The
guacamole famine, the Super Bowl, and other American dramas
By Belén Fernández
As
the US frets 'the guacpocalypse', its delusions about - and addiction to -
undocumented migration remain untreated.
As
part of a crackdown on corruption and crime, Mexico's new president, Andres Manuel
Lopez Obrador has revamped the national fuel distribution system to deter
petrol theft - a move that has resulted in temporary shortages across
various Mexican states.
The United States media have turned up
to highlight the real takeaway: the shortages may affect the transport of
Mexican avocados and the availability of guacamole for the annual massively
hyped, televised sporting event known as the Super Bowl to be held this year on
February 3.
A recent Reuters headline blared:
"Holy guacamole! Mexican fuel shortage threatens Super Bowl
snack." Other outlets followed suit. CNN warned that
"Super Bowl guac may be off the table if gas shortage sidelines Mexican
avocados," Maxim magazine foretold a "major guacamole
crisis", and the Eater website took the (foot)ball and ran with it:
"Cue the guacpocalypse."
In short, while the avocado dip may be in short
supply, the cheesiness definitely isn't. And speaking of cheesy, concerned
Super Bowl viewers are reminded that at least there's always queso - that
staple dish of Texas that often involves "cheese" that is not
actually cheese.
America's 'addiction'
While Americans fret over the loss of a favourite
snack food, US President Donald Trump, of course, has his own
border-related obsessions - and is forging ahead with his campaign to erect a
bigger and better wall on the US-Mexico frontier. According to
Trumpian analysis, the latter nation is primarily composed of drug
dealers, criminals, and rapists.
To be sure, there's nothing like a good migrant
scapegoat to detract public attention from elite pillaging of the
country and other unpleasantries.
But it's not so simple, as it seems that
- aside from guacamole cravings - there are other, much stronger
forms of cross-border dependence at play. As a January Washington Post article
noted: "A wall can't solve America's addiction to undocumented
immigration."
The author, Julia G Young, traces the past century
of addiction, observing that, although "politicians and media have
consistently cast undocumented immigration as a national security crisis … the
demand for undocumented immigrant labor - and consumers' demand for the low
prices that this labor makes possible - have continued apace".
And a January item on the CBS News
website - courtesy of Mary Jo Dudley, director of the Cornell Farmworker
Programme at Cornell University - lists some of the US industries that
"can't work without illegal immigrants".
For example, she writes, the US Department of
Agriculture has calculated "that about half of the nation's farmworkers
are unauthorised".
It's no secret that undocumented workers often
perform jobs that Americans won’t do - including ones entailing substantial
physical risk. They generally work for less pay and no benefits, hence the appeal to
profit-driven businesses.
US consumers, though perhaps unwittingly, are also
addicted to the exploitative system; Dudley brings up a dairy
industry study indicating that a "total elimination of immigrant
labor would increase milk prices by 90 percent".
No doubt many Americans would find such
prospects considerably more frightening than the potential guacpocalypse.
Checking the facts
Additional food for thought comes in the form of a
November PBS intervention, titled "4 myths about how immigrants
affect the US economy", which undertakes to replace Trump's tall tales
with such facts as that "immigrants contribute more in tax revenue
than they take in government benefits".
Citing US census data, PBS reports that, as of
2015, immigrants accounted for no less than "24 percent of nursing, psychiatric and home care
aides". Then again, everyone knows that the best way to sabotage a nation
is by taking care of its inhabitants.
A December NBC News "fact chack" on the
"costs" of illegal immigration furthermore references the estimate by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy that
US "state and local governments take in $11.74bn a year from undocumented
immigrants".
The bigger picture
Beyond the issue of hypocritical US dependence
on so-called "illegal" immigration, it is worth
considering how the "great guacamole famine of 2019" stacks up
against other border-related catastrophes - like the US vilification and
exploitation of Mexicans and Central Americans who were forced to migrate
northward thanks in large port to US regional machinations in the
first place.
Indeed, under normal circumstances, those avocados
enjoy superior cross-border freedom of movement compared with, say, the
seven-year-old girl who recently died in US Border Patrol custody after
journeying from her native Guatemala - a country the US has devoted much time
to screwing over politically and financially.
Ditto for migrants from Honduras and other locales
where the US habit of backing violent
regimes and increasing widespread poverty - pardon, "capitalism"
- means that daily existence can often constitute an apocalyptic scenario unto
itself and has driven entire families in to participate in one of the largest
mass migrations in recent history.
Anyway, back to serious news and the real
existential question: "No guac for the Super Bowl?", as USA
Today puts it.
But whether the guacamole materialises in time or
viewers have to make do with gobs of non-cheese cheese, there is plenty about
the current spectacle in the US that should make one sick to one's stomach.
Reproduced from Aljazeera.com

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