September 09, 2004
Is Mexico’s Constitution of Blood Coming Here?
By Chilton Williamson Jr.
[Previously by Chilton Williamson:
Do Illegal Immigrants Have More Rights Than Americans?
The Case of John Petrello and
Lighting the Powder Train]
In July
2004, First Data Corporation, a major Wall Street
company, [contact
them] hosted one of a
series of around-the-nation seminars on immigration
“reform”
in Denver, where the company is based. Among First
Data’s affiliates is Western Union, whose wires transmit
tens of billions of dollars in
remittances sent home by illegal aliens residing in
this country, thereby generating
enormous profits for
First Data.
Needless
to say, by “immigration reform” First Data means
“open borders”--as do the aggressive Hispanic
“activists” it invited to participate in the seminar,
while excluding bona fide reformers like
Fred Elbel and
Mike McGarry of the
Colorado Alliance for Immigration Reform.
In the
event, a number of immigration non-enthusiasts—including
McGarry and Elbel—showed up to claim their place at the
audience’s microphone. Among them was Terry Graham. She
was later reported as having protested:
“This is illegal, what about the law?”
Scarcely
had she uttered the vile challenge when one Julissa
Molina, a 31-year old social worker who instructs the
inhabitants of Denver’s Little Mexico in
hepatitis prevention, attacked the woman, knocking
her to the floor and inflicting real injury.
Molina
was arrested by the city police and led away in cuffs—to
the anger of the crowd that shouted “You deserve it!”
at the victim and “Go back to
Ireland!” at McGarry.
It was
later assured by a female Hispanic attorney (and former
state senator) that she, personally, would “take care
of the [attacker] and [see that] nothing would happen to
her.”
This
minor episode in the annals of multicultural America is
significant, for two reasons.
I’ve
been reading up recently on the Mexican Civil War in
connection with an historical novel I’m at work on. The
war began in 1910, with
Francisco Madero’s overthrow of
Porfírio Díaz. It ended (officially) with the
accession of
Alvaro Obregón to the presidency in 1920, although
though hostilities persisted until the assassination of
Obregón himself by a
rightwing Catholic in 1928.
It is a
fascinating story, viscerally human in outline as well
as in detail, decorated by large and colorful characters
who, for all their brutality, are (most of them) far
from being unsympathetic ones. Francisco (Pancho) Villa
in particular, despite his cruel and even sadistic
aspect, was in many ways a great man. So was
Emiliano Zapata, though he confined his operations
largely to the patria chica (Little fatherland)—his
own tiny but beloved state of Morelos in central
Mexico.
Yet
Villa, Zapata, Obregón, Madero,
Pascual Orozco, and
Venustiano Carranza are all of them distinguishably
Mexican heroes. In the context of American
political
history and culture, these men’s heroic deeds would
be regarded as heinous and nearly unspeakable crimes.
They would be rewarded not by high office, devoted
popular followings, stone columns, and marble sepulchers
but rather by swift apprehension, trial, and execution.
The
Mexican Civil War was incomparably more bloody and
barbaric than the American War Between the States,
though that was
bloody and (thanks to the
Union butchers) barbaric
enough. In Mexico, there was torture, mutilation,
massacre. The two conflicts took place on unrelated
cultural and moral planes.
Abraham
Lincoln barely survived the hostilities before being
shot to death. But of the six great figures to dominate
the Mexican Civil War, each and every one was
assassinated by his political enemies. In the American
tradition, assassination is the exception rather than
the rule; in the Mexican one, it is the rule, not the
exception.
That, it
seems to me, is because Mexican politics has always
preferred instant gratification to self-control in
dealing with political opponents, the short-term
solution to the long one in sorting out complex
difficulties of state, and—always—the short-cut to
political freedom (or anything else, for that matter).
Villa’s unspoken maxim could have been,
“When in doubt, shoot.” In
Mexican political culture, to disagree has always
been to kill—or
be killed.
The
revolution in Mexico never amounted to social revolution
of the ideological variety, nor was it a generalized
insurrection throughout the whole of Mexico. It was
waged, instead, by a number of generals and their mostly
private armies, whenever those commanders chose to fight
and wherever they happened to be when they discovered
what they considered a strategically promising target:
Juárez, Chihuahua City, Parral, Durango, Torreón,
Veracruz, Agua Prieta, Mexico City. Their armies lived
off the country, requisitioning food and supplies and
empressing men as the need occurred. Chihuahua State in
particular was turned into a wasteland well before
revolution’s end—chiefly by Villa and his villistas,
whose home base it was.
What
strikes the Anglo-Saxon reader, however, is less the
general mayhem and destruction than the individual acts
of gratuitous cruelty and barbarism: acts committed by
men against others who were their own compatriots, after
all, not
foreign invaders.
From a
revolutionary time replete with atrocities, a number of
gruesome incidents are simply unforgettable.
One of
these is the murder in 1913 of
Gustavo Madero, brother of President Madero who was
himself about to be assassinated by the brutal General
Huerta in the coup that deposed him.
Huerta,
having invited Gustavo to lunch at an elegant Mexico
City restaurant at the height of the political crisis,
suddenly pointed a revolver at his chest and informed
him that he was under arrest. Charged with treason,
Madero insisted on his innocence, as well as on his
privileged status as a member of Congress.
A
wealthy businessman named Ocón, who had been at the
heart of the coup conspiracy and now presumed to act as
Madero’s judge, delivered a vicious blow to his face,
saying, “This is how we respect your privileges,”
before condemning Madero to death. When Huerta’s
soldiers attacked Madero as he was being led away, he
lunged at them—whereupon one of the soldiers drew his
sword and stabbed Madero in his only good eye, thus
blinding him completely.
At the
sight of their victim staggering about with his hand
over the ruined socket and hemorrhaging profusely, the
soldiers burst into violent laughter, interspersed with
taunts and curses.
Blinded
as he was, Madero was still strong enough to resist Ocón
as the thug took him outside to face the firing squad.
As Madero attempted finally to jerk himself free, Ocón
fired over twenty rounds from his gun into the
prisoner’s body.
Appalled
by what he had just witnessed, a functionary of the
National Palace rashly swore on the spot to avenge
Francisco—and for his temerity was ordered by Ocón to be
taken out and shot by the firing squad in the dead man’s
place.
No-one
was ever indicted for these crimes.
To put
it mildly, the murder of
Gustavo Madero is entirely foreign to the political
culture of the United States.
Whether
it is totally incompatible with Julissa Molina’s brand
of politics is, perhaps, a question worth asking.
Chilton
Williamson Jr. [email
him]
is the author of The
Immigration Mystique: America’s False Conscience
and an editor and columnist for Chronicles
Magazine, where he writes the The Hundredth Meridian
column about life in the Rocky Mountain West.