The Mexico Thread

Mexicans getting a taste of what it's like when your country is invaded.


White people are getting a taste of their minority status again.

A lot of white people assume they’re going to buy a plane ticket to South America or Asia once SHTF.

I barely keep up to date on these things and it’s clear even from a distance.

Not only is there an effort to vilify white people anywhere they can be found but all these countries are clamping down legally on “westerners” staying long term.

They got the marching orders. Things are in motion.
 
Not only is there an effort to vilify white people anywhere they can be found but all these countries are clamping down legally on “westerners” staying long term.
It varies a lot by country. Plenty of countries are still rolling out the red carpet for cashed up gringos. It’s more about keeping the backpackers, etc out of their countries. Malaysia, Thailand and Ecuador and Panama all have good visa programs and privileges for cashed up foreign expats.
 
White people are getting a taste of their minority status again.

A lot of white people assume they’re going to buy a plane ticket to South America or Asia once SHTF.

I barely keep up to date on these things and it’s clear even from a distance.

Not only is there an effort to vilify white people anywhere they can be found but all these countries are clamping down legally on “westerners” staying long term.

They got the marching orders. Things are in motion.

In Hong Kong, the Job Market used to be really easy just with English. Now, they want people with Canto and Mandarin with almost no exception. The only places specifically looking for English are now Group/Regional level offices. The time to get out via white collar office employment is starting to clamp down.
 
I visited and was seriously considering the Mexican state of Michoacan for relocation. ( I speak Spanish fluently)
fast forward 2022, young Mexican-Americans vlogging on Youtube about "how cool" the place and "it is not as dangerous as people say". I knew that was the end of the state.
Now, in 2025 even Michoacan is unaffordable.
 
Now, in 2025 even Michoacan is unaffordable.
I am sure prices went up noticeably since then but surely it’s still affordable compared to western countries. I have visited Mexico and the only places that were unaffordable were tourist hotspots such as Tulum, Cancun, the rich parts of Mexico City etc. Everywhere else seems somewhat reasonable (but don’t expect it to be dirt cheap like Colombia or Peru) while Mexico is not dirt cheap anymore outside of the tourist hotspots it’s basically half the cost of living of comparable locations in the west.

The other thing in Mexico is the discrepancy between poor people stuff and upper class stuff is probably the highest I have seen out of any country. Fine dining restaurants and 5 star hotels and penthouse apartments in touristic locations and fancy hair salons etc in Mexico are basically at western price levels (and occasionally even more).

But normal stuff like eating street food, buying fresh produce from the markets, catching taxis, getting your hair cut from a barber at the market while sitting on plastic chairs, etc is all still very affordable. But yeah Mexico is not Bali or Thailand, don’t expect to luxury living on the cheap in Mexico.

Another thing I noticed is that even when you go to dirt cheap countries you don’t end up spending that much less than an expensive country because of lifestyle inflation. When you go to a country like New Zealand for holidays most nights you will decide to buy food from the supermarket and make your own food to save money because restaurants are so expensive whereas in a dirt cheap country like Vietnam or Peru or Colombia you end up going to restaurants almost every night, you catch taxis everywhere because taxis are cheap, you decide to treat yourself to some occasional massages etc. It all starts adding up. All things you would never do if you went to a country like Switzerland for holidays.
 
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I am sure prices went up noticeably since then but surely it’s still affordable compared to western countries. I have visited Mexico and the only places that were unaffordable were tourist hotspots such as Tulum, Cancun, the rich parts of Mexico City etc. Everywhere else seems somewhat reasonable (but don’t expect it to be dirt cheap like Colombia or Peru) while Mexico is not dirt cheap anymore outside of the tourist hotspots it’s basically half the cost of living of comparable locations in the west.

The other thing in Mexico is the discrepancy between poor people stuff and upper class stuff is probably the highest I have seen out of any country. Fine dining restaurants and 5 star hotels and penthouse apartments in touristic locations and fancy hair salons etc in Mexico are basically at western price levels (and occasionally even more).

But normal stuff like eating street food, buying fresh produce from the markets, catching taxis, getting your hair cut from a barber at the market while sitting on plastic chairs, etc is all still very affordable. But yeah Mexico is not Bali or Thailand, don’t expect to luxury living on the cheap in Mexico.

Another thing I noticed is that even when you go to dirt cheap countries you don’t end up spending that much less than an expensive country because of lifestyle inflation. When you go to a country like New Zealand for holidays most nights you will decide to buy food from the supermarket and make your own food to save money because restaurants are so expensive whereas in a dirt cheap country like Vietnam or Peru or Colombia you end up going to restaurants almost every night, you catch taxis everywhere because taxis are cheap, you decide to treat yourself to some occasional massages etc. It all starts adding up. All things you would never do if you went to a country like Switzerland for holidays.
Good points. I lived in my wife's country for years, one of the poorer and more dangerous countries south of the border. People in the USA always assumed it was dirt cheap to live there, but it's not that simple. It certainly could be, if you could handle the same lifestyle as a typical local. Thing is, you probably wouldn't want to do that if you could afford better. So it was a little less expensive for us there in the US, but not dramatically. Maybe 80% of what it costs us to here in the US now, and we're in a relatively expensive area, so I imagine there are parts of the US where a comparable lifestyle might even cost a bit less than in her country and other parts of Latin America.
 
It varies a lot by country. Plenty of countries are still rolling out the red carpet for cashed up gringos. It’s more about keeping the backpackers, etc out of their countries. Malaysia, Thailand and Ecuador and Panama all have good visa programs and privileges for cashed up foreign expats.
There's nothing wrong with backpackers, backpacking is part of white culture. There's nothing to clamp down on. Most of the complaints come from travelling liberals. The posturing between tourists and expats about whether you should eat mud cookies with the locals beside a trash can like a true culture connoisseur or whether you should be spending 500 a day to support the local economy like a real man. The locals themselves have jacked the prices on everything and are just complaining about cheapskates. That's not an issue with "tourism" or "backpacking" itself. It's cheaper to get a hot dog or a slice of pizza in NY than the third world, as far as I'm aware.

It's not a red carpet treatment, it's a given that money buys privilege. Over there you're "allowed" to stay there, until the renewal of your paperwork from square 1. Over here you can get a job, own land, and the people will even pretend it's normal for you to be here, you can even lecture the locals about racism.

If you ain't got 6 digit savings or a multinational corporation writing you cheques, good luck with the red carpet.
 
If you ain't got 6 digit savings or a multinational corporation writing you cheques, good luck with the red carpet.
6 figures in savings is pretty much what I was talking about when rolling out the red carpet. But some countries even give easy retiree visas for anybody over a certain age with a minimum passive income often $2000 per month and sometimes even less of social security income or rental income or dividend income can be enough to get you a retiree visa if you are old enough. They want retirees to come and spend money. What they don’t want is young expat types trying to come and take local jobs.
 
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