Jean Guerrero is an opinion columnist at the Los Angeles Times. Her writing has been featured in Vanity Fair, Politico, the Nation, Wired, the New York Times, the Washington Post and “Best American Essays 2019,” and she has contributed to NPR, “PBS NewsHour” and more. She started her career as a commodities correspondent in Mexico City for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires. She is the author, most recently, of “Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump and the White Nationalist Agenda.” Her first book, “Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir,” won a PEN Literary Award. A native of San Diego, she is a graduate of USC’s journalism school and has a master of fine arts in nonfiction from Goucher College. Twitter: @jeanguerre
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En ausencia de vías legales para los refugiados, las personas que huyen de la violencia en América Latina o que buscan regresar con sus familiares en Estados Unidos seguirán muriendo por la “máquina de matar.”
The film is a rare product of mainstream culture that invites men to reimagine masculinity for their own sake.
To return to the U.S., he tried to cross the desert in Imperial County.
La popularidad de Kennedy en el Westside de Los Ángeles, un punto caliente de ‘conespiritualidad’, donde el bienestar y la espiritualidad se encuentran con las teorías de la conspiración, muestra una creciente desconfianza de la izquierda en la democracia.
Kennedy’s popularity on Los Angeles’ Westside, a hot spot of ‘conspirituality’ — where wellness and spirituality meet conspiracy theories — shows a growing left-wing distrust in democracy.
The conservative justices are making the country a more hostile place for Gen Z and millennials. But elections can still change that.
Héctor Tobar habla sobre ‘Nuestras almas migrantes’, estructurado como un discurso para sus antiguos alumnos de UC Irvine, y cómo definimos algo tan amplio como la identidad latina.
Ningún político sugeriría bombardear a las corporaciones estadounidenses detrás de las muertes relacionadas con los opioides, pero todos los principales contendientes presidenciales del Partido Republicano respaldan una operación antiterrorista contra los cárteles en México.
No politician would suggest bombing U.S. corporations behind opioid-related deaths, but all top GOP presidential contenders endorse a counterterrorism operation against cartels in Mexico.
Héctor Tobar discusses ‘Our Migrant Souls,’ structured as an address to his former UC Irvine students, and how we define something as broad as Latino identity.