Dear Readers: Siempre, the wisest words that appear in this
column come from ustedes, y the following two cartas
prove this maxim. The first one addresses my year-end column,
in which a working-class gabacho insisted his people apapachan
a Mexicans mucho:
Half-Mexican here. I was fortunate enough to catch your column
while I was visiting for the holidays. I have a comment in regards
to [the gabacho who wrote the letter] Sick of all of You.
He said, “No other country baby-sits Americans the way American
baby-sit Mexicans.” I would have to disagree. I’ve been living in
Spain for the past seven months as an English teacher, and he is
greatly mistaken. All of Europe and practically the entire world
caters to Americans. The international business language is English.
Almost all signs are posted in the native language of the country
and English. I’m ashamed that our country sees it as a burden to
learn or tolerate another language. A majority of the world speaks
English as their second language in order to cater to the American
tourists and business industry. I just wanted to share this, from
my foreign living experience. The world caters to us the U.S.; I
think we can spare a few bus stop translations.
— Life in the Afternoon
The following letter is a bit more critical, concerning a Best
of Mexican I reran for the Jan. 7 edición of my column concerning
a white woman trying to calm down her wab paramour:
I couldn't believe the advice you gave Enamormada Gabacha: “Nothing
says I love you, nothing says ‘Welcome to America’ like an old-school
blowjob.” Maybe so, but “an old-school blowjob” also an excellent
way of spreading STDs. To be sure, transmitting HIV through oral
sex is rather rare — but it has been known to happen. However, syphilis
and gonorrhea are different stories. Gonorrhea, I might add, is
particularly worrisome because certain strains of this bacteria
are becoming increasingly immune to all known antibiotics. It's
extremely irresponsible to advise an “old-school blowjobs” without
also advising “old school” protection, like condoms.
— Trojan Travieso
Well, DUH. But Enamorada Gabacha was already seriously involved
with her hombre — this wasn’t a one-night stand, or a midnight
run to the border. I’d assume and hope anyone who gets intimately
involved with someone will first have a discussion about each other’s
sex life before doing the deed, up to and including sharing STD
test results — but if I put in a public-service announcement like
that, I’d be treading the terrain of Savage Love. And I don’t want
that mariposa messing with my pesos …
And now, a question:
Dear Mexican: I was under the impression that Mexico actually
had a LARGER middle class than most Latin American nations, consisting
of doctors and lawyers, among all sorts of other professions. Mexico
may have a far greater problem with poverty than the U.S., but compared
to its southern neighbors, it's relatively bourgeois. Do you know
if there is any truth to my supposition?
— Tío Moneybags
Dear Gabacho: No, you’re correcto — in a way. The World
Bank’s 2008 country rankings on gross national income per capita
lists Mexico as tops in Latin America, but an IMD International
survey puts Mexico as the país with the largest percentage
of its population (22.1 percent) below the median income line, which
suggest rampant social stratification (número three on that
list? Los Estados Unidos, with 17 percent of nosotros
making less than the middle-class — so much for our superiority!).
A 2006 BusinessWeek article estimated 40 percent of Mexicans
were in the middle class, and that really isn’t surprising. “All
sorts of other profession”? Raza, repeat after me: MEXICO
IS A NORMAL COUNTRY. Too many narco-killings, for sure, and too
little social mobility, but it’s firmly in the bottom rungs of the
First World — and definitely no Guatemala.
REMEMBER, READERS: Start asking me questions on my Youtube channel,
youtube.com/askamexicano. The bigger the sombrero, the better!