Ecuador kicked the Mexican embassy out after they refused to turn over the socialist ex-vice president of Ecuador.
Mexico has also granted asylum to many Ecuadorian criminals over the years.
Mexico was given four days notice to turn them over or be raided, and they preferred to lose the embassy.
Note: My sources are people, I don’t know where these claims are published. I don’t personally know most of this to be true or not, but there have definitely been actions going on by foreign powers in South America that I’ve alluded to before. Lots of land seizures and Chinese resource grabs, organized mass migration, new crime networks being set up, their capital has been behind barbed wire fence as well, terrorist attacks/bombings, lots of very interesting happenings. Google, “shockingly”, is censoring it.
Point being… First World countries are not the only places under attack…
The other countries have been under attack for even longer, which is much of the reason for their lower status. The attacks on the first world countries are designed to drag our status down.
This seems odd - like there's a lot more info that isn't presented here.
Ecuador and Mexico are literally on different continents. It's almost like Canada decided to raid the Swiss embassy - there would have to be a lot more background to understand the situation.
Ecuador is at the NW side of South America - at the equator which is where it's name originates. About half a dozen countries and the Panama Canal in between them.
Sorry I'm from Australia, the distance between Ecuador and Mexico is around two small Oz states.
Relatively close considering you were comparing it to Canada to Switzerland which I'm sure is half the world away.
I'm sorry I'm not being a fick just thought it was a little exaggerated.
You would expect that Ecuador and Mexico are in the same local geopolitical sphere.
Edit: I'm very uncertain so correct me, I've just assumed they're very close.
Generally speaking, I would think Mexico's sphere of influence would be limited to the central American area - from Panama at the furthest point South to the US border at the other end. TBH, I don't know the geopolitics that far South. I'd think Brazil or perhaps Columbia would be more of an influence on Ecuador than Mexico but maybe something is going on that I don't realize.
TBF, we don't get much in the way of news in the US from that part of the world - even Central America is barely covered even though it's pretty darned close. South America hardly gets mentioned.
What's interesting is that even though there is a contiguous land mass connecting the two continents, there are no roads linking them. The PanAmerican Highway ends south of the canal and then gets picked back up on the other side of the Darian Gap in Columbia. I think the plan was to eventually cross the gap but the terrain and topography made it an expensive endeavor and for whatever reason, it's never been done. So South America has been comparatively isolated from the North American continent, where there's all sorts of interaction (good and bad) historically between the Central American countries and between them and Mexico (and the US, and Spain, and Britain if you go far enough back)
I probably should have picked a different example than Canada and Switzerland,
Ecuador kicked the Mexican embassy out after they refused to turn over the socialist ex-vice president of Ecuador.
Mexico has also granted asylum to many Ecuadorian criminals over the years.
Mexico was given four days notice to turn them over or be raided, and they preferred to lose the embassy.
Note: My sources are people, I don’t know where these claims are published. I don’t personally know most of this to be true or not, but there have definitely been actions going on by foreign powers in South America that I’ve alluded to before. Lots of land seizures and Chinese resource grabs, organized mass migration, new crime networks being set up, their capital has been behind barbed wire fence as well, terrorist attacks/bombings, lots of very interesting happenings. Google, “shockingly”, is censoring it.
Point being… First World countries are not the only places under attack…
Thanks for the background info.
The other countries have been under attack for even longer, which is much of the reason for their lower status. The attacks on the first world countries are designed to drag our status down.
This seems odd - like there's a lot more info that isn't presented here.
Ecuador and Mexico are literally on different continents. It's almost like Canada decided to raid the Swiss embassy - there would have to be a lot more background to understand the situation.
Not that exaggerated, Mexico and Ecuador are close to each other if my geography is remembered right.
Ecuador is at the NW side of South America - at the equator which is where it's name originates. About half a dozen countries and the Panama Canal in between them.
Sorry I'm from Australia, the distance between Ecuador and Mexico is around two small Oz states.
Relatively close considering you were comparing it to Canada to Switzerland which I'm sure is half the world away.
I'm sorry I'm not being a fick just thought it was a little exaggerated.
You would expect that Ecuador and Mexico are in the same local geopolitical sphere.
Edit: I'm very uncertain so correct me, I've just assumed they're very close.
I guess it's all relative.
Generally speaking, I would think Mexico's sphere of influence would be limited to the central American area - from Panama at the furthest point South to the US border at the other end. TBH, I don't know the geopolitics that far South. I'd think Brazil or perhaps Columbia would be more of an influence on Ecuador than Mexico but maybe something is going on that I don't realize.
TBF, we don't get much in the way of news in the US from that part of the world - even Central America is barely covered even though it's pretty darned close. South America hardly gets mentioned.
What's interesting is that even though there is a contiguous land mass connecting the two continents, there are no roads linking them. The PanAmerican Highway ends south of the canal and then gets picked back up on the other side of the Darian Gap in Columbia. I think the plan was to eventually cross the gap but the terrain and topography made it an expensive endeavor and for whatever reason, it's never been done. So South America has been comparatively isolated from the North American continent, where there's all sorts of interaction (good and bad) historically between the Central American countries and between them and Mexico (and the US, and Spain, and Britain if you go far enough back)
I probably should have picked a different example than Canada and Switzerland,
#IStandWithEcuador