viernes, septiembre 30, 2005

ABOUT THE TRICOLOUR MEXICAN FLAG

I was surfing the net and I just learnt what the colours of the mexican flag mean. I knew the eagle and the snake represent somthing kind of aztec. But no clue about the colours. In fact, never thougt they really meant anything. But I found what you´ll find
on the picture top of the posting.

You won´t be wrong if you guess that what shocked me the most was what the red strip apparently means. The Independence movement, as in many other countries, was triggered by the descendents of the late settlers coming from the metropoli. That is why all american countries, from Canada to Argentina are really similar to their former colonists languagewise, religionwise and so on... (just Haiti was founded from the insurection of the slaves brought out by french colonists who were subsequently kicked out).
Us, Spaniards, keep tight historic bonds with Mexico (amongst others)... deffinitly it should be a must for all of us visiting, at least, Mexico once in our lifes. The fact that nowadays both countries are turned towards their most immediate trade and political partners (the US for Mexico and Cuba and Morocco for Spain) should not deter us from experiencing and discovering what, certainly for good, is part of our history and ourselfs as individuals...
It just comes to my mind how great was getting, while in Cancun, to those haciendas serving communal meals with all those mariachis playing all over the canteen... it´s sad, but besides that lunch that we had somewhere in downtown Cancun, it was the most authentic taste we got from the Real Mexico.
Hopefully, with the help of God that inspired the white strip of the flag, everything will work Ok and we´ll be able to enjoy and for ever remember the journey.
Help us Almightly God.

jueves, septiembre 29, 2005

FIRST INTERACTION WITH THE MEXICAN AUTHORITIES, OR HOW IT WAS PRETTY MUCH LIKE TALKING TO SPANISH OFFICIALS

Today I had the first interaction with mexican immigration officials.
As a Spanish national, there are not special immigration requirements I should comply with. I need no visa or specific authorisation. I can stay at any of the countries we will be heading to up to 90 days. Apparently, our burgundry EU passport has countless properties and will be welcomed all over...
But DG recently experienced some border crossing issues in Upstate NY... Gone are the days in where we were just accountable to God Neptune and the only thing we had to take care of was getting on the right air stream... (not an easy task, though...) the point is that we had to make sure we would not have the same problems south of Rio Grande that we had north of the Saint Lawrence.
All and all we pulled the phone numbers for most of the mexican consulates in the US. There' s a whole bunch of'em...
Definietly those guys are too close to the US... calling those offices takes you straigh to the torture of f****** voice menus... I' d say that together with the speed limit is one of the things I'll miss the less.

  • Getting somedody on DC' s was really easy but not really helpful. Being at the Capital brands everybody... it was easy to feel certain stifness on an extremely polite and professional-sounding lady... beatiful accent... steady... kind of sweet... But nothing really useful. It seems that the Embassy and the Consulates depend on the Foreing Affairs Office (Secretaría de Asuntos Exteriores) and customs depend on the Home Office (Secretaría de Gobernación), which makes full sense... but asking a bit of interoffice communication so that the official could know how likely it could be being turned down at the border didn´t prove very effective.
  • Calling Miami´s, Philly´s and NY´s was useless. The voice menu takes you through a net of options, addresses, greetings, governamental commercials...
  • Calling Orlando was funny. Funny assuming you are not rushing because of whatever... The official there got really curious about my trip, he was probably bored and I became a good release to it.
    - ¿A dónde va a ir usted?
    - ¿Cómo dice?
    - Qué por donde tiene pensado ir.
    - Pues por donde pueda, señor, por donde llegue con el carro (yeah... adapt or fail...)
    - Me tiene que decir exacatamente por donde quiere ir, caballero.
    Pinche cabrón... estás aburrido ¿Verdad pendejo cabrón...? Well... it doesn´t matter... no problem with it...
    - Disculpe, pero no veo la realción entre decirle a usted por donde voy a ir y si voy a ser capaz de entrar en el país...
    - ¡Joven! Está usted hablando con el consulado. Debe facilitarnos toda la información que le solicitamos.
    Should I hang up? Would it make any difference when I show up at the border? Well let´s remain polite...
    - Pues tengo pensado ir desde la frontera con Tejas a Guatemala en Chiapas... pero si tiene usted alguna idea o alguna recomendación la recibiré con mucho gusto, señor.
    - ¿Por toda la República?
    sí... cabrón... todita entera...
    - Sí señor. Entonces, ¿Qué? ¿Podré cruzar la frontera o no?
    - Pues no le puedo contestar, caballero. Las aduanas dependen de Gobernación y no le sé decir...
    Well... it should be like 10 am in Arizona and they probably are more used to attend people with border-related problems. Let´s do it...
  • Tucson was finally the best option. It looked so easy since the very begining. The first lady I talked to put to somebody else who was supposed to give a more accurate response. She could not. She talked about what department depends on what... but she had a brilliant idea. She gave me the phone number to the immigration office in Hermosillo, the head office for the Nogales post, since it is through there that I pretended I was gonna cross. Good. Two hours later, we learnt we should be calling straight the guy to whom we will be talking once we show up at the border. Leaving in the US makes you do weird stuff... all those procedures... policies... guidelines... bullshit... do as you would at home. Pick up the phone and call the guy, then ask him what the scenario will be,... and see what he says...

We called Nogales. It was funny. The radio commercials on the background. I could almost imagine what the radio looked like. An oldy transistor, holding together tied up with shipping tape and thread... stains all over... the dial wheel about to fall down if not already missed... the plastic colour faded and the aerial twisted, bended, and missing the top ball. On the table, surely a sandwich or a taco, half chunked, half wrapped on its foil... some crumbs on the table and in between the paperwork... probably a bottle of soda around as well... pretty much the same as any official cabin somewhere in Spain. No doubt what an american would say about the scene... a cop getting off a Dunkin Doughnut with a 24 box, scoffing them anxiously with a stabucks cup of coffe on his hand is, apparently, a much civilised and respectable picture...

A very helpful lady told us that what we should be doing, is calling the customs office itself, explaining what our issue was, and just finiding out whether we´d have a problem once we show up at the border.

We had to play a role. It' s always easier innit? So we pulled a map of the border and we pretended, for each custom office we were calling, we were at the closest large city on the US side. For instance, were we calling Nogales, we said we were in Tucson, Piedras Negras and Nuevo Laredo, San Antonio and so on... We went to the Mexico Customs webstite (Aduanas de México, http://www.aduanas.sat.gob.mx/webadunet/aga.aspx?Q=r19) and we got all the phone numbers for all the offices on the north border. Once again, a bit of geograohical tracking with the phone. BTW, our Cingular contract considers calls out to Mexico as if they were out to the US... which was a pretty satisfying finiding when we got the bill...

I´ll try to summarise what we got from each post.

  • Tijuana. No answer at all. I don´t know what the hell were hey doing overthere, but nobody got the phone,... not even after the fifth call... anyway... hopefully, we´ll be crossing somewhere a bit more west.
  • Matamoros. It was not that easy, at any office, describing what our issue is. It is not just about what records they might share with the US, but how the canadian adventure would affect the passing. We had to make sure we explained all the relevant stuff. At the end it resulted a very encouraging conversation. No problems at all. The only thing those guys care of is kind of making sure no terrorists or smthg like that flees the US through their border. So no probs...
  • Nuevo Laredo. There we might have got on the phone the auditor kind of guy. He was not really sure what the whole story wa about. But he prove very honest, helpful and goodwilling. We agreed that I´d be calling a bit later and he would have done some research. "Llámeme dentro de un rato joven, que ya habré yo buscado y comentado por acá y le podré contestar"... well,... thank you man... I don´t know whether I was really gonna wait for me calling afterwards... but I made us feeling good... no bullshit, politness... that is pretty much what we´ll need when we do it. Sadly, this city is recently well-known due to some drug trafficing problems and to mafias that operate in the area. Although anglo-saxon media overspin everything a little bit we should consider that.
  • Piedras Negras. That was our last call. And it was very cheering. The guy I first talked to put me on the phone a bloke who presented himself as the subdelegate. He asked me where I was willing to cross through. Through the bridge? Well... I don´t really know officer... I´ve never been there,... I don´t know how the border looks like... there is a bridge...? I mean, wherever you guys want me to go go through, I will... When you show up you´ll have to go through International Bridge #2... all rit... if that's what I' m supposed to do... I will... Yeah, that' s it... get to the border, cross the bridge, pull over at the lot and when you get to the main office ask for me. I am Mr. XXXXX, (you might understand that I do not remember the name) the subdelegate, if you struggle at the border ask for me, I' ll be around and we' ll more than glad to help you out.

All and all it prove to be a very helpful exercise. Certainly we could have spared all that hadn't we have those accidents like a year ago... but it is what it is... right? We got a good feeling on what we can expect on the other side of the border. It all really depends on the officials we will be dealing with. But I can bet whatever, and I won't loose it, we might, at least, get ride of the dog-looking DHS official... as worried in freezing you with his look as concerned of loosing his job if he ever dares to relax his strained chevy chase... For God's shake... it's not gonna be a safer country if you release your face buddy... take it easy... we don't need you to smile... but don't look like you are gonna bite someone... please... somebody throw a bone to those dudes...

miércoles, septiembre 28, 2005

CLARIFICATION ON WHAT WE MEANT BY THE "AMERICAN SPIRIT"

If we live here, you have, in certain extent, play their game. It is not about ass kissing all day round. That´d be not just highly unethicall but extremelly unhygienic. And we never were too
politically correct.
They really need being told what a great country they live in... how much we would like settling down here... what a great fullfilment of our personal needs getting the US passport would be...
well,... it´s now to late to throw that bullshit...
But we cannot start saying what a whole bunch of pussy cats they sometimes look like those blokes...
So we had to find a way to call´em puffy bastards and say it in such a way that it looked like a compliment...
"Guys... please... where the american spirit is gone...? I mean... you guys get to the moon, get Europe rid of its own disease... you freed it from the nazis... you conquer countries... and now... because you won´t find a McDonalds every 20 miles but a taquería you are gonna stop doing whatever you want...?"

They got it the way they were supposed to.

They would have said that they do not want to drive on any highway that has not any McDonalds... they´d say they´ll pay somebody to put McDonalds on it and then they will, freely, decide whether they drive or not... well... here we go... the same old stuff...
Anyway, I don´t really mind pulling over at McD... I really think it´s a cool stuff to have on the highways...

Pero donde esté el Casa Pepe de Despeñaperros... eso sí que es un clásico coño... Ahí sí que tendrían que pararse... no hay cojones...

http://clubbingspain.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=9236&highlight=&sid=dee39239d71906795b51f9baef9d3141

martes, septiembre 27, 2005



INITIAL FEEDBACK OR HOW THE "AMERICAN SPIRIT" VANISHED

Setting: DC's Grill and Bar @ the Wisp Ski Resort,Western Maryland
Cast of Characters: RM, associate from NJ working in the Baltimore office; MMcT, Sr. Associate from MD; DG.
Not much we could chat about. And, apparently, I was the one supposed to make it a "bearable" night since there was no game on the telly. No way I was gonna start shiting somebody and, even 1.5 later, my american football conversation is considerably poor... so I shared some of our initials plans with the kids. I know they like it.
There is always a mix of envy, scorn and curiosity when I mention my travelling. Envy since it brings out the easy position I am at. What you want... I mean... if I'm getting back, I'm getting back... no way I'm gonna feel guilty about it bro... You want some XXXX-sponsored holidays?... All rit... put ur ass on a plane and get urself somewhere... Scorn because of whatever. Curiosity as an extension of the never ending feeling our presence implies and brings to wherever we go. I would have guesed I should already be done with it... I mean... the fact that I travel should not be such an amazing experience, at least 1.5 years later... since the fact that I came out to the US, already represents, by itslef, some travelling... but anyway... that is the way it is...
Comments were interesting. MMcT was shocked. He' s a good guy, and certainly does not give a shit about what we do or what we do not do. But we had to keep on talking... He could not stop some sights pulling out from his mouth. It can be easily summarised as follows: "they' re gonna kill you... you don' t know where you are going... there is nothing over there... they have no runnig water, no medicines... if you get ill no way you can get any assistance... no infrastructures, they rarely pave their highways... and your car... that's worth the wage of 10 years over there... you'll be shot at for it..."
RM was a bit more cautious. There was a bit of everything on his face. A huge desire to experience a bit of adventure above all. We agreed on something. DG should plan really well in advance some essential aspects of the journey. It makes full sense although it is not likely to become the distinctive style of our drifting... What follows is illustrative as well: "You neglect a lot of things... you don't really know what it's like overthere... you might think that it is like the US and... well like Europe.... but it is not..." some seconds elapsed in between the "and" and the "well" I' d say they cannot help it... and we will consider it a gentle and well intentioned rectification.
And please, remember, Moonshine, not Moonwalk, is a home made beverage brewed illegaly and not for sale on liquor stores.