By Joseph P. Duggan on 4.28.09 @ 6:07AM
Live (still) from Mexico City, where grudgingly unhelpful Embassy
personnel and CNN swine flu coverage are discomfited by a 5.8
earthquake.
MEXICO CITY, April 27, 2009 -- On the crowded sidewalks of Paseo
de la Reforma, a dark-eyed office worker held a cell phone to her
left ear and with her free hand pulled down her blue medical mask
to reveal a lovely Latin pair of lips. In a gesture worthy of
Albert Camus, she took a deep dark carcinogenic draft from a
Marlboro Light. Without exhaling, she replaced the mask.
As is the case so often in this country, something's picturesque
with this wrong.
I was in this crowd along the Reforma after a Sisyphean morning
at the United States Embassy. I had arrived a little after 9:00
to avail myself of the notarial services offered, according to
the Embassy website, every weekday from 8:30 a.m. until noon. In
one of the many obstacles to commerce that NAFTA has not
alleviated, the only place a United States visitor to Mexico can
get business and legal documents notarized for purposes back home
is the Embassy or one of its consulates. The rent-a-cop
("seguridad privada") at the entrance told me that the Embassy
had decided to suspend all services for American citizens until
at least the sixth of May because of the swine flu scare. "Unless
it's an emergency."
After two hours of persistent calls up the bureaucratic ladder
and trying to explain that I could show I had a deadline by which
to send some notarized documents to the United States, I finally
found an official who was willing to consider the threat of
unintentionally voiding a major transaction to have the character
of an emergency.
As forbidding as the portals of the Château D'If that confined
Jim Caviezel and countless other celluloid Counts of Monte
Cristo, the iron gates of the Embassy creaked open. Large,
smiling portraits of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton festooned
the anteroom to the "citizens' service center" where I waited
another half-hour to get the attention of one of the many idle
clerks in an office almost empty of citizens.
A "foreign service national" -- one of the local hires who do
most of the "work" in our Embassies and Consulates -- deigned at
length to recognize my presence. Displaying traits akin to the
kids who used to take pleasure in plucking the wings from
helpless insects, he pronounced himself unimpressed that my
situation presented an emergency.
"But that's why they let me in here after two hours!" I
protested.
After a long consultation in a back room, he returned, carrying a
grudge as grand as an Aztec pyramid. "The vice consul will
notarize your documents," he hissed.
After no particular hurry, the vice consul appeared. With the
fastidiousness of a cleric taking sacred vessels from a
tabernacle, the foreign service national readied the shiny metal
embossing instrument to adorn my documents with the Embassy's
official seal.
Just before the secular sacrament could be consummated, the room
began to feel like a ship on rough seas. "It's an earthquake!"
said my wife, a Mexico City native. "The Embassy is built on a
hydraulic foundation. That's why it feels like we're on water."
A disembodied voice barked over the public address system, "THIS
IS NOT A DRILL. THERE HAS BEEN AN EARTHQUAKE. SECURE ALL
CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS AND EVACUATE THE BUILDING IMMEDIATELY."
"Well," said the vice consul dryly, "you'll just have to come
back later."
Across the side street in the snack bar of the Sheraton, I
watched CNN interrupt the Mexican health minister's live news
conference on the swine flu crisis to cut to live coverage of the
earthquake from just across Paseo de la Reforma. As reports
filtered in from around the city and the countryside, it turned
out to have been fairly big on the Richter Scale --5.8 -- but
there was no apparent human injury or property damage. For an
hour, the CNN screen seesawed between swine flu and earthquake
hysteria, making me wonder whether the usual fixtures on the
round-the-clock news tube, the drug lords and their military
foes, were feeling slighted.
Then an Embassy cop with a bullhorn announced "all clear." A half
hour later, the documents were notarized.
Morton Blackwell, the imperturbable trainer of young conservative
politicos, gives his students a list of copybook maxims. The one
I remember best is "Never give a bureaucrat a chance to say No."
Here in the Mexican capital, bureaucratic Powers, Thrones and
Dominations rule the day, undeterred by the goodness and common
sense of the world's Morton Blackwells. Last week I had to spend
three successive mornings in a blizzard of paperwork at the
Mexican Immigration Office just to get a visa renewed for a term
of three weeks. Today was Uncle Sam's turn to show he was
culturally "with it," too.
On the way from downtown to the residential neighborhood where
I'm staying, I have to cross a bridge over the "Barranca del
Muerto" (Dead Man's Gulch). A big green sign on the bridge
indicates an exit where I never see anyone turn, for "Avenida
Alta Tensión."
My wife explains that the street runs beside the right-of-way for
a procession of high-voltage electrical towers.
Pace Mel Brooks, in this city High Anxiety is not a dire
state of mind. It's just a place on the everyday landscape.
(Mr. Duggan is a visiting, but not much visited,
professor in Mexico City, where all the schools from Pre-K to
Ph.D. have been closed for the swine flu
emergency.)
topics:
Mexico City, Bureaucracy, Earthquakes