In the summer of 1980, Fidel Castro emptied Cuba’s jails and shipped thousands of prisoners across the straits to Florida. Arriving alongside a mass exodus of 125,000 upstanding immigrants, the flotilla of violent criminals and political dissidents was Castro’s middle finger to the free world. As real-life Scarfaces1 became Miami drug lords, more than 1,000 Cuban ex-cons ended up in Los Angeles, furthering the decline of the once tranquil retirement community around MacArthur Park into a festering nexus of crime and corruption.”When I arrived here eight years ago, this was a no-man’s land,” says Sandra “Mama” Romero, owner of Mama’s Hot Tamales Cafe in L.A. “You could smoke crack cocaine, buy a fake passport, and have sex openly. The park was filled with homeless encampments and mountains of shopping carts2.” She decided to do something about it: make tamales.With a background in fair-housing legislation and human rights, Romero and partner Joseph Colletti started the Institute for Urban Research and Development which seeded the area with tamale vendors while police weeded out gangs like Mara Salvatrucha3 and Trece. The IURD’s Rediscover MacArthur Park program, a tamale-fuelled arsenal of free concerts, craft markets, and fairs, has revitalized the neighborhood. In 1998, 440 arrests were made, Romero says, and there haven’t been any in the past two years. Once known as “the illegal documents capital of the world,” MacArthur Park has been rebaptized “the tamale capital4 of the world.”Serving a panoply of international tamales, Mama’s Café bills itself as an apprentice-run training facility. Many of the student-worker-chef-hosts are low- and moderate-income immigrants who got their start selling homemade food out of car trunks or shopping carts; Romero’s program helps them navigate the process of manufacturing food legally. “It’s about bringing people from the informal economy into the formal economy,” she says. Anybody training in Mama’s kitchen must also enroll in the business-development courses at the IURD’s adjacent economics lab. “All these people are actually entrepreneurs,” says Romero, whose program teaches students how to apply for a business license, make a business plan, develop a market, and acquire capital.With her focus on incorporating the excluded, Romero is putting to work a First World take on the economist Hernando de Soto’s idea that marginalized workers outside the legal system are the solution instead of the problem. By studying the lower classes in his native Peru, de Soto identified an enormous untapped potential.”[People] viewed as unruly squatters and urban pests were actually enterprising citizens who were carrying the nation’s economy on their backs,” he writes in The Other Path. The cornerstone of microentrepreneurial theory is property ownership, and only by amassing capital in the form of real estate can emerging entrepreneurs begin to prosper in the business world. As de Soto puts it: “You need a Property Right before you can make money.”Just as de Soto’s work is helping citizens of developing nations attain land ownership titles, Romero emphasizes the idea of home ownership in her courses and sets up bank appointments so her pupils can attempt to secure loans. “People think, ‘I can’t own a restaurant or a house,’” she says. “Yes, you can. It’s all possible.” An example of a Mama’s success story is Rocio Ramirez, a former street vendor who bought a house and set up a catering business. “She said, ‘If it wasn’t for those tamales, I never would have been able to buy this home,’” says Romero, beaming.As tamales have saved an atomized neighborhood and turned lives around, similar programs are springing up nationwide. Downtown L.A.’s Mercado La Paloma is a marketplace with an economics training center that offers ESL classes and other resources. (A recent graduate now owns an excellent Yucatan restaurant called Chichen Itza.) The National Business Incubation Association lists the many “kitchen s” giving start-up cooks access to professional, full-service kitchens so they can sell their merchandise according to health-code regulations. San Francisco’s La Cocina Community Kitchen offers kitchen facilities to immigrant women who prepare alfajores and meat pies. Seattle’s FareStart specializes in restaurant training and job placement for the homeless and disadvantaged. The recent awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Muhammad Yunus for his microfinancing system suggests that the phenomenon will continue growing.Supporting these efforts is delicious. The L.A. Weekly recently deemed Mama’s one of the 99 best restaurants in Los Angeles. It’s just a bonus that this cafe, painted in dazzlingly bright colors, is also the iridescent epicenter of a small revolution that’s effecting change, one tamale at a time.

  • Man’s dog suddenly becomes protective of his wife, Internet clocks the reason right away
    Dogs have impressive observational powers.Photo credit: Canva

    Reddit user Girlfriendhatesmefor’s three-year-old pitbull, Otis, had recently become overprotective of his wife. So he asked the online community if they knew what might be wrong with the dog.

    “A week or two ago, my wife got some sort of stomach bug,” the Reddit user wrote under the subreddit /r/dogs. “She was really nauseous and ill for about a week. Otis is very in tune with her emotions (we once got in a fight and she was upset, I swear he was staring daggers at me lol) and during this time didn’t even want to leave her to go on walks. We thought it was adorable!”

    His wife soon felt better, butthe dog’s behavior didn’t change.

    pregnancy signs, dogs and pregnancy, pitbull behavior, pet intuition, dog overprotection, Reddit stories, viral Reddit, dog instincts, canine emotions, dog owner tips
    Otis knew before they did. Canva

    Girlfriendhatesmefor began to fear that Otis’ behavior may be an early sign of an aggression issue or an indication that the dog was hurt or sick.

    So he threw a question out to fellow Reddit users: “Has anyone else’s dog suddenly developed attachment/aggression issues? Any and all advice appreciated, even if it’s that we’re being paranoid!”

    The most popular response to his thread was by ZZBC.

    Any chance your wife is pregnant?

    ZZBC | Reddit

    The potential news hit Girlfriendhatesmefor like a ton of bricks. A few days later, Girlfriendhatesmefor posted an update and ZZBC was right!

    “The wifey is pregnant!” the father-to-be wrote. “Otis is still being overprotective but it all makes sense now! Thanks for all the advice and kind words! Sorry for the delayed reply, I didn’t check back until just now!”

    Redditors responded with similar experiences.

    Anecdotal I know but I swear my dog knew I was pregnant before I was. He was super clingy (more than normal) and was always resting his head on my belly.

    realityisworse | Reddit

    So why do dogs get overprotective when someone is pregnant?

    Jeff Werber, PhD, president and chief veterinarian of the Century Veterinary Group in Los Angeles, told Health.com that “dogs can also smell the hormonal changes going on in a woman’s body at that time.” He added the dog may “not understand that this new scent of your skin and breath is caused by a developing baby, but they will know that something is different with you—which might cause them to be more curious or attentive.”

    The big lesson here is to listen to your pets and to ask questions when their behavior abruptly changes. They may be trying to tell you something, and the news may be life-changing.

    This article originally appeared last year.

  • Throughout history, women have stood up and fought to break down barriers imposed on them from stereotypes and societal expectations. The trailblazers in these photos made history and redefined what a woman could be. In doing so, they paved the way for future generations to stand up and continue to fight for equality.

  • ,

    Why mass shootings spawn conspiracy theories

    Mass shootings and conspiracy theories have a long history.

    While conspiracy theories are not limited to any topic, there is one type of event that seems particularly likely to spark them: mass shootings, typically defined as attacks in which a shooter kills at least four other people.

    When one person kills many others in a single incident, particularly when it seems random, people naturally seek out answers for why the tragedy happened. After all, if a mass shooting is random, anyone can be a target.

    Pointing to some nefarious plan by a powerful group – such as the government – can be more comforting than the idea that the attack was the result of a disturbed or mentally ill individual who obtained a firearm legally.


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