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THIS ENERGY ⚡️⚡️⚡️ !!️!!️!!️ Diego and Rico being the change we need to see in this world 😭 Unjust laws are made to be broken ̄\_(ツ)_/ ̄ SAN ANTONIO TX GOES SO HARD 🔥🔥🔥🙏🏼🔥🔥🔥 Bendiciones 💕💕💕 We tip our hats to this level of compassion of nerve of loving your neighbor Amen 🕊 Posted @withregram • @texasmonthly “It just [doesn't] make sense to have kids when you don’t have health insurance."⁠ ⁠ Approximately 4.5 million women comprise 52 percent of the food and beverage industry’s labor force, performing jobs that are often low-paying and physically taxing. Only 27 percent of service workers more generally participate in a basic medical-care plan, while waitresses, chefs, and bartenders who do have children are faced with childcare costs that can exceed $10,000 per year.⁠ ⁠ When Roe was overturned last month, food-service industry veterans understood how the decision would uniquely affect their workforce. As they wait for Texas's trigger law to go into effect on August 25, several restaurant and bar owners are stepping up to help, voicing dissent through fund-raising and rallying, and providing financial and travel assistance to employees. At San Antonio's Mixtli, for example, chefs Diego Galicia and Rico Torres will provide payments for travel, lodging, and any necessary long-term care to employees who find themselves in situations “where the law does not protect them." The chefs already provide healthcare, at a cost of $67,000 a year, to fourteen employees, thirteen of whom are women.⁠ ⁠ Visit the link in the bio for more on how Texas restaurateurs are finding new ways to help employees seeking abortions. #loveyourneighbor #wwjd #justiceforall #aidandabetabortion #aborto #proabortion
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