22. North Invades Mexico
Source:
TomDispatch.com, September 19, 2006
Author: Mike Davis
Title: Border Invaders: The Perfect Swarm Heads South
http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=122537
Student Researcher: Rachel Icaza and Erica Haikara
Faculty Evaluator: Francisco Vazquez, Ph.D.
The visitor crossing the Mexican border from Tijuana to San Diego these
days is immediately confronted by a huge sign, Stop the Border
Invasion! Sponsored by allies of the anti-immigrant vigilante
group, the Minutemen, the same signs insult Mexican citizens at other
border crossings in Arizona and Texas. The ultimate irony is that a
crisis invasion is indeed occurring, but the signs, it seems, may be
pointed the wrong direction.
Author Mike Davis points out that, in a reality stood on its
head, few peopleat least outside Mexicohave bothered
to notice that while all the nannies, cooks, maids, and gardeners have
been heading north to tend the luxury lifestyles of irate republicans,
the Gringo masses have been rushing south to enjoy glorious budget retirements
and affordable second homes in Mexico.
The number of North Americans living in Mexico has soared from 200,000
to 1 million (one-quarter of all US expatriates) in the past decade.
With more than 70 million American baby-boomers expected to retire in
the next two decades, experts predict a tidal wave of migration
to warmerand cheaperclimates. Baby-boomers are not simply
feathering nests for eventual retirement, but also increasingly speculating
in Mexican resort property and gated communities, complete with Hooters,
Burger King, and Starbucks. The land rush is sending up property values
to the detriment of locals whose children are consequently driven into
slums or forced to emigrate north, only to face increasing invasion
charges.
The Gringo footprint is largest (and brings the most significant geopolitical
consequences) in Baja California, an epochal process that, if unchecked,
will produce intolerable social marginalization and ecological devastation.
Indeed, the first two stages of informal annexation have already occurred.
Under the banner of NAFTA, Southern California has exported hundreds
of its sweatshops and toxic industries to the maquiladora zones of Tijuana
and Mexicali. The Pacific Maritime Association, representing the West
Coasts major shipping companies, has joined forces with Korean
and Japanese corporations to explore the construction of a vast new
container port at Punta Colonel, 150 miles south of Tijuana, which would
undercut the power of Longshore unionism in San Pedro and San Francisco.
Secondly, tens of thousands of US retirees and winter-residents are
now clustered at both ends of the peninsula. Along the northwest coast
from Tijuana to Ensenada, a recent advertisement for a real estate conference
at UCLA boasts that there are presently over fifty-seven real
estate developments with over 11,000 homes/condos with an inventory
value of over $3 billion all of them geared for the US market.
Meanwhile, at the tropical end of Baja, a US expatriot enclave has emerged
in the twenty-mile strip between Cabo San Lucas and San Jose de Cabo.
Los Cabos has become an archipelago of real-estate hot spots where continuous
double-digit increases in property values pull in speculative capital.
Judging from the registration of private planes at the local airport,
Cabos has essentially become a resort suburb of Orange Countythe
home of the most vehement Minutemen chapters.
Davis points out that many wealthy Southern Californians evidently
see no contradiction between fuming over the alien invasion
with ones conservative friends at the Newport Marina one day,
and flying down to enjoy their Cabos investment properties the next.
One of several multi-billion dollar real estate projects being developed
for the US market is the Villages of Loreto: another 6,000 homes for
expatriates in colonial-Mexico motif on the Sea of Cortez. The $3 billion
Loreto project boasts that it will be the last word in green design,
exploiting solar power and restricting automobile usage. It will, coincidently,
balloon Loretos population from its current 15,000 to more than
100,000 in a decade, with the social and environmental consequences
of a sort that can already be seen in the slum peripheries of Cancun
and other mega-resorts.
One of the irresistible attractions of Baja is that it has preserved
a primordial wildness that has disappeared elsewhere in the West. Local
residents, including a very eloquent indigenous environmental movement,
cherish this incomparable landscape, as they do the survival of an egalitarian
ethos in the peninsulas small towns and fishing villages.
However, thanks to the silent invasion of the baby-boomers from the
north, much of the natural history and frontier culture of Baja could
be swept away in the next generation. The problem is, as Tom Engelhardt
of Tomdispatch points out, Fences dont work if youve
got your own plane.