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Vagos Motorcycle club

The story starts not in some gritty biker bar but in the sun-bleached streets of San Bernardino, California — the same fertile outlaw ground that gave us the Hells Angels a generation earlier. It was 1965. Vietnam was still a headline. The Stones were on the radio. And a group of Latino riders, tired of being turned away from predominantly white motorcycle clubs, decided to build something of their own.
They named themselves the Vagos — Spanish for "vagrants" or "wanderers" — and chose Loki, the Norse god of mischief, as their patron saint. That combination alone tells you something: a club with deep Chicano roots wearing the symbol of a Norse trickster god. It was irreverent from day one. Counterculture on two wheels.
The founders weren't career criminals looking for cover. They were working men — mechanics, veterans, laborers — who wanted brotherhood, open roads, and the right to ride their own way. If that sounds romantic, it's because it was. At least at first.

Видео Vagos Motorcycle club канала The Untold Case
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