[¡Ask a Mexican!] Special Wedding Edition

WEB EXCLUSIVE!

Dear Readers: Since the Mexican’s sister is getting married to a good man from Zacatecas this weekend, I must ignore my research archives to slaughter a pig and hire a banda sinaloense. So indulge yourselves in some piratería questions I ripped off from my book, and await my return next semana!

Dear Mexican: Isn’t brown pride a P.C. adoption and morphing of white power?

Serapes Scare Me

Dear Gabacho: True, Serapes. And that’s why events such as Hispanic Heritage Month are lame responses to centuries of gabacho oppression and exclusion. Hispanic Heritage Month is useful only to see how hilariously clueless gabacho administrators, newspaper editors—hell, the entire American power structure—still are about Mexicans. Bake some pan dulce, throw in a salsa band, invite the Mexican as a keynote speaker (note to said power structure: e-mail me!), and that’s culture, right? Or run weepy profiles of Mexicans rising from nothing to barely something, as daily papers do during Hispanic Heritage Month, and that pleases those pesky Latinos who clamor for positive, accurate coverage in the press, ¿qué no?

What’s worse is the litany of accomplishments recounted during Hispanic Heritage Month to show that Latinos are just like everyone else, but more so. Look—a Mexican astronaut! Golfer! Doctor! No gardeners here! And don’t be surprised if you hear some MEChA chapter state some really out-there claim, like that Thomas Alva Edison was Mexican, that the Aztec empire went as far north as Michigan because the state name sounds like Michoacán, and that Mexican women take it up the butt to protect their virginity. All those cultural-pride pendejadas get tiresome after a while because it’s nothing more than pandering and assumptions. Ask Mexicans what they’re proud of, and they’ll probably point to their shiny new Silverado.

Dear Mexican: I’ve noticed that areas with lots of recent Mexican immigrants have stores that sell nothing but water. I find this very odd. Do people recently arrived from Mexico not know that tap water here is potable? How can these stores survive selling nothing but water, anyway?

Agua Pa’ la Raza

 

Dear Gabacha: Mexicans can never get far from the bottle, whether it’s H2O or Herradura. In a 2002 survey, the Public Policy Institute of California found that 55 percent of Latinos in the state drink bottled water, compared with 30 percent of gabachos. It’s definitely a custom smuggled over from Mexico, where tap water remains fraught with nasty viruses and bugs and crap. So it seems the Mexican affinity for Arrowhead is another case of assimilation gone dead, huh?

But another possibility is suggested by Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. In the 1964 Stanley Kubrick classic, Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper reveals that fluoride-contaminated tap water is a commie plot that’s robbing America of its precious bodily fluids. Mexicans want no part of that. We want our mecos healthy and hopping, so when it comes time to repopulate the States after the bomb hits, we can turn all surviving gabachitas into baby mills.

Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net or myspace.com/ocwab. Or write to him at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815-1433. Find him on Facebook and Twitter!

 
  • Gustavo Arellano 10/12/2009 7:50:00 PM

    CHS: Guy was born here; family is from Zacatecas. Marcos: Screw you! Ustedes no saben como cocinar birria! Santisima aka ya basta: Jesus. Chiltepin: No more! FBM: Hay too many flores en mi jardin for me to marry...

  • FBM 10/10/2009 4:17:00 AM

    While visiting family and friends in California we've noticed they use bottled water a lot, they stock them by packs, kids throw them away unfinished. I understand and highly appreciate the 2nd. refrigerator in the garage for beer and softdrinks and extras of everything, but can't follow that of water. Mexican your sister's wedding is a blessing for your parents, but it's an awuful indirect message for you and your girlfriend, you know everybody will be asking you= are you next? when are you getting married? that's a hard test for your bachelor's skills.

  • Chiltepin 10/10/2009 12:39:00 AM

    Mmmm! I didn't know you had a sister! Any more left, cu�to?

  • El Cholo 10/09/2009 10:25:00 PM

    A wedding?? Chale! Call me for teh quinceanera! A cholos paradise!

  • Santisima Malinche 10/09/2009 9:57:00 PM

    So Gustavo, in Mexican weddings who is responsible for decorating the donkey the newlyweds ride off on?

  • Marcos 10/09/2009 8:51:00 PM

    Eww... you know how greasy ppl from Zacatecas cook their food? She should've looked for a nice Potosino...

  • CHS 10/09/2009 8:50:00 PM

    Your sister is marrying a dude from Mexico? I thought that part of the assimilation process for Mexican-American gals was marrying a white guy. Mrs. CHS did it, Mrs. CHS's sister did it, and CHS' brother's wife did it. I should add that my brother's wife is only 1/2 Mexican-American...the other 1/2 is from El Salvador...still trying to figure that one out but the 2 1/2's have been married for 60+ years so what do I know.

  • CB 10/09/2009 6:33:00 PM

    Purity Of Essence = Peace On Earth

  • El Gringo 10/09/2009 10:07:00 AM

    �Agua purificada? The only water stores I've seen around here ripping of los Mexicanos by charging 25 cents a gallon for filtered city water (BYOB) are Chinitos.

 

Most Popular Stories

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy