'Latinx Files TikTok creator becomes guardian angel for California food'

'Latinx Files TikTok creator becomes guardian angel for California food'
02:49 Dec 26, 2022
'Meet Jesus Morales, the TikTok content creator that has become a guardian angel for several street vendors in California. The 24-year-old who goes by @Juixxe has gone viral on the social media platform by filming himself giving $1, 000 in cash to unsuspecting people selling food or merchandise on the street. The money is crowdsourced from his more than 1 million followers. To date he has raised and handed out $90, 000, mostly to vendors in Los Angeles. Morales told CalMatters that he drew his inspiration from his immigrant parents.“My dad worked multiple jobs, and my mom was a server, and she would tell me that sometimes people would tip her pennies, ” Morales said. As has been the case with any group of marginalized people, the COVID-19 shutdown has been hard on food vendors. At the start of the pandemic, the Los Angeles City Council lifted a moratorium on ticketing people selling food without a permit because of health concerns. As my colleague Emily Alpert Reyes reported, the council considered formally reinstating the moratorium in March but has yet to do so.“I do not know [the sellers] nor do I know what they are going through, ” Morales said. “I would not say that I come at a perfect time, but it is a visit with a purpose. ”Today marks the 175th anniversary of the United States Congress declaring war on Mexico, an event so significant it created an entire group of people.“That’s why Mexican Americans exist, because of the fact that there was this war of conquest that was driven by the notion of ‘Manifest Destiny, ’ a term coined in conjunction with all of this, ” said Ernesto Chavez, a history professor at the University of Texas at El Paso and author of “The U. S. War With Mexico: A Brief History with Documents. ”“Manifest destiny, ” the idea that it was the United States’ divine right to expand to the Pacific, was coined in 1845 by John O’Sullivan in an editorial that argued for the annexation of Texas and the Oregon territory. The U. government blamed its southern neighbor for the start of the war. President James K. Polk, who ran on a platform of western expansion, claimed Mexico had shed “American blood on American soil, ” conveniently leaving out the fact that the land in which the soldiers killed in what became known as the Thornton Affair was Mexican at the time. The end of the war resulted in the U. nearly doubling in size, acquiring land that is now present-day California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico and Texas. It was also a prelude to the Civil War; the expansion further heightened the slave state vs. free state debate. In fact, known racist and secessionist John C. Calhoun was opposed to the Mexican-American War precisely for this reason. (He was also against the idea of acquiring all of Mexico because that would mean more Mexicans). For Chavez, the legacy of this declaration of war is very much alive.“The U.   All data is taken from the source: http://latimes.com Article Link: https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/newsletter/2021-05-13/food-vendors-mexican-american-war-latinx-files   #war #newspolitics #newstodaybbc #newsworldwide #kingworldnews #newstodayinusa #' 

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