Friends:
Happy 16 de Septiembre!!! 🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽
Re-posting this piece as because it affirms our identities as Mexicans and Mexican Americans and how much we are connected by our diversity per what researchers term, the "Mexican genome." The Mexico Biobank (MXB) is an exciting development for geneticists as, according to Nature, this is "the most diverse collection of genetic information in the Global South." Also,
"The results of these genetics studies will also have takeaways for people of Mexican descent in other countries." “The population genomics of Latin America is also the genomics of the United States.”Now that's impressive, if you ask me—another way to see and deepen our connectedness to our shared identities and to the continent. I hope that we all also learn to love ourselves in the process. We must not succumb to the toxic myth that any human being lacks worth when nothing could be further from the truth.
Every life matters. Every life is important. For starters, absolutely no one should mock or celebrate Charlie Kirk's death. We must abide by an ethic and practice of respect, reciprocity, and care toward others—and live in community, as well, where these practices are not only affirmed but embodied in our daily interactions, shaping a culture of dignity even amid deep disagreement.
Nor should anyone revel in the suffering of detained immigrants whose lives have been shattered. Their detention is not an abstract policy issue but a profound human tragedy—families torn apart, children traumatized, and entire communities destabilized. To treat their pain as entertainment, as deserved punishment, or as a spectacle is to normalize cruelty and to diminish our own humanity in the process. If we are to live by the principles of justice, compassion, and reciprocity, then we must reject indifference and resist any attempt to trivialize or exploit the suffering of the most vulnerable among us.
I digress.
For the record, "Mexican" is a Nahuatl term that comes into existence with the emergence of the nation state, upon the winning of independence from Spain in 1810. "Mexico" gets its name from the Nahuatl-speaking "Mexica" who are otherwise known as "Aztecs" today.
The MXB holds much promise for improving health care for people on the continent, as well as connecting Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and the Indigenous peoples of Mexico, the U.S., and beyond to a genetically diverse past comprised of our ancestors whose vision endures in us today—reminding us that science, culture, and identity are deeply intertwined in shaping a more just and inclusive future.
I digress.
For the record, "Mexican" is a Nahuatl term that comes into existence with the emergence of the nation state, upon the winning of independence from Spain in 1810. "Mexico" gets its name from the Nahuatl-speaking "Mexica" who are otherwise known as "Aztecs" today.
The MXB holds much promise for improving health care for people on the continent, as well as connecting Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and the Indigenous peoples of Mexico, the U.S., and beyond to a genetically diverse past comprised of our ancestors whose vision endures in us today—reminding us that science, culture, and identity are deeply intertwined in shaping a more just and inclusive future.
Feliz 16 de Septiembre!!! 🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽
—Angela Valenzuela
—Angela Valenzuela

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