(Ed.'s Note: City of Brownsville Commissioner Jessica Tetreau is sure showing a thin skin over E. Fronton Facebook page parodying her vote on the changing of their street name to McNAir family Drive. During the meeting Tetreau - like rose Gowen, Joel Munguia, and John Gowen - took refuge on a question of "process" over a policy she voted to approve just a scant few months ago and kept the name despite that the residents had complied with all the requirements of the policy to change the name back.
Unable to dispute that fact, they said they were not satisfied the policy was workable and that it was not right that the poor McNairs would get their feelings hurt. But they don't seem to have the same consideration for the feelings of the 78 percent of the lot owners on E. Fronton.
Then Tetreau calims that the renaming policy was "plagiarized" from existing ordinances in Greenville, Texas, so it shouldn't apply here. But may we remind Ms. Airhead that she – along with the rest of the commissioners who voted against the Fronton St. residents – approved it by voting for it back in May. Does she mean to tell us that she votes for something that she didn't agree with or understand?
And as far as expelling someone for tailoring a city ordinance after ordinances from other cities, she will find out that it's done all the time. Why reinvent the wheel? The question should be: Why do we keep electing people like her who base their argument for her unpopular vote on high school academic codes? She voted against the people and in favor of a prominent family like any social climber worth her salt would have voted.
Since she just enrolled her child in St. Joseph Academy, it would not do to piss off Rose Gowen, Joel Munguia and John Cowen, all St. Joe grads. Houston, we have anew majority, and Tetreau wants so badly to "belong" with the self-appointed Good People.
She will be "reaching out" to law enforcement, thin-skinned Jessie has stated. As an elected official, she must surely know that her expectations of privacy and the questioning of official acts lies wholly within the realm of the citizens' First Amendment right to question authority.
Elected officials, dear lassie, have to face the consequences of their official acts. It comes with the territory.)