Dear Mexican: I have a Chicana friend who comes from an upper-middle-class family, goes to a prestigious Ph.D. program, and has never had to take out student loans or work a real jobโ€”but she is constantly complaining about how โ€œoppressedโ€ she is.

Examples she gives are seemingly trivial things, such as not being called on in class, a professor being mean to her one time, and not feeling โ€œemotionally safe.โ€ She even said my questioning of her micro-aggression stories was itself a micro-aggression! I donโ€™t know what to make of itโ€”hanging out with her is hard, because I have to walk on eggshells constantly.

I know Chicanos and Chicanas who come from objectively worse circumstances and have had way harder lives than she has, yet they donโ€™t act like the world is against them. Does she have a victim mentality?

Gringo Blanco

Dear Gabacho: Weโ€™ve got a name for people like that in Mexican Spanishโ€”fresas. Strawberries, because they bruise easily. OK, so the Mexican doesnโ€™t know the actual etymology of the snobbish meaning of fresa, but makes sense, ยฟquรฉ no?

Racism against Mexicans does indeed exist in doctoral programs nationwide, and we shouldnโ€™t assume that raza in rarified worlds donโ€™t feel discriminationโ€™s sting. (Just ask George P. Bush.) But it seems like your pal, to use the old baseball phrase, was born on third base and goes through life thinking she hit un triple.

Tell her to work a day as a strawberry-picker to know what the hard life really is. That said, Mexicans who suffer real shit and donโ€™t complain arenโ€™t somehow better than lloronesโ€”weโ€™re Mexicans in a racist society, after all, not Jesus pinche Christ. And even He cried on the cross.

Dear Mexican: I am currently incarcerated, and have a one-year subscription to a newspaper that carries your column. I am Chicano, and Iโ€™m a fan of your column. I just want to ask you a couple of serious questions, and I hope you can personally respond back.

Iโ€™ve been reading up on Mexican history, and Iโ€™m a little confused. Why did the Texas Revolution start in 1836 between Mexicans and Anglos? Secondly, how did the Battle of Texas lead to the Mexican-American War?

Pinto en La Pinta

Dear Homie in Prison: I usually donโ€™t answer two preguntas in one shot, but Iโ€™ll make an exception for the homies in Chino. Besides, the answer is muy easy.

The Texas Revolution started because Americans hate Mexicans. And the Mexican-American War happened because Americans hate Mexicans. And now you know why Donald Trump rescinded DACA. Oh, and #fucktrump.

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Enough negativityโ€”letโ€™s do an experiment! Now, more than ever, good Mexicans deserve our support.

An ยกAsk a Mexican! fan runs La Moustache, a Los Angeles company that does chingรณn bowties, but is agรผitado that more raza arenโ€™t buying his handcrafted, classy creations. So show him whatโ€™s up! Visit lamoustachebt.com, and place an order or 30. And this ainโ€™t no payolaโ€”whenever the Mexican needs to wrap something around his neck for fresa parties, itโ€™s always a cinto piteado tied in a Windsor knot.

Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net; be his fan on Facebook; follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano; or follow him on Instagram @gustavo_arellano!