This is Tijuana City of hall Mexico
Tijana
Showing Out-of-Town Family the Sites of San Diego, 1965
Family at 3728 Grim Ave, North Park; First United Methodist Church of San Diego; Mission Valley Center; Bolero; Mission Basilica San Diego de Alcalá; Balboa Park Art Studios & Miniature Railway; Agua Caliente Race Track, Tijuana Mexico; Coronado-San Diego Ferry ride; Balboa Park: California Building (Museum of Man); Plaza de Panama; back to 3728 Grim Ave, North Park.
From the R. S. Young Family
Thanks, Pea Hicks!
Cartel Mansion
This Unknown Mansion, House or what ever you think it is got its name from the village locals. I decided to film it before it disppears for good. This video does not reflex on current politics, nor does it represent the people pf Mexico.
This video is based off a filmers point of view.
Centro Cultural Tijuana, Mexico
Cecut, Centro Cultural Tijuana embodies the classic artistry and culture of Mexico and is true icon of Tijuana. Dating back to as old as 1982, the Centro cultural center reflects the true essence of the blend of contemporary and historical. The Centro Cultural Tijuana (Cecut) occupies three buildings of the most distinctive and unique architecture in Mexico with facilities like IMAX, beautiful concert hall, which has a room for around a thousand visitors and it is mostly used for private concerts and plays. It has lecture rooms, video room, café, and a bookshop. There are several spaces for temporary small exhibits. The most recentely held exhibition in Cecut, was YUMANOS. Yumanos Jalkut, el The world and Divine Serpant is one of temporary exhibitions. The Yumanos indigenous tribes were the original inhabitants of Baja California. It models the myths about their specific theory of the origin and evolution of the universe and of relating to the evolution or genesis of the human race through their material production.
Where To Get The Freshest Seafood Just Across The Mexican Border — Open Road
Eater’s favorite roadtripping duo is back this week with another episode of Open Road, an eight-part travel series following brother and sister Fernando and Bricia Lopez on a culinary exploration from Los Angeles to Mexico. Today they finally cross the border and stop for a few plates of ultra-fresh seafood at Erizo Baja Fish House and Market in Tijuana.
Eater is the one-stop-shop for food and restaurant obsessives across the country. With features, explainers, animations, recipes, and more — it’s the most indulgent food content around. So get hungry.
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8-year-old Saul Arellano arrives in Tijuana to be reunited with his mother
SHOTLIST
1. Elvira Arellano walking towards her son Saul and hugging him
2. Various, Elvira and Saul together
3. Elvira hugging activist
4. Elvira and Saul talking
5. Elvira and Saul being interviewed by reporters
6. Elvira, Saul and activist looking at newspaper
7. Elvira, Saul and activists
8. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Elvira Arellano, deported mother:
I feel happy because we are together. I have told Saulito that he can return to United States whenever he wants because he is an American citizen. Thank God, we have the support of our church and I think that I will not be far away from Tijuana. Yesterday, I met the superintendent of the Methodist Church in Tijuana. They will start a project to support immigrants here, in Tijuana, so we will be communicating with Federal District (Mexico City) in the campaign Latin Family United that I preside over, and I will be working on immigration matters.
9. Low shot of Saul with luggage
10. Elvira tying Saul's shoelace
11. Various of Elvira with Saul
STORYLINE:
One of America's youngest immigrant activists rejoined his mother in Mexico on Thursday, after she lost her year-long fight to stay in the US despite her status as an 'undocumented migrant'.
Eight-year-old Saul Arellano, a US citizen by birth, led a chanting crowd of about 150 activists including other children through the halls of the US Congress on Wednesday, carrying a banner that read Born in the USA - Don't take our Moms and Dads away.
Over the last year, he has appeared at rallies across the US, on television and at meetings with lawmakers, but he has often seemed distracted and ill-at-ease in the media spotlight.
It raised questions of his age and the effect of his separation from his mother, Elvira Arellano, who on Wednesday blamed Washington for splitting them up.
Elvira Arellano told reporters at a news conference at a hotel in the border city of Tijuana that she will continue working for her Mexico City-based Latin Family United group, and in Tijuana, working on immigrant rights projects and travelling.
Her son will attend third grade at a private school in Maravatio, in western Michoacan state, his mother's hometown.
I feel happy because we are together. I have told Saulito that he can return to United States whenever he wants because he is an American citizen. she said.
Saul did not speak to reporters, preferring to hug his mother or hide behind her.
The two will live at her sister's home in Maravatio until they can fix up an abandoned home there owned by her parents.
Saul will apparently participate in a project to teach English to local children; his mother said he originally wanted to stay in the US but after meeting his grandfather and cousins on a previous visit, he became happier at the prospect of living in Maravatio.
Elvira Arellano had lived in the US illegally for several years when she came to the attention of immigration authorities.
She took sanctuary at a Chicago church for about a year in defiance of a deportation order, but left in August and was arrested after giving an immigration speech in Los Angeles.
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These 3 People Went To Mexico For Weight-Loss Surgery And Now They Regret It | Megyn Kelly TODAY
Megyn Kelly TODAY welcomes Jessica Ballandby, Justin Blackburn and Carson Miller, all of whom traveled to Mexico to save money on weight-loss surgery. Now they have filed suit over the results. Shortly after her surgery, “I looked down at the bed and it looked it was a murder scene,” Ballandby says.
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These 3 People Went To Mexico For Weight-Loss Surgery And Now They Regret It | Megyn Kelly TODAY
In Name and Blood: Homeless in Tijuana , Mexico - how it got started
Site:
@jonhalllovesyou
Film and edit:
Music: Braddigan
Hotel Workout - Tijuana Intervals
Physical Culture in Old Mexico:
When you find yourself at Hotel Nelson in Tijuana, you will want an interval workout to keep you #GASSTATIONREADY
Of course, you don't have to be in Old Mexico to work this into your training routine.
Physical Culture in Old Mexico:
Crossing the wall - Megadeth in Tijuana [legendado]
From Los Angeles to Tijuana for a Megadeth concert
Viagem de Los Angeles para Tijuana no México para o show do Megadeth.
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kikoloureiro.com/riffs
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How to go to TJ I94 form Mexico from Los angeles
Why did i go there?
Because my friend needed to make the new I94 form.
Mexico Tijuana is not safe, so I only brought $120 and passport, I20,and I94.
If you failed to make I20 or sth, this is the way of making I94.
two videos for you guys.
Street
club
Nogales mayor concerned about train stoppages
The mayor of Nogales says he has become increasingly concerned with the amount of time it takes some trains to clear railroad crossings in the city and how lengthy delays affect people living, working, and shopping in the area.
U.S./Mexico Border, Nogales, Arizona | Bernie Sanders
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders on Saturday made an emotional visit to the U.S.-Mexican border. Sanders was joined during the visit by Rep. Raúl Grijalva, Cook County Commissioner Jesús “Chuy” Garcia, Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada and DREAMers Jessica Elizabeth Orellana Díaz and Julio Zuniga.
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Bernie Sanders is a Democratic candidate for President of the United States. He is serving his second term in the U.S. Senate after winning re-election in 2012 with 71 percent of the vote. Sanders previously served as mayor of Vermont’s largest city for eight years before defeating an incumbent Republican to be the sole congressperson for the state in the U.S. House of Representatives. He lives in Burlington, Vermont with his wife Jane and has four children and seven grandchildren.
Bernard “Bernie” Sanders was born in Brooklyn, New York, to immigrant parents and grew up in a small, rent-controlled apartment. His father came to the United States from Poland at the age of 17 without much money or a formal education. While attending the University of Chicago, a 20-year-old Sanders led students in a multi-week sit-in to oppose segregation in off-campus housing owned by the university as a Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) officer. In August of 1963, Sanders took an overnight bus as an organizer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee to hear Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic “I Have a Dream” speech firsthand at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
After graduation, Bernie moved to Vermont where he worked as a carpenter and documentary filmmaker. In 1981, he was elected as mayor of Burlington as an Independent by a mere 10 votes, shocking the city’s political establishment by defeating a six-term, local machine mayor. In 1983, Bernie was re-elected by a 21 point margin with a record amount of voter turnout. Under his administration, the city made major strides in affordable housing, progressive taxation, environmental protection, child care, women’s rights, youth programs and the arts. In 1990, Sanders was elected to the House of Representatives as the first Independent in 40 years and joined the Democratic caucus. He was re-elected for eight terms, during which he voted against the deregulation of Wall Street, the Patriot Act, and the invasion of Iraq.
In 2006, Sanders defeated the richest man in Vermont to win a seat in the U.S. Senate as an Independent. Known as a “practical and successful legislator,” Sanders served as chairman of the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs where he authored and passed the most significant veteran health care reform bill in recent history. While in the Senate, Sanders has fought tirelessly for working class Americans against the influence of big money in politics. In 2010, he gave an eight-and-a-half hour filibuster-like speech on the Senate floor in opposition to extending Bush-era tax breaks for the wealthy. In 2015, the Democratic leadership tapped Bernie to serve as the caucus’ ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee.
Known for his consistency on the issues, Senator Sanders has supported the working class, women, communities of color, and the LGBT community throughout his career. He is an advocate for the environment, unions, and immigrants. He voted against Keystone XL, opposes the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal, wants to expand the Voting Rights Act, and pass the Equal Rights Amendment.
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El Cajon: Innocents Being Used as Drug Mules 10252018
INCIDENT DATE/TIME: 10-25-18 10:00 am approx
LOCATION:1220 N. Magnolia Ave
CITY: El Cajon (Unincorporated)
DETAILS:
A man who lives in Tijuana, Mexico but works in the US, received a telephone call from his wife this morning. The next door neighbor informed her that they had seen men messing with the victims truck overnight.
The victim went to check on his truck and saw a large package, that was completely duct taped. It was attached to the bottom of the truck with magnets. The victim and his employer called the SD Sheriff’s Department.
A Deputy did a search and discovered a total of 4 large packages hidden under the truck. A Narcotics Detective arrived and spoke with the victim and assured him that this had become a common practice.
The smugglers find out who works in the U.S., and if they had SENTRY pass to go across the border. (The SENTRY line is apparently not checked as often as the regular crossing lines). The smugglers then follow the victims or already know where they work, and when they think they can, they grab the drugs and go.
The Sheriff’s Dept. will be taking these 4 packages to their lab, and open them to see what is inside. They suspect either meth, heroin, or fentanyl.
The victim is now very scared for the safety of his wife, his 3 children and himself, thinking the Cartel will come after him. As of this date, there has been over 2,000 homicides in Tijuana.
MEXICO: STREET CHILDREN
Spanish/Nat
On Friday, before being sworn in as Mexico's first non-PRI (Revolutionary Institutional Party) president, Vicente Fox will have breakfast with street children and teenagers at one of Mexico City´s most troubled neighbourhoods, Tepito.
This is the place which last 16th of November turned into a battle field, with street vendors violently rejecting a police raid to seize their illegal merchandise.
Here, the president-elect will be collecting a first hand account of Mexico´s youth most urgent problems: poverty, child and drug abuse.
APTN spoke to the teenagers Fox will be meeting, about what they expect from their new president.
Arturo and Mario Jose - both 17 years old - live off what they get from performing as fakirs in the streets of Tepito, one of Mexico City's most dangerous neighbourhoods.
In Mexico City, the world's largest city, there are 20-thousand estimated street boys.
Some are homeless, some live in associations run by the city council or non-government organisations.
Arturo and Mario Jose live in a shelter run by the Asociacion Civil Libertad.
There, alongside over 100 street children and teenagers, they will have breakfast with president-elect Vicente Fox early on Friday, before he´s sworn in Congress.
They ask not for pity, but for understanding.
SOUNDBITE: (Spanish)
We want them (Fox and his people) to see that not all street boys are not as bad, or as stupid as they think. We also have goals and we can achieve them.
SUPERCAPTION: Arturo (no surname given), street fakir
They were too young to vote on July 2nd, when Fox beat the Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI) - in power for seven decades - with a promise to change Mexico.
They are the outcasts who have little else but their strong sense of dignity to help them survive.
SOUNDBITE: (Spanish)
I will not be asking Fox for his help, it´s not that. What I will ask him for is understanding, that he understands us. That if he sees us lying on the floor, getting drugs or trying to sleep on a bench - because sometimes necessity is very bad and one doesn´t care anymore about what the others might think of one - that if he (Fox) sees a child on a bench that he doesn´t reject him, that he doesn´t say ´no´, that he says ´yes´.
SUPERCAPTION: Mario Jose (no name given), street teenager
Expectations are high here.
Vicente Fox won the sympathy and the vote of Mexico's poorest with his populist approach and with his promise to create wealth and distribute it more evenly.
SOUNDBITE: (Spanish)
This (Fox´s visit to Tepito) is very different from what happens before the elections, because almost all of them (politicians) use them (the street children) before becoming presidents. This will be the first time when a president will be coming down here to see those who didn´t vote, may be because they didn´t have their credentials - although many are now old enough to vote - but who are not interested in who´s their president. And I
think that in that sense this could be the beginning of an alliance, not with those who have less but with those who receive less attention.
SUPERCAPTION: Lucia Ruan Arizmendi, President of NGO Asociacion Civil Libertad
Mario and Arturo have spent most of their lives on the streets, alone.
They know how to survive in a society that so far has given little attention to their plight.
SOUNDBITE: (Spanish)
This is the first time I see a president supporting street boys.
SUPERCAPTION: Arturo (no surname given), street fakir
Vicente Fox's gesture seems like a new beginning.
But whether he will be able or willing to deliver once he takes office, remains to be seen.
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The Crystal Meth Epidemic Plaguing Fresno
Fresno is experiencing a meth epidemic.
Located in California’s Central Valley, the city is a hub for many major highways and is surrounded by vast farmlands. And while now, most meth is smuggled from Mexico, the valley was once an ideal location for meth manufacturing labs in the 1990's.
Today, methamphetamine is the number one threat for the Central Valley Drug Task Force, and, because latinos make up half of Fresno's population, they are also being affecting by this epidemic.
VICE's Paola Ramos traveled to Fresno to explore the history, factors and the ongoing relationship between the Latino community and methamphetamine use.
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Tijuana Artists Boycott Museum
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Tijuana's most important cultural institution has been the target of a boycott by local artists and writers for the past three years. At the center of it is a politician-turned-museum director accused of corruption.
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Fronteras Desk:
Paloma for TRUMP was live
Paloma for TRUMP
At Tijuanas City Hall where citizens are complaining about the Caravan!
Immigrants climb over U.S. Mexico border wall
Immigrants climb over U.S. Mexico border wall
Inside Tijuana's Taxi Showdown
Yellow cab drivers in Tijuana have historically been among the first to greet people right as they walk cross the U.S.-Mexico border.
For decades, yellow taxis had first dibs on tourists, and they had little in the way of competition. But the rise of ride-sharing companies like Uber has disrupted the taxi industry there, and the yellow cabs aren't happy about it.
On this week’s podcast, Andrew Keatts and Kinsee Morlan sit down with Derrik Chinn and Alejandro Torres from the tour company Turista Libre to discuss the Tijuana taxi cab turf war and how it connects to Tijuana politics.
Early this month, a video surfaced that showed a flock of cab drivers harassing and possibly physically assaulting a man for opting to take an Uber instead of a taxi.
This kind of harassment has been happening for months, say Chinn and Torres, but the yellow cab company's political power stopped city officials from doing anything about it.
City leaders did finally step in when the video started getting lots of views and publicity and removed the cabs from their spot at the border, but the situation is still far from settled.
Torres said when tourists have more options, they often get to see a better side of Tijuana, a city that's long struggled with a reputation for being dirty and dangerous.
“For the longest time, the cab drivers in Tijuana were the original and first wave tour guides, and I think in a lot of ways that has led to this misunderstanding of what tourism in Tijuana is really about,” Torres said. “They're taking you to mediocre places ... so of course Tijuana has this image problem because look who's promoting it.”
Also on the podcast, Keatts talks with Montgomery Monica, a candidate for the San Diego City Council's District 4. They discuss her background as a criminal justice advocate and what she hopes to accomplish if she gets the job.
Hero of the Week This week's hero goes to San Diego County Board of Supervisors who decided to invest more than $1.1 million for body cameras for San Diego County Sheriff's officers.
Goat of the Week Interim District Attorney Summer Stephan gets the goat this week. Recently, Stephan has tried to distance herself from the role she played as a prosecutor in the gruesome murder case of 12-year-old Stephanie Crowe. Our very own Ashly McGlone spoke with key players in the case and found Stephan was no bystander.