Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Wednesday, September 10, 2014, 10:02 (4069 days ago)
It saddens me that after years of trying to give helpful advice to Larry and the folks of the charitable organization Por Los Niños it appears all of my efforts to warn them not to allow themselves to be used as political pawns have fallen on deaf ears. Today's newspapers carry photos of Larry with one of the local political candidates for the mayorship dedicating a basketball court together. Heck, Larry, you might as well have simply made a campaign contribution!
Perhaps Larry and his group don't realize the precarious situation they have now placed themselves and all their work in. But after seeing this photo it wouldn't take much for one of this candidate's rivals to use the Artículo 33 of the Mexican Constitution to shut down Por Los Niños and expel Larry and his foreigner assistants from the country. I'm sure the subject will be discussed by some of them. Politics is a vicious arena with no holds barred, and if one of this guy's rivals think they can gain any political advantage by removing an apparent source of assistance to this candidate they will seize the opportunity, the kids and the charity bedamned.
Unfortunately it is precisely because Por Los Niños is not careful enough not to allow itself to be used by political interests that I cannot wholeheartedly offer them my support, as much as I would like to, and that's just a damn shame.
SMILE! YOU'RE PART OF THE CAMPAIGN!
Larry
by Zihuateco
, Wednesday, September 10, 2014, 20:28 (4069 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
I applaud your good intent and efforts.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by JACK
, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 09:38 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Dear Jack, Could you please post this response to Rob's comments. My password doesn't seem to work. Gracias! Lorenzo
Dear Rob,
Damn, I wish we could get on the same page. I hate writing these long-winded, self-justifying emails every year.
With all due respect, the only "helpful advice" you have given us over the past 10 years has been your annual post on the message board criticizing how we do our work. You have never once sat down with us face-to-face, perhaps over a cold one, and asked us a single question, in spite of our repeated invitations. You have always been "too busy". Sadly, your postings suggest that you don't quite know what we do, or how we do it.
Citing Article 33 is a rather long stretch of imagination. Por Los Niños does not accept political contributions. We do not endorse political candidates. We do not attend political functions. Politicians who participate in our projects agree not to use Por Los Niños in their political advertising, excluding, of course, newspaper photo-ops at ceremonies. And, yes, we have a Mexican lawyer on our committee who provides guidance.
Por Los Niños de Zihuatanejo is a federally-approved Mexican foundation, chartered to provide educational opportunities to children in the municipality of Zihuatanejo. We are a collaborative organization with limited funding. So we invite other foundations, government agencies, individuals, and yup!, even politicians, to join the fun. We need their help, they need our help - none of us have the resources to solve Zihua's educational crisis individually(nor will we ever). So we combine our resources, each partner providing what they either can or choose to do for the benefit of our bright-eyed young scholars.
A prime example of this collaboration is the two new schools we built this Summer in Barrio Nuevo. Nearly 20 groups, (Mexican, American, Canadian) and individuals collaborated to make magic happen for the kids and the community. The government agencies, Rotary Clubs and political candidates do not donate to Por Los Niños de Zihuatanejo; they donate directly and independently to the schools to support a common goal. No funds change hands. (Ain't many votes to be won by donating to our 12 member committee, only half of whom are entitled to vote.)
Our Mayor, Presidente Eric, assigned 4 city construction workers for 14 weeks to help build the schools. Was he just doing his job, providing more desperately-needed new schools? Or was it a political contribution? He will certainly be running for a new political office when his term as mayor ends next year? Does his personal motivation really matter when the results benefit the community?
Profe Fernando Leyva Sotelo, is a mayoral candidate. When he was the Municipal Director of Education, he busted his buns to successfully "fast-track" the federal certification of our new schools(we ain't got a working school without it). Is he entitled to attend a photo-op ribbon-cutting ceremony at the schools he helped create? We think so. By the way, he just missed being in the photo you posted featuring his political opponent Jorge; he couldn't pass up the school mom's enchiladas.
Lic. Jorge Sanchez Allec, formerly Municipal Coordinator of Public Works, is a mayoral candidate. His family owns a concrete company. They donated $80,000+ pesos of concrete to our projects this year. Did we thank him when the new schools opened? Damn right we did.
Fernando and Jorge have been active supporters of Por Los Niños' educational initiatives for many years prior to their political candidacies. Do we now reject their politically-motivated contributions and just toss them overboard when they run for office? Not me, I have to work with the winner for his three year term of office.
Rob, my point being, I guess, is that volunteers come in all flavors. We don't insist on an ideological-purity litmus test, particularly when the public benefit of the donation is so obvious. There are, of course, ethical lines we will not cross. To your dismay, and I think I understand your perspective, politicians are sometimes on the right side of our line. Are you suggesting we should limit our activities to a "should be" world instead of addressing the world as it really is? Idealism vs practicality? It is an issue that troubles most thoughtful folks. Our first question is, "How does it benefit the children?"
In the United States, political candidates promise to solve all the world's problems, and then spend millions of dollars for scurrilous attack ads slandering their opponents. And, thus, they prove their value to the voters.
In Mexico, political candidates promise to solve all the world's problems, and then try to influence voters by - gasp! - contributing funds to civic projects. What a concept! When I visit schools during an election year, I see gallons of paint, stacks of roofing tiles, a line of shiny-new toilets or sinks, - all donated by some political schmuck looking for votes. The cool thing is that even when they lose, the kids and the schools win.
I must confess that, even with the history of corruption in Mexico, I prefer politicians that actually offer something to the community to earn (buy?) votes. (Is this where you go back to referring to us as "naive, well-meaning foreigners who just don't understand Mexico"? The combined ages of our committee members reflect about 200 years of experience in Mexico. This is not our first rodeo.)
Rob, in all sincerity, I again invite you to join us for a happy hour, ask us anything, get to know us, learn how we operate, offer us your advice. The drinks are on me.
Abrazos,
lorenzo
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 10:35 (4068 days ago) @ JACK
Dear Jack, Could you please post this response to Rob's comments. My password doesn't seem to work. Gracias! Lorenzo
Dear Rob,
Damn, I wish we could get on the same page. I hate writing these long-winded, self-justifying emails every year.
With all due respect, the only "helpful advice" you have given us over the past 10 years has been your annual post on the message board criticizing how we do our work. You have never once sat down with us face-to-face, perhaps over a cold one, and asked us a single question, in spite of our repeated invitations. You have always been "too busy". Sadly, your postings suggest that you don't quite know what we do, or how we do it.
Citing Article 33 is a rather long stretch of imagination. Por Los Niños does not accept political contributions. We do not endorse political candidates. We do not attend political functions. Politicians who participate in our projects agree not to use Por Los Niños in their political advertising, excluding, of course, newspaper photo-ops at ceremonies. And, yes, we have a Mexican lawyer on our committee who provides guidance.
Por Los Niños de Zihuatanejo is a federally-approved Mexican foundation, chartered to provide educational opportunities to children in the municipality of Zihuatanejo. We are a collaborative organization with limited funding. So we invite other foundations, government agencies, individuals, and yup!, even politicians, to join the fun. We need their help, they need our help - none of us have the resources to solve Zihua's educational crisis individually(nor will we ever). So we combine our resources, each partner providing what they either can or choose to do for the benefit of our bright-eyed young scholars.
A prime example of this collaboration is the two new schools we built this Summer in Barrio Nuevo. Nearly 20 groups, (Mexican, American, Canadian) and individuals collaborated to make magic happen for the kids and the community. The government agencies, Rotary Clubs and political candidates do not donate to Por Los Niños de Zihuatanejo; they donate directly and independently to the schools to support a common goal. No funds change hands. (Ain't many votes to be won by donating to our 12 member committee, only half of whom are entitled to vote.)
Our Mayor, Presidente Eric, assigned 4 city construction workers for 14 weeks to help build the schools. Was he just doing his job, providing more desperately-needed new schools? Or was it a political contribution? He will certainly be running for a new political office when his term as mayor ends next year? Does his personal motivation really matter when the results benefit the community?
Profe Fernando Leyva Sotelo, is a mayoral candidate. When he was the Municipal Director of Education, he busted his buns to successfully "fast-track" the federal certification of our new schools(we ain't got a working school without it). Is he entitled to attend a photo-op ribbon-cutting ceremony at the schools he helped create? We think so. By the way, he just missed being in the photo you posted featuring his political opponent Jorge; he couldn't pass up the school mom's enchiladas.
Lic. Jorge Sanchez Allec, formerly Municipal Coordinator of Public Works, is a mayoral candidate. His family owns a concrete company. They donated $80,000+ pesos of concrete to our projects this year. Did we thank him when the new schools opened? Damn right we did.
Fernando and Jorge have been active supporters of Por Los Niños' educational initiatives for many years prior to their political candidacies. Do we now reject their politically-motivated contributions and just toss them overboard when they run for office? Not me, I have to work with the winner for his three year term of office.
Rob, my point being, I guess, is that volunteers come in all flavors. We don't insist on an ideological-purity litmus test, particularly when the public benefit of the donation is so obvious. There are, of course, ethical lines we will not cross. To your dismay, and I think I understand your perspective, politicians are sometimes on the right side of our line. Are you suggesting we should limit our activities to a "should be" world instead of addressing the world as it really is? Idealism vs practicality? It is an issue that troubles most thoughtful folks. Our first question is, "How does it benefit the children?"
In the United States, political candidates promise to solve all the world's problems, and then spend millions of dollars for scurrilous attack ads slandering their opponents. And, thus, they prove their value to the voters.
In Mexico, political candidates promise to solve all the world's problems, and then try to influence voters by - gasp! - contributing funds to civic projects. What a concept! When I visit schools during an election year, I see gallons of paint, stacks of roofing tiles, a line of shiny-new toilets or sinks, - all donated by some political schmuck looking for votes. The cool thing is that even when they lose, the kids and the schools win.
I must confess that, even with the history of corruption in Mexico, I prefer politicians that actually offer something to the community to earn (buy?) votes. (Is this where you go back to referring to us as "naive, well-meaning foreigners who just don't understand Mexico"? The combined ages of our committee members reflect about 200 years of experience in Mexico. This is not our first rodeo.)
Rob, in all sincerity, I again invite you to join us for a happy hour, ask us anything, get to know us, learn how we operate, offer us your advice. The drinks are on me.
Abrazos,
lorenzo
Larry, your comments with respect to the politicians shows your determination to ignore the dirty reality. As to your comments regarding my advice or not, again, you play the ingenuous card. I have tried to warn you repeatedly not to involve yourself in political matters including the squatter communities, not just for your own good but in order to be able to support you, but you come back with replies like this that only demonstrate your continuing preference to ignore the reality. Yes, I'm sure you have a lawyer, yet that kind of comment again shows that instead of informing yourself you prefer to rely blindly on the advice of others who may have different interests than yours. I guarantee you the politicians and their civil organizations could care less whether they induce you to violate the Constitución, and they have no scruples about using you. Article 33 is extremely relevant in this matter and you have most definitely exposed yourself to prosecution under it, no matter what your lawyer has been telling you. But hey, you are certainly free to ignore my warning.
Candidates don't donate to you. Why you would even think that was something I was referring to escapes any logic I can come up with. It works exactly the other way around. The photo speaks for itself. The smiling mayoral candidate standing on a cement basketball court made with cement from his construction business and with your help speaks for itself. Everyone but you and a few other foreigners with you seems to know what's going on, despite all your collective years of doing whatever else you've done in Mexico.
Why would the politicians help fast-track certifying schools and miss out the photo ops? Because they are doing the slimy business of fomenting squatter settlements they can manipulate for votes. Then they use you to help build the schools and voila! Another requirement is met for regularizing an illegal squatters' community that the population at large does not want there. Hello?! Anybody home?
While I appreciate your invitation to drink and discuss serious matters, I never discuss serious matters over drinks, and you always appear to be drinking whenever I see you. Could that be impairing your judgement on these matters, including repeatedly ignoring my advice and warnings?
I'm all for helping kids, but not for backing politicians and being used as their pawn in the process, especially ones whom the general public believes have pilfered millions in public funds. You seem to have no scruples about allowing them to use those allegedly pilfered funds to suit your needs and aid you in your tasks, but the great majority of Mexicans would be quite angry with you to read such comments from you. The local politicians including the one in the photo and the current mayor are in campaign mode and there you are playing their stooge and giving them some of the legitimacy they desperately seek when most locals wouldn't give them the time of day.
So again, instead of winning my support and convincing me you know what you're doing, you only convince me that I am justified and vindicated in withholding that wholehearted support, Larry. Yes, you are no doubt doing some measure of good and I am indeed impressed with some of your achievements, but with just a little more common sense, care and wisdom I suspect you could do much much better.
Warm saludos and best of luck to you.
Happily, Por Los Niños still going
by Ydur, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 11:41 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Kids and most guys in Mexico do not actually care who,what, how,why, where the help comes from. We all just want them to get a fine and continous education that will give them the knowledge and tool to solve Mexico´s thousand-year-old endemic problems. We want solutions now, not when the politicians settle their differences or sameness.
We have no choice of who will rescue us in the middle of the dark ocean. Just give them a hand. Give them the opportunity now. Time is of the essence. We already lost enough generations over centuries
I would like to thank,recognized Lorenzo and the entire group of this organization for their efforts, achievements and commitment to this monumental undertaking: Help Mexican education. ¡Admirable!
Rob, loosen up and have a drink!!! Mexico is a happy, fun, full of energy and laughter-country. Not a sad one.Never sad. Cheer up, man
¡Salud !
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by tja
, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 12:11 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Strikes me as a very cheap, un-called for, insulting shot ----"While I appreciate your invitation to drink and discuss serious matters, I never discuss serious matters over drinks, and you always appear to be drinking whenever I see you. Could that be impairing your judgement on these matters, including repeatedly ignoring my advice and warnings?"
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by JACK
, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 12:37 (4068 days ago) @ tja
Strikes me as a very cheap, un-called for, insulting shot ----"While I appreciate your invitation to drink and discuss serious matters, I never discuss serious matters over drinks, and you always appear to be drinking whenever I see you. Could that be impairing your judgement on these matters, including repeatedly ignoring my advice and warnings?"
I am a dear friend of Lorenzo and also a volunteer and accountant for Sailfest. Rob, you know nothing about Lorenzo's drinking habits. I sit at Casa Arcadia almost every day for happy hour. Lorenzo only comes on Tuesdays and Fridays and drinks only water for the first hour that he is there, followed by only two or three drinks. Most of the time we spend there we are discussing business related to Por los Niños de Zihuatanejo, A.C.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 14:25 (4068 days ago) @ JACK
Strikes me as a very cheap, un-called for, insulting shot ----"While I appreciate your invitation to drink and discuss serious matters, I never discuss serious matters over drinks, and you always appear to be drinking whenever I see you. Could that be impairing your judgement on these matters, including repeatedly ignoring my advice and warnings?"
I am a dear friend of Lorenzo and also a volunteer and accountant for Sailfest. Rob, you know nothing about Lorenzo's drinking habits. I sit at Casa Arcadia almost every day for happy hour. Lorenzo only comes on Tuesdays and Fridays and drinks only water for the first hour that he is there, followed by only two or three drinks. Most of the time we spend there we are discussing business related to Por los Niños de Zihuatanejo, A.C.
I wasn't inferring ANYTHING, simply REPLYING to his invitation to discuss the matter over DRINKS.
But thanks for ignoring EVERYTHING ELSE I wrote this year and last year and the year before that, etcetera.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 13:40 (4068 days ago) @ tja
Whatever... thanks for ignoring EVERYTHING ELSE.
por los ninos, Bravo!
by katherine
, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 12:15 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Regardless of who their parents are or where they live, all children need and deserve an education. I applaud the efforts of all who are working to end the cycle of ignorance and poverty. Education is the only way forward!
And the rest of Zihuatanejo?
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 13:17 (4068 days ago) @ katherine
Yes, Katherine, BUT I am trying to avoid having Por Los Niños create more impoverished uneducated niños that add to Zihuatanejo's problems. This very important point apparently keeps getting lost on the organizers and their cheerleaders. I regret that instead of trying to understand what I'm saying foreigners rush to paint me as "the bad guy" and apply foreign standards to a Mexican problem. Apparently most of you don't realize how much damage the squatters' communities have caused to the rest of Zihuatanejo's residents and visitors, and you don't appear to appreciate the sentiment of the rest of the residents. Never mind the central problem with endorsing a hundred tiny schools that will NEVER have sufficient operational funds or resources. We'll just leave that discussion for another time. When Larry allows his organization to be used as a tool to further the interests of unscrupulous politicians because HE believes he is helping children and doesn't see the larger picture where he is in fact potentially and unwittingly helping to create more and more impoverished and uneducated children, then I feel obliged to speak out. And each time you cheerleaders pull this Machiavellian crap that the end justifies the means. Well I and most of my fellow Mexican citizens who aren't squatters or politicians or totally ignorant beg to differ.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by LadyM in Zihua, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 12:23 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
All the people involved in this cause deserve our respect. They have done more to help Zihuatanejo and her future than any other group I have ever heard of. My thanks goes out to them.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 13:23 (4068 days ago) @ LadyM in Zihua
All the people involved in this cause deserve our respect. They have done more to help Zihuatanejo and her future than any other group I have ever heard of. My thanks goes out to them.
Again, you are another person who TOTALLY misses the point of my message. And no, not all the people involved deserve our respect. You simply aren't paying attention to what some of the folks involved are actually doing. Some of them are just looking to create more impoverished folks to manipulate for their votes. Maybe you missed the photo.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by LadyM in Zihua, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 14:43 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Feds Forcing Schools to Admit Illegal Aliens Without Health Screenings While Private Citizens Begin Taking Things Into Their Own Hands.
Anything like this?
Rob, I do understand the "squatter" issue. I, also, think that needs to stop, but until locals "stop" it from happening maybe the kids need an education.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by Dabuilder, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 16:30 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
You simply aren't paying attention to what some of the folks involved are actually doing. Some of them are just looking to create more impoverished folks to manipulate for their votes. Maybe you missed the photo.
Rob is right. I think they learned that from the political leader of the USA or maybe it was the other way around.
Sadly, Por Los Niños still a political pawn
by JACK
, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 16:51 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Rob,I don't understand why you continue to link Por Los Niños to squatter issues. You have been informed, perhaps a dozen times, that Por Los Niños does not work with squatter communities. We have had long discussions about it on this board. We publish an annual list of our projects; I challenge you to pick out a squatter school. It is one thing to disagree with us, but quite another to spread false information in defense of your opinion.
lorenzo
Colonias irregulares regularizadas
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 18:33 (4068 days ago) @ JACK
I think you confuse the message. I appreciate that you are now sensitive to this issue, but I don't believe you comprehend its depth. Just because a "colonia irregular" has been "regularizada" does not mean that in the eyes of the community at large it is no longer a colonia that should not exist or be there. Each mayor for the past dozen years or so, since the major land invasion that occurred under Amador Campos (when I began to try to urge you and other folks to please steer clear of this local problem), during their campaign for office they have promised to regularize these "colonias" that should not exist, but then when they win they work only to regularize a very few, leaving the rest in the lurch on purpose for future political manipulation. So when the candidate seeks another office (since there is currently no re-election) or when one of his contributors seeks office (it's almost like a revolving door) they can go back to one of the colonias they regularized and say here we are, your saviours, with more free stuff for you, as in the current situation with the basketball court for El Barril. These impoverished colonias are the cannon-fodder. Meanwhile, as perhaps you and most folks can't help but notice, the rest of the town, including the parts where the majority of its taxpayers live and work, suffers acute neglect while these politicians play "friend" with the impoverished communities. So what seems like help isn't always what it appears to be, meanwhile the folks who really need and deserve help go neglected. That's why I urge you to avoid any and all politicians like the plague. The money and materials they "donate" is not theirs, and the folks they lead you to help are the folks whose votes they are seeking, not necessarily the folks who need help the most. When the rest of the community sees your photo posing with a former municipal "public servant" who is now a candidate whom they believe pilfered millions for his current campaign, they associate you as a pawn or lackey of his, and it won't take long until a cry arises among someone, pehaps the opposition party, to have you as a foreigner expelled from the country for meddling in politics, though you believe you have done no such thing. As we used to say in the Deep South: "all it takes is one awwshit to negate a hunnerd attaboys!"
I regret that what was intended as friendly advice has somehow turned into something much different. Emotions and passions run high among your supporters, but they also can run high among the locals who keep seeing politicians posing with you. It's just a matter of time until such photos come back to haunt you unless you take better care, and that would be a downright shame. Thus my comments here today. You can heed my warnings or not, but I wouldn't say anything if I didn't care about you and your organization.
Colonias irregulares regularizadas
by katherine
, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 18:54 (4068 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
This is extremely confusing, to say the least! I cannot help but compare squatter communities to undocumented immigrants in the US. In both cases, people are simply seeking a better life for their families. And people who are already there do not want them. But the thing is, you cannot just wish people away. So why not try to work with them? Combine resources for the benefit of all. I seem to recall a time when these children were not allowed into the schools here. Because they did not speak Spanish. Or could not afford uniforms. Or school supplies. Or shoes. And well-meaning foreigners started helping them because no one else would.
Colonias irregulares regularizadas
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Thursday, September 11, 2014, 19:16 (4068 days ago) @ katherine
You are comparing mangos and avocados. One has nothing to do with the other.
Most land invasions have little to do with poverty, and in many cases the folks who physically occupy the land are stand-ins, and once the land is regularized and titled the poor shmucks are unceremoniusly shuffled to the next land invasion while the "patrón" sells the land, makes a nice bundle and moves on to the next scam. How is the poor person helped by uprooting them from their community and moving them into a new one where they remain just as impoverished if not more so? As was mentioned by Superzanka, most squatters come from somewhere else. A good deal of them come from Acapulco and communities where land invasions are a professional business and a way of life for generations of folks. The politicians want desperately poor folks to remain desperately poor so they can manipulate them and buy their votes cheaply with a bag of food and a t-shirt or a few pieces of tarpaper for a roof.
People should NOT be crossing undocumented into the USA, and they are also being manipulated but by US businesses seeking to maintain a cheap source of labor because the current style of US capitalism is based on greed and exploitation, something that is not morally sustainable. In that case they are ABANDONED by the politicians who shirk their duties to fix the decades-old broken immigration laws.
Neither situation is something we should support. What Mexicans dislike about US immigration policy is the manner in which undocumented folks are mistreated, in part by the racists and in part by the police forces. Those folks are not necessarily criminals. Yet here in Mexico LAND INVASION aka THEFT OF LAND is indeed a criminal matter that needs to be attended to, treated as such and the law enforced. That is, again, the opinion of the majority of Mexicans except the land invaders and the politicians who use and abuse them.
still confused
by katherine
, Friday, September 12, 2014, 09:03 (4067 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
The more I try to lest about this issue, the less certain I am about anything. Surely not ALL of the people on the hillsides are land invaders? And why doesn't the government find a better place for them to live, since where they are is obviously a huge problem. Something I will never understand.
still confused
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Friday, September 12, 2014, 10:01 (4067 days ago) @ katherine
Everything above 70 meters is a land invasion in what should be Zihuatanejo's protected ecological zone. Many of those invasions had a school built for them with help from foreigners. Beginning about 12 years ago the local government illegally changed the zoning to allow both the land invaders on one side of the bay and the luxury developments on the other. Since then the local government has declared some of those invasions "legal", and dangles the prospect of regularization of others in front of other invaders like candy in front of a baby, especially during election times as we are currently in, but the good citizens of Zihuatanejo don't consider a declaration by an allegedly corrupt government to be anything legally binding but rather just another ploy to manipulate the land invaders, who didn't just grow there like mushrooms but whom ALL came from somewhere else that they could go back to, including locals who knowingly broke the law to acquire cheap land. It's worth mentioning that the church of the Jehovah's Witnesses threatens to expel them if they participate in any land invasions.
You'll notice there are no invaders in Ixtapa or on ejido lands. Only on lands where the municipal government is responsible for enforcing the law. But as every local knows, no laws are enforced here when a political advantage can be gained such as by being able to manipulate groups of voters, so that's why there are now thousands and thousands of squatter homes scattered around our hillsides with more everyday. Meanwhile the needs of the good and decent law-abiding citizens throughout Zihuatanejo and high into our sierra go unattended, though most communities will get a cursory visit with cheap gifts and worthless promises from candidates while they are campaigning.
Here is how I see it--
by Gringo Viejo
, Kansas/Zihuatanejo, Friday, September 12, 2014, 10:02 (4067 days ago) @ katherine
the dishonest politico will cater to the wants of the "squatters" to get their VOTES. Sure, they might be better off somewhere else (I'm sure the government has the lasnd somewhere) but the people want to live on the hillsides and will give their VOTES to whatever campaigm maskes them the most promises.
I can see both sides of the isse. The children do deserve an education; it just isn't right that they suffer for the misdeeds of others. On the other hand I would surely not like it if foriegn influence was being used (at least so blantly)to influence local elections here in Casa Grande, AZ.
Two Days in a Row!
by ZihuaRob
, Zihuatanejo, México, Friday, September 12, 2014, 08:28 (4067 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Another day, another article with photos, and the headline reads "Juntos Somos Zihua cumple una vez más con unos de sus compromisos" and under it there are photos of the same foreigners from Por Los Niños smiling like good little political stooges alongside a local candidate for mayor.
For those not in the know, "Juntos Somos Zihua" is the ongoing political campaign of a local candidate, Jorge Sánchez Allec (yes, same family as 3-time former mayor Jorge Allec), posing as a charity. The locals all know this, and the majority of them believe the money he is using is what he skimmed during his brief stint as a member of the current administration, a post he "earned" by "generous" campaign donations when the current mayor was a candidate.
Now if I were just your average Zihuatanejo Mexican citizen I would certainly come to the conclusion that these foreigners are indeed being used to bolster and legitimize the campaign of Jorge Sánchez, if not working directly with him, and it would certainly occur to me that they are in direct violation of the Mexican Constitución, no matter what their lawyer says. Public perception is all that counts here, and it can become a monstrous beast that sets its own events in motion regardless of what the reality is.
Just another friendly warning, Larry and friends.
solution
by Zihuateco
, Friday, September 12, 2014, 09:58 (4067 days ago) @ ZihuaRob
Round up the kids and have them play a game of basketball in front of. Rob's house.
Pets also allowed.
Por Los Ninos
by ladybug
, Barra de Potosi, Friday, September 12, 2014, 11:55 (4067 days ago) @ Zihuateco
Just for the record Por Los Ninos DOES repair local public schools whenever THEY petition for repairs we do provide the materials for the repair. The labour is always the responsibility of the parents committee. The more little butts we can get into schools desks the better.

