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Tuesday, June 24, 2008
The WSJ reports that Californians are gassing up on more than beans in Mexico these days (sub req):
As gasoline prices rise ever higher, some drivers have discovered an alternative to runaway fuel inflation in the U.S.: subsidized gas just minutes away in Mexico. Gasoline is selling for six pesos per liter across the border in Tijuana, which works out to about $2.50 a gallon, way cheaper than gas prices approaching $5 a gallon in San Diego County. Diesel fuel is cheaper still -- $2.19 a gallon. All of this is a boon for James Blue's auto shop, located in a strip mall in the arid hills east of downtown San Diego. His business, Express Performance Center, installs extra-large fuel tanks in pickups and other work vehicles used for runs to fill up with cheap gas in Mexico. Already this month, Mr. Blue's shop has installed 12 tanks, more than he sold in all of last year. He expects demand to grow throughout the summer. Bulk fuel users, including farmers and construction contractors, are his best customers, he says. Many drive to Mexico several times a week, often looking to bring enough fuel back to sell to neighbors and co-workers. This is an interesting turnabout brought about by the rapid rise in gas prices in the US. It wasn't that long ago that people from Chihuahua (and other places in Mexico I imagine) would drive to the US to fill up on gas. For while the Mexican government may have sought to maintain parity in fuel prices between towns on both sides of the border, for many years in cities like Chihuahua the price per gallon was almost always higher than in the US. I was surprised when I first heard about this disparity because Mexico is an oil exporting country. The problem is that its not a gasoline exporting country. In fact, most of the gasoline they use is refined in the US. And the oil and gas markets in Mexico are completely controlled by state run PeMex (Petróleos Mexicanos), which really had no incentive in the past to offer lower prices. Now with oil prices surging, Pemex is struggling to keep gas prices in check to control inflation. The article states that the cost to subsidize lower prices was close to $2 billion in the first quarter of the year. So while in the US gas prices have followed the oil markets, in Mexico they have been kept low through this government subsidy. In case anyone is seriously considering the proposal by some Democrats to nationalize the US oil and gas industry, they should take a good hard look south of the border. There is growing frustration among the Mexican people with the realization that despite record high oil prices, Pemex is failing to take advantage of the golden (black) opportunity. A colleague explained to me that a study had recently shown that Pemex has been operating with a 62% efficiency rating over the last twenty or so years. "Can you imagine what would happen in a private firm with such performance?," he exasperatedly asked. Labels: Mexico Monday, February 26, 2007
Thursday night, near the tail end of a barbecue party in Chihuahua, the host borrowed a page from John Edwards and launched into a brief, but entertaining diatribe on the subject of "Two Mexicos." His passionate rhetoric was no doubt fueled by at least half a dozen Modelos and several pulls on the omnipresent bottle of Tequila clutched in his meaty hand. He was addressing me and another American co-worker.
"You know, those Mexicans who live in the U.S.? The ones you call F***ing Mexicans?" He didn't mean us specifically, but Americans in general. "Let me tell you something; they're not real Mexicans. You see, there are two Mexicos. This...us...here...THIS is the real Mexico. Them? They're not really Mexican." This isn't the first time I've heard this attitude expressed and I imagine it's much more common than most Americans would think. Labels: Mexico Friday, June 16, 2006
The Mexican national elections are only a few weeks away and when I was in Chihuahua last week, I found the city buzzing with anticipation. Well, actually that anticipation was all about the start of the World Cup. The attitude of most of the Mexicans I spoke to about the July 2nd voting could best be described as "casual indifference."
But the streets were filled with signs that the political season was peaking. In fact, you couldn't swing a dead gato in Chihuahua and not hit a campaign poster bearing the mug of a candidate. They were plastered everywhere: lampposts, street signs, utility poles, traffic lights, trees, etc. You almost had the feeling that if you stood on the corner for more than two minutes, someone would staple one on your gut. Here are a few of my favorites. ![]() Pat Anderson's non-union Mexican equivalent. ![]() Isn't it about time we elected a Vulcan? ![]() Hello, I'm Victor Anchando (cue music to Folsom Prison Blues). The pair also has the chummy look of the Chris Coleman and R.T. Rybak of Mexico. Some people believe that presidential candidate Lopez Obrador is a bit of socialist. Let's take a look: 1. Manifestacion 2. Raised fist 3. Mob of workers Where would anyone get that idea? ![]() Do you notice my casual easy-going nature? ![]() Yes, Dennis Weaver can! ![]() With my over-sized fist, I will crush all enemies, foreign and domestic! ![]() Ahmadinejad's glow of light is nothing compared to mine. ![]() Who lives on a watch face under the sea? Ju-dith Tor-res! ![]() Yo apenas farted! Finally, I think these guys need to work on their messaging a bit. Remember, it's all about sound bites these days. Labels: Mexico Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Last week, I jetted down to Chihuahua, Mexico for a quick three day visit. I've been traveling to the dry, sandy place often since 1998 and the changes that have taken place in the Northern Mexican city over the years are dramatic.
(A quick aside: why is it that the Northern areas of countries are typically more industrious than their Southern counterparts? Some examples that come quickly to mind are the United States, Italy, Mexico, and even Vietnam. For Mexico, the proximity to the US border is a huge factor and in some cases climate may explain part of it, but it's a pattern that usually defies an easy explanation.) In the on-going (and now seemingly never-ending) debate on immigration, we hear a lot that the endemic corruption, poverty, and lack of economic progress in Mexico is the root cause of illegal immigration to the United States. And, to a large extent, that probably is an accurate analysis. However, we should not ignore the fact that while Mexico has miles to go, there are areas within the country that are moving forward. An educated, property-owning, product-consuming middle-class is emerging in Chihuahua and it's rapidly changing the look of the city. So much so that there's a story going around (possibly apocryphal) of a coyote dropping a load of desperate campesinos off in the booming part of the city and telling them that they had at last arrived in the promised land of America. Because the surroundings were thick with Home Depots, KFCs, Applebee's, Wal-marts, Honda dealerships, etc., it took the poor would-be border crossers some time before they realized that they had been duped and were still in Mexico. Americans are a notoriously impatient lot and sometimes I think we have unrealistic expectations of our neighbors to the South. The United States should not have to serve as a crutch that keeps Mexico from taking the sometimes painful steps it needs to heal its limping economy. And we should not hesitate to push the Mexican government to undertake the reforms necessary for such healing to occur. But we also should not dismiss the entire country as an incurable basket case either. In Chihuahua at least, things are getting better. Slowly but surely. Labels: Mexico Friday, June 25, 2004
This hits a little close to home. Mexico won't drop murder charge:
A Minnesota family's hopes for the release of their daughter from a Mexican prison were dashed Thursday when they learned that Mexican authorities will continue to press murder charges against the Bloomington woman, contrary to promises made by Mexican President Vicente Fox in Minnesota Friday. The arrests of Kiecker and Perzabal, a Mexican native, received banner headlines across Mexico because authorities alleged that they killed 16-year-old Viviana Rayas in a 'satanic ritual.' Later, however, the couple said they were tortured into confessing to the crime. Three witnesses against them also later said publicly that they had been tortured into testifying. There have been numerous demonstrations in Mexico over the case and the unsolved murders of as many as 370 young women in the last 10 years in the state of Chihuahua. Several people held in connection with murders reported similar torture. The victim's family has even sided with the Kieckers in the case. Contacted Sunday in Chihuahua City, where the couple is being held, their lawyer, Miguel Zapien de la Torre, said that if 'Fox would follow up on his promise, they could be out in days.'" A little too close to home. Labels: Mexico Monday, November 18, 2002
One of the litanies of the "see no evil except in the actions of the U.S." Left (the Noam Chomskys, Susan Sontags, Molly Ivins of the world) is that the September 11th hijackers were motivated to commit their horrific attacks by a number of factors either directly or indirectly attributable to U.S. action or inaction. These factors include the widening gap between the wealthy and poor of the world which allegedly creates an environment without hope for citizens of the Third World and breeds despair and desperate fury. Another factor is the support from the U.S. that allows undemocratic, corrupt governments to stay in power in order to advance U.S. interests which creates resentment and hatred towards the U.S. The fact that the U.S. is allied with Israel which occupies territories acquired through war and has displaced much of the native population is also cited as a legitimate reason for against the U.S. And finally the cultural and economic "invasions" by U.S. commercialism of these poor countries has led to a justifiable backlash whose most extreme form we witnessed on 9/11.
According to the radical Left, these are the causes behind 9/11 and similar terrorist actions against the U.S. and, if we want to know why or look for someone to blame, we had better look in the mirror first. I was mulling this over last week while sitting in a hotel room in Chihuahua, Mexico and scratching my head. If one is to accept that these are the conditions that led to the terror of Al Qaeda and other groups (a big stretch considering that most of the 9/11 hijackers came from backgrounds of privilege not poverty and none were Palestinians, etc.), then why has there not been a Mexican Jihad against the hated Norte Americanos? (referring of course only to the U.S.--Sorry Canada as usual you're quiet irrelevant in this discussion.) Consider that while Mexico has made great strides in recent years, it remains a pretty damn poor country. Unemployment is high, many people still go hungry or live in the streets but instead of wanting to come to the U.S. to blow up buildings, Mexicans want to come to the U.S. to build them. Or clean them. Or whatever other job they can find. Hmmm... Although the U.S. probably wasn't too crazy about the oppressive PRI governments that ruled Mexico for most of the last seventy years, it certainly did not push very hard for real reform and, in the '60s and '70s, tended to look the other way when the military cracked down on dissident Leftist groups. During the last decade, Mexico has become a much more democratic country with the end of the long reign of the "elected" PRI governments, although corruption is still rampant, but the U.S. was hardly a major factor in these changes. And yet the Mexican people today are not resentful and bitter towards the U.S. for the all these years of not supporting real democracy in their country. Hmmm... And if you really want to start talking about occupied territories from the perspective of the radical Left, what is a more striking example than California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, all seized militarily from Mexico by the U.S.? (Technically speaking Texas gained its independence from Mexico by rebellion and then became an independent republic for a brief time before joining the U.S. Just ask any Texan and they'll tell you more than you ever want to know about it.) But, other than some tongue in cheek talk of a "reconquistda" of the area through Mexican immigration, the Mexicans seem to have by and large accepted the fact that this land is gone and it's not coming back to them. Why no intifatah? Hmmm... Finally no country has probably been so overwhelmed with U.S. commercialism than Mexico. U.S. chain restaurants are everywhere. U.S. movies play in all the theaters. U.S. goods are sold everywhere and anywhere. You can't walk ten feet without seeing a Coke or Pepsi sign. But, instead of being repelled by the stories of Walt Disney as Mohammed Atta was, Mexicans embrace the Disney characters (as well as Looney Tunes for that matter) and, rather than seeking to destroy the symbols of American business, they are far more likely to try to emulate them. Hmmm... So there I was at a loss for an explanation. Then I thought I'd check on the various religions in Mexico. I was unable to find one conclusive answer, but apparently the Muslim makeup of Mexico is listed as "less than 1 percent" according to one source or "numbers several hundred" according to another. This is out of a population of some 105 million people. But this isn't about religion right? Hmmm... Labels: Mexico Wednesday, November 13, 2002
Spanish must be a far more humorous language than English. I don't speak a lick of Spanish myself but my coworker who I'm in México with is originally from Guatemala and so it's his native tongue. On more than a few occasions this week he has been chatting with some of the Mexicans in Spanish when suddenly they all erupt in uproarious laughter. I'm left sitting there smiling weakly having no clue what just was said. Usually I get a translation of what just transpired and more often than not I have the same reaction. That's not funny. At all. I have to conclude that either they're having some fun at my expense or the material works much better in the lively Spanish tongue. This gringo just don't get it.
Labels: Mexico Tuesday, November 12, 2002
For almost five years I have made trips to Chihuahua, Mexico to visit a plant that the company I work for operates. During that time there have been a considerable number of changes at the plant and in the city. But one thing is always the same.
The receptionist who greets visitors at the main entrance to the facility is always an attractive young woman. Actually more than attractive. Gorgeous is probably a more apt description. There have been at least four of these women during my visits and they always fit the same mold. Beautiful,leggy, babes with killer smiles who aren't afraid to flirt a bit. It is not a coincidence. At one time companies in the US practised the same sort of discriminatory hiring for such positions and a few probably still do. Janet Reno types need not apply. But today most US firms consider themselves beyond such blantant sexist hiring and probably also fear a law suit if they insisted on hiring only the beautiful babies. In Mexico no such fears or enlightened thinking has yet to take hold. It's yet another example of how even though Mexico is in many ways becoming a modern, technological advanced country in other areas the country seems to be in another era. More on this in later posts. All I know is that this freedom to put on a pretty face for the public is a damn refreshing change from the corporate political correctness all too evident in the US. And the view ain't bad either. Labels: Mexico
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