A vulgar and racist online campaign by insane liberal women insisting Trump supporters are not welcome at Mexican and other ethnic restaurants, including Taco Bell, is going viral.
Thousands of social media videos, mostly of white female content creators, are pushing the message: if you support Trump and try to eat at an ethnic restaurant you will face consequences. Those consequences include having your vehicle keyed, being told to leave the premises, or even being violently attacked.
This all comes in response to Trump following through with his day-one promise to deport criminal alien migrants back to their homelands.
Chimichanga Your Ways
Juan Rodriquez, who owns a food truck in LA, says that these millennial “TikTok” influencers don’t speak for him or the values behind his food truck. In fact, Rodriquez has gone so far as to tell America’s Number One Source of Newstainment, GWU!, that if anyone has been a victim of this type of harassment, they can have his newly named “Mar-a-Lago” taco on the house.
Rodriquez, who mistakenly voted for Harris in 2024, says everyone is welcome at his establishment, and the online smear campaigns are only “hurting people, not helping them.”
“My family came to this country legally, much like millions of other Mexican-Americans. Part of being in a democracy is understanding your differences,” he confides in the steamy mobile food kitchen, while grilling a fresh slab of carnitas. Rodriguez adds, “Keying cars with Trump stickers or not serving someone wearing an American flag T-shirt is not helping anyone.”
“That is not what America is built on,” he adds as he delicately wraps a burrito and hands it to a middle-aged man wearing a MAGA hat.
Carteling Trump Out
Carlos and Maria, who opened a Colombian-fusion restaurant in Albany, NY, fully support the online campaign, especially after a weekend showdown between Trump and Colombia’s left-wing socialist president Gustavo Petro.
Petro initially turned away a flight carrying Colombian nationals who had been removed from the U.S., but after Trump threatened Colombia with heavy tariffs if they did not comply, Petro gave in. While most of those onboard had criminal records, Carlos says that he’s mad as hell at Trump for sending illegal migrants back to their country of origin in the first place.
“Colombia is already littered with crime and sending these people back will just make an already volatile country more dangerous. Trump is not giving these small countries a chance to clean up and get back on track.”
He goes on to say that “any patron wearing anything political” will be removed from their family-run establishment. “If you come into our shop wearing a Trump shirt or anything related to republican politics we don’t want or need your money.”
Carlos correctly says that in America there is a jail on every block. “We can afford to keep these people, Colombia can’t.”
When asked if they felt the same way about Harris-Walz merch (which is currently in shipping containers headed for Africa, according to Flipcity Magazine—ed), Maria described it as “different.” She says that for one, Harris is no longer in power and she does believe she’s even considered a politician. “So no, we would not remove a customer for wearing a White Dude’s for Harris charm bracelet.”
Disgraced and unemployed, Harris was recently spotted by paparazzi grocery shopping with husband Doug (What kind of man goes shopping with his wife?—ed).
Double Double Trouble
Latin Americans aren’t the only ones feeling the wrath of Trump’s crackdown on immigration. Canadians, who are currently in the so-called “fight of their lives” with the author of The Art of the Deal over his threatened 25% tariffs on Canadian exports, are seeing thousands of Canucks being tossed out by Uncle Don. A list that includes C-list actors, middle-set comics, late-night TV writers (thank god—ed), and left-wing podcasters.
And that has Rupinder Singh, a franchise owner of a Tim Horton’s in New Jersey, wondering if it’s even worth fighting back against the big boss man.
The small business owner, who purchased the franchise as part of his dream to spread traditional Canadian cooking around the world, says his mostly illegal, foreign staff will definitely be deported and then he’ll have no one to work for him. Beyond that fear, Singh laments: “They won’t be going back to Winnipeg,” he says while standing next to a never-used broom. “They’ll be sent back to India, Pakistan, even Sri Lanka.”
However, Singh adds in broken English that he doesn’t want to draw attention to his establishment like some franchisees—there are more than 600 Tim Horton stores in the US—so he won’t be acting out against Trump supporters who order a double-double. “Perhaps this will all blow over and we can continue to shelter under the dress of Lady Liberty.”
All of the restaurateurs GWU! spoke with, however, agree that they don’t foresee Trump, who prefers fast food to ethnic food, letting up anytime soon, as each day America’s Big-Mac-in-chief is cooking and delivering more people back to where they were sourced from.