Sunday, May 10, 2009

Poor Mexico

Lately, all I've been seeing is drug crime and swine flu. Considering I spent my entire senior year focused on people and money moving across the US - Mexico border, I feel a bit involved and attached to transborder flows of any sort, and I've got to say - it's never good news. No one ever talks about on the news, "Oh how great that we have a huge border with Mexico so that we can get easy access to inexpensive labor, fruit, and vacations." Pshaw.

On the issue of drug crime, I'd like to refer you all to the following article: Reflections from Latin America by Ibsen Martinez. He notes, as I have maintained, that the crackdown on drug imports from Colombia have led Mexico to be the new route into the US. The decreasing purity and increase in street price of cocaine in the US are also a side effect of this success. However, he also points out (which I did not know) about a potentially huge gun smuggling business from the US into Mexico. So perhaps increases in gun control in the US would be one policy to help our neighbor?

See an excerpt from the article below:

Mexico has quickly become the other epicenter of the violence activities carried out by criminal organizations associated with drug trafficking. Mexican drug cartels have come to supplant the Colombian traffickers as the main suppliers of illicit drugs to the U.S. market.

Mexico's attorney general reckons that U.S. consumers buy U.S. $10 billion worth of drugs from his country's cartels each year. All that money allows the two main cartels to arm, equip and pay for a highly motivated army of 100,000 that almost equals Mexico's armed forces in size and often outguns them.

"Americans are understandably focused on the flow of drugs and migrants into the U.S. from Mexico," says Andreas Peter, author ofBorder Games: Policing the U.S.-Mexico Divide. "But too often glossed over in the border security debate is the flow of weapons across the border into Mexico," he told FoxNews.com in a statement via the Internet.3 Mexican authorities say 90 percent of smuggled weapons come from the United States.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Visitors!

For those of you threatening to come my direction, can you stick your dates on here cuz I am rockin without any of this blackberry crap and I'm having a hard time keeping track of all the amazing jet setters I know...

Go here and put in some clues about when/where you'll be in Asia. I end my job contract officially on July 31, and at some point between now and then I'll be running a teambuilding workshop for my office. That's my only main reason I wouldn't be in Hanoi, unless I'm off with someone who is swinging through town.

View Katy's Whereabouts calendar

Friday, May 1, 2009

The Temples at Angkor Wat

I had one of my best days in Asia to date yesterday, bicycling around Angkor Wat.
 I was on my own, and on a bike rather than motoring around in tuk-tuk, so I really got to take my time, enjoy some beautiful weather, and chat up all the girls who were selling post cards and things. There are several who are incredibly bright and excellent salespeople - I was seriously impressed. These two, on the other hand, I think mostly traded on the cuteness factor



In and around Siem Reap, Cambodia are scattered a myriad of temples built by the different Khmer empires. At one point, the Khmer empire stretched all the way to the Pacific Ocean and into Thailand. The most famous of these temples are located near the heart of the empire at its apogee, which is at Angkor Wat. What most people think of as Angkor Wat are the temples that are inside the Archeological Wat Archeological Area, and include Angkor Wat itself, the Bayon, Ta Prohm and about a million other ruins large and small, in varying stages of restoration.

Angkor Wat itself was built in the mid 12th century by a fellow named Suryavarman II. It was originally Hindu, but as the state religion changed to Buddhism some of the Hindu imagery was destroyed or modified to fit the new times. These include immense bas-relief mural carvings of different Hindu myths, like the Churning of the Sea of Milk, and these apsaras (heavenly consorts).
Part of what makes it so spectacular is the massive moat that surrounds the complex.

Other very cool ruins include the Bayon, which is inside the Angkor Thom walled city and was used by a variety of kings. Each of them seems to have added bits and pieces so now it has quite a labarynthine feel, which is made even more bizarre by the fact that faces have been carved into the towers.


My personal favorites were Banteay Kdei and Ta Prohm, partly because I loved the look of the temples that have been left to be overgrown my trees. 


It was a full day, starting with a 4:30 AM wake up to bike out there for sunrise, and ending with a final half our biking in the pouring rain at 7:30 pm, which was hilarious. It was well worth it to see the bolts of lightening frame the spires of Angkor before I left. It started lightening while I was sitting with a little girl who was chatting me up and sharing some of her fruit. Her English was incredible - you don't get kids who speak English like that in Vietnam really, unless they have family in the USA. So very full, and very, very nice. If anyone is going to Angkor any time soon I definitely recommend bicycle! It made the trip (thanks to Adam Flynn for the advice).


If you really want a personal view, check out these videos: