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No, the Conquistadors Are Not Back. It's Just Wal-Mart.
New York Times ^ | 09/28/04 | JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

Posted on 09/28/2004 2:35:35 AM PDT by conservative in nyc

TEOTIHUACÁN JOURNAL

No, the Conquistadors Are Not Back. It's Just Wal-Mart.

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

Published: September 28, 2004

SAN JUAN DE TEOTIHUACÁN, Mexico, Sept. 21 - The market in this small town is a warren of streets with canopied stalls and battered storefronts, where one can buy everything from fresh avocados to jeans to a vaquero's saddle.

As they have for centuries, the merchants here ply their trade midway between the ruins of giant pyramids built by the Maya and the stone steeple of the town's main Catholic church, which Spanish monks founded in 1548.

Now another colossus from a different empire is being built in the shadow of the pyramids, a structure some merchants and other townsfolk here say threatens not only their businesses but their heritage. In December, an ugly cinderblock building rising from the earth is to house a sprawling supermarket called Bodega Aurrera, a subsidiary of Wal-Mart of Mexico.

"What's next?" said David García, 27, whose family owns a dry-goods store in the market. "It's like having Mickey Mouse on the top of the Pyramid of the Moon."

The 71,902-square-foot store with 236 parking places is about a mile from a gated park where tourists flock to some of Mexico's best-known ruins, a complex of pyramids and other structures built between the fifth and ninth centuries and later called by the Aztecs "the place where men became gods."

How Wal-Mart got permission to build a superstore on farmland supposedly protected under Mexican law as an archaeological site has vexed the merchants here, who freely accuse the town, the state and the federal Institute of Anthropology and History of corruption.

The opponents charge Wal-Mart with trampling on their Indian heritage and suggest that the backhoes clawing at the earth on the site are destroying irreplaceable relics.

But an economic reality underlies this dispute - Wal-Mart has not only built stores throughout Mexico, but has taken over several other chains. It is the largest private employer in the country, and wherever this American retail titan erects a new outlet, the local merchants tend to disappear, or at least lose business.

"It's a crime," said Irma González Rodríguez, 40, who sells chickens in the market. "They say they will bring 200 jobs. How many people are you going to leave without jobs for those 200?

"The ruins and us go together. We are part of this culture. They will leave us without work, without anything."

Nonsense, say state and local officials, who approved the project, as they do most things, without any public hearings. Mayor Guillermo Rodríguez Céspedes said there were no more than 20 opponents, people who were afraid of losing business. He points out that Wal-Mart is promising to bring 180 jobs to a town struggling with unemployment. He angrily denounced the grumbling about corruption at City Hall as lies.

Archaeologists at the federal institute also defend their decision to let the project go ahead. True, a small pre-Hispanic altar of clay and stone was discovered under what will be an expansive parking lot, along with a few other artifacts, said Sánchez Nava, an official with the institute.

But most of the artifacts have already been recovered from the area where the supermarket is being built. Besides, he said, teams of archaeologists from the institute are at the site each day, watching over the work. "I don't feel there is a risk," he said.

Opponents say the government is misleading people. They say they have found what look like pottery shards, arrows and other relics in the earth excavated from the construction site. They point out that Maribel Miró Flaquer, who approved the project for the institute, resigned shortly afterward. Her successor, Raúl Javier Córdoba García, died of unknown causes after only a week in office.

All this has fed the rumor mill on the town's streets, talk of corruption and murder, charges officials call pure fiction. Some compare Wal-Mart's invasion of the pyramid area to the Spanish conquest.

Ever since Wal-Mart entered the retail market by taking over Cifra, a Mexican retailer, in 1991, it has gobbled up a greater and greater share of consumer spending. It now owns more than 650 department stores, restaurants and supermarkets in six chains. It rakes in revenues of more than $11 billion a year, greater than the other top three discount retailers combined. In February, it announced plans to open 77 new stores this year and next.

Raúl Argüelles, a spokesman for Wal-Mart of Mexico, says the company's only motive for building a store here is to bring lower prices for basic goods to consumers. People here now have to trek 30 miles to the nearest hypermarket, he points out, and pay higher prices in the old-fashioned market. He characterized the protesters, who on one occasion threatened the site with sticks and machetes, as a handful of malcontents. "The community wants the store," he said.

But the opponents have been joined by some intellectuals, like the poet Homero Aridjis, who in early September intoned that building a shopping center in sight of the pyramids amounted to "driving the stake of globalization into the heart of Mexican antiquity."

Emmanuel D'Herrera, a schoolteacher and former diplomat who lives near the pyramids, said the federal archaeologists relied on surveys to give their approval. He said the construction crews started digging three weeks before government archaeologists arrived, a charge that could not be verified.

"We see an awful corruption all around that stinks, from INAH to the mayor's office," said Mr. D'Herrera, using the acronym for the archaeological institute. "We want to preserve our heritage. It's not a common piece of land.''

Others here are more pragmatic. Francisco Briseño has sold cheese, ham, soap, bridles, saddles and other necessities from his tiny shop in the market for 40 years. He does not care much about ancient history. Asked what would happen when the big store opened, he shrugged and said everyone else would lose some business. Still, he has faith in his clientele.

"I don't think they are going to abandon me," he said, smiling broadly, as if to say nothing ever really changes here, even when it does.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Mexico
KEYWORDS: mexico; wallyworld; walmary
Funny that the Mexicans are raising the same anti-Wal*Mart arguments that you hear in the U.S. --- it will put the folks on Main Street out of business and hurt the environment.
1 posted on 09/28/2004 2:35:35 AM PDT by conservative in nyc
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To: conservative in nyc

When I first heard this story on the radio a few weeks ago, they said the Walmart was going up right next to the Pyramid. This story says a mile away. I tend to believe this print story, rather than what I heard on the radio.


2 posted on 09/28/2004 2:56:54 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: conservative in nyc

It sounds like loony left talk to me.

It is a walmart store in question. And lefties hate walmart, Although they all secretly shop there, instead of higher priced unionized stores.


3 posted on 09/28/2004 3:01:28 AM PDT by Nathan Zachary
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To: conservative in nyc

The Phrase, "But the opponents have been joined by some intellectuals . . ." says it all. If you find yourself on the other side, you're probably in the right.


4 posted on 09/28/2004 3:08:46 AM PDT by LanPB01
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To: Nathan Zachary
Well, the article is from the New York Times, and full of condescension against Wally World.

That's not surprising. We don't have any Wal*Marts in New York City, and there are only a handful in the whole New York metropolitan area relative to the population. New York Times-reading snobs would be the first to lift their noses in disgust over having to shop at Wal*Mart.
5 posted on 09/28/2004 3:10:18 AM PDT by conservative in nyc
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To: conservative in nyc
"What's next?" said David García, 27, whose family owns a dry-goods store in the market. "It's like having Mickey Mouse on the top of the Pyramid of the Moon."

Okay we will take back our Wal-Mart if you take back all your cousins.

6 posted on 09/28/2004 3:16:06 AM PDT by beaversmom (Michael Medved has the Greatest radio show on GOD's Green Earth)
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To: conservative in nyc
like the poet Homero Aridjis, who in early September intoned that building a shopping center in sight of the pyramids amounted to "driving the stake of globalization into the heart of Mexican antiquity."

Sweet! Perhaps a little payback for all those U.S. jobs sent south of the border since nafta, or even that massive illegal mexican immigration. Tough sticks, Homer - write a poem about it.

7 posted on 09/28/2004 4:49:12 AM PDT by searchandrecovery (Socialist America - diseased and dysfunctional.)
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To: searchandrecovery
Sweet! Perhaps a little payback for all those U.S. jobs sent south of the border since nafta, or even that massive illegal mexican immigration. Tough sticks, Homer - write a poem about it.

LOL! How do you say "D'oh!" in Spanish?

8 posted on 09/28/2004 4:54:35 AM PDT by L.N. Smithee (The Final Score: Buckhead 1, Talking Head 0)
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To: conservative in nyc
"We see an awful corruption all around that stinks, from INAH to the mayor's office," said Mr. D'Herrera,

No spit, Sherlock! If corruption wasn't your government's middle name, the more ambitious of your poor people wouldn't have to come to America to bus tables and clean toilets!

9 posted on 09/28/2004 4:57:14 AM PDT by L.N. Smithee (The Final Score: Buckhead 1, Talking Head 0)
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To: beaversmom
Okay we will take back our Wal-Mart if you take back all your cousins.

Works for me!!!!!!!!!

10 posted on 09/28/2004 5:01:41 AM PDT by Gabz (Hurricanes and Kerry/Edwards have 2 things in common - hot air and destruction.)
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To: conservative in nyc
People here now have to trek 30 miles to the nearest hypermarket

On a typical Sunday here it looks like they all trekked a little further to the Walmarts here. I think they should build Walmarts all over Mexico --- it seems the main store they head to when they cross the border --- build them some hospitals and schools too and we could eliminate a lot of the traffic at the ports of entry.

11 posted on 09/28/2004 6:02:54 AM PDT by FITZ
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