Dear Mexican: Lately, Iโ€™ve been hearing how punks and metalheads in Mexico are trying to beat up emos because itโ€™s been said emos make Mexican culture look bad. As a metalhead, I support this because I donโ€™t see the point in being emo since they are very sensitive and guys dress like girls, but I still believe everyone has the right to be whatever they decide to be, no matter how bad it seems to people. Whatโ€™s your perspective on this issueโ€”do you think itโ€™s a good thing or is it a bad thing? And do you agree that the emo trend is a poison to the Mexican culture?


โ€”Mosh โ€™Til You Die

Dear Wab: The emo riots that have spread across Mexico for the past month have been a source of joy and frustration for the Mexican. On one manoโ€”as I told Wired reporter Alexis Madrigal for his fine story on the madnessโ€”Iโ€™m loving the clusterfuck that feuding Mexican emos, metaleros, punketos and other modern types presents to the gabacho mind, which still largely thinks Mexico is one giant, continent-spanning sombrero. I personally donโ€™t like emo, but not because I think itโ€™s somehow not โ€œMexicanโ€โ€”last I checked, the punk and metal movements that spawned the movimiento anti-emo didnโ€™t originate south of the border, either. And those pendejos going after wabs in Dashboard Confessional T-shirts embody the worst tendencies of the Mexican character: intolerant of anything it doesnโ€™t consider โ€œMexican,โ€ preferring to bully weaklings instead of facing the big niรฑos, and hopelessly outdated. Oigan, anti-emo folks: Hating emos is so 1998. Porque no you guys go after a true Mexican plagueโ€”like, say, your immigrant-producing economy?

Dear Readers: By the way, the paperback edition of ยกAsk a Mexican! (released on April 22) differs from the hardcover that appeared last May in that it contains an extra chapter of new preguntas and a new cover. Double the fun at nearly half the costโ€”why donโ€™t you have a copy in your hands?

Why is it that Mexicans have the impulse to preface any English word that begins with the letter โ€œSโ€ with the letter โ€œE”? Estupid, espeaker, esit and esleep, espeak eslowlyโ€”whatโ€™s the deal?

โ€”Johnny Chingas


Dear Wab: Linguistics at trabajo, amigo: itโ€™s a form of prothesis, the placing of a vowel at the front of a word. In the case de eSpanish, plopping an โ€œEโ€ before any English word estarting with an โ€œSโ€ is a legacy of the languageโ€™s long-ago esplit with Latin, which esaw medieval eSpaniards adding a prothetic โ€œEโ€ to Latin loan words that began with an s-led consonant cluster: schola (school) turned to escuela, for instance, or stella (star) to estrella. When Mexicans espeak English, they naturally apply their native tongueโ€™s linguistic rule to the esecond language. Gabachos can laugh all they want at the quirk, but let he who casts the first estone try to pronounce โ€œยฟHablas japonรฉs en Mรฉxico con tu xoloitzcuintli lleno, gitano zorrero?โ€ correctly without sounding like a pendejo.

P.S.: Seriously, gentle readers: Buy my book in paperback! I need to comprar a new identity!

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