Originally posted by Don Alley
Virtually ALL crime coverage in the US is sensationalized entertainment. Exactly what is the general, national relevence of the Drew/Scott/Laci
Peterson cases? Natalee Holloway? The Phil Specter case? Paris Hilton or Britney Spears adventures? Sometimes, celebrity guarantees coverage, other
times it's a puzzle to me. But in the case of the Baja reports, there has been pressure from visitors, including participants on this board, put on
media outlets to run with these stories.
I can't say that Baja crime reports have affected my travel habits, or choice of residence.
Still, I find the crime statistic comparisons with US cities a poor argument. Sorry, but I'm not considering an idyllic vacation in the seamier side
of Philadelphia, as much as I liked the film Rocky. Yes, parts of the US also have poor reputations that deflect visitors due to crime and press
coverage of crime.
And I've spent most of my adult life in the states and can't say I've been ripped off by the police in phony traffic shakedowns. Nor can I, off the
top of my head, recall a city police department being attacked by criminals. And Mexico's difficulties in controlling police corruption, especially
that aimed at tourists, is legendary and has provoked bad press for decades. It is, and has always been, a brake slowing tourism in Mexico. Repeated
stories of such incidents in the internet age may be as damaging to Mexican tourism as the reports of more serious crimes. |