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Ask a Mexican
Special Amnesty Edition. by Gustavo Arellano

Dear Mexican: I’m an illegal alien. Got here on a tourist visa and stayed for a job. My gabacho employer knows about it and
doesn’t give a crap. I don’t apologize about it, as ever since I can remember, the U.S.A has meddled around other countries’
business like it owns the world. That, at least in my mind, gives me the right to be here and do a decent, reasonable man’s
labor with muchos huevos, labor that nobody else will do. Why won’t gabachos? A myriad of reasons, from snobbism to plain
old laziness to greed, none of them to be discussed here. I don’t get in trouble, I work my culo off and get good money for
it.
Now, to my point: I don’t give a caca about amnesty or, like they like to call it these days, “a pathway to legal citizenship.”
With the current status quo, I get to be here and have a good job without having to quit being what I have always been, cherishing
what I have always cherished or acting as I always have: as a Mexican. I’m the same exact person I have been, only a few hundred
miles north and with better life chances. Under the current status quo, my employer gets great workmanship for a bargain price.
Not saying it’s right (or wrong), but works well for me. And again, I’m able to work without giving my previous life and beliefs
up. Aside from the occasional toothless bigot with historical amnesia, my life here as a Mexican is pretty stable. I even
have good gabacho friends.
My question to you is this: What would you calculate to be the percentage of illegal Mexicans in the United States who actually
want the whole enchilada of American goodness, with all its obligations, rights and privileges nowadays, when those privileges
seem to be reduced to taking it in the ass from the American government in the name of some shady interest God-knows-where?
-Some Chihuahuan
Dear Wab: Heavy lies the sombrero, amigo. I’m glad you’re enjoying life as an illegal, but few of your fellow undocumented
do—what else explains the 2006 amnesty marches, the fear of escalating migra raids and the healthy market for fraudulent document
establishing some type of legal residency? Your question does brush up on an interesting, related phenomenon—the legal Mexicans
who can become American citizens but don’t. A March 2007 Pew Hispanic Center report revealed that only 35 percent of eligible
Mexicans had naturalized their status in 2005, an improvement from 20 percent in 1995; compare that with the 77, 71, and 69
percent rates for legal immigrants from the Middle East, Asia, and Europe/Canada for 2005. Researcher Jeffrey S. Passel wrote
that wabs notched the abysmally low rate because “so many have low education levels, high poverty and other characteristics
that are associated with low citizenship levels.”
Wait a minute: I always hear anti-immigrant pendejos claim that LEGAL immigrants are grateful Americans, while ILLEGAL immigrants
are unworthy of citizenship. Yet the Mexican example shows that it’s the illegals agitating to improve their citizenship status,
while the legals learn the American way and become complacent in their station. Know Nothings: care to explain the difference?
Dear Mexican: A Mexican-born colleague of ours recently became incensed about a staff party invitation that called for invitees
to bring margaritas or margarita mix at our Mexican-themed potluck. He said Mexicans drink tequila instead of margaritas,
and that Mexicans don’t eat chips, either. He was also upset about the adjective “Mexican” used with a lower case m. Were
we accurate, or is he being over-sensitive?
-Clueless in California
Dear Gabacho: Tell the wab to shut up. So maybe Mexicans don’t consume margaritas and tortilla chips as much as, say, pan
dulce and huitlacoche—who cares? Both gabacho faves have their roots with Mexicans entrepreneurs who took authentically Mexican
products to create an Americanized hybrid—he should celebrate these feats instead of whining like Loud Dobbs. I’ll only fault
your staff for using the lowercase on “Mexican”—stylebooks require upper-case letters at the beginning of nationalities or
movements even when adjectivized (Americanized, or Know Nothing-esque) and lower-case for races or peoples (gabacho, negritos
and pendejos).
Get your Mexican needs at youtube.com/askamexicano, myspace.com/ocwab, and themexican@askamexican.net!
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