Today I talked to a guy who was a supervisor for an ice cream company. His job was to go around and make sure that the people who rent the little ice cream carts show up everyday and are paying enough money back to the company. After he told me this he threw in that it was a very dangerous job. I sort of chuckled imagining him as the James Bond of sorbet. I could see him making sure the carts had the right mix of ice cream bars and cones.
"It's a very dangerous job" he assured me again, "I have to go into gang territory". "Oh" I said still not quite convinced that a gang would be too worried about an ice cream cart. He could tell I wasn't convinced "I have to pay off the gangs" he said.
Imagine first my disbelief, then my face as I realized that the gangs are so prevalent here that even the ice cream man has to pay his fair share or die.
On the same theme of violence on the way home we passed two guys standing on the side of the road guarding what looked like a bus stop in the middle of nowhere. This is not unusual, most stores, banks, and delivery trucks have their own guards. Both guards had large semiautomatic rifles and you could tell they took their job guarding a little patch of dirt in the middle of nowhere very seriously. Closer to Itzalco I spotted a man in a guard tower with what looked like a sniper rifle in his hands (could have just been a rifle) and a machine gun slung across his back. My head swung around and I craned my neck to figure out what was so important that this man was guarding, it was a fruit company's distribution center.
Where is this foreign land? There is no way that this can be on the same continent as my quiet country abode. Such stark differences from a place where bad stuff rarely happens to a whole country where bad stuff is just considered the norm. If nothing else this trip is really opening my eyes to the great differences in the human condition and each individuals state of living.
I have two opposing thoughts tonight, one good and cheerful the other not so much:
1. Just help at least one person. Help one person escape the circle of violence and poverty, one person would be enough.
2. There is no way to help them all. One person's actions alone cannot change the world. The "Let you're light shine" stuff is bull, alone we're nothing.
"It's a very dangerous job" he assured me again, "I have to go into gang territory". "Oh" I said still not quite convinced that a gang would be too worried about an ice cream cart. He could tell I wasn't convinced "I have to pay off the gangs" he said.
Imagine first my disbelief, then my face as I realized that the gangs are so prevalent here that even the ice cream man has to pay his fair share or die.
On the same theme of violence on the way home we passed two guys standing on the side of the road guarding what looked like a bus stop in the middle of nowhere. This is not unusual, most stores, banks, and delivery trucks have their own guards. Both guards had large semiautomatic rifles and you could tell they took their job guarding a little patch of dirt in the middle of nowhere very seriously. Closer to Itzalco I spotted a man in a guard tower with what looked like a sniper rifle in his hands (could have just been a rifle) and a machine gun slung across his back. My head swung around and I craned my neck to figure out what was so important that this man was guarding, it was a fruit company's distribution center.
Where is this foreign land? There is no way that this can be on the same continent as my quiet country abode. Such stark differences from a place where bad stuff rarely happens to a whole country where bad stuff is just considered the norm. If nothing else this trip is really opening my eyes to the great differences in the human condition and each individuals state of living.
I have two opposing thoughts tonight, one good and cheerful the other not so much:
1. Just help at least one person. Help one person escape the circle of violence and poverty, one person would be enough.
2. There is no way to help them all. One person's actions alone cannot change the world. The "Let you're light shine" stuff is bull, alone we're nothing.




