Instapundit has been all over this story.
And check this editorial at IBD, "The Stimulation of Murder."RELATED: "Obama’s Watergate."
What else could you possibly want? Well, maybe beer and beautiful women, but we have them, too! Pay attention!
Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Friday, July 8, 2011
Humberto Leal, Mexican Citizen, Executed in Texas
At New York Times, "Mexican Citizen Is Executed as Justices Refuse to Step In."More at Memeorandum.
Monday, June 27, 2011
'José, Can You See?' U.S. Soccer Team Booed at Gold Cup Final, Rose Bowl, Pasadena
You get used to it. You're a foreigner in your own country sometimes. You get the feeling in many parts of Southern California. And in some of the small agricultural towns in the Central Valley you might as well be in Mexico. Democrats and progressives don't care, except to the extent that it keeps them in power, but we've long ago basically undergone a foreign invasion of people whose primary loyalty remains to the countries of their origin. The Los Angeles Times has the report, from Bill Plaschke, "In Gold Cup final, it's red, white and boo again." The U.S team was booed. Here's a quote from the piece (via Memeorandum):
This is an old debate, largely taboo for discussion in polite company, like academic departments. But it's not a new thing, at all. Recall Samuel Huntington's seminal essay in 2004, "The Hispanic Challenge"
RELATED: At Pamela's, "US SOCCER TEAM VICIOUSLY BOOED IN L.A. -- MEXICO WAS "HOME TEAM" - ENEMEDIA CALLS IT "UNIQUELY AMERICAN'."
Most of these hostile visitors didn't live in another country. Most, in fact, were not visitors at all, many of them being U.S. residents whose lives are here but whose sporting souls remain elsewhere.Right.
Welcome to another unveiling of that social portrait known as a U.S.-Mexico soccer match, streaked as always in deep colors of red, white, blue, green … and gray.
"I love this country, it has given me everything that I have, and I'm proud to be part of it," said Victor Sanchez, a 37-year-old Monrovia resident wearing a Mexico jersey. "But yet, I didn't have a choice to come here, I was born in Mexico, and that is where my heart will always be."
This is an old debate, largely taboo for discussion in polite company, like academic departments. But it's not a new thing, at all. Recall Samuel Huntington's seminal essay in 2004, "The Hispanic Challenge"
Massive Hispanic immigration affects the United States in two significant ways: Important portions of the country become predominantly Hispanic in language and culture, and the nation as a whole becomes bilingual and bicultural. The most important area where Hispanization is proceeding rapidly is, of course, the Southwest. As historian Kennedy argues, Mexican Americans in the Southwest will soon have “sufficient coherence and critical mass in a defined region so that, if they choose, they can preserve their distinctive culture indefinitely. They could also eventually undertake to do what no previous immigrant group could have dreamed of doing: challenge the existing cultural, political, legal, commercial, and educational systems to change fundamentally not only the language but also the very institutions in which they do business.”Déjà vu.
Anecdotal evidence of such challenges abounds. In 1994, Mexican Americans vigorously demonstrated against California's Proposition 187—which limited welfare benefits to children of illegal immigrants—by marching through the streets of Los Angeles waving scores of Mexican flags and carrying U.S. flags upside down. In 1998, at a Mexico-United States soccer match in Los Angeles, Mexican Americans booed the U.S. national anthem and assaulted U.S. players. Such dramatic rejections of the United States and assertions of Mexican identity are not limited to an extremist minority in the Mexican-American community. Many Mexican immigrants and their offspring simply do not appear to identify primarily with the United States.
RELATED: At Pamela's, "US SOCCER TEAM VICIOUSLY BOOED IN L.A. -- MEXICO WAS "HOME TEAM" - ENEMEDIA CALLS IT "UNIQUELY AMERICAN'."
Friday, May 27, 2011
Mexican Cops Suspended For Forcing Young Woman To Strip For Her Freedom
MEXICO - A group of leering police officers allegedly forced a young woman they had detained to strip in front of them - in exchange for her release. Now all 15 of them - including three women - have been suspended after an explicit video emerged showing at least one uniformed officer groping the woman as she performs a lap dance while the others cheer and chant. The woman had been arrested along with a male friend for allegedly possessing stolen bank cards and cheques in the Mexican border city of Tijuana...
Sometimes I wish I was a chick. I'd never get into any trouble. It's like "All I need to do to get out of jail is strip, dance and let you fondle my boobs? Let's get it on!" This chick didn't seem too bothered by the whole experience. And from what I know about the cops in Mexico she probably got off easy. She's lucky they weren't in the mood for the donkey show.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Mexican Brewer Launches Beer Aimed at Gay Market
GUADALAJARA, Mexico - A Mexican company has launched the first beer aimed at the gay and lesbian community – an artisan honey-flavored ale that initially will be sold in parts of Mexico and exported to Colombia and Japan. “We’ve entered the market with great respect, with the idea of offering a product aimed at the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) community, which has been neglected but is very important and very demanding,” Bodega 12 marketing chief Dario Rodriguez Wyler told Efe. The beer – brewed with malt and organic honey – is being sold at gay bars and restaurants in Guadalajara, one of Mexico’s most traditional cities, as well as in Mexico City and beach resorts such as Puerto Vallarta and Los Cabos. In the coming months, Bodega 12 will export just over 1,000 cases of the beer to Colombia and Japan, Rodriguez Wyler said. The beverage comes in two different types of packaging: “Salamandra” (Salamander) and “Purple Hand,” which recalls a famous gay-rights protest in San Francisco in 1969....
Makes sense, I guess. I mean we already have Mount Gay Rum, right? And here's a test to see if you should be ordering up a case or two of these new brewskies:
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