Thursday, October 22, 2015

Grace Potter Concert in Paso Robles, California

Recently, I had the opportunity to go see Grace Potter & the Nocturnals live in concert at the Vina Robles Ampitheater in Paso Robles. This was 2 months ago. She was absolutely amazing live and strongly recommend everyone to check out her albums and music. Grace Potter kind of reminds me of a blend of Fleetwood Mac Stevie Nicks/Jefferson Airplane type style. She's got class, something most musical artists do not have these days. The bass was insane and she played all her old/new stuff. It only took me about 3 or so hours to get there from where I live but it was definitely worth the price, 50$. While I was there I bought The Lion,The Beast, and The Beat album along with a snazzy t-shirt. There were many country girls there and I have to say I enjoyed it immensely! I am hoping she will see this and come back to California again to do more concerts. I got front row tickets so my experience was so much better. The opening act of her concert was a girl named Odessa and I really do see her becoming big soon. She just needs to learn to play the guitar a little more and she'll be just as good as Grace Potter. Otherwise, I loved everything about the show and would give it an A+.

Mexican Independence

The New Spain Independence Problem
            The Mexican elite ran into numerous problems trying to constitute a new nation and in turn, it affected their ability to govern and maintain sovereignty. The divisions that occurred were economic, political, and social in nature. One prominent nineteenth century liberal characterized Mexico as a “society of societies”.[1] The process of Mexican independence had taken on all kinds of characteristics, between autonomists wanting to keep the position of King and absolutists advocating for full independence. The Viceroyalty of New Spain had an end goal in sight but by the end of the independence movement, they ended up with the exact thing they were trying to prevent, a powerful central government with no limits on power. Economically, their position on slavery and the inability of the state to become recognized by other foreign powers as legitimate would play a huge role in the movement as well. With all these issues standing in their way, it was clear from the get go that blood would have to be shed to unite the nation and make it whole again.
            The Mexican War of Independence can be traced all the way back to 1624, when the very first Viceroyalty of Spain was ousted by the encomienda.[2] It also has roots in the Enlightenment, when English speaking philosophers got together and said that governments could help improve the lives of individuals. Before Hidalgo’s uprising in 1810, punishment for treason against the crown was swift. If you look at the political makeup of the independence movement, it is clear that there are two main political parties, conservatives and liberals. Conservatives were in favor of the Catholic Church and a monarchy, with no separation of church and state. Liberals on the other hand, favored secularism and were in support of having a republic.[3] This movement for independence also took on the characteristic of resisting Spanish rule throughout the Americas once the Bourbon Reforms were enacted. The Bourbon Reforms essentially levied taxes on Mexico and other Spanish colonies to pay for the European Wars.[4] The ideas behind Father Hidalgo’s fight included the distaste for the French after the invasion by Napoleon and at the same time, he advocated for full independence. Once he is killed in 1811, civil war begins between the autonomists and absolutists, and Hidalgo is thrusted into the spotlight as a martyr for this cause. The independence movement is chaotic to say the least because you have multiple sides offering different solutions.
The topic of social unrest is important too because it is the very reason this campaign began in the first place. You had more competition for land and Indians rebelling against New Spain’s colonial rule. Socially, Mexico was divided into several ethnic groups consisting of American born Spaniards, Africans, and Castas. All these classes believed in profitable trade and commerce, and when Spanish economic protectionism threatened this very idea, social unrest began. The people did not recognize Spain’s rule as legitimate, resulting in the Crisis of 1808. Problems stemmed from a division over those autonomists wanting to retain the position of the King and the absolutists, whom said no to a monarch. One could even make the argument that these social issues go way back, to when the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan was sacked in 1521 by the Spaniards and Cortes. The crown’s unsuccessful attempt to take control from the governing juntas did not make things any less easy.
With the social hierarchy now in disarray, Mexico had to rise up from the ashes of conquest and unite the people. The Crisis of 1808 presented this opportunity to upset the status quo and as Virginia Guedea puts it:
“Originating in the heart of the empire, when Napoleon Bonaparte occupied Spain, it precipitated a series of rapid changes that, in the beginning, like the crisis itself, were fundamentally political.”[5]
She also later goes on to say that while Spain wanted to constitute a new order, this allowed for the political participation of individuals, and it undermined the significance of the insurgency for the disaffected in the viceroyalty.[6] The Spaniard criollos also resented being treated as second class citizens and as a lower step of the racial hierarchy.[7] These were the main challenges confronted by the political elite during the transition from viceroyalty to a federal and central republic. Iturbide had also failed to maintain unity by declaring himself Emperor. After the Plan of Iguala is signed in 1821 by Mexican leaders, there was no separation of church and state, and it limited the power of the generals. The constitutional monarchy is then replaced by a federal republic after Iturbide is thrown out from office.[8] Sovereignty resides with the people and provinces, creating a loose confederation. This confederal republic left the central government power structure weak, law and order was impossible to enforce, and it gave more power to the states.
During the time of the federal republic, Mexico became plagued with internal issues over states’ rights and externally as well, with the Mexican-American War being fought in Texas. These problems jeopardized Mexico’s livelihood and sovereignty. It also affected their ability to maintain unity among the population itself. The issue over slavery began when Moses Austin (the father of Stephen Austin) received permission from the Mexican government to colonize the territory of Texas. No mention of slavery was made in this petition.[9] During my research, I also discovered that the vast numbers of slaves who were first brought into Texas were originally from the South. Mexico’s positon on slavery came from their gaining of independence from Spain, advocating liberalism instead.[10] They did not have a great number of slaves anyway, so to them, emancipation was the easiest route to go down. Under Iturbide’s administration however, American immigrants were free to bring their African slaves into Texas.[11] This all changed with the federal laws of Mexico, which stated:
1. Commerce and traffic in slaves, proceeding from any country and under any flag whatsoever, is forever prohibited in the territory of the United Mexican States.
2. Slaves that are introduced contrary to the tenor of the above article are free in virtue of the mere act of treading Mexican territory.
[12]

            During the time of the centralist republic, Mexico was encountering fierce resistance inside and outside its continental boundaries. Beginning with Santa Anna’s rise to power, stiff laws were imposed upon Mexico and Texas had just begun its revolution against their rule. Mexico’s territorial integrity was at stake. This period has been characterized as an inglorious, militaristic rule, culminating in the annexation by the United States of over half of Mexican territory.[13] It got so bad that the Republic of Mexico was basically governed by eleven different Presidents, many of whom never saw the end of their terms. In 1845, the United States annexes Texas as a state and so begins the Mexican-American War. In addition to ceding California, Texas, New Mexico, Nevada, and Utah, a new boundary was set at the Rio Grande River by the end of the war.[14] Mexico had lost and the two main political parties would again be at war each other not long after, batting heads in the Reform War.
            Overall, I’d have to say that Mexico had endured enough pain to last two lifetimes. The absolutists and autonomists had great ideas when it came to liberalism, but it just didn’t work out the way they wanted it to. The only question I really had during my studies: Why did Mexico bounce around with so many different forms of government? The difficulties of the Mexican elite to maintain stability ultimately ushered in a period of over fifty years or so of turmoil. This affected their economy as well. Mexico had gained its independence and right to become formally recognized by other nations, but at what cost? They had achieved what no country besides the United States had done during this point in time. It is a dazzling display of history.



Bibliography


[1] Hernández Chávez, Alicia. 2006. Mexico : A Brief History. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, p. 127.
[2]  Ida Altman, Sarah Cline, and Javier Pescador, The Early History of Greater Mexico. Prentice Hall 2003, pp. 246-247.
[3] Burton Kirkwood. History of Mexico (Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000), p. 107.
[4] Barbier, Jacques. “The Culmination of the Bourbon Reforms, 1787–1792.” Hispanic American Historical Review 57 (February 1977): 51–68.
[5] Guedea, Virginia. 2000. The Process of Mexican Independence. The American Historical Review. 105, no. 1: 116-130.
[6] Ibid
[7] Ivan Arturo Ebergenyi Thorpe. “Mexico’s War of Independence.” The Mexico News Network, September 16, 2015. <http://www.mexiconewsnetwork.com/art-culture/mexico-war-independence/>
[8] De Iturbide, Agustín"Plan de Iguala"Leaflets. 1821. Woodson Research Center, Rice University, Americas collection, 1811-1920, MS 518.
[9] Lester G. Bugbee. “Slavery in Early Texas.” The Political Science Quarterly, vol. III, no.3, 1898.
[10] Ibid
[11] Ibid
[12] Ibid
[13] Thomson, G P C. 1995. The Central Republic in Mexico, 1835-1846: Hombres De Bien in the Age of Santa Anna Journal of Latin American Studies. 27, no. 3: 714.
[14] The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. National Archives. Retrieved: October 11, 2015.