Web Letters: A City Made of Waste

By Teddy Cruz

January 29, 2009

Write a Web letter about this article.

What's a Web Letter?

Web Letters are continuously published e-mails from real people, signed with their real names. No registration is required. Each article page on The Nation includes a Web Letters link.

Read the best Web Letters on this page.

We're committed to publishing your comments as they are received. We place a red star () on the best submissions and may edit your e-mail for length or content. Your e-mail address will not be published or shared with any third party without your consent.

We look forward to hearing from you.

  • Mr. Cruz makes many observations about San Diego and Tijuana that are difficult to evaluate given the lack of stastical information he provides. One has no idea how many bungalows are moving south of the border and how many McMansions are being built (actually, building here has slowed down considerably). However, the greatest flaws of his article are the unanswered questions he raises and the assertion that the informal sector may "become the basis for a new paradigm of...sustainability." Just what would this new paradigm look like?

    Karen Kinney

    San Diego, CA

    02/12/2009 @ 01:07am


  • Those informal houses near NAFTA factories may be convenient if these people want to find work. The famous sucking sound of jobs going south took the jobs not only of American citizens and permanent residents but also of temporary workers. I caught the end of a piece on CNN, about a temporary worker from Guatemala, who had to get a bus ticket home from his consulate because there was no work for him in the US. Not only the factory jobs but some California farmers have also gone south, looking for cheap labor.

    There was a fairly recent story on several news outlets about a farmer who said that he had gone to southern Mexico because he couldn't find enough pickers in California. It was mentioned rather casually that he had paid his workers $9 an hour in California, but he only had to pay them $11 a day in Mexico. He wondered why the workers didn't work as hard in Mexico as they did in California. Fleetwood sent their trailer production down to Mexicali from Rialto. In California they paid workers $20 an hour, but in Mexico, workers received $3 an hour. Many of the workers who lost their jobs in California were Americans of Mexican ancestry.

    As for the American jobs that went south, the American market that supported both the American and other workers from points south disappeared with those jobs. Those jobs in America provide the disposable income to support two-thirds of the American market. But cheer up: those trailers make good temporary housing too, if the workers who make them can afford them. Perhaps Mexico can replace the US in providing temporary work for people from Central America.

    Pervis James Casey

    Riverside, CA

    01/31/2009 @ 2:58pm


Advertisement
Advertisement

Blogs

» The Beat

Reagan Would Fail "Purity Test" Proposed for GOP | RNC right-wingers say their ideological correctness standard for candidates is rooted in Reaganism. But the former president would flunk.
John Nichols
52 Comments
Posted at 1:19 PM ET

» The Dreyfuss Report

A Kingdom of Bicycles No Longer | China's ambassador for climate change speaks on the eve of the Copenhagen summit meeting.
Robert Dreyfuss
33 Comments

» Act Now!

Coal Country | "This is a civil war."
Peter Rothberg
83 Comments

» The Notion

A Blow to Privatization in Israel (and Perhaps Beyond) | A potentially historic ruling on prison privatization, in Israel.
Eyal Press
33 Comments

» Editor's Cut

Around the Nation | The week we went Rouge. Plus, Moyers on Afghanistan.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
109 Comments

» Altercation

Slacker Friday | The "Second Amendment" sale; the raving paranoids of the right.
Eric Alterman