Mexico Tranny
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The Supreme Court blocked a Texas law that its supporters hope would ban social media companies from silencing conservative viewpoints.
"Free Speech * Conditions Apply by Fukt" by wiredforlego is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0
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Patrick Williams is editor-in-chief of the Dallas Observer.
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A joint effort by federal law enforcement, Arlington police and the Tarrant County Sheriff's Office led to the arrest of a 22-year-old man who was trafficking children.
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Jacob Vaughn , a former Brookhaven College journalism student, has written for the Observer since 2018, first as clubs editor. More recently, he's been in the news section as a staff writer covering City Hall, the Dallas Police Department and whatever else editors throw his way.
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Gustavo Arellano
March 11, 2010
4:00AM
Dear Mexican: I've always been attracted to transgendered women since I was about 13. I've noticed, however, that most trannies are Hispanic. Now, before you say that this is ¡Ask a Mexican!, not ¡Ask a Hispanic!, I've also noticed that more than half of all Hispanic transsexuals are Mexican. What's up with that? Is it a cultural thing? Is it something in your genes?
Like any good male of the species, I was surfing porn on the Internet last week when I happened on an escort Web site. The site had several categories, depending on your sexual proclivities, I suppose. While clicking through them, I got to the shemale escort section and noticed a curious thing: The percentage of transgendered escorts that were Latinos (by their admission) was 57 percent whereas Latinos only comprise 37 percent of the population in general. Given the legendary Latino male machismo, how do you account for these statistics?
—Gabacho of the Straight Persuasion
Dear Wab and Gabacho: To the gabacho: I'm all for folks enjoying their different strokes, but you: straight? When you're looking through the transgendered section of a prostitute Web site? And were able to calculate to the exact percentile the number of Latina escorts on said site? (Don't know which orifice you pulled out the 37 percent stat for Mexis, though, as the Pew Hispanic Center's 2008 survey of Latino demography in los Estados Unidos puts the population of wabs and their descendants in the States at about 31 million, about 10 percent of the total American population.) Cabrón : You ain't straight, and that's all right. To the wab: I don't know where you get your numbers, either. No reliable statistics exist on the number of Mexican transgendered people, whether in the motherland or el Norte , but what is known about this population is that they're inordinately represented in HIV cases and as sexual-assault victims, and face rampant harassment. To the gabacho: Instead of ogling them, maybe you should spend your perverted dollars on donating to nonprofits that help LGBT Mexis—and maybe they'll be kind enough to help you with your own sexual hang-ups. To the wab: You should donate too. And to the both of ustedes and everyone else: This is ¡Ask a Mexican!, not Ask a Hispanic, Latino, Chili Belly or whatever other chingadera people confuse Mexicans with—ask accordingly!
I met a wonderful man from Mexico City and became romantically involved with him. However, after just one month of dating, he dropped the te amo bomb on me, which I thought was a bit sudden. Coincidentally, shortly after this happened, a good friend of mine also started dating a chilango . He said te amo to her after only one week! Now, while my gabacho friends saw these situations as red flags, my Latino friends blamed this on pasión , and said that these guys were "just being Latino men" and insisted not to worry about it. The latter reaction leads me to ask if it's a cultural norm in Mexico for a man to tell a woman he is dating that he loves her so soon?
Dear Wahine: Chula , Mexican men get straight to the punto . Your chilango obviously told you he loves you so soon because he thinks your hips are child-bearing, your bosom bountiful and your health good. No time for courtship—bring on the babies! I'll allow that mexicanos , brought up on decades of expert wooers like Jose Alfredo Jimenez, Juan Gabriel, Agustin Lara and other songsmiths, might be more florid and expressive in matters of the corazón than their gabacho counterparts, who wouldn't be able to quote "Night and Day" if you spotted them the Frank Sinatra-Tommy Dorsey version and Frank's solo, drunken effort. Let love reign, and its verbal couplets rain upon you, I say—now, start popping out those twice-bronzed brownies!
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And it's a difficult enough choice if you're a shopkeeper or a cab driver. But it's on another level if you're a sex worker.
"I'm so scared for my health," said Alejandra, a sex worker in Tijuana, who asked we only use her first name. "I don't know if the person I'm with has the disease or not."
Tijuana, Mexico's famed red-light district, called Zona Norte, sits a stone's throw from the US-Mexico border. Calle Coahuila, the area's main strip, is normally teeming with a frenetic action bathed in neon light.
Women in short dresses and the highest of high heels stand along the sidewalks, beckoning groups of men to spend some time and money with them. Massive strip clubs, some with hotels attached, act as de facto brothels.
Many specifically cater to the thousands of Americans who cross the border from California each month, looking for a kind of fun that can't be found legally in the United States, except maybe in some Nevada counties where prostitution is permitted.
All of it is legal here -- or, at least, it was until the pandemic descended.
Mexico's government shuttered its economy in late March. Non-essential businesses were forced to close, including in the state of Baja California, where Tijuana is the largest city.
That meant that all the strip clubs, bars, sex hotels and even the sex workers on the sidewalks were forced to close up shop, restrictions that remain in place today.
The land border between the United States and Mexico was also closed to non-essential travel. It was all done with the intent of slowing the virus' spread.
But on a recent reporting trip to Tijuana, it was abundantly clear that while the sex industry isn't as vibrant as it was pre-pandemic, there's a lot of sex happening behind closed doors.
There's something odd about standing in an empty strip club with the lights on. But it's where we met Roberto Torres, who owns the El Zorro Men's Club, just off the district's main drag.
"I don't think we're safe to open yet," he told us. "So, I'm not going to put myself at risk or my employees at risk either."
He had to let go of all his female employees. He says most of them went home but for those that didn't, he has an idea where some could've ended up.
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