Monday, November 30, 2009

Guanajuato, Mexico - "Blood Suckers"

From time to time a theme that arises in the online forums is whether or not there is a dual price system, THE GRINGO versus THE MEXICAN price for just about everything from an apple to renting a house. This, of course, is an American expatriate issue.

Let me say that there are definitely two prices. The Mexican pays one price and the Gringo the much higher.

This is so plainly so that it is so painfully so to hear the bickering online and even to have some Mexicans weigh in on the side of "We are righteous and fair Mexicans and would never charge the Gringo an unfairly inflated price."

It took us about a week of living here (we are now seven year residents of Guanajuato, Mexico) to find out that we were being charged more than our Mexican neighbors for just about everything. The way we discovered this was by our fluency in Spanish and listening to the transaction ahead of us in line in the market place.

My wife would stand in line (no Mexican stands in a line, if you must know) at the market to buy produce. She would listen and hear the proprietor charge the Mexican in front of her one price and when she would buy the same thing in the same amounts the price would suddenly, as if by magic, inflate to double or triple than what the Mexican paid.

We've bought donuts at sidewalk kiosks and hear the vendor charge a lower price to the Mexican in front of us.

What absolutely throws me is to read of Mexicans complain of "racism" when I point this out. They deny this practice takes place. Deny...deny...deny - denial of this long accepted and practiced custom. I am at a loss to explain their reactions.

As I said, this goes for buying one donut to renting a house.

We pay, right now, four thousand pesos for your basic squalor house. It is furnished, so hey, there you go.

The landlord came right out and admitted she was charging us double what a Mexican would pay.

We are presently looking to move. As soon as we call an ad listing a rental for $1,500 - $2,000 pesos a month, the rental price suddenly increases to double or more. The instant the land-baron senses we are Gringos, the prices becomes astronomical. We are rich Americans after all so why not?

People from one of the rare Mexican protestant churches we attend here have been super-supportive.

I was talking to one of the Elders of our church and told him of our plight. He said, and I quote:

"I am so embarrassed that my fellow Mexican is so unjust and dishonest. We are blood suckers when it comes to treating Americans."

This evening a contingency of our church people came to our house for a battle strategy meeting. They are also of the opinion that their fellow Mexicans are right down dishonest when it comes to Americans and are going to help us move. They are going to act as mediators, using their connections, to get us a fair and reasonable price for a rental and furniture.

I recall looking at an apartment in another Mexican state. The place was listed for $2750 pesos but when the real estate guy saw we were Americans it shot up to $3,500 pesos with the schmuck claiming this was the "IVA" tax.

What? An IVA tax on Gringos?

Mexicans, that is some Mexicans, write me and wring me out for being racist when I write about this.

Americans, this virtually all of them, who care a whit about this, write me and threaten my life (I am not kidding) when I write about this.

The complaining Mexicans I cannot explain. The Mexicans I know and fellowship with in church tell me their fellow Mexican is a "blood sucker" and yet I get mail, mostly from Mexico City, calling me a bigot.

The complaining Americans I can indeed explain...in a word--STUPID!

The vast majority of Americans who try and move here cannot speak enough Spanish to order a taco much less being able to tell when the Mexican in the market line in front of them is being charged a lower price. They just can't or more likely WON'T learn enough Spanish to be wise in the market place.

And, the STUPID AMERICANS will pay what ever price they are told and haven't the skill linguistically or logically to know the difference. Sorry...it is the way it is so don't get your panties twisted in a knot over it.

As for my wife and I, we are going to be paying less for rent as the result of building relationships with Mexican friends.

The Dual Price System is alive and well in Mexico.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Guanajuato, Mexico - Health Care

One of the reasons my wife and I sold everything we owned in the States and moved to Mexico was Health Care. You might even say that it was the primary reason.

We began seeing the handwriting on the wall, so to speak, long before such atrocities as “concierge” services or health care (Read of this insanity here.), came into being. Though not predicting “concierge” services or health care specifically, we knew something had to be coming down the pike and it would not be for the benefit of the patients but that of the doctors.

If after reading this article which appears on MSNBC, tell me if the whole thing sounds like a BRIBE?

If the articles aren't enough to convince you, follow your doctor home (in a NON-stalker kind of way, of course) and see what kind of house they live in, what make of car, and how many, they drive to park in their three-car garages. Also, check out where they send their kids to school, where they buy their kid's designer clothes, where they all go out to eat. How many on staff at their houses to clean them?

In other words, is this “concierge” services or health care just an attempt to keep the standard of haughty living to which they doctors have grown accustom?

I once heard one of American TV's medical guru tell another doctor she was interviewing that the public needs to "respect" the medical education these doctor have and do as they say without reservation.

The gall.

Anyway, the medical scene in Mexico you will find quite different. No “concierge” services or health care, will hit you in the face by your doctors. The prices are still very reasonable. We pay less than two dollars and fifty cents to see a general practitioner and less than fifty bucks to see a specialists.

Mexican doctors will spend as much time as needed with you. And, they don't charge you a “concierge” service fee to have their cell phone numbers either.

Doctors in the States will end up cutting their own throats for their avarice.

That is my next prediction!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Guanajuato, Mexico - A Kidnapping Event Foiled

On the way home to GTO from Zacatecas, we had an event we shall not soon forget.

After the bus stopped in Aguascalientes, about forty minutes outside that city, the relief driver (there are always two) walked back to where we were sitting and offered this song and dance:

He said that since we were going to Leon, GTO, where we would change buses to get to the city of GTO--our home, he wanted to save us an extra hour by pulling off to the side of the highway and put us with our luggage off the bus. He claimed another bus bound for Leon would soon drive by and stop and pick us up. This, he said, would save us an hour since he claimed they had to stop in Lagos de Moreno before going to Leon.

So, picture it: He claimed we would get to Leon faster this way and would be saved from having to ride to and through Lagos de Moreno.

But, here's the deal: The bus we were on does NOT go through Lagos de Moreno. The reason we knew that is because not only had we ridden this same route before on the same bus line before the Express Kidnapping became the name of the game, but we speak Spanish and always ask the ticket agent how many stops the bus for which we are purchasing passage, makes.

The ticket agent specified the bus stopped at Aguascalientes, Leon, and then on to its last stop in Mexico City. All but five of us were Mexico City bound.

The relief driver did not offer the three Mexicans on board the same "get-off-the-side-of-the-road deal". Only us--The Americans.

We refused, of course. And, sure enough, we drove right past the Lagos de Moreno turn off.

The would-be kidnapper's accomplice lied to us.

Look at the facts:

1. That bus route did not, nor ever, go through Lagos de Moreno. Why would the relief driver said it was going to do so? We have been on this bus route before about three years ago and knew it did not go through Lagos de Moreno. We always ask the ticket agent how many stops the bus will make. He DID NOT mention Lagos de Moreno.. And, we drove right past the Lagos de Moreno turn off. He lied. Why did he lie?

2. Ask a Mexican if he or she would have gotten off the bus--IN THE MIDDLE OF NOWHERE--and stood on the side of the road to wait for a phantom bus to take a more direct route to Leon.

3. Why didn't the driver ask the other passengers who were getting off at Leon the same thing they asked us?

4. Our friend, Carlos Bocanegra, said that this line was dangerous and known to stop for the driver's friends to rob and plunder the passengers.

5. What person in their right minds, who reads Mexican paper news and watches Mexican TV news, would agree to get off in the middle of nowhere to wait for a bogus bus in a country like Mexico????

What else could it have meant?

Friday, November 6, 2009

Guanajuato, Mexico -- Random Thoughts

Last night's network news showed Mexico's President announcing the end of the recession in Mexico...We shall see.

Also on the news: More than 45 thousand babies are kidnapped in Mexico each year and sold off in illegal adoptions. Many of these chidren disappear into the U.S. and Canada.

This week, we were walking downtown from our little barrio to happen upon a knock down drag out between two young women right in El Jardin. They were going at each other tooth and nail right in the center of town, touristlandia, beating each other have to death. Finally the cops showed up and put a stop to the tourist's entertainment.

The weather is nice. The rains seem to be elsewhere right now giving GTO a reprive. The rainy season really never got off the ground and, as it looks like now, is a bust. Too bad for farmers and food prices.

Federales, Mexico's Feds, are doing the extortion thing here in GTO. Isn't that grand?........Read Entire Article



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More on the Feds:

Federales golpean a campesino

Por: Esaú González, Viernes, 06 de Noviembre de 2009
El afectado denunció los hechos ante el Ministerio Público

PÉNJAMO


EVIDENCIAS

A raíz de la lesión que sufrió, el hombre camina apoyado en un bastón. Foto: Marco A. Ortega


Dos elementos de la Policía Federal Preventiva (PFP) fueron acusados de lesiones y abuso de autoridad ante el Ministerio Público, luego de que presuntamente golpearon a un campesino porque les reclamó que hayan metido una grúa a su propiedad sin su permiso.........Read Entire Article



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