Quote:
Originally Posted by RandyMcCharles
Mexico is less regulated. I prefer that even though it is 'buyer beware'. Regarding karaoke, there are 2 bars in Mazatlan I have found that I like and 1 that I dislike. The first 2 get my business the other does not. Neither does it miss my business because it consciously caters to locals and discourages tourists. What I like is they they choose to operate as it suits them rather than are required to operate as the gvt mandates.
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Randy,
The Mexican Government has more laws and regulations than the average tourist realizes! The enforcement can be where you are noticing a little less pressure, and that is only because the municipalities are grossly undermanned. But, if you cross the line in a foreign country such as Mexico, as an American, Canadian, Japanese, or .... Citizen, you'll find a sharp distinction of differences that we sometimes take for granted, in the USA, or Canada!
Being a resident of a border town with all kinds of Mexican Heritage, I have seen the Latino Culture change about as fast as their American border cities. In a tourist area such as Mazatlan or Nogales, you will see little differences... but go to a non-tourist area, and you will find a totally different culture, along with the old Mexican traditions, and incredibly different values...
Back to the subject at hand... most all of Mexico allows for smoking in public, but each private business, can allow for the smoking/non-smoking segregation, that is the same as most of the USA, but there has been many businesses that have posted the non-smoking signs...
You say the bars in Mazatlan, that you prefer, vary in the way tourists are treated... I don't know if you are bi-lingual or not, but I would like to hear the conversations amongst the employees/staff once the tourists have gone back home, and they are left with the local residents... Most treat their clients like locals if they can see that they are bilingual, and respect their culture... if you are a "Gringo" and cannot speak the language, they will do what is necessary in order to get you to spend your American/Canadian dollars, and then ridicule you in the local tongue, once you are gone, whether it's the Bar Servers, Curio Shops, Restaurant Waiters, or Local Police.
Mazatlan is on the coast not far from Culiacan, which is the heart of the State of Sinaloa, which is the drug capital ( Also Produce Capital! ) of Mexico. If you get a chance, go to Culiacan, and see the difference between a commerce center, and a tourist trap... See the militia carrying machine guns through the public streets, and the federales who don't take any lip from anyone, and all those endless smiles, that are missing... and you'll see how the drug cartels have changed a country that didn't know better, and doesn't have the government manpower, to reverse the situation and protect its citizens, so they feel safe going out on the street at any time, day or night... to a smaller extent, we in Nogales, Arizona, have seen the same thing happening recently to our sister city of Nogales, Sonora, Mexico...
Tourists have been staying home because of the fear of being an innocent bystander when the drug cartels, and the federal police, start shooting without regard of the innocent people that have been caught in their crossfire... it's a way too frequent occurance in the Border Towns of Mexico, such as Tijuana, Nogales, Juarez, etc.
But for an enpoverished country like Mexico, the tourist trade will probably take a back seat to drug trafficking, since an Uzi will make you more money than a pina colada! They used to say that if you don't go looking for trouble in Mexico, that you won't find it... but that's not exactly the truth anymore!