a union with Mexico and Canada, four members of the House have stepped up to sponsor a resolution opposing both initiatives.

Rep. Virgil Goode Jr., R-Va., has introduced a resolution – H.C.R. 487 – designed to express “the sense of Congress that the United States should not engage in the construction of a North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Superhighway System or enter into a North American Union (NAU) with Mexico and Canada.”

“Now that Congress is preparing to take up the issues of the North American Union and NAFTA superhighways, we are moving out of the realm where critics can attempt to disparage the discussion as ‘Internet conspiracy theory,'” explained Jerome Corsi, author and WND columnist who has written extensively on the Security and Prosperity Partnership – the semisecret plan many suspect is behind the efforts to create a European Union-style North American confederation and link Mexico and Canada with more transcontinental highways and rail lines. “This bill represents a good first step.”

Corsi explained to WND that the Bush administration is trying to create the North American Union incrementally, under the radar scope of public attention.

“Even today,” said Corsi, SPP.gov has a ‘Myths vs. Facts’ section that denies the administration is changing laws or working to create a new regional government. Unfortunately, the many references on SPP.gov to Cabinet-level working groups creating new trilateral memoranda of understanding and other trilateral agreements makes these denials sound hollow.”

The resolution introduced by Goode had three co-sponsors: Reps. Thomas Tancredo, R-Colo., Ron Paul, R-Texas, and Walter Jones, R-N.C.

The “whereas” clauses of the resolution lay out the case against the North American Union and NAFTA Superhighways as follows:

* Whereas, according to the Department of Commerce, United States trade deficits with Mexico and Canada have significantly widened since the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA);

* Whereas the economic and physical security of the United States is impaired by the potential loss of control of its borders attendant to the full operation of NAFTA;

* Whereas a NAFTA Superhighway System from the west coast of Mexico through the United States and into Canada has been suggested as part of a North American Union;

* Whereas it would be particularly difficult for Americans to collect insurance from Mexican companies which employ Mexican drivers involved in accidents in the United States, which would increase the insurance rates for American drivers;

* Whereas future unrestricted foreign trucking into the United States can pose a safety hazard due to inadequate maintenance and inspection, and can act collaterally as a conduit for the entry into the United States of illegal drugs, illegal human smuggling, and terrorist activities;

* Whereas a NAFTA Superhighway System would be funded by foreign consortiums and controlled by foreign management, which threatens the sovereignty of the United States.

The resolution calls for the House of Representatives to agree on three issues of determination:

1. The United States should not engage in the construction of a North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Superhighway System;

2. The United States should not enter into a North American Union with Mexico and Canada; and

3. The President should indicate strong opposition to these or any other proposals that threaten the sovereignty of the United States.

“As important as this resolution is,” Corsi said, “we need still more congressional attention. Where is congressional oversight of SPP? We need congressional hearings, not just congressional resolutions.”

H.Con.Res.487 has been referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and to the Committee on Internal Relations for consideration prior to any debate that may be scheduled on the floor of the House of Representatives.

"Hands Across the Corridor" a smashing success and show of solidarity!

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Today, more than 100 people gathered at the Alamo to take a stand against overbearing and abusive government as evidenced in the privatizing and tolling of our existing FREEways and Rick Perry’s massive Trans Texas Corridor, a 4,000 mile network of toll roads taking 580,000 of private Texas land and putting it in the hands of foreign companies for BIG profits. They brought dirt from their land and told Perry, “You’re not taking our land or Texas roads without a fight!” The San Antonio event was part of events across the state in 43 counties.

The highlight of the rally was remarks from State Comptroller and Gubernatorial candidate Carole Keeton Strayhorn who stood shoulder to shoulder with ordinary citizens in an unprecedented statewide revolt against Perry’s land-grabbing toll network and DOUBLE TAX tolls on existing FREEways. Then, the crowd joined Mrs. Strayhorn behind a “line in the sand,” in the spirit of Col. William Travis who drew his famous line in the sand marking the historic stand at the Alamo in 1836, and folks dropped their bags of dirt and gave a cheer while many started chanting “We want Carole,” and “No to tolls, and no to the TTC.”

Then the Toll Party addressed the gathering giving credit to ordinary citizens and their efforts as the reason Perry finally caved and released the SECRET contract with Cintra-Zachry, “Without the constant pressure from citizens like you and without the leadership of Carole Strayhorn who has hammered this Governor and demanded this contract be made public, the contract would still be secret today.”

Next up, a grassroots push to elect true leaders and allies who will represent the PEOPLE, and the Corridor Summit in Austin, October 7. Read more here. Also, “Truth Be Tolled,” a documentary exposing the truth behind the privatization and tolling of public highways along with the shift toward foreign management of our public infrastructure is going on the road to Austin, Houston, and Dallas.

Strayhorn reaction to Perry finally opening the SECRET contract

For Immediate Release:
Thursday, September 28, 2006

Statement from Strayhorn Campaign in Anticipation of the Long-Overdue Public Disclosure of Toll Road Contract

(Austin) – “For 16 months Rick Perry has fought to keep Texans in the dark and his contract with a foreign-owned company to build toll roads across Texas a secret,” said Mark Sanders, Strayhorn campaign spokesman. “Carole Keeton Strayhorn has repeatedly called for Cintra-Zachary contract to be made public. Rick Perry should immediately make every aspect of this contract available to the public.

“Texans have the right to know what their government is doing, but Rick Perry and his highway henchmen are determined to cram toll roads down our throats and were willing to go to court to protect this administration’s special interests.

“As governor, Carole Keeton Strayhorn will blast this $184 billion boondoggle off the bureaucratic books. She will put an end the secret, back-room deals prevalent in the Austin political establishment today and put the people’s interests about special interests.

“In a Strayhorn administration, agreements and undertakings of this magnitude will be put to the voters or be approved by the Legislature.”

US 281 to become mini Trans Texas Corridor?

News on US 281 from a supporter turned reporter…

“Approximately 250 people attended last night’s TxDOT public meeting on the expansion of Hwy. 281 from the Guadalupe to just past Highway 306. Greg Malatek, David Castell, Clay Smith from TxDOT were there as well as Comal County Commissioners Jay Millikin and Jan Kennady. The County and TxDOT are looking at the same ‘pass through financing agreement’ as the financing tool for this project like they are for Hwy 46.

Also, the plans call for 400 feet of total right of way, with approximately 120 feet for each of the northbound and southbound lanes, with approximately 160 feet in the middle for future expansion. Greg Malatek mentioned that middle area could be for future expansion for cars, trucks, buses, or rail. (Sound familiar, sound like the Trans Texas “International Trade” Corridor?)

The word CORRIDOR was used quite often. There was also a map detailing the Texas Trunk System. Just about everybody that spoke asked TxDOT and the County to remove the TOLL Language from the agreement. As usual, the politicians said they will not. Quite a few others suggested that overpasses be built instead of stopping 281 traffic with more stop lights. And as usual, the money excuse came up from TxDOT. (Remember: TxDOT only has money for toll roads, not free roads in spite of their budget more than doubling since Rick Perry took office.) We had a very demanding and energized crowd that would have made you proud.”

Way to go folks! But do you see where this is headed? Everything will be tolled or have contracts like pass through financing that allows tolls in the future (when traffic counts make the tolling viable). Without a new Governor, EVERY highway in Texas will eventually have tolls (his own Transportation Commission Chairman, Ric Williamson, said so: “In your lifetime, most existing roads will have tolls”)! And this Governor tries to claim he’s doing all this without raising your taxes…who does he think he’s fooling? A TOLL is a TAX, and one that’s 25 times more money than gas taxes (we pay 1-3 per mile in gas tax, tolls will be 25 cents or more per mile per TxDOT’s own studies)!

TxDOT releases SECRET contract: victory for the PEOPLE!

This is a guarded victory for open and transparent government and for the PEOPLE of Texas who have created the political pressure to make it happen! Until we wade through the 1,600 page document, we’re not certain if the financial details and totality of control this Governor handed Spanish-owned Cintra. The timing of this, 40 days out form an election where the Governor is losing ground daily due these toll issues is certainly suspect. But no matter, it’s a hard fought victory and our thanks to Carole Strayhorn for hammering the Governor to open up this secret to the light of day. The PEOPLE of Texas deserve to know what he’s sold us for.
Read Express-News here.

Read Star-Telegram here.

Read Dallas Morning News here.

Toll road contract at issue in governor’s race to be made public
By KELLEY SHANNON
Associated Press
09/28/2006

Previously secret parts of a contract to develop the Trans-Texas Corridor that have been a contentious issue in the governor’s race are going to be made public right away, state officials said Thursday.

The decision was announced at a Texas Transportation Commission meeting where a plan for the first phase of the proposed corridor was revealed. Because that plan is an update of an earlier proposal by the consortium Cintra-Zachry, all parts of that earlier document — including those that were kept secret for proprietary reasons — will be released, said Amadeo Saenz, assistant executive director for engineering operations at the state transportation department.

Consequently, a transportation department lawsuit attempting to keep the contract secret will be dropped, he said.

Republican Gov. Rick Perry, who proposed the Trans-Texas Corridor in 2002, has come under fire from opponents and anti-corridor activists in part because of the secret contract. Some are also mad because the giant toll road will take their land.

Cintra-Zachry proposed paying $7.2 billion to build the first segments of the corridor, running roughly parallel to Interstate 35. The Spanish-American consortium would invest $6 billion to build a state-owned toll road and would pay the state $1.2 billion and get to operate the road and collect tolls.

State transportation officials now say the private money invested could total as much as $8.8 billion. Perry’s aides have said the private construction is part of a growing trend across the country as government money for road construction dwindles.

Independent gubernatorial candidate Carole Keeton Strayhorn has been the most vocal Perry opponent in criticizing the Trans-Texas Corridor and the state contract with Cintra-Zachry.Over the summer, she attended several crowded public hearings along the corridor route to speak against the project.

Ultimately, Perry has said, the corridor would be a network crisscrossing the state and costing up to $184 billion. The corridor would be up to a quarter-mile across, consisting of as many as six lanes for cars and four for trucks, plus railroad tracks, oil and gas pipelines, water and other utility lines, even broadband transmission cables.

The Federal Highway Administration will have the final say on the first-phase plan released Thursday. Construction could begin by 2011, pending environmental clearance.

"Truth Be Tolled" documentary on tolls & the TTC debuts

Read KSAT 12 coverage here. See the link to the Truth Be Tolled web site right on their home page (on the right).

Government has figured out a way to make money on public infrastructure. The plan is to convert existing Texas roadways into tollways and hand them over to foreign interests without a public vote. Many citizens are crying highway robbery.

Elected officials have passed laws unnoticed to simply pave the way. The political establishment is not listening to the people, but their voices will be heard.

This powerful documentary follows the process as citizens utilize their most important power as members of a democracy: freedom of speech and exercising their right to vote, especially when government goes awry and arrogantly ignores the will of the people.

View the trailer and send everyone you know to view the trailer and preview. Find out how to sponsor a screening here: www.truthbetolled.com.


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