Crime

Igor Loving lovingigor@hotmail.com
Sat Dec 20 08:58:04 2003


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<P>Crime South Of The Rio Bravo 
<P>Reflections On The Virtue Of Lawlessness <BR>December 8, 2003 
<P>I am sad to report that Mexico is the most criminal of countries. Let me <BR>illustrate. 
<P>Suppose that you were subject to, say, horrendous sinus infections or <BR>earaches. In America, by law you would have to get an appointment with a <BR>doctor, $75, thank you-when he had time, how about day after tomorrow, <BR>whereupon he would give you a prescription for amoxicillin, fifteen bucks <BR>and a trip to a pharmacy. If this happened on a Friday, you would either <BR>slit your wrists by Saturday evening to avoid the torture, or go to an <BR>emergency room, however distant, where they would charge you a fortune <BR>and give you a prescription for…amoxicillin. 
<P>In Mexico, upon recognizing the familiar symptoms, you would go to the <BR>nearest farmacia and buy the amoxicillin. The agony would be nipped in <BR>the bud (presuming that agony has buds). The doctor would not get $75, <BR>which is against all principles of medicine. The pharmacist would not <BR>lose his license, as he would in the United States. 
<P>See? Criminality is legal in Mexico. That's how bad things are. 
<P>Another grave crime here is horse abuse. Often you see a Mexican father <BR>clopping through town on an unregistered horse-yes: the horror-with his <BR>kid of five seated behind him. A large list of crimes leaps instantly to <BR>the North American mind. The kid is not in a governmentally sanctioned <BR>horse seat. He is not wearing a helmet. The father is not wearing a <BR>helmet. The horse is not wearing a helmet. The horse is not wearing a <BR>diaper. The horse does not have a parade permit. The horse doesn't have <BR>turn signals. The father does not have a document showing that he went to <BR>governmentally approved school and therefore knows how to operate a <BR>horse, which he has been doing since he was six years old. 
<P>In Mexico, if you want to ride a horse, you get one, or borrow one. If <BR>you don't know how to ride it, you have someone to show you. Why any of <BR>this might interest the government is unclear to everybody, including the <BR>government. 
<P>You see, here is the dark underside of Mexico. People do most things <BR>without supervision, as if they were adults. 
<P>This curious state of affairs, which might be called "freedom," has <BR>strange effects on gringos. Shortly after I moved here, I began to hear <BR>little voices. This worried me until I realized that I was next door to a <BR>grade school. Daily at noon a swarm of children erupted into the street, <BR>the girls chattering and running every which way, the boys shouting and <BR>roughhousing and playing what sounded like cowboys and Injuns. 
<P>In the United States, half of the boys would be forced to take drugs to <BR>make them inert. If they played anything involving guns, they would be <BR>suspended and forced to undergo psychiatric counseling, which would in <BR>all likelihood leave them in a state of murderous psychopathy. Wrestling <BR>would be violence, with the same results. 
<P>Here you see the extent to which, narcotically, Mexico lags the great <BR>powers. The Soviets drugged inconvenient adults into passivity. America <BR>drugs its little boys into passivity. Mexico doesn't drug anyone. 
<P>In fiesta season, which just ended, everybody and his grand aunt Chuleta <BR>puts up a taco stand or booze stall on the plaza. Yes: In front of God <BR>and everybody. These do not have permits. They are just there. If you <BR>want a cuba libre, you give the nice lady twenty pesos and she hands it <BR>to you. That's all. There is in this a simplicity that the North American <BR>instantly recognizes as dangerous. Where are the controls? Where are the <BR>rules? Why isn't somebody watching these people? Heaven knows what might <BR>happen. They could be terrorists. 
<P>If you chose to wander around the plaza, drink in hand, and listen to the <BR>band, no one would care in the least, in part because they would be doing <BR>the same thing. If you didn't finish your drink, and walked home with it, <BR>no one would pay the least attention. 
<P>In America this would be Drinking in Public. It would merit a night in <BR>jail followed by three months of compulsory Alcohol School. This would <BR>accomplish nothing of worth, but would put money in the pockets of <BR>controlling and vaguely hostile therapists, and let unhappy bureaucrats <BR>get even with people they suspect of enjoying themselves. 
<P>Mexicans seem to regard laws as interesting concepts that might merit <BR>thought at some later date. There is much to be said for this. The <BR>governmental attitude seems to be that if a thing doesn't need <BR>regulating, then don't regulate it. Life is much easier that way. 
<P>If a law doesn't make sense in a particular instance, a Mexican will <BR>ignore it. Where I live it is common to see a driver go the wrong way on <BR>one-way street to avoid a lengthy circumnavigation. Since speeds are <BR>bout five miles an hour, it isn't dangerous. The police don't patrol <BR>because there isn't enough crime (in my town: the big cities are as bad <BR>as ours) to justify it. It works. Everybody is happy, which isn't a crime <BR>in Mexico. 
<P>I could go on. In Mexico, legally or not, people ride in the backs of <BR>pickup trucks if the mood strikes them. This is no doubt statistically <BR>more dangerous than being wrapped in a Kevlar crash-box with an oxygen <BR>system and automatic transfusion machine. They figure it is their business. 
<P>Here is an explanation of Mexican criminality. The United States realizes <BR>that a citizen must be protected whether he wants to be or <BR>not-controlled, regulated, and intimidated in every aspect of everything <BR>he does, for his own good. He must not be permitted to ride a bicycle <BR>without a helmet, smoke if he chooses, or go to a bar where smoking is <BR>permitted. He cannot be trusted to run his life. 
<P>Have you ever wondered how much good the endless surveillance, preaching, <BR>and rules really do? In some states your car won't pass inspection if <BR>there is a crack in the windshield. There are-I don't doubt?-studies <BR>measuring the carnage and economic wreckage concomitant to driving with a <BR>cracked windshield. Presumably whole hospitals groan at the seams (if <BR>that's quite English) with the maimed and halt. 
<P>Or might it be that the rules are just stupid, the product of meddlesome <BR>bureaucrats and frightened petty officials with too much time on their <BR>hands? Maybe it would be better if they just got off our backs? 
<P>Nah. </P></DIV></div><br clear=all><hr> <a href="http://g.msn.com/8HMBENUS/2755??PS=">Check your PC for viruses with the FREE McAfee online computer scan.</a> </html>