Thursday, May 15, 2025

New regulations call for inspections of light vehicles

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highway traffic
The new inspection requirement takes effect in November.

A new inspection requirement for new vehicles will take effect later this year, the federal government announced.

The Economy Ministry (SE) announced an additional verification requirement for most new vehicles that weigh less than 3,857 kilograms.

Called NOM 236, the requirement will take effect in November, according to an SE publication in the government’s official gazette.

All cars registered in Mexico will have to pass an inspection before they have 1,000 kilometers on their odometers.

Among the things to be checked are cars’ bodywork, seatbelts, lights, brakes, wheel alignment, suspension and engine. Any serious problems will have to repaired in order for vehicles to be deemed roadworthy.

The new inspection requirement is in addition to the emissions verification that vehicles also must pass.

Vehicles will have to pass a second NOM 236 inspection four years after the initial one and additional ones every two years after that until they are 10 years old. Inspections will then become annual. “Intensive use” vehicles will face annual inspections from the get-go.

Among the vehicles exempt from the new requirement are those that weigh less than 400 kilograms and those used exclusively in off-road settings.

With reports from ADN40

Caught in traffic, bride accepts biker’s offer of a ride to her wedding

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The bride cruises to her wedding on Saturday.
The bride cruises to her wedding on Saturday.

A bride risked arriving at her wedding a little wind-blown on Saturday when she jumped on the back of a motorcycle to get to the church on time after being stuck in traffic.

In a video on social media, the woman is seen in a large white wedding dress and veil getting on the back of a motorcycle amid heavy traffic on the Mexico City-Toluca highway. Two people can be seen helping her onto the motorcycle between lanes of traffic, ensuring her dress is well placed.

In another video, the bride and motorcyclist are seen cruising down the highway at speed.

The motorcyclist is thought to have been a stranger, but saw the bride was in a desperate situation, the newspaper La Razón reported. It’s unclear whether she arrived late to say her vows.

“They’re going to give a ride on a motorcycle to the bride because otherwise she won’t get there,” one of the people filming from another vehicle can be heard saying off camera, as the bride mounts the bike.

“What worried me was that the dress would get stuck in the wheel,” one person wrote on social media.

The traffic was caused by an accident near La Marquesa, 30 kilometers east of Toluca, in the direction of Mexico City, which almost completely stopped traffic.

With reports from La Razón

AMLO gets a warm welcome in Cuba, calls for renewal of its revolution

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AMLO and Cuba president Miguel Diaz-Canel
President López showing his support for Cuba and Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, left, at a ceremony on Sunday in Havana. López Obrador website

President López Obrador received Cuba’s highest state honor during a visit to the island nation on Sunday.

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, who was the guest of honor at Mexico’s Independence Day celebrations last September, presented the Order of José Martí to his counterpart at an event in Havana.

Named after the 19th-century independence hero and poet, the honor was bestowed upon López Obrador for advocating the economic integration of American states, strengthening regional unity and defending just causes, peace and cooperation between nations.

Among the other heads of state who have received Cuba’s highest honor are Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his deceased predecessor Hugo Chávez, Russian President Vladimir Putin, former Iraq president Saddam Hussein, former Chilean president Salvador Allende and former South African president Nelson Mandela, who received the order before he assumed the presidency.

In Havana, after a whirlwind tour of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Belize, López Obrador also attended a ceremony at the Plaza de la Revolución (Revolution Square), where former Cuban president Fidel Castro delivered countless lengthy speeches during his almost 50-year rule.

AMLO at ceremony in Cuba
President López Obrador at Havana’s Plaza de la Revolución, where he laid a wreath to honor Cuba’s independence hero José Martí. López Obrador website

At the square – backed by buildings adorned by large images of Cuba’s revolutionary heroes Ernesto “Che” Guevara and Camilo Cienfuegos – the Mexican president laid a wreath to honor Martí, who was killed in an 1895 battle with Spanish troops.

After being conferred with the honor at the nearby Palace of the Revolution, López Obrador – well-known for his indefatigable oratory – delivered a nearly hour-long speech, during which he reiterated his rejection of the United States’ trade embargo on Cuba and pledged to never bet on the failure of the Cuban revolution, which celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2019.

Only 100 kilometers from the superpower that is the United States, there is an independent island inhabited by “modest and humble yet happy, creative and … very dignified people,” he said.

“… Personally, I have never bet on … nor will I ever bet on the failure of the Cuban revolution, its legacy of justice and its lessons of independence and dignity,” López Obrador said.

“I will never participate with coup plotters who conspire against the ideals of equality and universal fraternity,” the president told those present, including Díaz-Canel, who stood at his side while he delivered his speech.

However, AMLO did advocate for renewal of the political system in Cuba, which has been a one-party communist state for over six decades.

AMLO in meeting with Cuban officials
The president participated in multiple photo-op events but also met with President Díaz-Canel to discuss the purchase of COVID vaccines and the services of Cuban doctors in Mexico. President of Cuba’s office

He said he had hoped “that the revolution is capable of renewing itself in order to follow the example of the martyrs who fought for freedom, equality, justice and sovereignty.”

López Obrador, who claims his administration is carrying out a “fourth transformation” of Mexico, added that he had faith that the Cuban government was ruling the country with that objective in mind.

“That the new revolution is being carried out within the revolution is Cuba’s second great … lesson to the world. The [Cuban] people will once again demonstrate that reason is more powerful than force,” he said.

López Obrador reiterated his advocacy for the establishment of an economic bloc in the region in which each country’s sovereignty and political system is respected.

He said he would emphasize to United States President Joe Biden that no country should be excluded from the Summit of the Americas, which will be held in Los Angeles next month.

The U.S. government has indicated that Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua are unlikely to be invited, but López Obrador proclaimed that “nobody should exclude anyone.”

In much briefer remarkers after the Mexican president’s address, Díaz-Canel thanked his counterpart for his support and “firm position” against the United States’ blockade.

“We’ve addressed important issues on our bilateral agenda but also dealt with regional issues,” he said, referring to meetings between Cuban and Mexican officials during López Obrador’s 27-hour visit.

“… As President López Obrador has said, the relations in the [western] hemisphere must change profoundly. The Cuban revolution … will continue its triumphant march … and Mexico will always be able to count on Cuba,” added Díaz-Canel, who succeeded Raúl Castro as president in 2018.

Back in Mexico City on Monday, AMLO revealed that more than 500 Cuban doctors would come to work in Mexico and that the government would purchase COVID-19 vaccines from Cuba.

“We are … going to hire doctors from Cuba who are going to come to work in our country; we made this decision because we do not have the doctors we need,” he told reporters at his regular news conference.

COVID-19 vaccines from Cuba will be used to inoculate children as young as two, López Obrador said, adding that the communist island nation, which has developed its own anti-COVID shots, has achieved “great results” from its vaccination program.

With reports from El Universal, Reforma and Reuters

Child, 9, bitten by wolf during visit to zoo

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wolf attack in Mexico state zoo
The child was bitten after he maneuvered past a guardrail in front of the wolf enclosure and stuck his arm through the metal fencing.

A nine-year-old boy was bitten by a wolf on a visit to the zoo in México state on Friday.

The child maneuvered past a railing and approached the metal fence of the wolves’ cage to pet one of the large canines in the Nezahualcóyotl zoo, just east of Mexico City’s Benito Juárez International Airport, before one of them bit him on the arm. The injury was serious and required surgery.

The zoo, run by the municipal government, closed its doors to the public after the incident but reopened on Sunday, with the wolf still in its enclosure. Many of the families visiting on Sunday were unaware of the incident, the newspaper El Universal reported.

The México state health ministry said it received reports of the incident at 4:30 p.m. on Friday and confirmed that the boy was in a stable condition on Saturday. His injuries were not life-threatening, health officials said, but after being taken initially to La Perla Hospital in Nezahualcóyotl he was transferred by air ambulance to a hospital in Zumpango, 55 kilometers north, due to the severity of his injuries.

The boy received reconstructive surgery on the arteries and veins of his arm and was able to move his fingers after a successful operation, Nezahualcóyotl Mayor Adolfo Cerqueda Rebollo confirmed.

The municipal government said it would help with the family’s medical costs. Cerqueda said he had arranged an evaluation for the boy with specialist surgeons to continue his recovery.

Meanwhile, Cerqueda said the wolf had been well-treated prior to the attack and that authorities were considering what to do with it.

“They did medical tests, and it is in optimal condition … We have received many queries as to what will happen to it, whether it will be put down or not,” he said.

Cerqueda added that the wolf’s fate would be decided by state authorities. The local government said it had spoken to the State Commission of Natural Parks and Fauna (Cepanaf) to review its security protocols.

With reports from Informador and El Universal

Thieves nab 300 drones in highway robbery

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DJI is the world's leading producer of non-military consumer drones, often used for aerial photography and videography.
DJI is the world's leading producer of non-military consumer drones, often used for aerial photography and videography. Facebook / DJI

A technology company has asked customers for patience after thieves cleared out a truck carrying a variety of products on Tuesday, including over 300 of the company’s drones.

China-based DJI said in a statement on social media on Friday that around 300 drones and 500 cameras and mounts were stolen in the highway robbery from a truck transporting the products to their warehouses.

The news site Xataka México reported that 324 drones and 521 cameras and mounts were taken and that the value of the stolen goods was about 6.5 million pesos (US $320,000).

The company didn’t confirm where the goods were stolen, but DJI has three stores in Mexico City as well as stores in Cancún, Quintana Roo; Guadalajara, Jalisco; San Pedro Garza García, Nuevo León; Quéretaro city and Puebla city.

“We’ve worked hard to initiate all of the legal proceedings to find the items and those responsible. We extend an apology to our customers that are being affected by this difficult situation and we assure that we’ll do everything possible so that you can get your orders as soon as possible,” DJI said.

The company said the stolen products had been blocked, but asked people to look out for unofficial sales of their products and to inform the authorities if they see them being sold.

DJI is headquartered in China, but also has offices in the United States, Germany, the Netherlands, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong.

With reports from Xataka

Pilots avoid collision on runway at AICM after getting permission to land

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Instead of landing on the occupied runway, the Volaris pilot managed to pass over the other plane and then regain altitude.
Instead of landing on the occupied runway, the Volaris pilot managed to pass over the other plane and then regain altitude. Screenshot

Pilots of a Volaris plane narrowly averted a disaster at the Mexico City International Airport (AICM) Saturday night after they were apparently cleared to land on a runway where another aircraft of the same airline was waiting to take off.

A flight from Mazatlán was about to touch down when the pilots noticed that another Volaris plane was on the 05L runway. They abruptly terminated their descent to avoid colliding with the other plane, which was about to take off to Guatemala City.

The incident came just days after the International Federation of Air Line Pilots’ Associations (IFALPA) raised concerns about the capacity of air traffic controllers to direct flights into the AICM. An investigation into the apparent air traffic control blunder is underway.

The Ministry of Infrastructure, Communications and Transportation (SICT) said in a statement that the director of the government agency Seneam (Navigation Services for Mexican Airspace) had resigned following the incident.

But in an interview with the Milenio media group, deputy transportation minister Rogelio Jiménez Pons said the SICT had in fact dismissed Víctor Hernández.

A passenger in a nearby plane captured the close encounter on video.

Jiménez said Hernández had not managed the Seneam work environment well and his technical management of the agency was poor. The incident on Saturday was “the straw that broke the camel’s back,” he said.

Jiménez also said that Seneam under Hernández’s leadership hadn’t maintained good communication with the aviation industry.

“Seneam is a services agency and suddenly it started acting like it was an authority. That has to change, it [has to be] at the service of airlines. It has to have a different, more collaborative attitude,” he said.

Jiménez said the incident at the AICM was dangerous but a disaster was thankfully averted due to the dexterity of the pilots. He said the occurrence was unprecedented and “mustn’t happen again.”

IFALPA issued a safety bulletin last week advising that in the past month it has been made aware of several incidents involving aircraft arriving at the AICM with limited fuel due to “unplanned holding, diversions for excessive delays, and significant GPWS [ground proximity warning system] alerts where one crew almost had a controlled flight into terrain.”

It said that with the opening of the Felipe Ángeles International Airport – which began operations on March 21 –  it would appear that air traffic controllers at the AICM have received little training and support as to how to direct flights operating in the new airspace configuration.

But Jiménez said that the latest incident was not related to the redesign of airspace in the greater Mexico City area.

In a letter sent to Seneam last week, the International Air Transport Association (IATA), which represents almost 300 airlines, said there had been at least 17 incidents of GPWS alerts at the AICM over the past year.

But the SICT said Friday that neither Seneam nor the Federal Civil Aviation Agency (AFAC) has received any official reports of such incidents. It said the last GPWS alert incident at the AICM occurred on June 15, 2021.

The SICT said it is “working to guarantee operational safety” for all airlines that operate in Mexico and that the AFAC and Seneam have attended to formal reports of incidents in a timely manner.

“It’s important to say that air operators, mainly [airline] crews, as well as air traffic controllers must immediately report any event that could place safety at our airports and in our air space at risk,” the ministry said.

The SICT also said that an air safety working group has been formed to address the concerns raised by IFALPA.

“The policy of this ministry is that all reports concerning operational safety are taken with the utmost seriousness and are investigated in accordance with the practices recommended by the International Civil Aviation Organization,” it said.

With reports from Milenio and El País

These expat authors put their love affair with Mexico into their mystery novels

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author Jinx Schwartz
Many of Jinx Schwartz's novels feature the feisty Texan Hetta Coffey, who solves mysteries and gets into misadventures with her yacht in Mexico.

Obviously, I am a fan of nonfiction writing, especially about Mexico, but sometimes it is more fun, and more insightful, to read something fictional set in our adopted home.

There is no lack of talent among the many foreigners who live here and find Mexico to be an inspiration. But two have caught my attention because both draw heavily from their many years in the country, are rather prolific and are both are known for writing mysteries/whodunnits.

Jinx Schwartz’s work focuses on protagonist Hetta Coffey, a “sassy Texan with a snazzy yacht, and she’s not afraid to use it!”

Unsurprisingly, Hetta’s life draws from Schwartz’s own. Born and raised in Texas, she says she has a “natural affinity” for Mexico.

Her nomadic life brought her to San Francisco, where she met and married a naval officer. The newlyweds took his boat from there to Baja California, and when they rounded Los Cabos into the Gulf of California, they fell in love with the sea and its desert coasts. In the end, the Schwartzes spent the most of 30 years on a boat in that area, only leaving to escape hurricane season.

Author Jinx Schwartz
Author Jinx Schwartz and husband on their boat in the Gulf of California. Jinx Schwartz

But the “cruiser” life meant needing an alternative occupation to engineering, which she found in writing. Her first work was a family history, followed by a historical novel called The Mexicans and another based on her childhood experiences in Haiti.

Her husband convinced her to write a “shoot-em-up” (his words), using the Gulf of California as a backdrop. She agreed to do it if he would help with his knowledge of firearms and fighting. It wasn’t the most successful of collaborations, she admits, but it was her transition into the Hetta Coffey series, of which No. 14 is in the works.

Schwartz draws heavily from her real-life experience as a foreigner living and exploring Mexico through the couple’s boat. Such experiences can be quite dramatic, such as being buzzed by a military or police helicopter, an incident that really happened in the middle of the Gulf and made it into one of the books.

To this day, she does not know who really hovered over their boat in the middle of the night.

But they also include extensive research into issues that Schwartz calls “thorns in Mexico’s side,” generally inspired by news headlines that she delves into to get ideas for the crime behind the mystery.

With the exception of the Haiti-based one, all of Schwartz’s books focus on Mexico in some way, especially the boating lifestyle she knows so well. In fact, she says, her books have inspired more than a few people to buy their own boats and explore the Gulf of California in a similar fashion.

San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato
Scherber moved to San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, years ago and began putting the picturesque city in his books. Choupi33/Shutterstock

Schwartz continues the Coffey series as she always has, even though life has steered her into dividing her time between the United States and Mexico. The main reason for this was the loss of her husband a few years ago and the decision to sell the boat afterward.

Older now, she decided to make her base on the Texas coast, but still spends a good part of the year in Mexico through her connections with the foreign community in northwest Mexico. She admits to missing the boating lifestyle, although concerns about her age and health are more important now.

John Scherber’s main protagonist for his Murder in Mexico series is named Paul Zacher. All the stories are based in the mountain city of San Miguel de Allende.

Scherber’s Mexican inspiration began before he even got here.

He grew up in Minneapolis and discovered a talent for writing in high school. In 1964, he went to San Francisco to begin a writing career, but after writing two books that he says “were not very good,” he all but quit at age 25.

Despite several attempts to get back on track, he would not write seriously again until he was 62.

Author John Scherber
All of author John Scherber’s 31 books in his Murder in Mexico series of mystery novels have been set in San Miguel de Allende Guanajuato. John Scherber

The road back to writing began in New Mexico in 2005, where he was living with his wife and family. One day, while driving to Taos, he imagined a conversation between a model and a painter. He liked it and wrote it down.

That conversion would be the center of the first Zacher novel.

Scherber was not living in Mexico, but he and his family were traveling extensively in it. From the beginning of his Murder in Mexico series — Twenty Centavos — the books have been set in San Miguel de Allende.

Like Schwartz, more than a little of his personal life winds up in his novels. One difference is that instead of projecting himself into one character, he is found in various, especially the three that are the focus: Paul Zacher the painter, his girlfriend Maya Sanchez and retired homicide detective Cody Williams. Each has a role to play, even if not always harmoniously.

Already into the third of the series, Scherber moved to San Miguel de Allende permanently in 2007. Unlike Schwartz, Scherber does not depend on headlines for the creation of his mysteries, actually finding issues such as the drug trade too difficult to weave into his writing.

Instead, Mexico influences his stories through the relationships he has with many average Mexicans, and through hearing stories about their normal lives.

Books by John Scherber
Scherber has written both fiction and non-fiction books about Mexico. John Scherber

San Miguel’s unusual mix of a traditional Mexican and significant foreign population also makes its way into the books. Although he admits it can distort how one experiences Mexico, the foreign population also provides a source of conflict and drama that provide insight.

Scherber is now a prolific writer, with 46 books in only 17 years. He says he’ll  stop when “… I pitch forward into the keyboard.” Thirty-one of those books are in the Murder in Mexico series, with some other fiction books and five nonfiction related to expat/foreigner life in Mexico.

Most of his audience are people who have some kind of connection to Mexico and/or Latin America, with the setting of his stories being the main initial draw.

Leigh Thelmadatter arrived in Mexico 18 years ago and fell in love with the land and the culture in particular its handcrafts and art. She is the author of Mexican Cartonería: Paper, Paste and Fiesta (Schiffer 2019). Her culture column appears regularly on Mexico News Daily.

Go-To Granola

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granola
Crunchy, stuck-together clumps is elusive gold standard of granola makers.

Granola has been a staple in my kitchen for, oh, 40-plus years.

I’ve tended to make it myself because I want certain ingredients and flavors and don’t want others. (No peanuts; not too many raisins; not too sweet.)

Buying it ready-made can also be expensive; understandable because some of the essential ingredients are, but still, I hate spending money on something I’m not sure I’ll like.

One of my favorite things about granola are the crunchy, stuck-together clumps. That’s hard to find too, and for years I’ve tried to figure out how to make that happen consistently. I used to think the trick had to do with the right amount of oil or a thick sugar syrup, but it turns out I was wrong. (Sugar does assist in the crisping process, but not in the way I thought.)

After years of experimenting, making mistakes and sometimes careless cooking, I realized that when the oats are soaked in water before baking, they clump into the sought-after crunchy nuggets.

granola
Granola’s worth the effort: it can keep for up to six weeks in the refrigerator.

What happens is that water softens the oats, allowing them to swell and release their natural starch, which bakes them into you-know-what (and allows smaller things like bran and chia to stick to the clusters). Softening the oats first also prevents the granola from turning into too-hard, impossible-to-eat “horse food,” which many of us have unfortunately experienced.

Once the soaked oats are put in the oven, steam releases as they bake, clumps form as the starch attaches to itself and the grains become crisp and light. Sugar mixed in and dissolved in the soaked oats during a second pause before baking caramelizes into yet more crunch and a delicious, subtle sweetness. Using buttermilk (or yogurt mixed with water) for the soaking yields a mild tang, and the acidity slows down the browning process as the oats bake.

I know buttermilk is difficult if not impossible to find in Mexico; Amazon México carries both freeze-dried and buttermilk powder, but they’re pricey. (Remember to ask a snowbird or visiting friend to bring you some!) Yogurt, though, can provide the same acidity and is easy to come by. Use only plain, unsweetened, as-natural-as-possible yogurt, and not Greek yogurt, which is too concentrated to work in this recipe.

To make granola, start with old-fashioned whole rolled oats, not instant, quick, or steel-cut; in Mexico the container or bag will say hojuelas de avena integral.

Resist the urge to use prepackaged, already-toasted nuts – chances are they’ll have added oil and salt and won’t work in your granola. (I did and had to pick them out. Yech.) Better to roast them yourself — carefully, because they’re so easy to burn! If you use slivered almonds, they’ll toast faster than the other nuts, so roast them separately or take them out first.

And don’t be tempted to use a metal spatula or spoon for stirring — use the two-fork method or a firm silicon spatula. The trick is to disturb the clusters as little as possible so you end up with those coveted crunchy nuggets.

granola
A wooden spoon or rubber spatula is your best bet for stirring.

Never-Fail Crunchy Granola

  • 3½ cups whole rolled oats
  • 1/3 cup wheat germ/bran
  • 1 Tbsp. chia seeds
  • 1 cup buttermilk OR ½ cup plain regular yogurt mixed with ½ cup water
  • ½ cup unsalted butter or coconut oil, melted
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • ½ tsp. salt
  • ¾ cup pepitas (raw pumpkin seeds)
  • ½ cup chopped or slivered almonds
  • ½ cup pecan pieces
  • ½ cup unsweetened coconut, toasted or not
  • Pinch salt
  • 1½ cups dried fruit (combination of raisins, apricots, chopped dates, cranberries, etc.)

In a medium bowl, combine oats, wheat germ/bran and chia. Mix well, then stir in buttermilk or yogurt/water mixture and melted butter/coconut oil till combined. Cover with a kitchen towel and set aside until oats are stiff and dry, about 20 minutes.

Stir in sugar, vanilla and salt, cover, and let stand until the mixture looks loose and damp and the oats have expanded, about 30 minutes, stirring well once or twice.

With oven rack in the middle position, preheat to 350 F (177 C). Combine pumpkin seeds, almonds and pecan pieces on a parchment-lined pan and toast about 10 minutes, watching carefully so as not to burn, until fragrant and just beginning to brown. (I always burn slivered almonds so consider roasting them separately.)

Transfer to a large bowl, sprinkle with salt and stir in dried fruits and coconut. Reserve the parchment-lined pan to use again.

Reduce oven temperature to 300 F (150 C). Scrape oat mixture onto the parchment-lined pan and spread into a thick, even layer. It will be like a thick batter.

Bake until uniformly golden brown and dry to the touch, about 100 minutes total, pausing every 20–25 minutes to remove the mixture from the oven, and turn carefully with a pair of forks or a firm spatula.

When golden and dry, remove from oven and allow to cool completely on a wire rack. To speed cooling, slide the parchment off the baking sheet without disturbing or breaking up the oat clusters, if you can.

When the oats are completely cooled, about 45 minutes, transfer to the bowl of dried fruit and nuts. Toss gently until combined. Once cooled, transfer to an airtight container and store up to six weeks at room temperature.

Adapted from seriouseats.com

Janet Blaser is the author of the best-selling book, Why We Left: An Anthology of American Women Expatsfeatured on CNBC and MarketWatch. She has lived in Mexico since 2006. You can find her on Facebook.

Will Mexico’s influx of foreigners wear out expats’ welcome?

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Foreigner in Mexico City
Foreigners on the streets of Mexico City.

No matter where you live in the world, you’re always faced with the task of picking your specific combination of poison and pleasure.

Do you go for (at least the perception of) unlimited opportunities with the thrill of nary a safety net? The United States is your place.

A life where everything simply works the way it’s supposed to, but where you might feel you’re lacking excitement? Perhaps a small western European country will do.

Color and life all around, but combined with big crowds and extreme poverty? There are some cities in India with your name on them.

Many people, of course, have decided that Mexico is the place for them, and many more are increasingly deciding to stay. The reasons are varied, but one thing is for certain: there’s a lot to love about Mexico, and plenty decide that the pleasures it has to offer far outweigh the poisons.

Mexico’s popularity has really soared since the days when I first arrived in 2002. Most people’s response at the time when I told them that I was going to Mexico to study was “why?” The more polite people would say “Do you think you’ll be safe there?” The ones who couldn’t get enough of their own hilarity would say, “Don’t drink the water!”

Now when people learn I live in Mexico, they mostly think it’s cool. Mexico has become an “it” place (extremely well-deserved, in my opinion), and it seems that more and more people are discovering what I’ve always thought made it special: the friendly, gregarious culture, the delicious food, the breathtaking sites, the relaxed way of life.

And now that the tourism industry, which represents a sizable chunk of the country’s GDP, is finally recuperating after a long pandemic, I imagine that quite a lot of people are breathing a sigh of relief.

Right?

The short answer here is, “it’s complicated” – especially when it comes to visitors from the U.S., Mexico’s most enduring love-hate, on-again/off-again relationship.

A relaxed attitude about testing incoming travelers, for example, was great for the tourism industry in general, but caused COVID cases to surge in high-tourism areas, a dangerous trade-off, if you ask me.

And a Oaxaca community famous for its nudist beach had to make a specific law prohibiting public sexual acts too, so I think outsiders are definitely a mixed bag for Mexicans. These types of stories make me worry about us collectively wearing out our welcome.

Plenty of foreigners, of course, are coming to stay. The primary reason for coming that respondents gave a recent Expats In Mexico magazine survey was the lower cost of living here, which is understandable given the extent to which prices are going up all over the world.

In Mexico, those price increases are still fairly tolerable — at least, they are if you’re getting paid even poverty wages in U.S. dollars — and plenty of people have realized that they can live much better here than in their home countries on the same amount of money.

I often reflect on this fact and wonder to what extent foreign arrivals with intentions to stick around are resented. I mean, surely it’s not lost on anyone that it’s possible for those of us from countries with higher wages to work remotely and live like kings (well, sort of) while our Mexican counterparts with similar skillsets are bound to make merely average wages.

With only about 2% of salary earners bringing in above 26,000 pesos a month here, the 40,000-peso-a-month (about $2,000 USD) average income of most who responded to the Expats in Mexico survey is quite a lot to allow most people to live comfortably; especially if they’ve got proceeds from home sales in their own country in hand.

That said, it isn’t the same to live in a foreign country as one’s own. While you might have enough money to get what you need, what you often don’t have is the family and social support that most locals count on when times get tough. Still, enough money usually gets you what you need wherever you are in the world.

And most digital nomads coming to Mexico for extended stays know exactly what they want. The market is responding to those desires, with certain tourist areas offering an ever-increasing number of rentals through Airbnb. This is great for digital nomads, but not so great for average Mexicans discovering that finding an affordable, available place to live isn’t as easy as it used to be.

My question is always the same: is there a way to integrate well here without gentrifying up the whole place and negatively affecting those who were here first?

Will there be a tipping point at which it becomes clear that we’ve worn out our welcome?

For now, most foreigners I know in my area are modest and well-meaning, and I want to be clear that I’m not blaming people for coming. There are simply forces much greater than our individual wills.

Can our awareness of those forces help lessen the blow of the negative effects, and amplify the positive ones?

Sarah DeVries is a writer and translator based in Xalapa, Veracruz. She can be reached through her website, sdevrieswritingandtranslating.com and her Patreon page.

Slicing up the American pie: the week at the morning press conferences

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President López Obrador at his Tuesday press conference. Presidencia de la República

President López Obrador checked up on his flagship Maya Train project last weekend. A rail enthusiast, AMLO has previously related that he used to travel to his home state Tabasco on a now defunct passenger line from Mexico City to Palenque, Chiapas. He has even noted the contributions to Mexican rail by a politician he otherwise despises, the dictator Porfirio Díaz, who ruled Mexico for 31 years at the turn of the 20th century.

Monday

The president lined up the troops to attest to the ecological and social benefits of the Maya Train project. Environment Minister María Luisa Albores said relatively few trees were endangered by construction, compared to the many being planted nearby through the Sembrando Vida (Sowing Life) reforestation program. The head of the National Tourism Promotion Fund (Fonatur), Javier May, assured the project represents “development with justice,” providing investment in education, health and housing in its wake.

Later in the conference, López Obrador said it was U.S. funded groups that were blocking the progress of the project. “We continue to demand that the U.S. government no longer intervenes by supporting those civil society groups … that is interference, it’s a lack of respect for our sovereignty,” he said.

The president rediscovered his charm when he was asked about his Friday call with U.S. President Joe Biden. “The conversation with President Biden was very good. He’s very respectful, he’s a good person,” he said, adding that they’d made progress on immigration policies, such as investment in Central America and temporary work visas for migrants.

Environment Minister María Luisa Albores highlights benefits of the Maya Train on Monday.
Environment Minister María Luisa Albores highlights benefits of the Maya Train on Monday. Presidencia de la República

However, on Texas Governor Greg Abbott, his mood swung again. Abbott provocatively said he’d consider declaring illegal migration at the border an “invasion,” by which he could invoke wartime powers. AMLO suggested he listen to “Somos más Americanos” (We are more American) by the much beloved norteño band Los Tigres del Norte.

Tuesday

The president introduced a briefing on health reforms, lamenting that only half of Mexicans have social security.

The director of the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS), Zoé Robledo, said the country was short more than 33,000 staff including doctors, specialists and nurses. He added that Nayarit had been the first state to benefit from direct federal health services and that Tlaxcala and Colima would be next.

Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell, increasingly less preoccupied with the COVID-19 pandemic, offered a poetic vision of the vaccination program, which was almost reminiscent of a song famously sung by U.S. soul singer Marvin Gaye.

“One of the big challenges in the vaccination program was reaching people … community by community. Crossing rivers, climbing mountains, along winding roads and gorges,” he said.

Later in the conference, the president called for integrity in public life by quoting the 19th century Mexican writer, Ignacio Manuel Altamirano, meanwhile illustrating how to win the moral high ground.

“‘I’m poor because I didn’t want to steal. Others see me from the top of their carriages … but they see me with shame. I see them from above with my honesty and my legitimate pride. He who walks without remorse and is unstained always goes higher,'” he cited.

Wednesday

Much of Wednesday’s conference was dedicated to the plan to curb inflation of staple products. Business leaders were given an unusually warm welcome.

“A decision was taken to act on food-related issues, convincing, persuading, calling on producers, distributors and retailers to act together [with the government], without coercive measures. It’s not about price controls, it’s an agreement, an alliance to guarantee that the canasta básica has a fair price,” the president said, referring to a set of 24 staple goods.

A spokesperson from supermarket chain Walmart welcomed the plan, as did the global vice president of bread-maker giant Bimbo.

In addition to the usual officials and reporters, Wednesday's conference was attended by several prominent food industry leaders.
In addition to the usual officials and reporters, Wednesday’s conference was attended by several prominent food industry leaders. Presidencia de la República

Finance Minister Rogelio Ramírez de la O credited telecom magnate and Latin America’s richest man Carlos Slim for promising not to increase internet and telephone charges.

Although a frequent critic of big business, López Obrador called for a round of applause for the cooperative companies.

Federal fib-finder Ana Garía Vilchis said the government hadn’t ordered the destruction of a dam in Coahuila and insisted they weren’t trying to jail opponents of the failed electricity reform. She also found time to ask journalist Carlos Loret de Mola to declare his earnings and property portfolio.

Later in the conference, the president said his patience was wearing thin with U.S. promises for assistance to Central America. “We’re asking them to speed up because the Capitol managed to send US $30 billion in a few days for defense in Ukraine and we have been waiting four years for the authorization of US $4 billion for Central America,” he said.

Thursday

The president was in Puebla city on Thursday to commemorate the Battle of Puebla, when Mexican forces overcame a French assault in 1862. The holiday is better known as “Cinco de Mayo” (May 5) in the United States, where it is often celebrated more vigorously than in its country of origin.

Puebla Governor Miguel Barbosa speaks at Thursday's press conference.
Puebla Governor Miguel Barbosa speaks at Thursday’s press conference. Presidencia de la República

It would be the last conference of the week: the president had his bags packed for Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Belize and Cuba.

“It’s to express our solidarity with brotherly peoples, neighbors, from Central America and the Caribbean … We lack resources and there is a lot of need in Mexico … but preference must always be given to the poorest, the most humble, the most needy,” the president said of his trip, before alluding to his wish for the political unification of the Americas.
Migration was sure to be a topic of discussion during the trip. “There are partisan interests, interests of groups, political and economic interests which are the ones that have influence … they take advantage of the exclusionary policy,” he said of U.S. political figures, before calling for “Somos más Americanos” to be played in dedication to Mexican migrants in the United States.

Friday

The tabasqueño was on his travels, so there was no conference on Friday. Well-traveled too are Los Tigres del Norte. The band was formed by teenagers in Sinaloa in the 60s but only started recording once they had reached California. Migration features heavily in their songs, which have won them six Grammy awards.

Here is part of their song, “Somos más Americanos”:

“They’ve ordered me a thousand times,
That I return to my land,
Because I don’t belong here.
I want to remind the gringo,
I didn’t cross the border,
The border crossed me,
America was born free,
It was man that divided her.
They painted the [border] line,
For me to jump over,
And they call me an invader.
It’s a clear error,
Eight states were taken from us,
Who is the invader here?
I’m a foreigner in my own land,
I didn’t come to cause war,
I’m a hard working man.
Among brave warriors,
Indians from two continents,
Mixed with the Spanish,
If we go back through the centuries,
We are more American,
We are more American,
Than the son of the Anglo-Saxon.”

Mexico News Daily