The Bad Mexicans - Brother, Betrayal, and the History of the Mexican Revolution
The Barios "Undoing the Revolution" delves in to one of Mexico's most turbulent periods, the revolutionary decade (1910-1920). The book describes the utopian spirit that spawned a unified revolutionary league--a fraternity in which all members shared ideals of freedom and reform. It then tells how this brotherhood disintegrated into a most cruel and bloody civil war filled with trickery, misdeeds and mutually shifting alliances. By describing some of the persons and decisions then of ÎĄÎ±Î·Ï Î±ÎżÏ Ïg, η the the book gives a vivid picture how personal ambition, ideological splits and betrayal forever change the political complexion and social structure demanded by men like Zapata. This is the war which has now come down to us in history books or films with Pancho Villa as its leading hero. Throughout every stage of its development furthermore, this war was, without exception, fought under an overall guise of brotherhood; though naturally there are many people who do not recognize that to be true at all today when they hear about Mexic 10 revolutionaries. The revolution began as a united struggle to overthrow the dictatorship of Porfirio DĂaz. Who had ruled for 35 years as a slave master over his subjects (slaves were most of them. Humanity in this state simply thousands of millions); DĂaz had achieved a position of extreme inequality and oppression. Francisco Madero became the leader of the revolution, championing democratic reforms. His Plan of San Luis PotosĂ was soon joined by Zapata in the south and Villa in the north.
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The Bad Mexicans: Brother, Betrayal, and the History of the Mexican Revolution - Hitori Nakamoto
The Bad Mexicans - Brother, Betrayal, and the History of the Mexican Revolution
The Barios "Undoing the Revolution" delves in to one of Mexico's most turbulent periods, the revolutionary decade (1910-1920). The book describes the utopian spirit that spawned a unified revolutionary league--a fraternity in which all members shared ideals of freedom and reform. It then tells how this brotherhood disintegrated into a most cruel and bloody civil war filled with trickery, misdeeds and mutually shifting alliances. By describing some of the persons and decisions then of ÎĄÎ±Î·Ï Î±ÎżÏ Ïg, η the the book gives a vivid picture how personal ambition, ideological splits and betrayal forever change the political complexion and social structure demanded by men like Zapata. This is the war which has now come down to us in history books or films with Pancho Villa as its leading hero. Throughout every stage of its development furthermore, this war was, without exception, fought under an overall guise of brotherhood; though naturally there are many people who do not recognize that to be true at all today when they hear about Mexic 10 revolutionaries. The revolution began as a united struggle to overthrow the dictatorship of Porfirio DĂaz. Who had ruled for 35 years as a slave master over his subjects (slaves were most of them. Humanity in this state simply thousands of millions); DĂaz had achieved a position of extreme inequality and oppression. Francisco Madero became the leader of the revolution, championing democratic reforms. His Plan of San Luis PotosĂ was soon joined by Zapata in the south and Villa in the north.
Grab a copy of this book now!