I know the feeling, as Arizona has been called 'Occupied Mexico', for as long as I've been here, (16 years) .
When I lived in the "Land of Enchantment" next door to you, the local National Public Radio station (KRWG at New Mexico State University) ran a program produced by the New Mexico Tourist Bureau (I think) titled
One Of Our 50 Is Missing, regarding the uninformed comments and official pronouncements that New Mexico citizens received during their travels elsewhere in the United States. Some of the most frequent ones were:
"I need to see your passport,"
'Are you enjoying your visit to the United States?" and
"I'm sorry, we do not accept foreign checks."
My former father-in-law, who lived in El Paso but worked in Las Cruces, New Mexico, was in Boston and needed to show an official document prepared in Las Cruces. The bank employee rejected the document because it was "foreign." Fortunately, there was a map of the United States on the wall behind the employee, because the employee refused to accept any other form of proof of nationality.
The American journalist H.L. Mencken's observation nearly 100 years ago is true: "No one ever went broke from underestimating the intelligence of the American people."
