Categories
Economy Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics In The News Israel-Palestine War Russia-Ukraine War

Gaza Aid Sites Close, U.S. Doubles Steel Tariffs, Mexico City Floods

👋 Saluton!* Welcome to Wednesday, where Trump doubles steel and aluminium tariffs, South Korea’s new president is sworn in and our quiz question takes you to one of Amsterdam’s iconic museums. Meanwhile, for Daraj, Iman Adel tells us the story of Laila Soueif, the mother of a jailed British-Egyptian activist who has been on a […]

Categories
Geopolitics

It’s Not Just Trump — Mexico Has To Move Beyond Its NAFTA Fairytale

Mexico failed to use the legal stability provided by the NAFTA treaties to consolidate lawful governance at home. Now, as U.S. President Trump shakes up all his country’s ties, millions of Mexicans are up against the consequences of their country’s endemic and unresolved problems.

Categories
Geopolitics Women Worldwide

How Does Claudia Sheinbaum Handle Trump? It’s A New Brand Of Mexican Socialism

More good news this week from Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum, who has avoided new tariffs from the U.S. What’s the secret to her success? It has to do with her pragmatic interpretation of from the same socialist National Regeneration Movement as her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

Categories
Geopolitics Women Worldwide

Sheinbaum Is Showing How Mexican Socialism Can Be Done Differently

While Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum comes from the same socialist National Regeneration Movement as her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, their stories are different. What does that mean for the country’s future?

Categories
This Happened

Dynasty’s Ending To A Basketball First — On This Day In History March 2

The fall of an empire, the birth of a nation, and a basketball milestone.

Categories
Food / Travel

Where’s The Catch? This Mexican Fishing Town Has Run Out Of Fish

Once teeming with seafood, Los Cerritos lagoon is now nearly barren due to rising sediment levels. As fishers struggle to make ends meet, many are forced to seek new livelihoods — or leave their homes behind.

Categories
Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics Ideas special series Trump And The World

How Claudia Sheinbaum Can Tame Trump — And Save Mexico From Economic Disaster

After Colombia’s president took on U.S. President Trump and lost, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has managed this new complex relationship with remarkable deftness and clarity of purpose. But can this strategy be maintained with Trump’s mind set on tariffs everywhere?

Categories
Green Society

The Mexican Volunteers Who Go Chasing (And Cleaning) Waterfalls

Authorities say they don’t have the funds to clean up the scenic gem. Instead, a determined community has stepped up.

Categories
Economy Eyes on the U.S. special series Trump And The World

With New Tariffs, Why Trump Is Hitting Canada And Mexico Harder Than China

The American president had promised tariffs of at least 60% on all Chinese products. For now, it will be only 10%. Washington has other issues to negotiate with Beijing. Hitting old allies harder is part of a much different approach.

Categories
Economy Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics

A Blunt Message To My Fellow Mexicans About Trump’s “Dreaded” Return

Mexico must dial down the nationalism in dealing with Donald Trump, and try to think instead how it might use his intransigence to solve some of its biggest problems — like massive, unchecked crime.

Categories
Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics

How Trump’s Revival Of The Monroe Doctrine Looks From Latin America

In the past, the Monroe Doctrine has pushed the United States to meddle in hemispheric affairs to strangle Soviet and communist subversion. Will incoming President Donald Trump revive this 19th-century U.S. foreign policy position to keep China out? And what would that mean for other countries in the Western Hemisphere.

Categories
Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics Ideas

Donbas, Greenland, Mars: Times Of Peril When Men Draw New Maps

Greenland, Canada and Panama: Why is Donald Trump using maps for his politics? And what does Elon Musk’s Nazi-loving grandfather have to do with mapped utopias?

Categories
This Happened

Pivotal Industrial First To Global Pandemic Origins — On This Day In History December 1

The opening of a famous museum in Paris, a staple in the industrial revolution, and the beginning of a global pandemic.

Categories
Society Women Worldwide

Abortion And The U.S. Election: Women Of The World Are Watching

A landmark decision last year by the Mexican Supreme Court is part of a push in Latin America to expand abortion access. But as seen by the U.S. overturning Roe v. Wade in 2022 and the presidential election in November of this year the issue is moving in different directions around the world.

Categories
Geopolitics Ideas

From Spain, Why I’m So Happy That Mexico Snubbed Our King

When Mexico’s new president, Claudia Sheinbaum, chose not to invite King Felipe VI to her inauguration, Spain could have reacted differently. It could have taken the opportunity to evaluate its colonial past and apologize to the native peoples of the Americas. But imperial nostalgia and a conflictual relationship with diversity are leaving Spain in the past.

Categories
Economy Geopolitics

Mexican Judicial Reform: Boost To Democracy Or Gift To Drug Cartels?

Mexico’s ruling party has reformed the constitution, forcing judges to run for office, supposedly to make them accountable to the people. But given the country’s history and singular problem with crime, it may turn them instead into ordinary politicians vulnerable to bribery and mob terrorism.

Categories
This Happened

This Happened — September 19: Earthquake Devastates Mexico City

Updated Sept. 19, 2024 at 10:40 a.m. On this day in 1985, an earthquake with a magnitude of 8.0 on the Richter scale struck Mexico City. What was the toll of the 1985 earthquake on Mexico City? The estimated death toll ranged from around 10,000 to 30,000 people. Tens of thousands more were injured, and […]

Categories
Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics

Harris-Trump Debate: Two Very Different World Views On Display

The two candidates for the U.S. presidential election presented two visions of the role of American power in the world. For Europeans, the choice of Kamala Harris may be more reassuring, but the fate of course is in the hands of the American people.

Categories
Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics

Why Latin Americans Are Bracing For Another Whack Of Trump

The former U.S. president and Republican nominee Donald Trump is threatening to revive his choice policies of curbing immigration and trade, and nobody would suffer as a result quite as much as the hundreds of millions of Latin Americans who may be forced to turn toward China and the Global South.

Categories
This Happened

This Happened — July 6: Birth Of Frida Kahlo

July 6, 2024 at 11:10 a.m. Frida Kahlo was a renowned Mexican artist known for her distinctive and vibrant self-portraits. She was born on this day in 1907. Kahlo is considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. What was Frida Kahlo’s childhood like? During her childhood, Frida contracted polio, which left […]

Categories
Geopolitics

Will Evo Morales Use Bolivia’s Failed Coup As A Path Back To Power?

Bolivian President Luis Arce easily survived Wednesday’s bungled coup, which may suggest the populist Left is more resilient than it used to be. But it may also be the foreshadowing of the reigniting of an internal war with fellow Socialist and former President Evo Morales as unrest spreads around the country.

Categories
Geopolitics Green

Sheinbaum’s Choice: AMLO’s Easy Oil Or Her Own Hard Climate Science

Mexico is already suffering the effects of the climate emergency. And president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum — a climate scientist and former environmentalist — will have to choose between taking her predecessor’s fossil route and a harder but more sustainable path.

Categories
Women Worldwide

The Indigenous Midwives Of Chiapas Expand Safe Childbirth In Mexico

Erasing the practice of midwifery through legislation seems impossible, yet fear persists in Mexico, which counts at least 16,000 midwives, trusted by thousands of women every year, especially peasant and indigenous women.

Categories
Society

For Chiapas Indigenous, Justice Gets Lost Without Translation

In Chiapas, 42% of indigenous people who were arrested did not receive the assistance of an interpreter in any part of their legal proceedings. Today, they serve their sentences without understanding what was said during their trials.

Categories
Geopolitics Ideas

A Defense Of The Mexican Work Ethic — And Critique Of ‘Peronist’ Politics

An often dysfunctional state has turned Mexicans into a vigorously self-reliant, hard-working nation. But plans by the leftist presidential candidate to create a welfare state seem like the sure-fire way of pushing Mexico toward “Argentine-style” reliance on the government.

Categories
Society Women Worldwide

Can Marxism And Feminism Ever Join Forces? Mexico’s Next President May Find Out

For decades, feminists have accused Marxism of not addressing women’s specific struggles. With presidential elections in Mexico approaching in June, an interesting experiment may happen, as two female candidates are in the race. A vision for how Marxism and feminism, together, can help change Mexican society — with a woman at the helm.

Categories
Geopolitics

Ecuador-Mexico: Storming An Embassy Is The “Nuclear Option” Of Diplomatic Asylum

Ecuador’s forced entry into Mexico’s embassy has been roundly condemned, but its worst effect in Latin America may be to undermine a regional tradition of dissidents seeking protection in an embassy in their country.

Categories
Economy Green

A DNA Bank To Save Jaguars Threatened By Mexico’s Mega Rail Project

A government mega-project could push the country’s big cats closer to extinction — an outcome that would have devastating ripple effects on the local ecosystem.

Categories
Migrant Lives

Dying To Get To America: Why So Many Missing Migrants Go Unidentified

Since the 1990s, thousands of migrants have tried to enter the U.S. by crossing the borders of Arizona and Texas, and many have died in the desert. Yet there is no unified DNA program to identify the remains of missing migrants. So who identifies them and how do they do it?

Categories
Economy Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics

Why Biden May Be Just As Bad For U.S.-Mexico Trade As Trump

U.S. President Biden has quietly turned his Republican predecessor’s anti-foreign posturing into economic policies that strongly favor domestic manufacturing. Does Mexico, which depends on massive exports to the U.S., have anything to look forward to in the upcoming presidential elections?

Categories
Geopolitics

Mexico’s 2024 Elections: Time To Boost Democracy Or Cement Authoritarianism

As Mexico’s president seeks to consolidate his power ahead of the 2024 general elections in the fall, will voters and institutions react to safeguard the country’s democracy or fall deeper into outgoing President López Obrador’s authoritarian impulses?

Categories
Society

How I Made Homeschooling Work For My Mexican Family

Educating children at home is rarely accepted in Mexico, but Global Press Journal reporter Aline Suárez del Real’s family has committed to daily experiential learning.

Categories
Green

Stinkin’ Sunset? A Mexican Coastal Paradise Has A Major Sanitation Problem

As a paramunicipal organization takes over water services from local councils, residents face high costs, shortages, contamination — and a foul odor that’s sullying the area’s reputation as a coastal paradise.

Categories
Geopolitics Society

In Mexico And Poland, Women Candidates Defy National Cultures Of Misogyny — And Win

Mexico is on the cusp of getting its first woman president. And in Poland, the upcoming elections will see the highest-ever number of women running for office. Two landmarks for nations where the patriarchy has long reigned supreme.

Categories
Eyes on the U.S. Migrant Lives

Latin America’s Migrants Trying To Reach The U.S.: Risk It All, Fail, Repeat

Searching for a safe home, many Latin American migrants are forced to try, time after time, getting turned away, and then risk everything again.

Categories
LGBTQ Plus Society

The “Magical Towns” Of Mexico, A Tourism Trap Paid By Marginalized Locals

The Patio de la Estrella neighborhood being hailed as a “magical” place in Córdoba, Mexico is a perfect example of “touristification,” where the most vulnerable residents suffer the consequences.

Categories
LGBTQ Plus

How I Learned To Call You ‘Son’ — A Mother’s Awakening To A Non-Binary World

Journalist Daniela Pastrana thought she knew how to be a mother — until her child came out as non-binary. Pastrana’s journey to acceptance took her through Mexican history and deep into herself and her own prejudices.

Categories
Society Women Worldwide

This Naked Body Has A Voice: Mexican Art Models Call Out Abuse

An art-model collective gives voice to a group of women that, for centuries, has been seen but not heard.

Categories
Food / Travel Green

In Mexico, Indigenous Women Are Saving Your Morning Coffee, One Plant At A Time

Coffee producers in Oaxaca, Mexico, are adapting to climate change by restoring their coffee plantations in agroforestry systems. While the costs of their work are increasing, the price of coffee is not.

Categories
Food / Travel

A Sip Of Summer: Five Rosé Wines From Around The World

Welcome summer with a glass of one of these elegant rosés from winemakers in Mexico, New Zealand and more.

Exit mobile version