A Quote by Beto O'Rourke

We in El Paso and Juarez are literally one community. There's no separation; there's no DMZ; there's no buffer. — © Beto O'Rourke
We in El Paso and Juarez are literally one community. There's no separation; there's no DMZ; there's no buffer.
Juarez had become a failed city. The mayor of Juarez lived in El Paso. Not only did he not live in his own city, he didn't live in his own country. You had all these kids out of school who didn't want to work because they saw their mothers toiling in jobs for hardly any cash.
I don't know that my colleagues in Congress really care about what happens here in El Paso and in Juarez. They care what happens in their home district.
I moved from New York to El Paso in 2015, just before my senior year. I was super nervous. My mom, she's in the Army, and she got stationed at Fort Bliss. We packed everything up and drove all the way to El Paso.
I'm just a kid from El Paso, Texas.
I spent some special years in my hometown of El Paso.
[My grandparents] were from Texas. El Paso. White trash.
I've got to thank the city of El Paso for standing behind me.
I didn't feel like I had a home until I moved to El Paso.
We’re on the moon,” Sadie murmured. “El Paso, Texas,” Bast corrected.
Well, I was born in El Paso, Texas, it was in the nearest hospital to the family farm.
I was in dire need of a band that was serious about getting out of El Paso.
Out in the west Texas town of El Paso, I fell in love with a Mexican girl.
El Paso in many ways is the Ellis Island for Mexico and much of Latin America.
We all knew each other in the neighborhood. I loved living in El Paso. I had a wonderful childhood there.
While in El Paso, I met Mr. Clinton Burk, a native of Texas, who I married in August 1885.
I went to school with a lot of kids whose fathers and mothers were part of the El Paso black history.
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