May 31, 2007
Memo From Mexico,
By
Allan Wall
Booing Miss U.S.A.—Why No Mexican Apologies?
[See also:
Doing the Booing Americans Won't Do, by
Michelle Malkin]
The 2007 Miss Universe pageant, held this month in
Mexico City, is now over.
Miss Japan won. Congratulations,
Miss Japan.
Miss U.S.A, Rachel Smith, was
booed by Mexican audiences
on two separate occasions. The first was on May 20th,
at an outdoor venue, when each contestant wore some sort
of national costume—Miss U.S.A. had on an
Elvis costume, complete with guitar. The second was
on the final night, May 28th.
According to an article in El Universal,
Miss Mexico, Rosa Maria Ojeda, "…attributed it to
the
tension over migratory matters and said that she
spoke with Smith to explain it to her and that [Miss
Smith] perfectly understood the situation."
El Universal’s gloss:
Relations between Mexico
and the U.S. have worsened in the past year after the
border was reinforced with agents of the
National Guard that have helped to erect hundreds of
thousands of kilometers of fencing to
keep out the illegals who attempt to cross over from
Mexico. [Abucheo
a Miss EU refleja tensión con México: Trump, May
29, 2007]
"Hundreds of thousands of kilometers?"
That’s an enormous exaggeration of course. But the
bottom line: for Mexico,
one kilometer of fencing would be
too much.
And get a load of this part:
"Mexicans are also
bothered by the radical immigration reform proposed by
the [U.S.] Senate that would make it difficult to
maintain family ties, to limit to 40,000 the
quantity of visas that are granted and to change the
system of preferences that for four decades, [ I. E.
since the Immigration Act Of 1965]has
favored these [family]
ties."
There you have it. Even the Senate Sell-out
is not good enough, is it? As I’ve pointed out
elsewhere, nothing but open borders and full benefits
for all Mexicans are sufficient. As for "family ties",
Mexican families
could all stay together by just staying in Mexico!
Mega-plutocrat Donald Trump is the owner of the
pageant. But a Trump official downplayed these ugly
incidents,
explaining that it was just a protest against
American policies and not Miss Smith personally.
The official did not even discount having the contest
in Mexico City again. The pageant was previously held in
Mexico City was in 1993—and guess what?
Miss U.S.A. was
booed then too!
A protest against American policies—or against
America?
This sort of thing regularly happens at international
soccer matches, as I’ve pointed out before. Mexican
soccer fans have booed the U.S.
National Anthem and even chanted "
Osama".
What’s telling is not so much that it happens—but
that fact that there’s so little condemnation of it in
Mexico.
In contrast, what would have happened if an American
crowd watching the pageant in a U.S. city had booed
Miss Mexico?
Sure, there are rude people everywhere. But part of
civilized society is making clear we don’t approve of
such behavior.
I recall an incident back in my small high school in
Oklahoma, when I was Student Council president my
senior year. We had some rude behavior at a school
assembly. It was actually rather mild behavior, even by
the standards of those days. Nevertheless, I was asked
to write a newspaper editorial condemning it. After all,
we couldn’t have the Student Council president tacitly
approving of
hooliganism, could we?
Some Mexican voices who condemned the booing,
included Marta Debayle, radio talk show hostess. Mexican columnist Tere
Quezada wrote an article entitled "
Los
Chilangos y su deplorable educacion" in which
she rebuked her fellow countrymen for booing Miss U.S.A:
"…the eternal, boring,
and
weary litany that the U.S. stole
Mexico ’s territories, and all the possible pretexts
….such as Yankee imperialism….that they (Americans) are
responsible for all the problems of this country…are
reason enough to insult whatever gringo that
treads Aztec territory, even if she is a beauty
pageant contestant….."
And the coverage on the El Universal website
was sympathetic to Miss U.S.A.
But overall, there was certainly no great outcry over
it.
The administration of President Felipe Calderon
wants us to amnesty illegal aliens, allow in more
guest workers and finance
economic development in Mexico. But neither he nor
anyone in his government criticized the booing.
It’s not the Mexican government’s job to get mixed up
in a beauty pageant, you think? Well, then why were all
the Miss Universe contestants invited to visit
Los Pinos (the
Mexican White House) and to
have dinner with Mexican First Lady Margarita Zavala?
Couldn’t
Mrs. Calderon, who had dined with all the girls,
have spoken out about it?
Shouldn’t Miss Mexico, as the host country
contestant, have spoken up more forcefully about it?
Couldn’t some
Mexican beauty pageant officials or some
Mexican celebrity have spoken out about it?
Well sure, they could have, but they didn’t. They
never do.
And that’s what’s particularly bothersome.
Prominent Mexicans don’t seem to care about
rude treatment of Americans or
open anti-Americanism. But they constantly
demand more and more rights for Mexicans in our
country—even
when they enter illegally.
If Mexican leaders want to forge a new relationship
with the U.S., wouldn’t some consideration of our
feelings be in order?
Are
U.S.-Mexican relations just a one-way street?
American
citizen Allan Wall (email
him) resides in Mexico, with a
legal permit issued him by the Mexican government. Allan
recently returned from a tour of duty in Iraq with the
Texas Army National Guard. His VDARE.COM articles are
archived
here; his FRONTPAGEMAG.COM
articles are archived
here his "Dispatches from
Iraq" are archived
here his website is
here.