The Mexican Migra Blues

[¡Ask a Mexican!] Are you a vendido or a Manchurian Mexican?

DEAR MEXICAN: I’m a naturalized citizen born in Ciudad Juárez (the most dangerous city in the world, thanks to the drug cartels), but I work for la migra. I get a lot of shit from some of my family members because they feel I shouldn’t be doing this job. I always tell them that it’s better I got the job rather than some racist gabacho who might otherwise “mistreat” the aliens who come to the country—particularly the ones who like to make menudo on Sundays. I know I wouldn’t mistreat them. Should I quit my job and make my family happy, or keep my job and do it in a humane manner?

Migra Mexican

 

DEAR GABACHO: I answered your family’s question back in 2008, when someone called you and the 52 percent of wabs who make up the Border Patrol a bunch of hypocrites. My answer then was this: “It’s easy for Mexicans to dismiss these agents as vendidos, but let’s not pretend the United States-Mexico border is a playground on the level of Xochimilco. Lots of bad people inhabit la frontera—drug-runners, coyotes, Guatemalan aliens who invaded Mexico first before setting their beady eyes on the United States—and no one is better than a Mexican at dealing with scum, mostly because we deal with it daily in the form of our government. Besides, don’t bash our Mexican migra—we all know those brown Border Patrol agents are Manchurian Mexicans waiting for Obama to become president so they can open the gates once and for all.” I still stand by that sentiment (although Obama hasn’t complied with his end of our Faustian pacto), but I would ask you to be in the juego, not of the juego. Calling the undocumented “aliens”? You know better than that. By the way, gentle readers: A member of the Mexican’s extended family is migra. And now you know how I snuck into the United States.

DEAR MEXICAN: Why do Mexicans only purchase one piece of wood from the hardware store at a time? Usually, it’s an odd shape, like a 2-by-2 or one piece of trim, too small to even trim a closet.

Home Depot Diva

DEAR GABACHA: Because perfection takes time, chula. Take the Reconquista. . . .

DEAR MEXICAN: As you’re probably well aware, most American conglomerates have set up shop south of the border. Without naming names, how is it that they get away with, in most cases, charging more for the same product, yet pay these employees a fifth of what the same employee makes doing the same job up north? Why doesn’t Mexico say, “Hey, you want to sell products here for the same price or better than you sell it for back home, then pay the same wages you do up there?” If Mexico were to force these companies into this agreement, there would no longer be the draw to narco-trafficking jobs that pay $400 American a week making human soup, ¿qué no? Not to mention the fact that there wouldn’t be eight people in a one-bedroom apartment living illegally in the U.S., making $300 a week and thinking they hit the lottery. Why is Mexico allowing itself to be bullied by its big, next-door neighbor like this?

¡A La Mecha!

DEAR WAB: On one issue and one issue only can Know Nothings and Aztlanistas agree, and that’s the destruction the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and other neoliberal policies wrought on Mexico. Before its implementation, Mexico was largely a statist economy, with heavy subsidies and protections for industry and workers. That created a stagnant business environment, however, especially when compared to the free-market fustercluck we run up here, so Mexico’s peso policies didn’t stop its residents from going to el Norte. But once globalists on both sides of the border (as usual, Canada played an inconsequential role) implemented NAFTA on Jan. 1, 1994, the relaxed regulations (coupled with a devaluation of the peso) destroyed Mexico, unleashing the flood of migrants we have today. The problem with those maquiladoras you mention is that they’re merely following the free market—they can pay less in Mexico and charge more for products than in the United States because of our uneven economies, but they can also pull out and relocate to countries with even worse salaries than Mexico and screw everyone further. This is all a long way of answering your question: Mexico’s only possible response is . . . invasion!

 

Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net, be his fan on Facebook, follow him onTwitter or ask him a video question at youtube.com/askamexicano!

 

 
  • rcb2418 09/19/2010 8:36:00 PM

    When my brother was small, he used to tell my parents he was going to work for the migra to smuggle people in or become a coyote. JAJAJAJAJA. At the end, he ended up being a machinist.

  • kim 09/15/2010 4:46:00 AM

    Gustavo you are a biased piece of Mexican shiite. You dishonor my hometown of Anaheim. ITs assho's like you that feel there shouldn't even be a border. I hope someone shoves your reconquista up your pinche culo also. And uou thought I didnt speak Spanish. You and your protect every mexican from criticism crap is old. Admit the facts YOur reconquista crap is completely unAmerican. Take your sorry culo across the frontera and no returnee porfavor. You piece of....

  • bill t. 09/07/2010 5:45:00 PM

    To all those asking about the high prices and low wages paid, that is capitalism at work - explicitly the law of supply and demand. It is in-equities like these that fostered the great labor movements of the past that created unions. Unions are suck-ass bastards but if you expect GM management to be looking out for your interest over their next year's bonus, you're a sucker. Much of what know-nohings spout is based on partial understanding, specfically the self-regulating nature of economies with lots of small players that modern economic theory is based on. Our system of few (by "few" the theory says less than a couple of HUNDRED!) players is not self-regluating and demands outside interference (read "GOVERNMENT", who else?!!!). And with merger mania it will only get worse. Folks, ready yourselves for new labor wars as people get sick of not being able to find work to support their families.

  • jOE 09/04/2010 7:51:00 PM

    Hey i just wanna say thans to the Messicants who are killing each other daily, we thank you for the 28k less illegals who want to come to suckle the welfare teet and drop anchor s$%# babies like yourself.THANK YOU!Oh and just so you know everytime I hear about dead a$$holes like you who dry up before they get to the border in Arizona, I giggle just a little bit..I really do :)

  • FBM 09/04/2010 3:41:00 AM

    AC you got a point, everybody expected better from NAFTA especially in the US. P. Villa the mexican goverment admits 28000 crime-related murders in Mexico during president Calderon administration last 4 years and I read that there have been 19000 murders in Venezuela only in the last year!!!

  • Pinche Villa 09/03/2010 8:56:00 PM

    Wrong, Ciudad Juarez is not the most dangerous city in the world. Caracas Venezuela beat your nalgas in that department. And Mexmigra, how much are the Zetas paying you?

  • AC20850 09/03/2010 8:15:00 AM

    Sorry FBM but the fact is NAFTA is a total DISASTER and has completely failed to create the jobs its' citizens sorely need. The corrupt politicians who drew this SCAM up knew this very well but shoved it through legislation ANYWAY way back in 1994. The corrupt AMERICAN media never mentions how many billion$$ Multinational corporations have made by displacing Mexico's working poor nor how AMERICA plays politics when it comes to reforming immigration law to reflect the fact that it played a DIRECT role in creating this "illeagl" population. As it stands, the ONLY thing Nafta did do well is to make a HELLUVA lot of money for a very few people at the top like that FAT ASSHOLE CARLOS SLIM, and big Agri-Business, and now it seems U.S. politicians are HELLBENT on selling off AMerica to the biggest MAFIA in the world known as COMMUNIST CHINA!!!

  • Lorenzo Arellano 09/03/2010 5:20:00 AM

    Gustavo, you forget that I smuggled you into los estados unidos as sperm. I still can't believe you beat those other millions of swimmers but then you had the advantage with one less chromosone to slow you down. :)

  • FBM 09/03/2010 3:59:00 AM

    Mexican Migra you should listen to your family, they emigrated to the US so you can have better opportunities and not to land in a shitty job like that. A la Mecha, the Maquiladora agreement has a legislation of its own and wages are above the minimum. If goods are more expensive in Mexico that is because of import and trade fees depending of the country of origin, all finish goods from maquiladoras go to wharehouses in USA before they can be sold even back to Mexico. Both US and Mexico goverments give scarcy credit to maquiladoras, but for some American companies it is the only way to survive, and for us it mean a great deal of work source and economy engine hard to find elsewhere. Mexican, the perception here is that NAFTA and free trade in general, and the flow of investments worldwide make the economy more competitive and adaptable for growth and progress, but also we need to improve legislation in Labor and Energetics among others well past due, just compare Brazil Oil company Petrobras with PEMEX. Hey, I read your note in the Times, what you are doing for your folks is not just fair but very responsible and congruent.

  • El Grigo 09/03/2010 2:41:00 AM

    Gabacho: There a very old dicho. Poor México, so far from heaven and so close to the United States.

 

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