My Mexican

Hey, my name is Adrian I am 14 and a slave I lived through this terrible revolution. Come and join me while I live through this tragic revolution.

 

 

 

 

After this horrific revolution, a lot of things changed such as the violence that continues to thrive on the streets of Mexico.  Some other things that stayed the same were economic struggles that Mexico still has to go through to this day. There were also so things that changed like, laws such as Prosperity and repression under the PRI. This law made it so the government would be in charge of a percentage of land, they changed they changed the government from a dictator to a democracy , and rights were changed.

 

 

 

 

 

“We won but at what cost?” The Mexican Revolution in plain English. 🌮🇲🇽🩸

 

Picture found at: TSHA | Mexican Revolution (tshaonline.org)

I want to die as a slave to principles, not to men.” “I forgive those who murder and steal because they did it out of necessity, but a traitor never.” “If there is no justice for the people, let there be no peace for the government.” “It’s better to die upon your feet than to live upon your knees!”

-Emiliano Zapata

 

When I say Mexican Revolution what pops into your head. Probably nothing the Mexican Revolution doesn’t get talked about as much as another Revolution. If asked people to tell you anything about Zapata, Díaz, Madero, Huerta, Carranza, or Obregón they wouldn’t have an idea who they are or what they did. Nobody would know about Madero going against Diaz in 1910, The Battle of Juarez: April 1911, Madero being elected president in 1911, the ten tragic days in Mexico in 1912, or Carranza being elected president in 1917.  Come and dive in with me to learn about a vary complex topic like the Mexican Revolution and learn about it in simple and digestible way.

Download ARROW Free PNG transparent image and clipart

 

 

 

WATCH OUT (THIS IS A FATAL BLOG)

Fatal Fever, by Gail Jarrow, explains how a girl named Mary lived her life as a carrier of a deadly fever. This book is set in Manhattan in 1903,  Mary the protagonist is very stubborn. One thing this book touches on is how the health department started to take away Mary’s human rights. The plot of the book is how Mary is slowly spreading this fever around the city, and how the health department is trying to find out who is the carrier of Typhoid Fever. Slowly but surely the health department finds out that Mary was the carrier. READ THE BOOK TO FIND OUT WHAT HAPPENS NEXT!

 

 

This page of my notebook talks about how the health department took away Mary’s human rights. This page goes into detail about how the health department trapped her on North Brother island for over a year even though she didn’t show any signs of Typhoid.  This page also talks about how the health department published information into the public eye without her consent.

 

 

This page of my notebook talks about the cause and effect of this book. For example, typhoid is spreading the effect that people fear for their lives. It is interesting to see how people reacted to these problems.

 

 

On this page of my notebook it talks about the setting of the book and so describing word that describes the setting that we chose. For example, if the setting was jail I would say it is scary, dirty, and rough. It is sad to think about how the trapped Mary in this horrid place

 

 

 

For my last page, I was interested in what solitary confinement would look like in 1903 because it talked about it in the book. So I researched solitary confinement in 1903 and this is what I found out it is quite tariffing to think about.

 

 

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