"

‘The CIA has been trying to destabilise Venezuela,’ Gonzalez said. ‘They want us to pump more oil so prices will be lower. They have no moral capacity to make statements about our democracy.’

The US quickly congratulated Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto after his election in 2012, despite widespread accusations of fraud, including ballot-stuffing, and well-documented cases of voters being given grocery vouchers in exchange for voting for Nieto’s party.

"

From the Aljazeera piece Venezuelans angry over US election critiques.

I am not defending the Venezuelan government, but the US has a long history of intervening in Latin American presidential elections and it’s just hypocritical and ridiculous for this country to pretend they care about democracy or fair elections.  




Monument to honor up to 70,000 over 100,000 people killed in country’s drug war criticized for not naming the dead.
Mexico City has opened a memorial to honor tens of thousands of victims of the country’s drug war.
The government’s official monument was dedicated on Friday, four months after its completion, in a public event where relatives of the missing chased after the dignitaries in tears, pleading for help in finding their loved ones.
Only some victims’ rights groups recognize the monument, while others picked an entirely different monument to place handkerchiefs painted with names and personal messages in protest of the official site, which does not bear a single victim’s name.
“Other organisations asked us for other space because they’re against this one,” Interior Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong said at the official dedication of the government monument, which consists of steel panels bearing quotes from famous writers and thinkers.  
“What took us so long was trying to get agreement among the groups, and we failed.”
The memorial dispute arises from the fact that the Mexican government has yet to fully document cases of drug war dead and missing, despite constant pleas from rights groups, the public and orders from Mexico’s own transparency agency.
The previous government of Felipe Calderon stopped counting drug war dead in September of 2011 and the new government of Enrique Peña Nieto has only provided monthly statistics for December, and January and February of this year.
Estimates of those killed range from 60,000 to more than 100,000, and the missing from 5,000 to 27,000



The reason the monument doesn’t contain a single name is because including names and ages of victims would disclose the fact that innocent children, women, men, politicians, and journalists have died in this “war” on drugs, but most importantly, it would hold the Mexican government responsible to some extent for the lives of those well-over 100,000 people. This monument is an insult to the Mexican pueblo and the countless people who have lost loved ones to the War on Drugs .

Monument to honor up to 70,000 over 100,000 people killed in country’s drug war criticized for not naming the dead.

Mexico City has opened a memorial to honor tens of thousands of victims of the country’s drug war.

The government’s official monument was dedicated on Friday, four months after its completion, in a public event where relatives of the missing chased after the dignitaries in tears, pleading for help in finding their loved ones.

Only some victims’ rights groups recognize the monument, while others picked an entirely different monument to place handkerchiefs painted with names and personal messages in protest of the official site, which does not bear a single victim’s name.

“Other organisations asked us for other space because they’re against this one,” Interior Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong said at the official dedication of the government monument, which consists of steel panels bearing quotes from famous writers and thinkers.  

“What took us so long was trying to get agreement among the groups, and we failed.”

The memorial dispute arises from the fact that the Mexican government has yet to fully document cases of drug war dead and missing, despite constant pleas from rights groups, the public and orders from Mexico’s own transparency agency.

The previous government of Felipe Calderon stopped counting drug war dead in September of 2011 and the new government of Enrique Peña Nieto has only provided monthly statistics for December, and January and February of this year.

Estimates of those killed range from 60,000 to more than 100,000, and the missing from 5,000 to 27,000

The reason the monument doesn’t contain a single name is because including names and ages of victims would disclose the fact that innocent children, women, men, politicians, and journalists have died in this “war” on drugs, but most importantly, it would hold the Mexican government responsible to some extent for the lives of those well-over 100,000 people. This monument is an insult to the Mexican pueblo and the countless people who have lost loved ones to the War on Drugs .

Have I ever told you guys about the time I was in Frida Kahlo’s kitchen, bedroom and studio?

I was also in front original pieces like this:

It was glorious and I wanted to steal everything.

If you’re interested in Mexican indigenous languages and cultures you should definitely be following these guys. They have these cool little “Nahuatl lessons” for Spanish speakers and general indigenous Mexican linguistic awesomeness. 

Invasores de Nuevo León - Aguanta Corazón

Aguanta corazón no seas cobarde, 
si te tienes que ausentar que sea por Dios, 
no olvides que por lejos que te vayas, 
no sufres solo tú sino los dos. 

I dedicate this song to me.

"As for our skin color, we usually say that we are “café con leche,” coffee with milk, or “apifonadito,” which is the color of a pine nut. The amount of coffee and milk is the degree of segregation. Milk with only a little coffee is best for the Chicano’s health. Half and half is “moreno,” which is brown, and more coffee than milk is “prieto.” Strong, strong black coffee in a steaming cup is a disaster and we comment: “color de piano,” (black as a piano), or “Ese negro tan feo,” (that ugly black). We still have no use for decaffeinated coffee, but we certainly haven’t yet qualified as a delicious, richer and smoother blend for a taster’s choice."

— Elena Poniatowska on shadeism within the Mexican@ and Chican@ community in her essay Mexicanas and Chicanas.

From Ruis’ La revolucioncita mexicana (The little Mexican Revolution). The caption says “By 1900, a third of the lands [México] was private property.”
The following page goes on to tell us that it is calculated that 97% of México was private property, owned by 830 indivuals who didn’t even make up 1% of the country’s then population. Sound familiar, anyone?
Btw, La revolucioncita mexicana is an excellent book about Mexico’s 1910 revolution, IN COMIC BOOK FORM. I highly recommend it.

From Ruis’ La revolucioncita mexicana (The little Mexican Revolution). The caption says “By 1900, a third of the lands [México] was private property.

The following page goes on to tell us that it is calculated that 97% of México was private property, owned by 830 indivuals who didn’t even make up 1% of the country’s then population. Sound familiar, anyone?

Btw, La revolucioncita mexicana is an excellent book about Mexico’s 1910 revolution, IN COMIC BOOK FORM. I highly recommend it.

"There are the green-eyed Mexicans. The rich blond Mexicans. The Mexicans with the faces of Arab sheiks. The Jewish Mexicans. The big-footed-as-a-German Mexicans. The leftover-French Mexicans. The chaparrito compact Mexicans. The Tarahumara tall-as-a-desert-saguaro Mexicans. The Mediterranean Mexicans. The Mexicans with Tunisian eyebrows. The negrito Mexicans of the double coasts. The Chinese Mexicans. The curly-haired, freckled-faced, red-headed Mexicans. The Lebanese Mexicans. Look, I don’t know what you’re talking about when you say I don’t look Mexican. I am Mexican. Even though I was born on the U.S. side of the border."

— Sandra CisnerosCaramelo (via honeybrown)

(vía reclaimingthelatinatag)

fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

Did you know?
The flower commonly known as the poinsettia in the United States, originally called cuitlaxochitl in the nahuatl indigenous language, is named after Joel Roberts Poinsett, the country’s first minister to Mexico. He introduced the flower to the United States for the first time in the 1820s. The plant itself is native to Mexico and Central America, where it has been used as part of Christmas celebrations since the early years of the colonial period. Before that, the plant and its flowers were used by the Mexica for medicinal purposes and as a source of red dye. 

fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory:

Did you know?

The flower commonly known as the poinsettia in the United States, originally called cuitlaxochitl in the nahuatl indigenous language, is named after Joel Roberts Poinsett, the country’s first minister to Mexico. He introduced the flower to the United States for the first time in the 1820s. The plant itself is native to Mexico and Central America, where it has been used as part of Christmas celebrations since the early years of the colonial period. Before that, the plant and its flowers were used by the Mexica for medicinal purposes and as a source of red dye. 

(Fuente: fylatinamericanhistory)

thinkmexican:



What the Fuck Is NAFTA?
Since it was first introduced in 1994, NAFTA has been opposed by labor and student organizations in Mexico, the US, and Canada, the three signatories to this ‘agreement.’
Roughly, NAFTA is an economic law that deregulates capital movement through all three countries. It gives corporations the freedom to move entire operations untaxed, the ability to arbitrate as if they were citizens from those respective countries and, ultimately, the power to dictate the economy. For example, if Intel decides it is cheaper to manufacture processors in a facility in Guadalajara, NAFTA allows them to do so unopposed by the US government. It does not matter that this corporate freedom kills the Mexican IT sector, NAFTA is the law.
When Intel operates in Mexico, the Mexican government is forced to treat Intel as a Mexican corporation and affords them the same right to property as state enterprises. Intel is also not required to pay tariff dues as they used to be decades ago and, in fact, it receives subsidies from the Mexican government. This has effects the Mexican population through diminished tariff revenue for public services and infrastructure, a neoliberal trend present in all three countries.
NAFTA basically dictates that all three governments support corporate control of the economy.
The effects of NAFTA are also felt across economic sectors. For example, the movement of automobile manufacturing to Mexico, where labor laws are rarely enforced, has left large areas of the midwestern United States desolate; the area is referred to as the ‘rust-belt’ due to its abandoned manufacturing facilities.
Mexico’s maquiladoras, then, are obviously no good for Mexicans because they are economic production used to undercut the US worker. The way to undercut US workers is to neglect labor rights somewhere else. As a result, workers living on either side of the border are made more ‘competitive’ but competition within the NAFTA framework is narrowly defined as a demeanor and capacity to work for more time with less pay. NAFTA formally imposes a ‘race to the bottom’ as all workers are forced to participate in an economic competition they cannot possibly survive.
Through NAFTA, US corporations also manipulate the agricultural sector of Mexico. Remember, Mexico is still largely agrarian and many people survive through their own small scale farming operations. US corporations destroy this capacity by exporting lower quality products to Mexican firms and do so with the political protection and subsidies from the US government.
Monsanto, for instance, owns many acres of farm land and receives a federal subsidy for every bushel of corn planted regardless of quality. The subsidy is also given despite it being well known that Monsanto has near monopolistic control over corn and is consolidating control over publicly subsidized research in US universities as well. Monsanto’s federally subsidized corn is dumped into Mexico where Monsanto ‘fixes’ the price of maize - Monsanto and its Mexican subsidiaries raise the price of corn based products at will.
The effect is obvious: In Mexico, tortillas, corn and corn maize have all increased in price. Smaller farming operations are now unviable which displaces Mexican workers, forcing them to seek work in the United States.
Submitted by Ricardo Lezama



It brakes my heart to admit the fact that México is the U.S.’ puppet. NAFTA is the best example of that. 

thinkmexican:

What the Fuck Is NAFTA?

Since it was first introduced in 1994, NAFTA has been opposed by labor and student organizations in Mexico, the US, and Canada, the three signatories to this ‘agreement.’

Roughly, NAFTA is an economic law that deregulates capital movement through all three countries. It gives corporations the freedom to move entire operations untaxed, the ability to arbitrate as if they were citizens from those respective countries and, ultimately, the power to dictate the economy. For example, if Intel decides it is cheaper to manufacture processors in a facility in Guadalajara, NAFTA allows them to do so unopposed by the US government. It does not matter that this corporate freedom kills the Mexican IT sector, NAFTA is the law.

When Intel operates in Mexico, the Mexican government is forced to treat Intel as a Mexican corporation and affords them the same right to property as state enterprises. Intel is also not required to pay tariff dues as they used to be decades ago and, in fact, it receives subsidies from the Mexican government. This has effects the Mexican population through diminished tariff revenue for public services and infrastructure, a neoliberal trend present in all three countries.

NAFTA basically dictates that all three governments support corporate control of the economy.

The effects of NAFTA are also felt across economic sectors. For example, the movement of automobile manufacturing to Mexico, where labor laws are rarely enforced, has left large areas of the midwestern United States desolate; the area is referred to as the ‘rust-belt’ due to its abandoned manufacturing facilities.

Mexico’s maquiladoras, then, are obviously no good for Mexicans because they are economic production used to undercut the US worker. The way to undercut US workers is to neglect labor rights somewhere else. As a result, workers living on either side of the border are made more ‘competitive’ but competition within the NAFTA framework is narrowly defined as a demeanor and capacity to work for more time with less pay. NAFTA formally imposes a ‘race to the bottom’ as all workers are forced to participate in an economic competition they cannot possibly survive.

Through NAFTA, US corporations also manipulate the agricultural sector of Mexico. Remember, Mexico is still largely agrarian and many people survive through their own small scale farming operations. US corporations destroy this capacity by exporting lower quality products to Mexican firms and do so with the political protection and subsidies from the US government.

Monsanto, for instance, owns many acres of farm land and receives a federal subsidy for every bushel of corn planted regardless of quality. The subsidy is also given despite it being well known that Monsanto has near monopolistic control over corn and is consolidating control over publicly subsidized research in US universities as well. Monsanto’s federally subsidized corn is dumped into Mexico where Monsanto ‘fixes’ the price of maize - Monsanto and its Mexican subsidiaries raise the price of corn based products at will.

The effect is obvious: In Mexico, tortillas, corn and corn maize have all increased in price. Smaller farming operations are now unviable which displaces Mexican workers, forcing them to seek work in the United States.

Submitted by Ricardo Lezama

It brakes my heart to admit the fact that México is the U.S.’ puppet. NAFTA is the best example of that. 

(vía politicalthinker2099)

"La primavera mexicana se enfrió, se ha convertido en invierno."

Jorge Gastélum, ITAM en el articulo de BBC Mundo ¿Murió la primavera mexicana?

The Mexican Spring became cold, it has turned into winter - Jorge Gastélum for the BBC World piece “Have the Mexican Springs died?”

It’s sad for many Mexicans to recognize the death of what could have been a Mexican Spring. The failure of this summer’s #Yosoy132 movement to truly organize into something more united and consistent, the lack of empathy by so many Mexicans, the drug war, and finally the the rampant corruption within the government that makes sure any kind of progressive movement gets stomped on and literally killed, were all factors in the death of the Mexican Spring. Me parte el corazón.

reclaimingthelatinatag:

Confirmed dead, “La diva de la banda” Jenni Rivera. 
Mexican-American singer Jenni Rivera has been confirmed dead. Rivera’s plane went missing earlier today, Sunday December 9th, in Mexico. The wreckage was found at  5pm with no remaining survivors.
Jenni Rivera had sold over 15 million albums worldwide and was nominated at the 2003, 2008 and 2010 Latin Grammys. A successful regional Mexican artist and entrepreneur, she had started many companies, including Divina Realty, Divina Cosmetics, Jenni Rivera Fragrance, Jenni Jeans, Divine Music and The Jenni Rivera Love Foundation. Jenni Rivera became the first female Banda artist to sell-out a concert at the world famous Gibson Amphitheater in Universal City, California and became the first artist to sell-out two back-to-back nights at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles, California on August 6, 2010 and August 7, 2010.
Descanse en paz, gran señora.

reclaimingthelatinatag:

Confirmed dead, “La diva de la banda” Jenni Rivera. 

Mexican-American singer Jenni Rivera has been confirmed dead. Rivera’s plane went missing earlier today, Sunday December 9th, in Mexico. The wreckage was found at  5pm with no remaining survivors.

Jenni Rivera had sold over 15 million albums worldwide and was nominated at the 2003, 2008 and 2010 Latin Grammys. A successful regional Mexican artist and entrepreneur, she had started many companies, including Divina Realty, Divina Cosmetics, Jenni Rivera Fragrance, Jenni Jeans, Divine Music and The Jenni Rivera Love Foundation. Jenni Rivera became the first female Banda artist to sell-out a concert at the world famous Gibson Amphitheater in Universal City, California and became the first artist to sell-out two back-to-back nights at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles, California on August 6, 2010 and August 7, 2010.

Descanse en paz, gran señora.

(vía reclaimingthelatinatag)

An environmental activist who took a stand against drug gangs has been murdered along with her 10-year-old son in the southern state of Guerrero.

Juventina Villa Mojica was under police protection after receiving death threats when she went to make a phone call and was ambushed by at least 30 attackers, reported Democracy Now. Her seven-year-old daughter survived, but her 10-year-old son was also killed. More than 20 members of her extended family, including her husband and two other children, had already been murdered.

Keep in mind that just a few days ago Dr. María Gorrostieta Salazar, former mayor of the municipality of Tiquicheo, Michoacan, Mexico was brutally tortured and killed at the hands of a Mexican drug gang for also denouncing drug cartel violence. Completely unacceptable. I wonder what the PRI, who tomorrow reclaims their dictatorship presidency after 12 years out of power, plans to do about this…

Mexican security forces have found 19 bodies in mass graves in the northern state of Chihuahua.

They said 11 of the bodies had been buried about two years ago in a desolate area about 40km (25 miles) southeast of Ciudad Juarez.

The remaining eight victims, who had been tortured and killed only days ago, were found along a road near the town of Rosales.

Chihuahua is one of the states hardest hit by drug-related violence in Mexico.

All the victims were male and had been shot dead. Many also showed signs of torture.

According to figures released earlier this year by Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission, 16,000 bodies remain unidentified and a total of 24,000 people are missing.

Most of them are believed to be victims of fighting between rival drug gangs or the military response to the drug violence.

The total of 24,000 people missing and the over 50,000 (which let’s be real,those are two extremely conservative numbers) add up to over 70,000 casualties to this backwards and complete failure of “War on Drugs”. Cases like these 19 bodies is what Calderón should have worried about in his 6-year presidency. Not trying to change Mexico’s name…

Mexico’s President Calderon seeks to change country’s name

yerba-santa:

political-linguaphile:

Mexico’s President Calderon seeks to change country’s name

The current name, the United Mexican States, was adopted in 1824 and was intended to emulate its northern neighbour.

President Calderon wants to change it to just Mexico, as the country is known the world over.

Mr Calderon, who leaves office on 1 December, said Mexico no longer needed to copy any foreign power.

WHAT. Ridiculous. This stunt is just Calderon’s sorry attempt to go down in Mexico’s history for something other than the fact that his presidency has been nothing but a murderous bloodbath

México es una nación de estados distintos y soberanos. Cambiando el nombre borra esa distinción múy central a la historia y desarollo social de nuestro país.

Si Calderon pretende distinguir a México de EEUU, quizás deber empezar por lo que los dos países tienen en común sobre todo—la pobreza en los pueblos y el desamparo de la gente indígena del continente.

yerba-santa: Mexico is a nation of different and sovereign states. Changing the name erases that very central distinction of our history and social development of our country. If Calderon wishes to distinguish Mexico from the U.S., maybe he should start by [changing] what these two countries have in common — the poverty in the “pueblos” and the abandonment of the indigenous people of this continent. 

Dropping some truth bombs. This is why I love César. You guys should go follow asap!

(vía yerba-santa-deactivated20121206)