¡ASK A MEXICAN!

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<p><strong>SPECIAL SEXY EDITION</strong></p>
<p><strong> I’ve always been attracted to transgendered women since I was about 13. I’ve noticed, however, that most trannies are Hispanic. Now, before you say that this is ¡Ask a Mexican!,&nbsp; not ¡Ask&nbsp; a&nbsp; Hispanic!,&nbsp; I’ve&nbsp; also noticed that&nbsp; more&nbsp; than&nbsp; half&nbsp; of&nbsp; all&nbsp; Hispanic&nbsp; transsexuals&nbsp; are&nbsp; Mexican. What’s up with that? Is it a cultural thing? Is it something in your genes? I mean, what is it?</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>&nbsp;Self -Hating Hispanic</strong></p>
<p><strong>Like any good male of the species, I was surfing porn on the Internet last week when I happened on an escort website. The site had several categories, depending on your sexual proclivities, I suppose. While clicking through them, I got to the she-male escort section and noticed a curious thing: The percentage of transgendered escorts that were Latinos (by their admission) was 57% whereas Latinos only comprise 37% of the population in general. Given the legendary Latino male machismo how do you account for these statistics?</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Gabacho of the Straight Persuasion</strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Dear Wab and Gabacho:</em></strong> To the <em>gabacho: </em>I’m all for folks enjoying their different strokes, but you: straight? When you’re looking through the transgendered section of a prostitute web site? And were able to calculate to the exact percentile the number of Latin@ escorts on said site (don’t know which orifice you pulled out the 37 percent stat for Mexis, though, as the Pew Hispanic Center’s 2008 survey of Latino demography in <em>los Estados Unidos</em> puts the population of wabs and their descendants in the States at about 31 million, about 10 percent of the total American population). <em>Cabrón</em>: you ain’t straight, and that’s all right. To the wab: I don’t know where you get your numbers, either. No reliable statistics exist on the number of Mexican transgendered people, whether in the motherland or <em>el Norte</em>, but what is known about this population is that they’re inordinately represented in HIV cases, as sexual-assault victims, and face rampant harassment. To the <em>gabacho: </em>Instead of ogling them, maybe you should spend your perverted dollars on donating to non-profits that help LGBT Mexis—and maybe they’ll be kind enough to help you with your own sexual hang-ups. To the wab: you should donate, too. And to the both of <em>ustedes</em> and everyone else: this is ¡Ask a Mexican!, not Ask a Hispanic, Latino, Chili Belly or whatever other <em>chingadera</em> people confuse Mexicans as—ask accordingly!</p>
<p><strong>I met a wonderful man from Mexico City and became romantically involved with him. However, after just one month of dating, he dropped the <em>te amo</em> bomb on me, which I thought was a bit sudden. Coincidentally, shortly after this happened, a good friend of mine also started dating a <em>chilango</em>. He said <em>te amo</em> to her after only one week! Now, while my gabacho friends saw these situations as red flags, my Latino friends blamed this on <em>pasión</em>, and said that these guys were “just being Latino men” and insisted not to worry about it. The latter reaction leads me to ask if it’s a cultural norm, in Mexico, for a man to tell a woman he is dating that he loves her, <em>so</em> soon?</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>The Confused Hawaiana</strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Dear Wahine</em>:</strong> <em>Chula</em>, Mexican men get straight to the <em>punto</em>. Your <em>chilango</em> obviously told you he loves you so soon because he thinks your hips are child-bearing, your bosom bountiful, and your health good. No times for courtship—bring on the babies! I’ll allow that <em>mexicanos</em>, brought up on decades of expert wooers like Jose Alfredo Jimenez, Juan Gabriel, Agustin Lara, and other songsmiths, might be more florid and expressive in matters of the <em>corazón </em>than their <em>gabacho </em>counterparts, who wouldn’t be able to quote “Night and Day” if you spotted them the Frank Sinatra-Tommy Dorsey version and Frank’s solo, drunken effort. Let love reign, and its verbal couplets rain upon you, I say—now, start popping out those twice-bronzed brownies!</p>
<p><em>Ask the Mexican at <a href="mailto:themexican@askamexican.net">themexican@askamexican.net</a></em><…;, myspace.com/ocwab</em><em>, <a href="http://facebook.com/garellano">facebook.com/garellano</a&gt;, <a href="http://youtube.com/askamexicano">youtube.com/askamexicano</a&gt;, find him on Twitter, or write via snail mail at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815-1433!</em></p>

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Gustavo Arellano