Relationship Between Media Politics and Cartels in Mexico Essay

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The Perfect DictatorshipIntroductionWhat is Mexico? How has it come to be in the state that it is today? The film The Perfect Dictatorship represents a Mexico whose leaders in both politics and media are so thoroughly corrupt, and in bed together with one another, that no honest men have a chance of winning a seat in a position of power. Has Mexico always been this way? The fact is that the 21st century is unique in its own ways because of the power and influence of media and the role that crime plays in the lives of the rich and famous. In prior centuries, Mexico faced different issues, different struggles—and if the same kind of corruption was there it was manifested in different ways. One thing that is clear is that the struggle of Mexicans was more genuine in the past than in today (Hamnett, 2019). The Mexican Revolution of the early 20th century was a time when the Cristeros fought fiercely against a revolutionary government that aimed to reshape Mexico (Jaffary et al., 2003). Today, such a fight is not found because Mexico is beyond being subdued: it is veritably enslaved by the upper class villains who work hand in glove with the media empire, sustained all the while by the criminal class (of which they are all a part). It is a Mexico that is caught in a bitter, twisted death spiral. The Perfect Dictatorship makes light of that spiral, by using satire to represent the sad reality of the situation in Mexico today. If, however, there is one thing that is in Mexico’s favor it is this: it has at least retained its sense of humor.Historical Context/BackgroundAs Hamnett (2019) points out, the war with the US (1846-1848) led Mexicans living under US occupation to become like 2nd class citizens.

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Even though Mexico and the US have much of the same heritage as products of the Enlightenment and the Revolution, the reality is that the culture of Mexico has been subverted by a power within the US that used and exploited Mexico for centuries (Valentine, 2017). Mexico is also different because in spite of the revolutionary influences that have shaped Mexico in recent history, it has retained a great deal of the Catholic influence that shaped it in the post-Colombian era. That influence has been particularly powerful in Mexican culture because of the relevance of great narratives like the appearance of the Virgin Mary (Our Lady of Guadalupe) and other stories (Rodriguez, 2010). The US, culturally speaking, went in a different direction: it veered towards the White Anglo Saxon Protestant (WASP) culture of England, and immigrant cultures were suppressed ultimately through the promotion of the great melting pot theory, in which all immigrants were expected to assimilate into the WASP culture, with its Manifest Destiny, and serve that vision. In Mexico, the vision that was required of Mexicans following the revolution and the Cristero Rebellion, was one that aligned more with the American way of things. It ushered in a century of corruption and made every Mexican citizen who was not a member of the ruling class into a second class citizen, like those who had lived under US occupation in the 19th century. In his own homeland, Mexicans thus became like outsiders in their own nation.Comparative Analysis of the Film and Historical.....

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"Relationship Between Media Politics And Cartels In Mexico" (2021, May 16) Retrieved May 22, 2024, from
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"Relationship Between Media Politics And Cartels In Mexico", 16 May 2021, Accessed.22 May. 2024,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/relationship-media-politics-cartels-mexico-2176193