Businesses closed, children skip school for ‘day without braides’
In southern California and that country all over Monday, a large number of businesses across the country closes, the low schools and families emit a journey to the “Day Day.”
The call for action, which started to circulate in the sources of the social sources, encouraged immigrants to escape the work, and to keep their children at home to stay at school and rejected shopping on Monday.
Businesses throughout the US announced social media. The quinceañara boutique in Omaha. Coffee Shop Salt Lake City. A car costume used in Baltimore. Accounting company in Pasco, wash.
Prison Monday adorned the same action across February 2017, a month after starting President Trump Trump. Then Monday, students stayed away from school and staff did not report work, including employees in Senate Coffee in Washington, DC
Wendy Guartado, Los Angeles activist helped to organize the action, said that about 250 businesses across the country had closed intensity. Other institutions were detected short labor. At the Abbey Food & Bar, the famous Nightclub LGBTQ + in the West Hollywood, the kitchen was closed due to the lack of workers.
He said the action of Monday was just the beginning, and that he heard many people who could take a day notice of a week.
“It comes many,” says Gudado, “because there are four years of Trump.”
In all united Los Angeles, there were 66% Monday compared to 93% of the year all – and 91% last week, according to the district information. Gudado said the three circuit teachers told him that their classes were empty. Some told her that their classes were about nothing.
The Inglewood school spokesman said we found that “the absence of the most common student” in schools. San Diego Unified School District Supt. Phababi ill noticed that some students and families had been involved in the protest, but now many.
The teacher in Parmelee Avenue Elementary School in South Africa was not authorized to speak, saying 390 students of 370 students were not on Monday and that it would be because of a protest.
In El Sol Academy, about 50 students will miss school day for their reasons, Flores of Sarah said the school student and the school manager said. On Monday, it was 180 allowed.
In Sacramento, Mario Ledesma, 31, decided to close his shop, the work of Pa’l Norte and the west worn.
Ledesma said her father, who moved to the US from Mexico last decades, often sold western boots in the local local market. LESSMA later sells boots again, switching to the Internet sales during the Covid-19 epidemic. He succeeded that he opened brick and insects for the past four months.
With Ledesma, closing her new day of the day is more important than any profits standing to do. The name of his shop means north.
“I called my business to respect the sacrifices for our people to come to the country to go to the American dream,” wrote to Instagram. “We’re a little life when our American dream is attacked … Let’s show that without us El Norte Nothing is in“- The United States will not exist.
Among the enclosure to show showing unity with protesters was Golfo de Fosca, Salvadoran Eatery Epacoima. Yatan Franco, 30, written immigration arrived from El Salvador in 2015, hoped to order the Putusas to eat lunch. Her and father continues to Black Nissan Xerran Xerra in NOON to find a black restaurant.
Franco said that, was given to the deportation of Trump, chose not to buy them from big business, such as McDonald’s, target and walmart.
“Those supermarkets supported Trump,” said “many Latinos in Swap Meets selling clothes, and we can prescribe our people to fight their business.”
Santa Ana, Reyna, a dining line without wanting to provide her last name because she was in the world without law, decided to keep her children from the day.
Reyna has already had a day from work. But when a friend sent me a message about the weekend, he decided to join.
“We are part of the economy,” he said. “Two Americans are here for anyone who hurt anyone. We just want something better.”
Although the size of the business closure and unexpectedly was unclear, experts say that the importance should not be measured in dollars and cents.
“The effectiveness of these types is based in My organization,” Victor Narno, a project director at the UCLA’s employment center. He said a protest on Monday highlights the fact that the growing population and birthpeople were fallen, the country will have to rely heavily on economic workers to stay strong.
Several California restaurants were sent to the social media that they were closed to action: Oakakland, Ela Casa de Maria. In La Mirada, Barbacoa Los Gueros. All 10 places of red Teddy’s red Tacos, from Anaheim Evenice.
Antonjitos Puebla, Downtown Los Angeles, also announced that he would close the day. On Facebook, a restaurant wrote that “foreigners were in the rear of our nation.”
And Downtown, the protesters started again on Monday on Monday-out Monday and closed a 101 road the day at the beginning of Trump action in the Protection Acts. The action was very small, and there was no sign of another way to take the road.
Apart from Los Angeles City Hall, the Whir of Helikopa of the helicopter was drawn by Cacophony of Bullhorns and singing on fire. Katherine Sanchez, 18, was unable to help but smile.
“It is very exciting,” Sanchez said, standing with his sisters and parents on Monday afternoon. Holding the sign-readable sign, “ur racicus will not eliminate our strength.”
The Burbank High School Senior, who heard a show at Tiktok, said that many of his friends escaped from protesting.
Sanchez’s father, Esteban Sanchez, a Mexican child, is disappointed after the recent Trump action at the end.
“I was born here, and I heard as a foreigner,” he said.
He adhered to the country I thought we were, “He added, before cleaning down and joined protesters when they rushed to the spring street.
In the Downtown Santa Ana, hundreds of protesters gathered together similarly in Sasscer Park and across the Ronald Reagan Cegrise. The vehicles continued down the narrow streets while respecting their horns on pedestrian arms. Other cars, stick to the street between the park and the court, and began to conclude their ties, fill the spirit with smoke.
Fernanda Hernandez, 19, led some of his friends on the floor of the 4th Street, the Orange County Layin. He caught the sign, “My parents worked harder than your president.” Both his parents introduced foreigners from Mexico.
“Trump wants us to be afraid but we won’t be,” said Hernandez, who called sick in his sales work. “We need our representation coward. He wants us to go, whether it is illegal or not. “
Sodi Jimenez writers, Howard Blume, Daniel Miller and Jaweed Kalemen had an impact on this report.