Alyeska wrote:Mexico has no legal claim to Texas anymore. A corner stone of International Law is the power and ability to hold land. Whether we like it or night, Might Makes Right is still a fact of life.
Yeah, right. So if I forcefully evict you from your home, and for some odd reason, no one comes to your aid (police lines and 911 all are "engaged" for 170+ years), does that mean that you lose all your claims to what is righfully yours?
And if you bring some friends and their shotguns, but for some disastrous coordination mistakes and whatnot, you all get captured by my friends and me, and I -forcefully- make you sign a "treaty" while having some of my friends over at your old folks' place (say, "Alyeska City")...
Does that mean you effectively relinquish all claims to your home?
Ok, I do admit that Texas is now under a much better administration... As I keep telling my patriotic-yet-misguided students this, about that Texas story: "Just think about it... If we had kept Texas, and the rest of the Northern territories, from California to Texas in fact, we would have probably just ended up with a Tijuana, a Reynosa and a Juarez, just a few more hundred miles up north".
Starship Titanic wrote:Mexico has no claim on anything possessed by the US because they ceded those claims after the Mexican-American War. Just because there may be Mexican revanchists or Aztlan fanatics doesn't mean Mexico has any claim to the land any longer.
Same rule applies.
No, seriously, that's something that's happening quite often around here... Drug dealers and Cartel members are snatching up houses and lands from their rightful owners... They even bring in some coerced/bribed "notarios" to make the change of the deed "legal". Does any of that mean that what the US did with California... and what Texas did when it seceeded, any more legal?
LadTevar wrote:Looks like Mexico was trying to keep an eye on the cartels, and had a mechanical failure. Interesting to know they have drones, but otherwise a non-issue imho.
This is most likely what we're looking at. I mean...Wwho in their right minds would try to invade the continental US with any hope of success, since Pancho Villa (yeap, the Pershing expedition was a bust, and it was his Mexican adversaries who got to him in the end).
BTW, portraying these "drones" as some sort of of forerunners to a "Mexican invasion of Texas" seems to me as both a gross misrepresentation as well as irresponsible "journalism". Things are quite tense as it is, to lend ears to such sensationalist claims.
Darth Fanboy wrote: So what was the unmanned drone anyway, a kite with a digital camera attached to it after being set to record?
We DO have our own technology in Mexico, I'll have you know. That's how we developed colour television back in 1942 (date when the patent was issued), amongst other things. Get off your burro, snap off your siesta and take off your sombrero, we're a Western country, despite the many differences, and amongst many other things, you ignoramus.
PeZook wrote:While Mexico has little claim on Texas for much the same reasons, I must observe that the issue is more complicated than "look at the treaties" - since by that logic, france has no claim to 80% of its territorry which was ceded to Germany via treaty.
Precisely. Another instance of "might makes right".-... That's so stupid, Jean Jaques Rousseau went over it over 200 years ago (those who disagree, go read the "Social Contract" again... -Yes, pretty much the base of the modern State theory- No, REALLY! Go!).
Coyote wrote:As for Mexico & their errant drone, yeah, using drones to keep an eye on the drug cartels would be something the US probably sees favorable, so there won't be much of a problem over it. There have been problems in the past with Mexican Army and Federal Police crossing the border, either in error or pursuing someone; this will probably be a non-event by comparison.
Precisely.
Stas Bush wrote:did the USA give Mexico some other territories to use after it took Texas?
Uh, they did.
Stash Bush" wrote:Um... At the time of the Texan Revolution Mexico fell apart not because of corruption... although you could call slavery a particularly evil form of corruption that corrupted the minds of the high and mighty in Texas (no wonder, they were a slavocracy, so it is only natural). Because oi, the Mexican governor of Texas actually started enforcing anti-slavery laws, and Texan slavers didn't like it.
I see what you did just there! Good point. One of the main arguments from the Texas secesionists were about Slavery, which had been abolished in Mexico since 1810 -although it was made effective only after 1824- even though slavery and slaves were less than a negligible issue back then for the Mexican Empire)
Samuel wrote:We gave them 18.25 million dollars and paid 3.25 million in debts they owed to US citizens. In return we got about a third of Mexico.
Good point. Nice for the US, forcing the Southern giant just coming out -barely- of a terrible civil war... Go, US!!!!.
By the way, the US, as a country (and this is what I tell my patriotic-yet-misled students here in Mexico, the US paid for that with blood... And I mean it literally. Blood of brother against brother. What do you think pitted the North and the South into a fratricidal war, if not the shift of power between the abolitionist North and the South, with all these new territories, that -they thought- would immediately line with them?
Also, Samuel, if I gave YOU whatever measly amount for the lands and home I took from you, and "legitimised" such trade, via the mechanism I already outlined before (corrupt officials, as per my Drug Cartel-taking-over-private-citizen's properties example)... Would that make the rightful owner of your home and lands?
Spartasman wrote:I was talking about the Mexico of today Stas. Besides, whoever said the Texans were in the right to rebel?
Excellent point. Yes, Texas seceeded essentially because of the new anti-slavery laws emanating from Mexico City. As a matter of fact, it bears mentioning that they remained independent for about 11 years, before joining the US (you would have to consider what kind of terms did the Texans and the Confederates agreed on).
Zaune wrote:Kicking another sovereign state out of part of its territory is generally frowned on today, you know. I'm not saying Mexico would be totally in the right either, but maybe some concessions like no import-export tariffs or reciprocating on anyone with state ID from the former Mexican states not needing a visa to enter the country wouldn't hurt.
Now that's a first, constructive point.
Serafina wrote:In the end, we recognize the right of the people inhabitating an area of land which nation they want to belong to.
And i pretty much doubt that the majority of Texans want's to become part of Mexico.
Not all of them, but indeed, a very valid point, as I pointed out earlier. Even the original Mexican Texans would probably agree.
Spartasman wrote:Shit, most Mexicans don't want to be part of Mexico. Or at least the ones that have to live in constant terror/poverty from drug lords and corrupt officials.
Hey! Actually, most Mexicans working over there have no interest in (nor know anything about, for that matter) for the so-called "American Dream". They just want the extra buck for their work. That's why most of them try to return in precisely this season, and if immigration policies and other matters didn't make it as hard, a more than significant amount of them would voluntarily go back to Mexico once they had earned enough to go back to their families a successful "bracero", knowing they could return the next year.
But, if you make it more and more difficult for these migrant workers to go through the borders, you'll only end up with more of them ending up stranded in the US, and wanting to take their families into the US with them).
Coyote wrote:It is also worth remembering that back in the days of the first Mexican-American armed clashes, from the Texas era onward, the Mexicans were not the Sad Sack country they are now; they were in fact one of the better armies of the day, large, well-organized, and quite well equipped. It was not such a clear-cut case of Yankee Bullies attacking a pushover country like it would be now.
Yes, but you should also consider that the Mexican Empire was back then severely weakened by internecine war, and individualism (everyone with a large troop command thought they had a shot at the Big Chair) was tearing the Mexican forces apart even before the actual war started.
But, yes, Historians regard it as the David and Goliath story, only that it was the big, chaos-ridden Catholic Goliath to the South, against the well organised, and unified little Protestant little-engine-that-could David to the North (who got incredibly lucky).
Bah, I'm done....!
I've got more things to do tonight...!
Those more enlightened in regards of History are more than welcome to join in and masticate upon the residues of whatever petty historic misconceptions might be left behind.