A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.
How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.
The family of a dead judge blames a creeping fungus in the federal courthouse.
I worked at Kmart with John McCain's director of strategy.
Why are there Mexicans in the Border Patrol? What a hypocritical thing to do to our people.
Carne Asada Carlos
Mexican-Americans are named Eduardo, Juanita, Jose, Rosa, and all have a cousin named Jeff. What do they really think of their cousin Jeff?
Cousin Jeff
Jeff's a stoner pendejo who hasn't returned my copy of Cheech and Chong's Next Movie.
When I reveal to Mexican acquaintances that my mother's side is German, I get a strange reaction of strong approval. The accordion in ranchera music is the only apparent link I know of. Is there something else Germany did right by Mexico to garner such affection and honor, or is that it?
Haunted by Memories of Lawrence Welk
Though your inclinations are right, your terminology is wrong. The Mexican music genre that employs accordions is conjunto norteño, and it was Polacks and Bohunks that introduced squeezeboxes to the borderlands, not Germans. Krauts did influence banda sinaloense (the mestizo version of an oom-pah band), but only wabs from central Mexico truly enjoy the sound of 18 brass instruments blasting into one's ears. Some Mexicans mistakenly think we ripped off our quinceañera waltzes from Germans though, in fact, we stole them from the Hapsburg court of Emperor Maximilian. And though Frida Kahlo's father was born in Germany, that wouldn't explain the awed hush you received.
Maybe those Mexicans you hung out with bemoan the fate of the Zimmerman Telegram. That was the secret correspondence between German Empire officials where they planned to help Mexico retake the Southwest United States in return for its support during World War I; British cryptologists decoded the message, the United States declared war on the Huns, and Mexico declined the offer. Nevertheless, this episode forever poisoned the relationship between Mexico and the United States to the point where the Zimmerman Telegram makes up one-quarter of the quesadilla that is the Know Nothings' modern-day Reconquista conspiracy theory (the other parts being the Aztec belief in Aztlan, the Spanish Reconquista against the Moors, and the historical reality of Mexico's territorial losses in its 1846 war against the United States). Mexicans look back on the Zimmerman Telegram as the country's greatest what-if but don't dwell on it too much — after all, we didn't need Teutonic ayuda to accomplish what they proposed.