Monday, March 31, 2008

Coffee, cake & costumes: El Hijo del Santo Cafe & Shop

Well I think I found my piece of heaven in Mexico City, the El Hijo del Santo Coffe Shop & Store located in Col. Condesa in Mexico City, MEXICO. The cloths, masks and jewerly are great but a little pricey. Flat screens in the cafe show Lucha Libre wresting of El Hijo del Santo. I most liked the altar to El Santo that took up one corner. The altar has a painting of the Virgen de Guadalupe, which is most typical for Mexico.  But in this painting the angel, that holds up the Virgen, has been replaced by El Santo.  Muy cute.  I am sure El Santo loves his son cashing in on this name, keeping it all in the family with El Hijo del Santo. But does the next generation become El Nieto del Santo, etc. etc. Well, it is really a fun place. While I was there, a film crew from Venezuela was there. They loved how I was from Texas and loved lucha libre. I told them I had come all the way down from Texas to see the store, ji ji ji. But I don’t think they bought it. They did want to do a TV interview but I declined.

click the picture below for a slide show and too I posted a short video I took with my camera.

the video:
alt : http://www.youtube.com/v/W709d9i_DDc&hl=en

Posted by Santo Gay in 06:38:19 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Dios mio - Mira: Americans hate soccer because it’s gay

I am in machoville Mexico where life for men here goes something like this in lifes importance:  1. Soccer 2. God  3. Familiy.  So when I read this story I thought, Soccer is not gay, NOT in Mexico!  Ok, just maybe socceer is gay, the soccer player pictured below makes not only my mouth water and also ….


Americans hate soccer because it’s gay

Weighing in on the tired debate over why Americans fail to love soccer as passionately as the rest of the world, an editorial on football.co.uk offers the following four reasons: 1) the sport is not overcommercialized; 2) it’s too multicultural; 3) “homosexuals;” and 4) not enough points are scored.

Wait. Homosexuals? Please explain.

Soccer does not explicitly promote homosexuality, if it does at all, but in America, it is regarded as a “girly sport.” …The low-impact image of soccer makes it appear less manly and boring to the casual sports fan. In addition, the phenomenon of “diving” in soccer has only added to the “gay” image of soccer. Diving is the act of tripping over by an offensive player with little to no contact from his defender in order to win a free kick. Players like Cristiano Ronaldo, Didier Drogba, and Arjen Robben add dramatics such as loud screams and crying which further emasculate the sport. Homosexuality has always been a controversial issue that Americans have tried to avoid, and a sport like soccer that does not appear to be “manly enough” has failed to attract attention from the US.

By equating homosexuality with anything not “manly” enough to necessitate helmets and pads, the author has (inadvertently) pinpointed one of the major misperceptions that causes most homophobia in sports. But I don’t think it explains why this country doesn’t love soccer. Nor does it explain why we should. Soccer has thrived in the world for quite a long time without America sanctioning its status as a worthy sport. Americans don’t complain that the rest of the world should be fanatical about American football, our most popular sport. 

But I do agree that soccer promotes homosexuality. I mean, have you seen Cristiano Ronaldo? Don’t even try to tell me you don’t feel something. I’ll combine my responses to reasons #3 and #4 above by saying that soccer would be more popular with this American if it was a higher scoring game, thereby giving the players more opportunities to rip off their shirts and run around hugging each other. –Ryan Quinn  http://outsports.com/jocktalkblog/?p=742

Posted by Santo Gay in 04:56:02 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Immigration agents raid Latino night clubs in Dallas

If you lover did not come home last night, well, know you know why!


Immigration agents raid Latino night clubs in Dallas

05:53 PM CDT on Sunday, March 30, 2008

By JASON TRAHAN / The Dallas Morning News
jtrahan@dallasnews.com

A task force led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raided more than two dozen mostly Latino night clubs, restaurants, pool halls and other businesses Saturday night, arresting 49 undocumented immigrants employed as security guards, officials said.

All of those arrested work for two local security companies, which authorities declined to identify Sunday.

“We don’t want to compromise the investigation so we’re not releasing the two security company names yet,” said Jamille Bradfield, spokeswoman for the Dallas County District Attorney’s office, which is participating in the investigation.

It’s unclear if more arrests are expected, officials said.

At 11 p.m. Saturday, teams made up of local, state and federal officers simultaneously hit 26 businesses in the Love Field area, Northwest Dallas, Old East Dallas and Lakewood. No injuries were reported.

Authorities recovered four pistols. Federal law prohibits illegal immigrants from possessing firearms. Those arrested also face charges of being in the country illegally.

“Hopefully, this operation will help us send a message that we will not tolerate the falsification of documents for undocumented aliens under the guise of providing security,” said Craig Watkins, Dallas County District Attorney, in a statement Sunday.

Attempts to reach people at the clubs were unsuccessful Sunday afternoon.

Four of those arrested were from El Salvador and the others were Mexican, authorities said. One of the El Salvadorans was in the U.S. legally under Temporary Protected Status, immigration officials said. It’s unclear what charges he faces.

In addition to ICE and the D.A.’s office, the following agencies also participated Saturday night: the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Dallas Police Department, the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Texas Alcohol Beverage Commission, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Texas in Dallas.

Businesses raided

1. Az De Oro Night Club, 3320 Samuel Blvd., Dallas
2. Far West Night Club, 7331 Gaston Ave., Dallas
3. Ojeda’s Restaurant, 4617 Maple Ave., Dallas
4. El Penasco, 4601 Maple Ave., Dallas
5. Izalco Bar, 4605 Maple Ave., Dallas
6. Palacio, 4430 Maple Ave., Dallas
7. Metropolis, 8416 Denton Dr., Dallas
8. El Pulpo Restaurant, 2829 W. Northwest Hwy., Suite 330, Dallas
9. Los Compass Deli and Club, 2829 W. Northwest Hwy., Suite 216, Dallas
10. Taqueria Lupita’s, Webb Chapel Ext., Dallas
11. Terry’s Supermarket, 3025 Webb Chapel Ext., Dallas
12. Extravaganza Restaurant and Bar, 2905 Webb Chapel Ext., Dallas
13. Billares Puebla, 2900 Walnut Hill Lane, Dallas
14. Guerrero Bar, 2900 Walnut Hill Lane, Suite 220, Dallas
15. Exclusiva, 2900 Walnut Hill Ln., Suite 200, Dallas
16. La Frontera, 9744 Harry Hines Blvd., Dallas
17. La Pachanga, 9745 Harry Hines Blvd., Dallas
18. Los Corrales Restaurant and Bar, 10229 Harry Hines Blvd., Dallas
19. El Diamante, 4915 Singleton Blvd., Dallas
20. Club de Cache, 9100 N. Central Exp., Suite 300, Dallas
21. Oficina Billares, 10830 Harry Hines Blvd., Dallas
22. Viva Cafe and Billiards, 2829 W. Northwest Hwy., Suite 330, Dallas
23. Dallas Gentleman’s Club, 2117 W. Northwest Hwy., Dallas
24. 039 Club, 1820 W. Mockingbird Ln., Dallas
25. Orienta Night Club II, 8120 Harry Hines Blvd., Dallas
26. La Tormenta, 9834 Brockbank Dr., Dallas


NOTE: Santo Gay likes what Latina Lista had to say aobut the raids. And I quote,

“Obviously, the crackdown by ICE at such public places sends a message to the undocumented immigrant community that no place is safe. Yet, the same message is being received by immigrants who are also legally in the United States and know that in the government’s haste to apprehend anyone who “appears” to be undocumented, everyone is presumed undocumented until proven otherwise.

And though the raid targeted only security guards, the obvious intimidation of restaurant and bar staff, not to mention, the patrons, will certainly reverberate throughout the Latino business community and cause yet one more hardship to a struggling sector.”

You go Girl - Kick some NALGA!

 

Posted by Santo Gay in 01:35:51 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Castro daughter champions gay rights

Castro daughter champions gay rights


The daughter of Cuba’s new president is urging the Cuban National Assembly to adopt a law protecting LGBT rights, arguably the most liberal bill of its kind in Latin America.

Mariela Castro, Raul’s daughter, is the head of the National Center for Sex Education. The proposed legislation would recognize same-sex unions, including inheritance rights, allow free gender-reassignment operations for transgender people, and allow transgender people to change their identification records without first having to undergo surgery. The bill, however, does not allow adoption for gay couples, nor does it push for marriage equality. “A lot of homosexual couples asked me to not risk delaying getting the law passed by insisting on the word marriage,” she said, according to BBC News. “In Cuba marriage is not as important as the family, and at least this way we can guarantee the personal and inheritance rights of homosexuals and transsexuals.”

Castro said she has seen her father become less homophobic as she’s grown up, and that he is supportive of her work, though he warns her to move cautiously. Her mother, the late Vilma Espin, was an internationally heralded women’s rights advocate. During the early days of the Cuban Revolution, gays were sent to forced labor camps for reeducation and rehabilitation. While the camps were not in use very long, gays were still labeled “ideological deviants.” According to the article, gay and lesbian sex was legalized 15 years ago, but police raids on gay events has persisted until recently.

Read Complete Story on Gay.com

Posted by Santo Gay in 03:34:08 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Gay LULAC Meeting TODAY Tuesday, March 25 at the Resource Center

Dear LULAC 4871 Members and Friends,

This is a reminder that on Tuesday, March 25, LULAC 4871 – The Dallas Rainbow Council will meet at 6:30 p.m., at the Resource Center, located at 2701 Reagan St., Dallas, TX 75219. We will elect officers for 2008-2009.

In order to vote, you have to be a paid member. Here are the candidates for office:

Jesse Garcia – Candidate for President

1. Why are you running for President?
I fully support and embrace the values of the League of the United Latin American Citizens organization. I want to provide the best possible leadership for this unique council to get its message of tolerance and acceptance across to the public. This is a very important time for the Hispanic community in North Texas, and it requires special leadership to help the community deal with xenophobic attitudes and human rights abuses. I have successfully managed special events and organizations in the past decade, and I feel that my executive experience will be an asset to this organization.

2. What are your goals for the position?
I want to make sure there is consistent leadership throughout the year. We’ve had several
executive leaders come in and out. I’m prepared to give a full year to this position.

3. What is your professional background?
I have worked for the federal government in a public affairs capacity for the last 12 years.

4. What is your educational background?
I earned a bachelor’s degree in communication arts from Our Lady of the Lake University, and I
received a master’s degree in communications arts from St. Mary’s University.

Felix Arrieta – Candidate for Vice President

1. Why are you running for Vice President?
I feel that after being a member of LULAC Council 4871 for almost 2 years, and being one of the founding members as well, I’m ready to lead the group to meet goals we had set for, which is full equality.

2. What are your goals for the position?
My primary goal is full inclusion within the entire LULAC organization. So far our council has been successful in that matter, but there’s always room for follow ups and that is where I intend to ensure the goals we have accomplished are maintained and intact. My secondary goal would be to raise awareness with Veteran issues in our council and to encourage participation with the LULAC Veterans council.

3. What is your professional background?
I served in the U.S. Air Force from 1981 - 1992, and Texas Air National Guard from 1995 - 2004, both as an Air Transportation Specialist. I retired in April 2004. I currently work for the City of Dallas as an Office Assistant/Dispatcher since 1997.

4. What is your educational background?
I attended el Instituto Panamericano, a private Jr. High and High School in Panama City, Panama. I also earned an associate degree from the Community College of the Air Force.

Zhyla Alvarado – Candidate for Treasurer

1. Why are you running for Treasurer?
I am running for treasurer because I believe that I have done a satisfactory job the past two terms. The system of record keeping that I have established is organized and well documented for archival purposes. I would simply love to continue with the responsibilities that I have been completing thus far.

2. What are your goals for the position?
I would actually like to see more fundraising from the group. Although fundraising is something that is council inclusive I do feel that it is somewhat the treasurers job to come up with ideas and research what has been working best for other councils and organizations. I would love to do that this term.

3. What is your professional background?
I started working within education since 2004, with a small year gap in there to concentrate on my own education, but have been working in it ever since. I currently work for the Community Education and Outreach department for Southern Methodist University.

4. What is your educational background?
I have an AS from Mountain View College in which I graduated with honors and am on the National Dean’s List. I am currently a third year working towards my BS from Texas Women’s University.

Pepe Johnson – Candidate for Secretary

1. Why are you running for Secretary?
I want to see this LULAC Council succeed. I’m a very detailed-oriented person which is important for the position of secretary.

2. What are your goals for the position?

I want to develop a record-keeping system/format that will help those who serve as secretary after me to easily maintain records of our council. This could include “archives” to preserve our history as our presence grows within the community.

3. What is your professional background?
Currently I work an independent landman for Chesapeake Energy: basically I lease mineral rights from landowners in Cleburne. Previously I worked as a bilingual customer service representative for Western Union, and an assistant manager for Walgreens. Prior to that, as many of you know, I was a sergeant in the US Army.

4. What is your educational background?
I have a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration (Economics). I have also taken courses in human resource management and political science, including some Masters level courses.

Stan Bossler – Candidate for Parliamentarian

1. Why are you running for Parliamentarian?
As part of the leadership team, I wish to continue to support council 4871 when ever and where ever my professional and personal skills and abilities will contribute.

2. What are your goals?
I want to become a more present and active team member, and to help insure the success of council 4871’s short term and long term goals. And as a team member, I want to help to develop and realize those goals.

3. What is your professional background?
I am a small business owner of Principal Bossler Design Services Inc. Dallas, Texas, founded in 1994.

4. What is your educational background?
I earned a three year professional degree certificate of design at El Centro College Dallas, Texas, in 1984.

Posted by Santo Gay in 15:18:05 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Monday, March 24, 2008

CUBA: Transvestites and Crossdressers Key Workers Against AIDS

CUBA:
Transvestites and Crossdressers Key Workers Against AIDS


Dalia Acosta

PINAR DEL RIO, Cuba, Mar 17 (IPS) - Activism against AIDS is uniting a group of transvestites and crossdressers in western Cuba in a project that is going beyond peer education and making inroads into the world of culture.

“The time has come to take us seriously. We are in a position to demand our place in society, to contribute to AIDS prevention through our art, and to be respected for our abilities and knowledge,” a Cuban transvestite, whose artistic name is that of Mexican actress and singer Ninel Conde, told IPS.

“I never felt so sure of myself as I do now. When I used to dress in male clothes, I would always hang my head. Since I put on a pair of high heels, I have felt proud of being who I am. I began to be happy with myself, and I walk down the street with my head high,” she said.

A volunteer worker at the state Provincial Centre for Prevention of Sexually Transmitted Diseases and HIV/AIDS at Pinar del Río, 162 kilometres from Havana, Ninel Conde won one of the prizes at Transarte, a cultural festival that concluded with a performance at the city’s main theatre.

Fourteen crossdressers and transvestites took part in the Mar. 10 gala, along with some of the best-known singers in Pinar del Río, with a panel of judges made up of personalities from the world of culture.

At the event, tribute was paid to three of the first men in this town in western Cuba who dared to dress as women in public.

The message of AIDS prevention, with strong emphasis on the impact of HIV, the AIDS virus, on the community of men who have sex with men, reached the nearly 500 people who filled the Teatro Milanés, an emblem of national culture, built in 1837.

“We have shared the message with all the wide variety in the world of men who have sex with other men. This kind of artistic performance, which tries to educate people about the ethics of responsible sexuality, and also elevate aesthetic levels, is both important and timely,” said poet Nelson Simón, from Pinar del Río.

Simón, considered one of the greatest national figures of homoerotic poetry, said that “the gay world continues to lack places to socialise,” even though Cuba is a country “mature enough to learn to live with all kinds of different options.”

The issue becomes particularly important in the context of the national campaign against AIDS. By late 2007, the number of HIV-positive people diagnosed in the country amounted to 9,039, of whom 81 percent were male.

Out of these men, 86.1 percent said they had sex with other men, according to Public Health Ministry sources.

The situation is unique in the province of Pinar del Río, where only 68.7 percent of HIV-positive men say they have sex with other men. Nationwide statistics show that 14.3 percent of HIV-positive men define themselves as heterosexual, compared to 31.3 percent in this Cuban province.

Given this situation, “we’ll have to start to talk more about masculinity and take actions aimed not only at men who have sex with other men but at the heterosexual population, too,” Geidy Díaz, an expert at the provincial AIDS prevention centre, told IPS.

Since the first Transarte festival last year, 18 crossdressers and transvestites from Pinar del Río have graduated from training workshops as health promoters. This year’s Transarte courses included hairdressing, modelling, corporal expression, development of social skills and civic education.

According to Díaz, the community of men who have sex with men in Pinar del Río is motivated toward AIDS prevention by its close association to the transvestite world. “They (transvestites) are ideal teachers in peer education for this group. They join in most of the community activities we carry out, and have a representative on the expert advisory council,” she said.

As part of the project, the provincial centre has helped to find courses and jobs for transvestites who, in many cases, leave the educational system and labour market because of social rejection. Lack of education and the impossibility of working dressed as women leads them to prostitution, and quite often, AIDS.

The local initiative is part of an integrated strategy for addressing the needs of transvestites, transsexual and transgender people, promoted nationwide since late 2005 by the National Centre for Sex Education (CENESEX) with the involvement of a wide range of other state bodies.

Another group of transsexuals and transvestites, working with CENESEX on AIDS prevention tasks in several provinces, played an unprecedented role in this country in January, when they acted as recording secretaries and gave presentations and testimonies at the Fourth Cuban Congress of Sex Education, Orientation and Therapy.

“It was a high point for me. I felt as though the stage had become smaller than when I danced at the filming of the Cuban film ‘La Bella de la Alhambra’ (Enrique Pineda, 1989). But I was the one who had grown larger,” a crossdresser from Pinar del Río with the stage name Siarah Morel told IPS.

A dancer and a graduate in artistic direction, Morel received tribute at the first Transarte festival, and has been a local legend ever since she first appeared, at age 18, dressed as a woman on top of a carnival float representing the fishing industry, in 1976. “I never thought I would appear in the city theatre as I really am,” Morel said.

Simón, the poet, said that holding Transarte in a cultural institution like the Teatro Milanés “brings into the centre of the city what for a long time has been relegated to the margins.”

A space for participation is being opened up “in a country which must become, and is increasingly becoming, an inclusive rather than an exclusive society,” he told IPS. (END/2008)

Posted by Santo Gay in 17:52:12 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

In Mexico, attacks on ‘emo’ teens raise tolerance concerns

Well I got here in Mexico City right before Easter and what a mistake. This city of 25 million Mexicans closes shop. Almost everything is closed. A real ghost town. I just wonder where everyone went because no one told me a DONDE!
The Zona Rosa is energetic, needless to say and you will be getting updates soon.

BUT I wanted to tell you the Emo movement. These hip kids (pictured above) are getting a bad rap. Being accussed of being fags for one. Of course there some LGBT Emos just like there is LBGT in everything. But blog postings by Macho Soccer Players want to beat them up. After one confontation in La Zona I happened to by walking by and there were LOTS of Police.  I think they scared me more than the Emos.  Santo Gay thinks the Police are scary and the Emos are MUY CUTE. I will get real pics myself later when the city opens up and comes back to life on Monday, March 24th.

Below is a video and story on the Emos in Mexico City, CHECK IT OUT, BABY!


In Mexico, attacks on ‘emo’ teens raise tolerance concerns

 

By Jonathan Clark
Special to the Herald/Review

MEXICO CITY — Ever since he first discovered “emo” music five years ago, 17-year-old Emmanuel Huerta has been making regular two-hour trips from his home in the sprawling suburbs outside Mexico City to the capital’s Glorieta Insurgentes, a concrete plaza and transportation hub on the southern fringe of the free-thinking Zona Rosa neighborhood.

There, he hangs out with other teens who dress in black, peg their jeans tightly to their legs, comb their bangs down over their eyes and listen to emo-core, an offshoot of punk rock that emphasizes powerful emotions like love, rejection and depression rather than punk’s traditional expressions of political and social discontent.

“We share our feelings, talk about bands we like, and just hang out together and have fun, like any other kids,” Huerta said of his days at the plaza.

But lately, life at Glorieta Insurgentes hasn’t been so much fun for the “emos,” as Huerta and his friends are called. Other teens have been posting messages to Internet blogs that ridicule the emos for their sentimentality, many accusing them of being gay. Videos filled with homophobic language and violent imagery have popped up on YouTube with Spanish titles that translate as “How to kill an emo” and “We declare war on you, emos.”

Then, on March 8, in an apparent response to a call to arms circulated on the Internet, an estimated 200 teens descended on a square in the central city of Querétaro and pummeled a group of emos with pipes and sticks.

A week later in Mexico City, following reports of a similar Internet-driven attack plan, emos at the Glorieta Insurgentes tussled with youths whom the local media described as punks and soccer fans.

Elsewhere, emo kids in the city of Aguascalientes reported receiving e-mails from “metaleros,” or metalheads, warning them that they would be beaten if they showed up at the state fair in April.

Other warnings and incidents were reported from the states of Puebla and Guerrero in the south to Coahuila and Tamaulipas in the north.

The attacks and threats against the emos have commanded considerable attention in Mexico, especially in the socially progressive capital, where a leftist city government regularly makes headlines by extending rights and protections to homosexuals, transgender people and sex workers.

The anti-emo violence, pundits and social critics say, demonstrates just how far Mexican society has to go in terms of accepting diversity.

“This is still a very intolerant society in many ways,” said Ana Maria Salazar, a Mexico City-based newspaper columnist and radio commentator. “But I think what is most interesting and troubling is that now we’re seeing this type of intolerance in young people.”

Copying their style

Many of the threats and violence against the emos have come from members of other teen subcultures that also adopt black clothing and emotionally charged music, including the “punketos” (punks), “skatos” (skaters) and “darks” (Goths).

“They say we’re copying their fashion, or they say they don’t like the way we’re so focused on heavy emotions, like depression,” said Óscar Medina, a 16-year-old emo and a regular at the Glorieta Insurgentes. “But they’re just jealous because we can express our feelings and they can’t.”

Following the March 15 confrontation in Mexico City, a group of emos protested outside the capital Attorney General’s Office, demanding that police respect and protect their rights. Their call was soon echoed by the United Nations’ high commissioner for human rights in Mexico, Amérigo Incalcaterra, and by the Mexico City Human Rights Commission, or CDHDF.

“Everyone has the right to freely associate, to express themselves and to dress the way they want,” said Hilda Téllez, director of public attention and orientation at the CDHDF. “And we think that these acts and expressions against the emos directly contradict those rights.”

On Wednesday, acting under orders from Mayor Marcelo Ebrard, Mexico City Police Chief Joel Ortega announced he was instructing his officers to be more sensitive to the emos, and he called on the city’s punks and Goths to be more accepting as well.

“We are making a call for tolerance with this group of emos, even if they are a minority, because there are other kids who, because of their ideals, are also in the process of forming splinter groups,” he told reporters.

Happy/sad ending

The day after Ortega’s announcement, rumors began to circulate of an attack on the emos planned for Good Friday at the Glorieta Insurgentes.

According to media reports, someone had been posting solicitations to come “crucify” the emos that day at 3 p.m., the same time that Jesus died on the cross at Calvary.

Ortega responded by dispatching hundreds of police to the plaza to stand guard over the few dozen kids, including Emmanuel Huerta, who decided to brave the threat.

A handful of punks showed up at one point to glare menacingly from the walkways leading into the plaza, but the 3 p.m. deadline came and went without incident. The police and a swarm of TV camera crews had likely scared off the troublemakers, Huerta said.

Even so, he said, he felt more sadness than relief. He would prefer not to have to rely on police protection to come to the plaza.

“We just want people to respect our right to be ourselves and to leave us alone,” he said.

Jonathan Clark is managing editor of The News in Mexico City. He is a former Herald/Review reporter.

 

alt : http://www.youtube.com/v/sGfy99LaiCY&hl=en

Posted by Santo Gay in 03:53:09 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Will be posting more soon!

Sorry for not posting lately but I have bean real busy.

First I was in San Marcus and then San Antonio Texas, where I took the foto posted below. Too I have been real busy with packing to move to Mexico City, Mexico. Yes I have deided to leave Old East Dallas and go to the land of my grandparents. I leave on Monday, March 10, 2008, for a month leaving my studio/apartments with friends. Then I return to sell everything! I am sort of sad, but I also welcome the opportunity. Funny how I return to Dallas after I get Mexican PAPERS to live in Mexcio , when lots of my Mexican friends living in USA don’t have papers.

Anyway, my next postings with be from La Ciudad de Mexico or just Mexico. See you soon and be watching my postings from the gayest city in Mexcio - El DF!

- Santo Gay -

Posted by Santo Gay in 04:01:01 | Permalink | Comments (2)