I have been to Cozumel twice and walked pretty much every street between Calle 11 Sur and Calle 10 Norte and between the water front and Avenida 30. I have been to the southern end of the island twice, including venturing inland to El Cedral. I have gone as far north on the eastern side of the island as is permitted post-Wilma. I spent Sunday evening the town square the first time. Have been through the shops surrounding the square, but I much prefer the ones on the back streets which are farther removed from tourist heaven. Practiced my very rusty Spanish enough to be able to at least communicate with local shop owners who were far enough off the square that it was a toss up as to whether my Spanish or their English was a better tool for communication.
I just don't think where one eats necessarily makes the difference between experiencing the place I'm visiting and hiding in a resort. That is particularly when the food at the place I'm staying at serves good local food. If you haven't tried the evening meals at Scuba Club Cozumel, you should - at least when I was there they served a wide variety of local dishes (including identfiying for us which native tradition the food grew out of).
I also don't think eating at AIs is inherently unsafe - which certainly seemed to be the direction the conversation was headed when I jumped in.
That doesn't mean I won't necessarily try a different travel plan in the future - partly it depends on whether I'm traveling with a group (in which case the AI is prepaid, and I don't have a choice about paying for my food a second time) or by myself (and am free to make my own arrangements). If I'm traveling with a group, I'm likely to experience the island - as I have both times I've been there - but return to the AI for meals rather than paying twice for my food.
I believe you are confusing a comment someone else made with my response to it. In the context of this discussion, someone else implied that eating where locals eat would keep you safe (with the flip side being that if locals don't eat there it is not safe). My response was that you can't judge whether or not a place is safe to eat by whether or not locals eat there. Locals don't eat at places for a number of reasons, only one of which might be safety. On the flip side, one's GI tract does grow accustomed to what one is exposed to. Just because a local eats somewhere does not necessarily mean it is safe for non-locals to eat there (and that applies whether you're in Mexico, US, or anywhere else).
I stand corrected


I agree, food and where you eat doesn't have to be the priority...I was simply speaking in the context that you can actually eat very good and safe food here without having to worry about getting sick. I hear of more people getting sick fro the AI buffets and over indulgence in alcohol than anything else, so I was trying to bunk that myth that AI food is safer than eating outside of the resort. I was not slamming people who choose to stay at AI's for the convenience and sometimes cost effectiveness...I just really encourage people to venture out of the AI compounds and try some local food and experience the culture...that was really my point
