Prove they were being treated like dirt. That is the weight of an Anglo Saxon education. Or more appropriately a masonic one. Unbeknownst to most of us Americans.
I was corrected by a history professor of Mexico City university. I think he would be a better historian of his own people than some gringo in middle America who spends all of 2 weeks in a textbook in high school. (I am meaning all who received this education, not focusing on you, LiteCola).
Yeah not universally, obviously, else there wouldn't have been converts. But writings of the time showed the prejudice of conquistadores and clergy; there were deep rifts and many still considered the natives to be cannibal savages. Honestly, some still wanted to continue human sacrifice etc, and your should see what they were doing in their continued fights against the Spaniard soldiers and civilian colonists. These are the same original writings your academic should have been aware of. Incidentally, why would I trust any academic when they have been compromised long ago?
Also you know absolutamente nada of my history, or anyone else's. I have no idea what middle America schools teach of that period, if they cover it at all. Guarantee it ain't two weeks of that period of Mexican history, or even in total.
Anyway, nice distraction.
The point is to see what Mexican scientists and scholars have days and still say about the importance of the Virgin of Guadalupe from the time she first appeared until today.
Prove they were being treated like dirt. That is the weight of an Anglo Saxon education. Or more appropriately a masonic one. Unbeknownst to most of us Americans.
I was corrected by a history professor of Mexico City university. I think he would be a better historian of his own people than some gringo in middle America who spends all of 2 weeks in a textbook in high school. (I am meaning all who received this education, not focusing on you, LiteCola).
Yeah not universally, obviously, else there wouldn't have been converts. But writings of the time showed the prejudice of conquistadores and clergy; there were deep rifts and many still considered the natives to be cannibal savages. Honestly, some still wanted to continue human sacrifice etc, and your should see what they were doing in their continued fights against the Spaniard soldiers and civilian colonists. These are the same original writings your academic should have been aware of. Incidentally, why would I trust any academic when they have been compromised long ago?
Also you know absolutamente nada of my history, or anyone else's. I have no idea what middle America schools teach of that period, if they cover it at all. Guarantee it ain't two weeks of that period of Mexican history, or even in total.
Anyway, nice distraction.
The point is to see what Mexican scientists and scholars have days and still say about the importance of the Virgin of Guadalupe from the time she first appeared until today.