
26 February 2008
Red social para estudiantes internacionales

19 February 2008
Monterrey U.S.A.
Not up, not against. Just the facts.
From the Los Angeles Times
Monterrey U.S.A.
February 11, 2008
MONTERREY, MEXICO — When the Kentucky-based Yum Corp. was looking for a city in Mexico in which to open a Taco Bell, it must have figured it couldn't go wrong with this ultramodern, hyper-Americanized metropolis 125 miles from the Texas border in the northern Mexican state of Nuevo Leon. Regiomontanos, as Monterrey residents are called, wear their pro-Americanism on their sleeves and see little shame in the fact that their streets are as overrun by corporate American retailers as any suburban town north of the border.
Norteño Mexican culture has long been known for its openness to American ways, but Monterrey's love affair with American consumerism has reached a level that has to be seen to be believed. Bennigan's, Applebee's, Dairy Queen, Starbucks, Carl's Jr., McDonald's, Pizza Hut, IHOP -- they're all here. So are Wal-Mart, Hampton Inn, Home Depot, OfficeMax and Bally Total Fitness.
I spent part of Fat Tuesday strolling the aisles of a local H-E-B, a Texas-based big-box store that has brought the Mexican-owned Gigante chain to its knees locally. Three years ago, H-E-B opened a $30-million retail support center here, and the secret of its success, I'm told, is, well, that it's unabashedly American.
When it first came to Mexico, H-E-B launched a Mexico-specific house brand called Economax, but the company's market researchers quickly found that Mexican consumers preferred the long-standing American versions. Sure, H-E-B sells sell tortillas, bolillos and traditional Mexican pan dulce, but the brightly lighted, well-stocked aisles generally boasted such items as H-E-B brand chocolate chip waffles, Oscar Meyer bologna, Del Monte tomato paste, Jell-O pudding, Fruit Loops, Gatorade and, much to my surprise, cans of "ranch-style" beans made in the U.S. whose label boasted that they offered "the true taste of the West."
All these imports do come at a cost, literally. In part because Regios consume so many foreign products, the cost of living here is higher than it is in most other parts of Mexico. But the city's large middle class doesn't seem to mind paying the extra price.
In fact, the university students I spoke to here not only bought American products in Monterrey, they crossed the border to outlets in such places as McAllen, Texas. When I asked why, they said goods were cheaper there.
But it doesn't add up. The cost of gas, the 2 1/2 hour drive on a toll road that costs $60 round trip and the increasingly inhospitable post-9/11 waits -- sometimes three hours -- to cross the international border all suggest that the real reason they love to shop in Texas is status and the idea of the U.S. as the source of the good life.
Just outside the San Pedro district here, which has the highest per-capita income of any community in Latin America, you'll find some billboards entirely in English. Particularly when discussing entertainment, middle-class Regios like to pepper their Spanish with English. They'll talk about going to a "lugar muy nice," they'll say they're going to "tomar un break" or "echar unos drinks."
I met a few transplants from Mexico City who found the Regios' love affair with the U.S. more than a little offensive. But locals, particularly the young ones, don't see any problem with living bicultural lives.
"We feel like Mexicans, but we live as Americans," said Sarahi Garcia, a 22-year-old international relations student at the elite Tecnológico de Monterrey university. The state politicians I met here seemed aggrieved by all the talk in the U.S. of hardening the border. But still, few people I spoke to thought it would ultimately damage the Regios' strong sense of connectedness with their northern neighbor. The ties are just too deep.
Last September, the governor of Nuevo Leon inaugurated a beautiful Museum of the Northeast, and by the "northeast" they mean the Mexican states of Nuevo Leon, Coahuila and Tamaulipas as well as the U.S. state of Texas. Unlike many U.S. historians and institutions that treat Mexican history as separate from our own, the curators at this museum see the histories of northern Mexico and Texas as being connected not only by war but by shared heritage and intertwined economies. They don't ignore the reality of the border, but they also don't pretend that cultural and economic forces don't flow in both directions.
So does this powerful and historical sense of biculturalism mean that Taco Bell -- with its faux Mexican food -- is destined to thrive in Monterrey? I don't think so. I went by on Wednesday at lunchtime and ate my Fiestaco -- yes, that's what it was called -- all by myself.
University student Sofia Ugarte, 18, explained why. "There's nothing more typically Mexican than tacos," she said. "That's one thing that we don't need to import from the United States. Not even here in Monterrey."
18 February 2008
Ayudad a Cuba!!

En España es muy común que se viaje a Cuba en los viajes de fin de estudios universitarios, o grupos de amigos que van a disfrutar de las playas de Varadero. En esta página aparecen ideas de una forma entretenida de cómo ayudar a los cubanos cuando se viaja allá.
Por favor, una buena forma de colaborar es envíar este link a la gente que sepáis que vaya a viajar a la isla próximamente.
15 February 2008
Barack Obama
But could he deliver?
Feb 14th 2008
From The Economist print edition
It is time for America to evaluate Obama the potential president, not Obama the phenomenon
THIS has been an extraordinary week for the man who could become America's first black president. Barack Obama has now won all eight of the primaries and caucuses held since Super Tuesday on February 5th, which ended, more or less, in a dead heat with Hillary Clinton. He has won by much larger margins than most people expected, trouncing his rival not just in heavily black states, such as Louisiana, but in ones that are almost completely white, such as Maine. On February 12th he took all three prizes in the “Potomac primary”—Washington, DC, Maryland and, by a socking 29-point margin, Virginia.
Mr Obama now has more pledged delegates than his rival—and he is likely to remain the front-runner for at least another three weeks (see article). Revealingly, Mrs Clinton made her Virginian concession speech from Texas—a state which votes alongside Ohio on March 4th and is already being billed as her last stand. Mr Obama is raising money at the rate of $1m a day, twice as fast as she is; indeed, she has been forced to lend her campaign $5m of her own cash and fire the two people who run her campaign (although her husband has a big say).
Whatever happens, Mr Obama is already that rare thing—a political phenomenon. It is not just that he has managed to survive the Clintons' crude onslaught with grace. He has persuaded huge numbers of people around the world to reconsider politics in an optimistic way. To many Americans, a black man who eschews both racial politics and the conservative-liberal divide is a chance to heal the country's two deepest divisions. To many foreigners, he represents an idealistic version of America—the hope of a more benevolent superpower. Although Mr Obama's slogan “Yes We Can” has been turned into a pop video, the theme of his campaign echoes the Clintons' old tune—“Don't stop thinking about tomorrow”.
Optimism is a powerful emotion, but as that song warned, “tomorrow will soon be here.” That is why the real questioning of Mr Obama should begin now. With the brief exception of those four heady days after the Iowa caucuses, he has never been a front-runner; now he will be more fully scrutinised. The immediate focus will be on the horse race: can he win? But the bigger issue, which has so far occupied too little attention, is this: what would a President Obama, as opposed to Phenomenon Obama, really mean for America and the world?
Yes, you can; but not immediately
Begin with the horse race. Mrs Clinton is in a bad way—and deservedly so. The Clintons have fought a leaden and nasty campaign; at present, the prospect of a “Billary presidency” (even before you take into account the dynastic Bush-Clinton-Bush-Clinton aspect) is hardly enthralling. But Mrs Clinton is tough and smart, and now her rival will be under the media microscope. In debates she trumps Mr Obama on mastery of detail—and the race could well be a long, grinding one, perhaps decided in the end by the 796 “super delegates” from the Democratic Party's establishment. These people have tended to be loyal to the Clintons—though many might defect if polls still showed Mr Obama doing better against John McCain.
Mr McCain, whose lock on the Republican nomination looks stronger than ever following his own triple victory in the Potomac primary, is another part of tomorrow Mr Obama's euphoric supporters might think about. The Republicans are a mess, and the elderly Arizonan senator has plainly failed to stir up his party's supporters in the same way as either of the main Democrats. But Mr McCain is a brave man, with huge experience of international affairs and a much longer record of reaching out to his opponents in politics. Why should independent voters, who have often backed Mr McCain in the past, turn to the less proven man?
Of magnets and magic dust
That question is partly answered by Obama the phenomenon. His immediate effect on international relations could be dramatic: a black president, partly brought up in a Muslim country, would transform America's image. And his youthful optimism could work at home too. After the bitterness of the Bush years, America needs a dose of unity: Mr Obama has a rare ability to deliver it. And the power of charisma should not be underrated, especially in the context of the American presidency which is, constitutionally, quite a weak office. The best presidents are like magnets below a piece of paper, invisibly aligning iron filings into a new pattern of their making. Anyone can get experts to produce policy papers. The trick is to forge consensus to get those policies enacted.
But what policies exactly? Mr Obama's voting record in the Senate is one of the most left-wing of any Democrat. Even if he never voted for the Iraq war, his policy for dealing with that country now seems to amount to little more than pulling out quickly, convening a peace conference, inviting the Iranians and the Syrians along and hoping for the best. On the economy, his plans are more thought out, but he often tells people only that they deserve more money and more opportunities. If one lesson from the wasted Bush years is that needless division is bad, another is that incompetence is perhaps even worse. A man who has never run any public body of any note is a risk, even if his campaign has been a model of discipline.
And the Obama phenomenon would not always be helpful, because it would raise expectations to undue heights. Budgets do not magically cut themselves, even if both parties are in awe of the president; the Middle East will not heal, just because a president's second name is Hussein. Choices will have to be made—and foes created even when there is no intention to do so. Indeed, something like that has already happened in his campaign. The post-racial candidate has ended up relying heavily on black votes (and in some places even highlighting the divide between Latinos and blacks).
None of this is to take away from Mr Obama's achievement—or to imply that he could not rise to the challenges of the job in hand. But there is a sense in which he has hitherto had to jump over a lower bar than his main rivals have. For America's sake (and the world's), that bar should now be raised—or all kinds of brutal disappointment could follow.
12 February 2008
The Georgetown University 2008 Presidential Candidate Lecture Series
The Georgetown University Lecture Fund
on behalf of
The Georgetown University 2008 Presidential Candidate Lecture Series*
Invites You to
Remarks by
Texas Congressman
and Republican Presidential Candidate
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
8:00 p.m.
Gaston Hall
*Q&A session to follow the lecture*
Please RSVP to lecturefund@georgetown.edu with your name and NetID.
For security reasons, please have available your Georgetown University GoCard
or government-issued photo identification and avoid bringing any bags or backpacks to the venue.
11 February 2008
El nombre del programa no es este...
Buena Idea
Me parece una excelente idea esto del blog. De esta forma podemos compartir nuestras experiencias y extender invitaciones para eventos de interés común. ¡Invito a todos a que hagamos uso de él!
Saludos y permanecemos en contacto online.
José de la Luz