I Voted!

This “Future Voter” visited the polls in New Orleans in the 2016 presidential election. Vote early!

This “Future Voter” visited the polls in New Orleans in the 2016 presidential election. Vote early!

As we posted on Monday, early voting has begun in Harris County. It continues through October 30, allowing all registered voters plenty of time to make their voices heard!

As we conclude one full week of record activity at the polls, social media abounds with photos of proud friends, family, and famous folks who have already cast their ballots in the 2020 elections. No Instagram pic of a satisfied voter is complete without an “I Voted” sticker and a few words to rally all followers. Tack on an #ivoted hashtag, and the 21st century voting ritual is complete!

The Texas “I Voted” sticker is simple and no-frills — not big, bold, or bombastic as one might expect from the typically titanic Lone Star State. (Alaska, by contrast, which is geographically larger than Texas — and proud of it!— just revealed its 13 new “I Voted” stickers for 2020, which celebrate women and highlight native languages. Even Alaskans who vote from home can download digital stickers to proclaim their voting pride.) Instead, for a state as unique as Texas, our voting stickers are rather plain. However, the clean, classic design of our ballot badges still conveys the outsize honor we feel in being part of the democratic process. No one struts, swaggers, and swells with pride like a Texan!

Voters in other parts of the nation celebrate their visits to the polls in much more colorful and creative ways. Many of the stickers reflect the flavor, culture, and people of the regions they represent, highlighting features that make each state, city, county, or borough unique. Samples of our favorites are shown here, and links to even more stand-out stickers can been seen in the list below. Which is your favorite?

From Left to Right: New York City, Nashville, Louisiana

From Left to Right: New York City, Nashville, Louisiana

National Taco Day: Let's Taco 'Bout Tacos

How your Harris County Law librarians spend their weekends.

How your Harris County Law librarians spend their weekends.

This Sunday, October 4, Americans will set aside their differences and join together in honor of the humble but mighty taco. We owe this annual celebration to a Texan, Roberto L. Gomez.

Gomez, a San Antonian, was a force in the 1960 “Viva Kennedy!” JFK campaign movement in the southwest. Once Kennedy was in office, Gomez used his connection to the President’s brand to promote various Mexican foods familiar to the San Antonio community, starting in 1961 when he sent President Kennedy a 48 pound tamale, guarded by a motorcade, as a birthday gift. Gomez continued to build on this idea, and in 1965 he sent President Johnson, a dedicated Texan, a 55 pound taco. Shortly thereafter, Gomez helped found the National Taco Council. In 1968, San Antonio’s Congressman Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez stood on the floor of Congress and called for the first National Taco Day to occur that year on May 3. After some hopping around, in 2004 National Taco Day landed on October 4.

Some have speculated that the taco, in its perfect simplicty, must have come to us from deep in the past. In reality, it’s a modern miracle; an early example of fast food, born of industrialization and the need for a quick lunch break.

The taco’s origins are in 18th century Mexico, where silver miners toiled in caves. To extract silver, they would wrap a bit of gun powder in a piece of paper, then slide that into a crack in the rock face. They referred to the gun powder and paper wrap as a “taco.”

Then at some point in the 19th century, a genius Mexican mind, now anonymous due to the fog of history, decided to mimic this by wrapping meat inside a tortilla, and called their culinary innovation a “miner’s taco.”

Fast forward to San Antonio in 1905, where historians have found the first recorded mention of this food taco in the United States. The taco, a true and authentic Mexican food, likely came to San Antonio with Mexican migrants coming for work. It was one of the exotic examples of Mexican cuisine served by so-called “Chili Queens,” whose pushcarts provided Americans with an opportunity to sample culinary life south of the border.

If you travel to Mexico, don’t expect to find a hardshell taco. The crunchy, u-shaped taco shell was an innovation of United States entrepreneur Glen Bell in the 1950s, as he came up with the idea to sell gringo-friendly “Mexican food” to the masses through a franchise business he called Taco Bell.

Another American franchise operation, Subway, made international news yesterday when an Irish court ruled its baked loaves are too confectionery to legally be called “bread.” Is there a similar legal defintion in the United States of a taco?

The answer is that while lawmakers here have yet to define what a taco is, a Worcester County Superior Court in Massachusetts ruled in 2006 that a taco is NOT a sandwich. Thus the taco continues to reign supreme in its own right.

Further Exploration: