• The Mexican flag has become a defining symbol of the LA protests

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jun 10 08:21:44 2025
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, ca.politics, or.politics
    XPost: seattle.politics, fl.politics

    Does idiot Baxter really think these TV images of masked protestors
    blocking streets and pelting ICE vans and burning WAYMO cars while
    waving Mexican flags, and throwing rocks at police and military,
    is helping the Democratic Party?

    I think the majority of the country disapproves of these riots.

    from https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/10/us/los-angeles-protests-trump-mexican-flag-hnk

    The Mexican flag has become a defining symbol of the LA protests
    By

    Lex Harvey
    Updated 1 hr 7 min ago

    A protester holds up a Mexican flag while standing in front of smoke
    billowing from burning cars on Sunday in Downtown Los Angeles. Jim Vondruska/Getty Images
    Mexico’s red, white and green flag has become a defining symbol of the protests in Los Angeles.

    Demonstrators have waved flags from Mexico and other Latin American
    countries, as well as US flags, to express solidarity with immigrants
    and denounce the Trump administration’s raids, provoking the ire of
    Trump’s supporters.

    Los Angeles has been roiled in protests since Friday, when ICE officers
    raided several workplaces in the city’s garment district. While the
    protests began peacefully, they have since led to dozens of arrests and
    some violent clashes. President Donald Trump deployed thousands of
    National Guard troops and Marines, outraging Democratic Governor Gavin
    Newsom, who in a complaint defined the mobilization of the California
    guardsmen an “illegal takeover” and on social media called the potential use of the Marines “a blatant abuse of power.”

    The Mexican flag has long been a mainstay at immigration-related demonstrations, particularly in LA, which has deep cultural and economic
    ties to Mexico and is seen as the capital of the Mexican diaspora in the
    US. More than 3.4 million people of Mexican heritage or born in Mexico
    live in Los Angeles County, according to Census data, more than any
    other county in the US.

    But images and video showing flag-waving protesters facing off with
    police have drawn anger from Republican officials.

    A protester holds a Mexican flag during a standoff between police and protesters in Compton, California, on Saturday. Daniel Cole/Reuters Republicans, on the other side of the issue

    “They were literally out there protesting, carrying a foreign flag. That
    is absolutely insane. They’re not just peaceful protesters. These are illegals,” Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin told CNN’s Dana Bash, while defending Trump’s decision to deploy the National Guard to LA.

    “Insurrectionists carrying foreign flags are attacking immigration enforcement officers,” Vice President JD Vance posted on X Saturday.

    The Department of Homeland Security has shared on social media several
    photos and videos of the protests where, amid chaotic scenes, the
    Mexican flag is featured prominently.

    Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller described the protesters on social media as “foreign nationals, waving foreign flags, rioting and obstructing federal law enforcement attempting to expel
    illegal foreign invaders.”

    Waving a foreign flag – or even destroying an American one – is legal
    under freedom of expression rights protected by the Constitution’s First Amendment.

    Raul Hinojosa-Ojeda, associate professor of Chicana, Chicano and Central American Studies at UCLA, said invoking flags to demonize protesters is
    a “well-documented move on the part of the Trump administration, knowing
    that every single demonstration of this type brings out the Mexican flag.”

    A demonstrator waves a Mexican flag during a protest against federal immigration sweeps, in downtown Los Angeles on Monday. Aude
    Guerrucci/Reuters
    A long-time magnet for controversy
    The current Mexican flag was officially adopted by the country in 1968,
    though variations have been used since Mexico’s war of independence from Spain in the early 1800s.

    The brandishing of it and other Latin American flags to defend the
    rights of immigrants in the US has a long and complex history.

    The Mexican flag was a lightning rod during the 1994 movement against California’s Proposition 187, which sought to bar undocumented
    immigrants from accessing education, health care and social services.
    The flags, waved by protesters to show pride, were seen by many as
    symbols of anti-American defiance.

    In LA, some have argued waving the Mexican flag risks undermining the protesters’ cause by alienating people and shifting attention away from immigration policy.

    Waving the Mexican flag “transforms what should be a debate about
    American constitutional rights and due process into a conversation about foreign loyalty and cultural assimilation,” Mike Madrid, a Republican strategist focused on Latino voting trends wrote in the Sacramento Bee.

    But the waving of foreign flags speaks to the generations of people from
    Mexico and other Latin American countries who have called the US, and particularly California, home, Hinojosa-Ojeda said.

    “The flags mean their families. The flags mean their communities. It’s
    not about having an international invasion,” he added.

    The flags are a “mechanism of pride and identity that is under attack,” Hinojosa-Ojeda added.

    Antonio Rodriguez, an organizer with the Brown Berets immigration
    advocacy group, said the Mexican flag at the protests is a symbol of
    unity, not division.

    “I don’t necessarily think just because somebody has pride in their
    culture that they’re un-American,” Rodriguez said.

    “Waving a Mexican flag, for us, is showing pride in our culture and our family.”

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