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  1. Feb 26, 2013 · Political stability in turn encouraged economic growth, here's a quote from Johnathan Brown's Oil and Revolution in Mexico . ‘The Porfiriato, that period of Mexican history dominated by General and President Porfirio Díaz, from 1876 to 1911, was a time of unprecedented economic expansion. Compared to the economic decline and political ...

  2. Mexicans who like Porfirio Diaz are the kind of Mexicans who are: White skinned & European looking. 2. Firmly believe in social castes/strict stratification: they will call brown/indigenous people Naco and Inditos for doing just about anything (in their world view, the worst thing one can be is poor.

  3. Díaz married Delfina Ortega Díaz Who happened to be his niece In 1871, Díaz led a revolt against the re-election of Juárez In 1875, Díaz traveled to New Orleans and Brownsville, Texas to plan a rebellion, which was launched in Ojitlan, Oaxaca, on 10 January 1876 as the "Plan de Tuxtepec". A history of disregard for the democratic process.

  4. The Mexican Revolution is very complicated. It is true that Diaz helped to develop the nation but he did so at a tremendous cost to a great portion of the country. The conflict itself is very messy because what begins as a unified movement soon turns to civil war due to all the betrayals and rampant caudillismo.

  5. Dec 21, 2020 · Nowhere was this lack more evident than in the frequent re-elections of the President himself. By 1890, Díaz had served three terms as President– 1876-1880, 1880-1884, 1884-1888 –and was in the middle of the next four year cycle (the six year Presidential cycle didn’t begin until the late 1920’s).

  6. Jun 8, 2020 · Porfirio Díaz LUA: Los Científicos Great Engineers, Great Merchants and Great Scientists acquired during Golden Ages receive an additional Charge. Gains access to the Guardia Rural at the discovery of Rifling. LUU: Guardia Rural Unique Mexican replacement for the Ranger when Porfirio Diaz is their leader.

  7. Aug 8, 2014 · General Porfirio Díaz had risen to power decades prior, and ruled continually as President since 1884. I’m not up on Mexican politics, but the early years don’t seem to have been too bad, as far as dictators go. The economy was good, and the country was stable - not a very common thing in Mexican history of the 19th century.

  8. Jun 25, 2013 · Before the Revolution, Mexico was ruled by the government of Porfirio Díaz. A distinguished general from the Franco-Mexican War, Díaz assumed the presidency in 1876, and controlled it either directly or, for one term, through a follower, until 1911.

  9. Su pésimo manejo económico llevo a Mexico a una revolución con tonos socialistas…. Se puede comparar con Nicolas II de Rusia que llevo a su país a la revolución de octubre. Jajaja no mames, la revolución fue planeada por los gringos. Porque comparado con Lopez Obrador, Porfirio Díaz era un gran líder.

  10. Oct 8, 2022 · Díaz is a shitty leader. Not only is he controversial, but he's a cookie cutter caudillo which every latinamerican country has had. Juárez gets too much hate for "turning into a villain" when Díaz is guilty of pretty much the same thing: From defeating the french in the 1860s to giving them nothing but favorable concessions in the 1900s while ignoring working class unrest.