¡ASK A MEXICAN!

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<p><strong>SPECIAL GOOD GABACHO/EVIL ALABAMA EDITION</strong></p>
<p><strong>&nbsp;&nbsp; I learned Spanish in school as a teen. Then, it seems, because I was young, everybody was an <em>usted</em>. I would like to practice speaking it, but am now an adult and don’t know who gets to be a <em>tú</em>?&nbsp; I’m scared of getting it wrong and unwittingly offending. <em>Tú</em> might be too familiar—hence, disrespectful—<em>usted</em> might be too cold or aloof. Please tell what is customarily done, so I can dare to try to speak this very beautiful language. Thank you!</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Yo Quiero Hablar</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; <strong><em>Dear I Want to Speak:</em></strong> <em>Primeramente</em>, thank <em>usted</em> for being a <em>gabacho</em> who’s not afraid of Spanish—you can teach Arizona and Alabama something, you know? The formal second-person personal pronoun <em>usted</em> isn’t cold or aloof at all, though, but rather a sign of respect toward the person you’re addressing—it could be a kid, a <em>viejito</em>, or the <em>pinche</em> King of England. <em>Tú</em> (and here, the novice Spanish speaker will note the use of the accent to distinguish it from <em>tu</em>, which without an accent is the informal singular second-person possessive “your”; the formal singular second-person possessive in Spanish is <em>su</em>) is for addressing anyone who doesn’t deserve particular respect but also doesn’t deserve derision. For those <em>pendejos</em> in the latter category, don’t even bother addressing them as a “you”—just call them “Alabama.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; <strong>I just read another letter in your column from a <em>gabacho</em> talking about Mexicans, who he claims are “desecrating our flag. A-a-and showing contempt for American citizens!!!” (Presumably white American citizens, who are more easily identified than pochos) It’s time for me to ask you—are these letters for real? Are you sure they’re not some nefarious Mexican plot to make white people look like a bunch of whiny cracker boobs? I’m married to a Mexican woman. Our family may be dysfunctional, and slow to pick up the check in restaurants. But unpatriotic? I have a son-in-law who just came back from Iraq. I have a brother-in-law who barely speaks English. He wants to become naturalized just so he can vote Republican. (I know, I know. Don’t ask.) And if you ask the <em>pochos</em>, they will tell you that the most dubious patriot in the family is that big gabacho over there—the one whose family all came from Norway. Sadly, they would be pointing at me.</strong></p>
<p><strong>&nbsp;&nbsp; If these letters really are real, then I throw myself at the mercy of your readers. Not all gringos are unemployed, crank-snorting, self-pitying trailer trash. Okay, a lot of us are. But don’t give up on the rest of us. I am already in trouble with the <em>pocho</em> side of the family, who suggest that if I don’t love my country, maybe I should move back to Norway, where I belong.</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><strong>A Gabacho Unleashed</strong></p>
<p><strong><em>&nbsp;&nbsp; Dear Gabacho:</em></strong> Of course all the letters sent in are real—who do you think I am, a fabulist ala Sarah Palin? As I always say in my many lectures, I only do three things to the questions: edit them for space constraint, clean them up for grammatical purposes and give people a pseudonym (I would’ve called <em>usted</em> Dumbfounded in Denver, but your choice worked). But you don’t have to worry about Mexicans making <em>gabachos</em> look bad—the state of Alabama does that job just great. And don’t worry about Mexicans hating on good gabachos such as yourself. We keep track of every <em>gabacho</em> in this country—we know who we can count on to marry our daughters, and who’s calling code enforcement whenever our <em>primo</em> Chava parks his Suburban on our lawn—in our own mestizo <em>Domesday Book</em>, making notes so when the time comes to take over, we’ll decide who gets the shot of Corralejo and who gets deported to Alabama.</p>
<p><em>Ask the Mexican at <a href="mailto:themexican@askamexican.net">themexican@askamexican.net</a></em><…;, be his fan on Facebook, follow him on Twitter or ask him a video question at <a href="http://www.youtube.com/askamexicano">youtube.com/askamexicano</a>!</em>…;

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Author
Gustavo Arellano