It’s actually really frustrating being Mexican American and having to hear from my own blood and people giving me shit. Leave me alone. I’m here representing fighting and enjoying my culture. USA is my where I was born and Mexico is running thru my blood.
Nothing you say “no sabo” he don’t speak Spanish” is going to change the facts
The cases differ on facts and evidence.
Kyle Rittenhouse was chased, hit with a skateboard, and had a gun pointed at him while fleeing. Multiple videos showed clear imminent deadly threats. Jury acquitted on self-defense.
Karmelo Anthony entered a rival team's tent, was asked to leave repeatedly, said "touch me and see what happens," then stabbed Austin Metcalf in the chest after a shove. Jury rejected self-defense, convicted of murder.
Distinguishing them requires no soul-searching—just facts over race narratives.
A woman was live-streaming with her daughter when the child asked for her breakfast. The filter disappeared, revealing her face, which shocked everyone.
🇲🇽 | Un cubano agredió a un mexicano en suelo cancunense solo porque este le reclamó que su perro lo había mordido, lo que hizo que todo Cancún se uniera para madreárselo.
JAJAJA ADORO LOS FINALES FELICES.
Oliver Stone based Alejandro Sosa in Scarface on Roberto Suárez, one of the most powerful drug lords of the 1980s. In early drafts, Stone went into far more detail about Sosa’s power and political connections, but the final film only hints at it. Stone explains:
"At that time there was a man in Bolivia embodied by that drug lord in the movie, Suarez…I think that was his real name. Suarez was known at that time to have a large ring inside Bolivia. He was a big deal, Suarez—he was politically connected. He had his own state: The whole goal is to get your own state, like the Al Qaeda got their state in Afghanistan? Well, Suarez had his own state.
The DEA was trying to take him down, but he was protected, I think, by the CIA. That was the whole point with the scene [in Bolivia]—which was misread by De Palma when he filmed it, so people missed it—Suarez was being protected by another [U.S.] government agency of some kind."
Oliver Stone's quote comes from Ken Tucker's book Scarface Nation.
Notice in the clip below, when Tony visits Sosa over his “tax troubles,” he’s deliberately framed through gated bars, symbolizing the threat of imprisonment hanging over him. The camera pans away from the bars right as Sosa enters the frame, suggesting he represents Tony’s only way out.