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The Magical Fruta
Dear Wab:
Cabrón, tienes que work through some psychological issues before firing off questions to the Mexican — I suggest Cazadores. And can you get a Mexican-Spanish dictionary while you're at it? Refrito, when combined with frijoles, doesn't mean twice-fried; it signifies that the beans are cooked longer than usual. The mistranslation is common among both wabs and gabachos and originates in the assumption that the prefix re- means the same in ingles for refried as it does for frijoles refritos: repetition. It doesn't; in the Latino legume case, re- indicates an intensification of a situation, the transformation of once-humble beans after a date with tubs of lard into a mashed, delicious wonder. At least that's what my mother, sisters and chica caliente tell me — the most I can cook is pour Tapatío on some Cup o' Noodles.
Dear Mexican:
Why do Mexicans sell themselves short? Why are they willing to do jobs that other people don't want to do, and for so little? Why are they willing to settle for so little, when they could have much more? Why go through all the trouble of coming to America just to earn minimum wage for the rest of your life?
Eating the Welfare Queso
Dear Readers:
This is the último time I'm answering a letter that contains more than one pregunta. Too often, I receive rants from Know Nothings who pack as many queries into an e-mail as Mexicans into a Chevy trunk and usually end with some boast that I won't answer their rant because I'm a pussy. No, pendejos: The Mexican answers one question per person per column; to sneak in more than your allotment is to act like a Mexican. But the above challenge isn't one of those: Welfare Queso is relatively polite, and his multiple questions really refry down to the idea that Mexicans can do better than merely come to this country illegally.
Of course they can, Welfare Queso, and they do. As tough as the attainable jobs are for illegal and English-deficient Mexicans in the States, as low as the minimum wage is in this country, it's still mucho better than what's available in Mexico. The average minimum wage in Mexico (for some bizarre reason, the government sets three separate minimum wages, each corresponding to a particular region — and we wonder why it's so inept!) is 49.06 pesos a day. That translates into a measly $4.51 in American dollars A DAY. Most Mexicans can make four times that in the United States by picking up loose change after a matinée — really, is that such a mystery? And millions of Mexicans would love to earn minimum wage in Mexico. There's a reason why Mexicans continue to pour into the United States, and it ain't for Lou Dobbs' love.
Got a spicy question about Mexicans? Ask the Mexican at mexican@pitch.com.