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We have been throughout Michoacan. Our family lives in Michoacán. My husband and i visited Morelia and lived there for a month in August. I felt safe and even walked alone. Morelia is like my favorite city in Mexico. It’s so beautiful
Just back to USA, spent 9 nights in Morelia as a solo traveler. Rented a vehicle and drove to Quiroga, and Patzcuaro. Completely safe in all areas. The rental car had a budget sticker on it, so it was easy to see I was a visitor. I don’t speak Spanish. I had a great time, and the people are very friendly. I never felt uncomfortable. The food is fantastic, and Morelia is the most beautiful city I have ever seen. Don’t worry, go visit, you will be fine.
Me encantó como no solo dan a conocer los lugares más distintivos de Morelia, si no también investigan y dan a conocer varios datos culturales interesantes de nuestro estado.
Michoacan as a whole has always been painted as a notoriously unsafe state due to the drug trade, but it was refreshing to see you both frame the city's essence in a very fair and real light. My father is from Michoacan, and we used to travel to his rancho every Christmas. This is Andres by the way, glad to see you are both staying COMMITTED to the RU-vid game.
I live in Morelia, I've been here for the past 13 years, I've always felt perfectly safe, no different to any other Mexican city. The issues with Michoacan are really only concentrated in Tierra Caliente, Morelia is relatively far from that area.
it's so great to hear from someone who's lived in Morelia for a significant amount of time! as visitors for a few weeks we can only provide an educated guess based on our brief experience. Thanks so much for commenting. I'm glad to hear you feel safe in Morelia
@@EatBailaTravel There's a lot to visit in Michoacan, there's the Monarch butterflies, Cupatitzio National Park, Camecuaro National Park, Los Azufres, El Paricutin, Chorros de Varal, not to mention the coast. It's really worth a visit if you guys ever return.
Well, a was born and I have lived in Morelia all my life, except periods of times I come to the States and let me tell you, Morelia is not as safe as it use to be. Michoacan as a whole is dangerous because of the narcos, kidnapping, robbery, and express kidnapping. For the past 2 or 3 years that the socialist/comunist government of MORENA took over the state, we know the drug cartels put them in power, not the people, Morelia is very unsafe. Of course, it is very different for tourist to go and spend their days on Morelia's downtown than going into the peripherals of Morelia. Popular areas of Morelia are where the bulk of crime and extortion is. I'm pretty sure these guys and all these people speaking wonders of Morelia are honest and their wonderful experiences are truly correct but does not reflect the reality of the 90% of the people from the suburbs of the city. I'm pretty sure you guys of this video and the ones speaking nicely of my city didn't even notice the nightmare these business owners go through to be able to keep their doors opened and do business. Most of these business owners have to pay a monthly fee to the organized crime to let them operate their business and keep them safe from other crime groups. You guys won't notice this unless you keep your eyes and ears open and know what you're looking for. Of course, you can't be asking around business owners because you'll become a target, and the business owner won't wake up the next day. But that doesn't mean it's not happening. Actually, people like you and all of you who had wonderful vacations in Morelia are the ones who keep these criminals and corrupt governments in power without their knowledge. People living the nightmare want the world to know their situation, but then people like you who can reach thousands or millions of people around the world say otherwise validate these unjust criminal government forever. Say, for example, Cuba or Venezuela. We know they are criminal dictatorships oppressing and killing their people who speak up. However, we have tourists and youtubers who make money by visiting those countries and presenting the reality the dictators have for them tourists and, of course, without them knowing they're helping the dictatorship by financing them and telling the world what locals say is not true. 75 years and 25 years of dictatorships in Cuba and Venezuela, thanks to tourism who only care for their own good time and good life only them can buy. For example, EL GASPACHO, this lady bought, is meant for tourists and middle class or high class in Morelia. Low class people or poor people these socialist use as a flag to gain and keep the power is unreachable to them. A small GASPACHO costs $80 to $100 pesos and a poor guy with just 2 kids makes about $200 pesos daily. They take their family to Morelia's downtown on Sunday and buy a GASPACHO each, wife, husband, and the kids, that's $400 pesos or two full days of work. Why I'm telling you this, few years ago before the Socialist/comunist took over the government, the cost of living in Morelia was half of what it's today. A Gaspacho was selling for $40 to $50 pesos and you would make the same from work. Now everything doubled except salaries. Why everything double? Organized crime imposing fees to businesses and businesses have to increase prices to keep in business. That's how Socialist/comunist governments make people poorer and poorer until middle class dissappear and becomes poor too. Well, I'm sorry, I tried to explain you a little bit how your experience doesn't reflect the reality we really face in Michoacan and how we help these criminal systems be in place forever while people suffer and ask support from the world. If you stay en Morelia's downtown or travel to other places in Michoacan with a rental car os only speak English and visit other cities downtown or tourists places most likely you would have wonderful experiences because they know they have to protect you, you bring dollars which they need go finance themselves and you tubers would help them promote that place as safe around the world so no body listen or believe them. Morelia is not safe SEÑORES. If you are coming to visit us, get out of the tourist zone and visit the Popular áreas, get to INTERACT with the real people where the abuses happen. Otherwise, you guys, especially Americans, are going to keep financing another organized crime dictatorship in Michoacan and in all México. Tourists and youtubers who go to Cuba, Venezuela, China, North Korea, Nicaragua, or even Bolivia and try to document and live the reality of the 80%of the people dissappear, are imprisoned or are removed from that country and been told not to come back. Of course, I will never ask you to expose yourself to those dangers, but what I can ask you is to try to live like an ordinary Morelia's citizen person and your experience and opinion would be 360° different. You have an advantage. You are Mexican descent and have the looks. Hopefully, you are bilingual, so speak ONLY SPANISH and behave like Mexican. Spend only pesos and do not use credit cards or debit cards and use taxis and public transportation. Visit Popular stores or coffee shops where the majority of locals go and shop, and your experience would be completely different, and you would see more things if you observe with attention but then, I'll ask you to be very, very careful. The last thing I want is you risking your life. I have 3 kids born in USA and took them to Morelia every year on December, and I always kept them out of those dangerous places, and in Morelia, they heard gun shots every other night and heard next morning about the deceased people, etc. Now they are grown kids and come to Michoacan on their own. Now, I can't protect them anymore the way I would like and I keep telling them not to speak English and not to carry dollars with them and not to show more than enough money when they pay for something, specially when they go to visit family members in other cities of Michoacan. Specifically, when they travel to "TIERRA CALIENTE" like some of you mentioned. So, I'm glad you guys had a wonderful and nice vacation in Morelia but please don't give a wrong message to people out there unless you really experienced what real people lives in Popular áreas where crime is an everyday reality. God bless you all.
When we lived in Morelia we felt safe however we noticed that things were starting to change a couple years ago when we left, more graffiti for sure. The generation that started building the palace wasn't around to see it finished. You did a great job presenting the beauty of Morelia. -Marc
I love Michoacán with all the history, food, architecture, people, and weather. I actually have some Purepecha genes according to my DNA test which was great to find out because I became fascinated with the Purepechas and how they were never defeated by the Aztecs. Thank you for sharing this video I’m about to hit the shower cause y’all reminded me about “se bañan” haha thanks.
Wow that’s really cool that you’ve discovered purepecha genes in your dna! We are thinking of taking a test also out of curiosity… and I also really admire the strength of the Purepecha ❤️ Haha good! 🧼
Nice video. I’m from Baltimore and I’m traveling to Morelia in a few weeks by myself. I’m renting a car and traveling to a few cities within a couple of hours of Morelia. I have been to Mexico five times by myself, and never any problems at all. I don’t speak Spanish, other than to be polite and order food. Being humble, polite and respectful goes a long way. Living in fear is not really living. I’ll update with a post upon my return. Thanks again for the informative video.
I have been back for a week now. I was in Morelia for nine nights. It was fantastic, very beautiful city. I felt completely safe at all times. @@EatBailaTravel
@@ColdPlungeCam I stayed at the Holiday Inn Morelia. Had some decent food options in walking distance, I rented a car, but used Uber to go into centro, to avoid parking. Go enjoy yourself, beautiful city.
In regard to safety in Mexico, being an American/Canadian living in Canada, many Canadians are hesitant to travel to American city-centres: crime-ridden, deserted, etc. I studied in Mexico, and gave travelled to many cities! I feel safer in almost any city in Mexico than Baltimore, Cleveland, downtown Buffalo; my hometown, and even parts of Toronto! Of course, you have to know your surroundings.
Que buen video yo vivo en morelia a 5 minutos del centro, me alegra que les guste y en cuestión de seguridad la verdad si le están echando ganas, se puede sentir que va mejorando mucho y tengo fe que en un futuro será lo mejor posible. ✌
hola! que gusto ver un comentario de alguien que vive allí y más gusto escuchar que Morelia va en buen camino 🙏🏽❤️ que así siga para que los lugareños igual como los visitantes puedan disfrutar de esta hermosa ciudad
This video is a fantastic overview of Morelia. Along with the Morelia film festival video, this really makes me want to visit the city! As far as safety goes, sometimes a reputation can be an overgeneralisation - for example here in Europe many people consider Chicago extremely dangerous to visit...
Yes, fair! I hope I didn't overgeneralize, I was moreso trying to compare how I feel walking the streets of Morelia vs how I feel walking the streets of Chicago. A "feeling" doesn't equal an accurate picture of statistics and crime level, it's just a feeling. And having grown up in Chicago, it's the most prominent comparison source I have. I talk about Chicago in a similar way that people talk about Michoacan.. "it's so beautiful, but it can be very unsafe"
I'm from Atlanta, actually on the Southside near the airport. There are people that would never go to Old National Hwy or Camp Creek marketplace but it's my stomping grounds. Eyes up, keep aware. Would love to visit Morelia and Zacatecas, both listed as peligroso, but I'm thinking they are fun, and beautiful ❤️
Thanks for the video. You mentioned while traveling that you are looking for a new home. Which area did you decided on? Looking to retire in Mexico and considering Morelia or Oaxaca.
Hey there 👋🏼🙂 so we’ve really enjoyed living in several places, these have been our favorites: - Xalapa, Veracruz - Queretaro - Puerto Escondido And Morelia we didn’t spend enough time in to really say but I consider it to be a super livable city with lots of interesting things going on, food, culture and great weather. If I had to choose between Oaxaca City and Morelia, I’d choose Morelia hands down. We’ve chosen Puerto Escondido as our long term home, bought property there, but haven’t built anything yet and currently living in Mexico City for work. We talk a lot about what it’s like to live in various parts of Mexico I’d encourage you to check out some more of our videos, they might be helpful 🙂
Great video. I really appreciate the closed captioning as it really helps me with learning Spanish. It seems so much easier to learn when I can see the Spanish word in the closed caption while simultaneously hearing your pronunciation. Then I always get the bonus of both of you describing what you are talking about in English. The brief safety conversation at the end of the video was perfect. You should consider possibly doing that at the end of each video since it seems to be a concern for many people. I really felt that I wouldn’t have an issue visiting Morelia taking into consideration your safety tips.
That’s a great way to practice a new language! And thanks for the feedback on the safety conversation at the end. We liked it too and definitely considering doing it more often
You guys always do such a great job with your videos and this one was no exception! I really enjoyed the tour of Morelia, I like the city very much. As far as safety, would either of you want your mom to live there alone? (Asking for a friend, not!)
thanks, Cindy! hmm good question.. it might be too soon to tell (we'd need to spend more time there to feel more sure), but I think a woman about my mom's age would be just fine there.
Laughed very hard with our connection of Michoacán to Michigan. Over decades I've joked with my patients from Michoacan who have come to Michigan to work --- "De Michoacan a Michigan", and it even sounds more similar when using the hard "ch" in Spanish. Now, I'm finally going to go to Michoacan.
Colorism is unfortunately common throughout Mexico but that being said, there are many black, African American, and Afro Mexicans living in Mexico. Have you watched The Yarbros on RU-vid? They are some of our favorite travel vloggers. Black couple from the US living in Mexico and their videos are great! Check them out if you haven’t already
I was born in Chicago and raised in Morelia Michoacán, i came back to Chicago 6 years ago but i still go visit my family every year. It’s a really nice city
Glad I stayed for the bloopers..you guys are normally so polished it’s nice to see some flubs! Keep up the good work...very nice informative video...Morelia remains on my shortlist.
Great video. I've traveled extensively abroad and have rarely felt endangered or unsafe. Morelia looks like an amazing, wonderful place to retire. Thanks for posting.
It's such a great city, honestly. The cultural festivals happening every weekend from August to December (a different one every weekend) is one of my favorite things about Morelia. We would absolutely consider living there
Just came back from michoacan at the end of july. Definitely safe just dont be a foo and everything will be alright. I think the worst part was customs in guadalajara other then that everything was pretty chill.
I’m form Morelia and I think that usually on safety issues it’s a lot about the people u surround with, if you are in a safe environment with people that is not in something dark haha everything will be fine
The reason they are called " tales de ceniza", is because when the corn is cooked ash is added to the pot where the corn is cooking. Why ash?, you may ask. The purpose of the ash is to remove the skin from the corn. The ash remove the thin skin leaving the corn tender and easy to mill.
I loved this video✨ it's simply so well researched and it gives details and explanations about things I didn't even know although I live near this beautiful city♥️
best video of michoacan by american youtubers so far (and i've seen them all). beautiful city and unesco world heritage site. each person has different risk profile re security. some might be easier or more valued targets than others. outside of morelia is too much risk for my profile. morelia looks great and if criminal enterprises in michoacan somehow were cracked down by state government, i might be willing to take risk in future. but too many incidents in data collected by u.s. state department, which is much broader sample size than the american youtube videos sample, where no one has had an incident so far.
let's hope, for everyone's sake (locals as much as visitors), that criminal activity goes down.. and you're so right about the data and target risk. We all have different odds depending on how we look, sound, and what we're doing
agreed. the netflix documentary on food systems, rotten, episode on avocado trade (and related organized crime) was a sober reminder that real world in high risk mexican states does not look like american youtube vlogs of michoacan on the one hand, or an episode of narcos on the other hand. and when the u.s. state department prohibits u.s. government employee travel in states like guerrero or michoacan, they have my attention. i suspect they've dealt with problems most tourists can't imagine. though i suspect most locals know the risk better than americans.
I literally have lived in morelia my whole life and is safe, just exert some common sense like in any other city there are places one should be careful at late night, but they are places outside of the zones the tourist go so to get mugged you would need to actually try to put yourself in that position.
If you ever go back to Morelia, I´d love to hear a bit more about the safety concerns. There are 2 of you, you look Mexican and Kevin looks a bit too athletic to make an easy target. Forgive me, but there are parts of Chicago I´d never go to. I also want to say thanks for your excellent videos !
I’m going to Morelia in Nov. how do u recommend we travel from Guadalajara airport to Morelia? I’m a little nervous bc it will just be me and my mom alone
Take a coach bus! They're super comfy and safe. Primera Plus or ADO one of those lines should have a route. Our favorite coach bus line is ETN but they don't have routes everywhere but you can check! You'll be just fine :)
Someone feeling safe is one thing but it’s not safe all Michoacán is so dangerous our family saw someone get made into pieces and those aren’t the famous gazpachos it’s another stand that’s extremely popular the best in all Michoacán
you make a valid point, "feeling safe" is not the same as "actually safe or not"... I'm so sorry your family witnessed something so horrifying. At the end of the day we get to decide how much risk we are willing to live with and take whatever precautions necessary to do the things we want to do in life. And, wait, which gazpachos are the more famous ones?? Several locals pointed us to La Merced so we didn't even question it but now I need to know which other ones to try next time
Lived in Morelia for years and sorry but is far from safe, got robbed 3 times and all my friends did as well with violence. Is a probability game, if you just stay a couple of days you will be fine but is not safe city
true, I agree, it ends up being a probability game. It's the same in Chicago, and that's why we compared it to Chicago, you take your usual precautions and try not to be a target, but something could always happen
I was missing michoacán so much after staying with my grandma who lives over there for a while. this video really captures everything so beautifully ! loved this video so much, felt like i was experiencing it again.
Thanks for these videos. Inspires me to Travel to Mexico. Never stayed for more than a weekend or went further than Rosarito. Working on learning the language first!
I love this video! My family is from Michoacan, and I've always wanted to visit but wasn't sure how safe it is. Gazpacho is so good! My grandma said that the story goes as to how the name came about when, once in a fruit store, when the fruit was chopped into big pieces, an old man came to buy fruit. However, he had a problem with his teeth because he only had a few. Then the old man asked the owner of the place for a favor. He said, “Please chop the fruit into little pieces because I can’t eat it in big pieces.” So the man chopped the fruit and put it in a glass with some orange juice. That’s how the old man always returned to buy the same fruit. One time the man asked his name. It was Gaspar, and for that reason, the name is Gazpacho. Not sure how accurate or true that is, but that's what she explained. She's from Morelia and so were her parents :)
whaaa that is such a cool story!! thank you soo much for sharing it! It makes me love Gaspachos even more now! ❤️ I hope you get to visit Morelia soon. You're lucky to have roots in such a beautiful city
Baila Fam, let's get this video to 20K by Christmas, as our gift of appreciation to a job well done and done well by Kevin and Jenny! Let's GOOOOO!!!!!
I'm looking for my old penpal friend from Morelia I've been talking to about 20 years ago. I wonder how can I find her. No traces in Facebook or Instagram...
Lovely city. Loved it. My husband and I visited in January 2020. Try Origo Calzada for their delicious savory crepes, the Museo del Dulce, Mercado de Antojitos, El Cafe del Campanario (at night with stunning views of the cathedral, and La Piccola Italia. So many wonderful places to eat and drink. It is a s safe as any other large city in the world. Have fun and enjoy. Happy Holidays.
Origo was our favorite spot in Morelia 😋😋 but yes soo many great places, it's one of the many reasons we loved the city so much. Thanks, Laura! Happy Holidays to you and yours ☺️
People like to contest this but I firmly blieve there was a commercial link between all the North Anerican pre-columbian cities. Mexico city and Chahokia being very large examples. The languages were not isolated. They may be different but they mixed and were widely known.
So much info on Morelia! Would love to try the Gaspacho. It sounds sooo good. Also never thought about the similarities between Michoacan and Michigan. Great info guys.
can't take credit for drawing that connection - it was brought to our attention by a curandero in Baja California Sur when we went to a temazcal, I don't remember all the history behind it but that question remained in the back of my mind forever!
Muchachos, ya estaba impaciente por ver su vídeo, nos conocimos compartiendo en el mismo hostal en que nos quedamos en PÁTZCUARO, me ha sorprendido gratamente sus imágenes e información. ( Solo un detalle, se dice : calzada...pues calzado, corresponde al universo semántico de lo que se calza, zapatos, sandalias, tenis , etc...) Un abrazo grande para ustedes,¡¡¡ felicidades por éste video!!!
hola maestro!! Qué gusto ver su comentario 😊 gracias por la oportunidad de aprendizaje 😊 siempre mejorando las habilidades lingüísticas 👍😁 un saludo de nuestro parte a usted y su esposa!
Another righteous video folks. Morelia truly is a beautiful city. Safety, essentially you guys nailed it. It is like any other big city. As far as the travel warnings, that is mostly for certain areas in the state. In general, simply don’t do anything stupid and you should be as good as in an any other place.
Gazpacho is thought to possibly come from the latin word for little pieces. It posible that it referred to an old roman dish made of small pieces of bread soaked in water and then mashed together with oil, spices and either vegtables, fruits, or nuts. So gazpacho might refer to the little pieces of fruits the same way it used to refer to little peices of bread.
Great video! My Spanish students enjoy the content that you all so thoughtfully put together. They always learn something of value & are excited to soon travel into Mexico to experience what they've seen, for themselves. Thank you :)
Ever since my parents retired and went back to live to Michoacán, I reconnected with my roots and I reconnected with family and made friends. Now, I easily go twice to three times a year and I spend most of my time in Morelia even though my parents live in a nearby pueblo. I am so glad Chicago has daily direct flights to Morelia. Great video! ¡Saludos cordiales!
I've been to Morelia a few times in the last forty years, always loved it. I'm heading there but will mostly be in Patzcuaro and your video was wonderful to watch due to your info and enthusiasm. Your ganas is contagious! Thank you.
Wow, Michoacán is so gorgeous! Thanks for the update on safety in Morelia, definitely will try to make a trip there while I’m here. That concha de Jamaica looked 🤌🤌👌
Hola.... Fantastic video! . After living in GTO and QRO since 2013 I'm thinking of another move.. Morelia is on my list... My Spanish is OK... But I would like to meet up with other extranjeros there.... How many live there? 100? 1000? More?
I'm not sure exactly how many foreigners live in Morelia, but there are definitely some! I recommend joining the Expats in Morelia Facebook group to connect with other foreigners there
It may just be the camera but it always seems like you get a LOT of food when you order something in Mexico. I mean, that first cup of fruit looked huge.
I just came back from CDMX and found that even fancy spots can give big portions too. At the Sofitel restaurant I got 1lb of nearly pure meat pork rib (it had 1 small rib bone) for 400~ pesos. La Opera had a German platter (no bone pork hock x2, sausage x2, flank, sauerkraut, potatoes) of 600g meat for 300~ pesos. There was also a nice bakery next to El Bajio in Centro that had concha rellena de nata nearly the size of my face for 9 pesos. El Bajio had various meat options going by 250g-1kg on their menu but their carnitas was dry and bland as hell, you can prob make better at home with just an instant pot.
I always wanted to visit down there, specifically! And your guys' video makes it even more appealing. The Purepecha are pretty badass from what I read, and was curious to learn more.
i would like to travel there.... i live in McHenry... about 50 miles northwest of Chicago... my relatives are from Czechoslovakia and am of anglo-saxon decent...( I guess white is what i'm trying to say).... how relatively safe is it for me to travel there. or Patzcuaro.... farther west... thanks.... take care... bye....
Hi there! We saw and met a number of white non-Hispanic tourists in Patzcuaro during the día de muertos holiday. I imagine there may be less tourists in general outside of that holiday, but I don’t think you’d have much to worry about. As long as you speak some Spanish, you’ll be fine. If you don’t speak any Spanish, I’d try to make sure you’re traveling with someone who does
Gazpacho is called like that after the gazpacho en España, antes de que existieran las licuadoras el gazpacho de tomate was made by chopping the tomato in very fine dices and you would add the spices of your choice to it like aceite de oliva, pimienta, queso etc. El gazpacho in Morelia arrived with one of the more recent waves of spaniard migrants to the city after de Spanish Civil War (Nobody actually knows exactly when although there're many that claim to be the "First" or the "Original" which is a lie LOL), and so they tried to remake el gazpacho there. Since Michoacán has subtropical weather, the fruit variety is larger and so the tomato was replaced with other fruits, chopped into bigger dices, and they kept the spices and the cheese adding to it even more and more things just how only we Mexicans know how to do y ¡Pum! Gazpacho Moreliano. Saludos, desde Washington state.
Wooaahhh! Thanks so much for this historical context! I’m nerding out right now with excitement. I love it. I love Spanish gazpacho and I love gazpacho moreliano so it’s so cool to learn how one led to the other. Saludos y gracias ☺️🤗
Este es otro gran vídeo. Estuve en tu vida el otro día y con tus fantásticas habilidades de edición, estoy bastante seguro de que puedes contactar con otros creadores y preguntarles si necesitan un editor personal porque quien edita sus videos sabe exactamente cómo mantener la atención de los espectadores. Espero que esta sugerencia sea útil para ti y puedas seguir haciendo el trabajo divertido. ❤
Thank you! Yea, I would say so. We haven't taken a bus from CDMX to Morelia but buses out of Mexico City are usually very safe and we would totally take it
I went to Morelia michoacan the first viewing I got 3 persons hanging by it's neck on tree military personal in every Conner 20 miles away in malesia people running against drug cartel every one with guns k 47 in m26 Barret's 50 caliber in 60 calibers. The a real nice town don't 🤔.
Sobre la seguridad en México, deben de razonar lo siguiente, las personas normales o los turistas no son blanco de los carteles, narcos o delincuentes organizados, por la sencilla razón de que actúan de manera reservada como en USA, no quieren publicidad ni problemas con periódicos o embajadas los políticos mexicanos tienen alguna relación con la delincuencia organizada y con el narcotráfico, desde luego que si algunos, pero como en USA también los los hay. El narcotráfico fue introducido en México por el gobierno de USA después de la WWII y aun sigue utilizando para mantener una permanente guerra de baja intensidad contra México, la problemática reciente del narco se derivo de un senador de USA que dijo que a los USA no les gustaría tener un Japón en la frontera sur, ´por eso tenemos ese presidente Obrador inepto, impuesto por USA y alimentado por Kent Salazar embajador de USA en México, que a este señor le pagan por fomentar el socialismo, claro que no, pero si le pagan por perjudicar a nuestro país alentando al populista AMLO.
😮💨😮💨😮💨 qué pesado, pero me parece cierto todo lo que dices... USA es buenísimo para pisotear a los países latinos, especialmente a Mexico... esperamos poder poner nuestro granito de sal para contribuir al bien de nuestro país de herencia, nuestro patrimonio cultural.. aunque somos nacidos en USA nuestros corazones están hechos de nopal! ❤🌵
I am from a small town that used to be 5 kilometers away from downtown Morelia and it is now part of the city, una colonia más. When I lived there, there was no time or money to visit as a tourist. I'm going next month (January 2024) to visit dear ones and be a tourist at my place of birth. My wife and I have been visiting different parts of México (not the typical beach tourist resorts) and It's rather ironic that when I do a search on RU-vid for info about most places it is in English by RU-vidrs like yourselves. Thanks for the information in your video! About your question at Callejon del Romance, it's really not a poem, it is an "albur" bordering on erotic terms. You reminded me of our kids and so many other Mexican-American "kids" who lack "cultura". It's great to see you guys doing what you are doing. Keep it up!
Well, that's why we're here. To learn the things that we didn't get to learn about our heritage culture. :) Glad you will be enjoying your hometown roots of Morelia soon!