http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050629/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/mexico_stamp_controversy
MEXICO CITY - The Mexican government has issued postage stamps depicting an exaggerated black cartoon character known as Memin Pinguin, just weeks after remarks by President Vicente Fox angered U.S. blacks.
The series of five stamps released Wednesday depicts a hapless boy drawn with exaggerated features, thick lips and wide-open eyes. His appearance, speech and mannerisms are the subject of kidding by white characters in the comic book, which started in the 1940s and is still published in Mexico.
Activists criticized the stamps as offensive, though officials denied it.
"One would hope the Mexican government would be a little more careful and avoid continually opening wounds," said Sergio Penalosa, an activist in Mexico's small black community on the southern Pacific coast.
"But we've learned to expect anything from this government, just anything," Penalosa said.
In May, Fox riled many by saying Mexican migrants take jobs in the United States that "not even blacks" want. Fox later expressed regret for any offense the remarks may have caused, but insisted his comments had been misinterpreted.
Carlos Caballero, assistant marketing director for the Mexican Postal Service, said the new stamps are not offensive, nor were they intended to be.
"This is a traditional character that reflects part of Mexico's culture," Caballero said. "His mischievous nature is part of that character."
However, Penalosa said many Mexicans still assume all blacks are foreigners, despite the fact that at one point early in the Spanish colonial era, Africans outnumbered Spanish in Mexico.
"At this point in time, it was probably pretty insensitive" to issue the stamps, said Elisa Velazquez, an anthropologist who studies Mexico's black communities for the National Institute of Anthropology and History.
"This character is a classic, but it's from another era," Velazquez said. "It's a stereotype and you don't want to encourage ignorance or prejudices."
The 6.50-peso (60 cent) stamps — depicting the character in five poses — was issued with the domestic market in mind, but Caballero noted they could be used in international postage as well. A total of 750,000 of the stamps will be issued.
Ben Vinson, a black professor of Latin American history at Penn State University, said he has been called "Memin Pinguin" by some people in Mexico. He said the character's mother is drawn to look like an old version of the U.S. advertising character Aunt Jemima.
The stamps are part of a series that pays tribute to Mexican comic books. Memin Pinguin, the second in the series, was apparently chosen for this year's release because it is the 50th anniversary of the company that publishes the comic.
Publisher Manelick De la Parra told the government news agency Notimex the character would be a sort of goodwill ambassador on Mexican letters and postcards. "It seems nice if Memin can travel all over the world, spreading good news," de la Parra said, calling him "so charming, so affectionate, so wonderful, generous and friendly."
:???:
Mexicans are begining to become outnumbered in the work force by crackheads if you ask me. They do the job quicker and they charge 5 bucks for like anything.
Because Black people are notorious for hating on everyone; that is the hypocrisy of it all; and why hispanics and orientals and whites tend to look down on African-Americans.
I mean, you want to go talk about illegal immigrants and send them back to the country they came from, flat out disrespecting them; well then you have a lot of flak to deal with in return.
Get my drift? People hit back in the world.
First off, I'm mad you called Asians, orientals.. talk about politically incorrect. And secondly, other races don't hate blacks because we hate them. What kind of mess is that? Immigrants are taught to look down on black people before they even reach the American shores. Hell, mexicans look down on black mexicans. During the turn of the century when immigrants really began coming to America even they hated black people and they hardly knew ****about them. Blacks have been looked at as less than human and disrespected for centuries. The real problem is that we as blacks don't love ourselves enough to demand the respect we deserve.
But don't come to someone saying.. oh yea the struggle still exists, granted i am sure you think you know what your talking about but dude.. you don't know anything about the struggle because your not faced with, your not knee deep in it, your on the outside looking in..
And you would come to that conclusion, doing what?
Oh yeah, that judgement sutff I mentioned above. You know, something you don't have the authority to do.