¡ASK A MEXICAN!

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<p><strong>Dear Mexican: So, I walked into Carl’s Jr. the other day and gazed at the dozen of middle-aged women of Mexican decent hustling and bustling around a kitchen. A flawless performance, yet I couldn’t help but think of my days as a youth and the responsibility I learned from my first job. Do you think the youth of today have had less of a chance to procure a decent work ethic because most of today’s minimum-wage jobs are occupied by immigrants (both legal and illegal)? Put simply: if I lived a stone’s throw away from Canada, and their minimum wage was $14 an hour, I might go there to work and send all the money back to my family in the US. But I wouldn’t think it was right.</strong><br>
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<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>The Mick</strong></p>
<p> Blaming Mexicans for the flojo-ness of millennials? That’s the latest chant of Know Nothings, especially during the Great Recession. And, for once, it’s based on facts: last year, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics found that employment for 16-to-19-year olds is at the lowest level since World War II, when we used to send off said lazy teenagers off to fight Hitler and Hirohito, and pointed the finger at immigrants. But now we get to the issue that the Right never wants to acknowledge in their illegals rants: capitalism. It’s not the immigrants who told companies to depress wages and break unions to hire them; that’s the captains of industry seeking to make as much money as possible. It’s not the immigrants who force consumers to buy from rapacious corporations; that’s all on the plates of gabachos who want the cheapest products possible. And it’s not a fair system, but it ain’t the immigrants who insist on free-market capitalism—that’s all America, chulo. Finally, spare us your hypothetical fretting about taking away jobs from others—your mick ancestors sure as hell didn’t care when they were robbing jobs from the Dutch.</p>
<p><strong>I am a gabacha who lives in LA. My aunt, whom I love, is from Argentina—despite that, she spends mucho energy going on and on about how her ancestors settled there from France and therefore she is actually white. (While I don’t have access to her ancestry.com profile, she and her children look as brown as many of the Mexicans I know). Recently, her son has been applying for jobs and has gotten turned down, and blames not being hired on “all the quotas” there are for hiring people of color. Is it just my aunt and her kids, or do all Argentines take pains to distance themselves from the rest of Latin America? I also don’t get why, if my cousin really thinks quotas are why people are getting hired, why wouldn’t he play the race card and identify as “Hispanic,” since he could legitimately do so? Sorry, I know your expertise is on Mexico and not Argentina, but there is no ¡Ask an Argentine! column for me to write to.</strong><br>
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<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Blood Sausage Lover</strong></p>
<p><em>Dear Gabacha:</em> Even though I ain’t a carajo, I know enough about them to qualify as an expert—I once nearly dated one, I think Messi is God, and my compañera Aura Bogado blasts Know Nothings away over at The Nation and Colorlines. And while Argentines do think they’re superior to all Latinos, what Latinos don’t? I’ve always felt bad for them—from Perón to the Dirty War to Menem to Messi not being able to do anything during the World Cup, their string of bad luck makes them the Mexicans of the pampas, with chimichurri instead of salsa and men who are far more fey.</p>
<p><em>Ask the Mexican at <a href="mailto:themexican@askamexican.net&quot; target="_blank">themexican@askamexican.net</a>, be his fan on Facebook, follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano or ask him a video question at <a href="http://www.youtube.com/askamexicano&quot; target="_blank">youtube.com/askamexicano</a>!</em></p>

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Gustavo Arellano