Cortés conquered the Aztecs in 1521, and for the next 300 years, New  Spain, which included Latin America and parts of North and South  America, was ruled by Catholic Spain. 
 
 In 1808, 
Napoleon, who was a secular leader, invaded Catholic Spain and put his brother 
Joseph Bonaparte on the Spanish throne.
Many in Catholic New Spain questioned their allegiance to this secular French king on the Spanish throne. 
 Simon  Bolivar
 Simon  Bolivar led a revolution against Spain, which led to the independence of 
Venezuela,  Colombia (which included
 Panama),
 Ecuador, Peru and
 Bolivia, northern  Peru, western Guyana and
 northwest Brazil  
 In 
Mexico, in the year  1810, a priest named 
Hidalgo put the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe on  a banner and led thousands of poor peasants to revolt.
Hidalgo, considered
 the Father of the Nation of Mexico, was executed, but his movement led to Mexico's independence. 
 
 From 1821 to 1857, fifty different governments ruled Mexico.
Revolts  and revolutions in Mexico usually began with
 class-warfare of the poor  being organized to overthrow the rich, but
 ended with power-grabs by  revolutionary leaders
 who became dictators themselves.  Agustín de Iturbide
 Agustín de Iturbide first fought against Hidalgo, but then switched to fight Spain.
Iturbide made himself Emperor of Mexico, placing the crown on his own head in 1822. 
 
 Antonio  López de Santa Anna, Vicente Guerrero and others conspired against him  and he fled to Britain. Upon his return
 Iturbide was executed. 
 
 Mexico  was then ruled by a Supreme Executive Power, followed in 1824 by its  first President, 
Guadalupe Victoria, who was the
 only president to  complete his full term in more than 30 years of an independent Mexico.
Manuel  Gómez Pedraza won the second election, but Vicente Guerrero and Antonio  López de Santa Anna staged a coup d'état, bombarding the palace. 
 Vicente  Guerrero
 Vicente  Guerrero became President in 1829, but was deposed and executed by his  Vice-President Bustamante. 
 Vice-President Bustamante
 Vice-President Bustamante was deposed twice and exiled to  Europe.
Between 1833 and 1855, the Mexican presidency changed  hands at least 36 times, with 
Antonio López de Santa Anna ruling 11 of  those. 
 Antonio López de Santa Anna
 Antonio López de Santa Anna, styling himself after  Napoleon, laid aside Mexico's Constitution in 1835, dissolved the  Congress, and declared himself dictator. 
 Santa Anna
 Santa Anna had previously told the U.S. Minister to Mexico, Joel R. Poinsett, 1824:
"I  threw up my cap for liberty with great ardor...but very soon found the  folly of it. A hundred years to come my people will not be fit for  liberty. They do not know what it is, unenlightened as they are... 
A  despotism is the proper government for them."  
 After 
 Mexico had declared its 
independence from
 Spain in 1821,
 
others wanted independence from Mexico, beginning in  1823 with what became 
El Salvador, Costa Rica, Guatemala,  Honduras, and
 Nicaragua.  The dictator Santa Ana wanted to crush similar sentiments in Texas
 The dictator Santa Ana wanted to crush similar sentiments in Texas.
Major events included:
Battle of Velasco, Jun. 26, 1832;
Battle of Gonzales, Oct. 2, 1835; 
Battle of Goliad, Oct. 9, 1835;
Battle of Concepcion, Oct. 28, 1835;
Siege of Béxar ends, Dec. 11, 1835; 
 Battle of the Alamo
 Battle of the Alamo, Feb. 23-Mar. 6, 1836;
Texas Declaration of Independence, Mar. 2, 1836;
Goliad Massacre, Mar. 27, 1836;
Battle of San Jacinto,  Apr. 21, 1836
.  
 In 1845, the
 Texas became the 28th U.S. State. The Mexican-American War began in April 25, 1846 and 
ended FEBRUARY 2, 1848 with the 
Treaty of Guadalupe (more below). 
 
 Santa Ana consolidated power to ensure his continued rule, but this led to resistance led by 
Benito Juarez.In 1853, 
Benito Juarez fled in exile to New Orleans and worked in a cigar factory. 
 
 In 1854, Benito Juarez plotted the 
Revolution of Ayutla to oust Santa Ana from being dictator, forcing him to resign in 1855.
This resulted in a power vacuum, and the Church was caught in the middle. 
 
 Beginning in 1521, the Church in Mexico acted as a conscience influencing the elite to be considerate of the poor.
The  Church, though, did not actively attempt to change the political  structure and as a result was blamed by political revolutionaries for  somehow maintaining the status quo of inequality. 
 
 In 1856, a 
War  of Reform broke out against the Church, ending with significant limitations placed upon it.

After political maneuvering, 
Benito Juarez became  President in 1858. As a Free Mason, Benito Juarez founded the Rito Nacional  Mexicano lodge. 
Benito Juarez stopped Mexico's repayment of  loans borrowed from Spain, Britain and France, thus instigating European  intervention. 
 
 In 1861, a delegation of Mexican leaders traveled to Europe and  asked Maximillian I, the younger brother of the Austrian emperor Franz  Joseph I, to come to Mexico to restore order.
Meanwhile, in order  to get repayment of debts, the 
French forces of Napoleon III invaded  Mexico, suffering a minor unexpected setback at the Battle of Puebla on  
May 5 - Cinco de Mayo - 1862. 
 
 The French recovered and took  control of Mexico. 
Maximillian I agreed to rule Mexico, arriving with  the Pope's blessing in 1864, being 
greeted by an enthusiastic reception. 
 Maximillian
 Maximillian proceeded to enact many civil reforms to help the poor.
The United States Government, though, did not want European powers intervening in the western hemisphere.
After  the Civil War, 
the United States pressured Napoleon III to abandon  support of Maximillian, which he did by withdrawing all French troops from Mexico. 
 
 The  U.S. then began to secretly supply guns to Mexican gangs to cause  domestic violence and insurrection. 
Maximilian was captured and 
Benito  Juárez had him shot, June 19, 1867.  
 Following the example of  previous Mexican leaders, 
Benito Juarez continued the practice of  consolidating power to ensure his re-election. 
This let to a revolt led by Porfirio Diaz in 1871.
Juarez put down the revolt, but died of a heart attack and was succeeded by Lerdo de Tejada. 
 
 Lerdo de Tejada was overthrown by 
Porfirio Diaz.
Porfirio Diaz was President for most of 1876 to 1911.
Following  the example of previous Mexican leaders, 
Porfirio Diaz continued the  practice of consolidating power to ensure his re-elections.  
 
 This let to a revolt led by 
Francisco Madero in 1911.
In the next decade of fighting, millions died as the secular Mexican government attempted to crush the church and political dissent. 
 
 Francisco Madero was murdered in a coup d'Etat in 1913 by 
Victoriano Huerta, which started a civil war.
Pancho Villa, Emiliano Zapata and Álvaro Obregón forced Victoriano Huerta to resign. 
 
 In 1914, Hollywood sent a crew to film 
Pancho Villa as he fought from Durango to Mexico City.
Venustiano Carranza gained power with the backing of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and General Pershing. 
 Venustiano  Carranza
 Venustiano  Carranza was assassinated in 1920, and was succeeded by Adolfo de la  Huerta, who was then succeeded by the revolutionary Álvaro Obregón. 
 Obregón
 Obregón reportedly ordered the death of every rebel officer, including Pancho Villa. 
Adolfo de la Huerta started a revolt against 
Álvaro Obregón, but it was crushed. 
 
 In  1924, Obregón was succeeded by the aggressively anti-christian  freemason, 
Plutarco Elías Calles, who violently closed and confiscated  churches, schools, convents, hospitals, seminaries, missions and  monasteries. 
 Calles'
 Calles' radical atheist 
'Calles Laws' made it  illegal for clerical garb to be worn outside a church, imposed a 5-year  prison sentence on pastors who criticized the government, and limited  the number of clergy per state. 
 
 As portrayed in the movie, 
For  Greater Glory: Viva Crista Rey (2012), priests, ministers, and faithful  laity were harassed, arrested and even murdered. Catholic women and  girls were assaulted and raped.
This resulted in the Cristero War, 1926-29, where over 90,000 were killed. 
 Obregón
 Obregón was again elected in 1928, but was soon assassinated.
Calles again assumed power, being nicknamed 'Grand Turk' and 'Jefe Máximo' (political chieftain). 
 
 Promoting revolutionary socialism, 
Calles had Mexico host the Soviet Union's first embassy in any country.
Calles started Mexico's PNR party, the predecessor to the PRI party. 
 President Portes Gil
 President Portes Gil agreed not to enforce the 'Calles Laws' but left them on the books.
In  1936, President Lázaro Cárdenas deported Calles and repealed the  'Calles Laws', thereby restored some semblance of freedom of worship. 
 Get the book THREE SECULAR REASONS Why America Should Be Under God
 Get the book THREE SECULAR REASONS Why America Should Be Under GodBut back to 1848...
When  the Mexican-American War ended on FEBRUARY 2, 1848, the 
Treaty of  Guadalupe-Hidalgo was signed at the altar of the Basilica of Our Lady of  Guadalupe in Villa Hidalgo, in present day Mexico City. 
 For $15  million dollars,
 For $15  million dollars, coincidentally the same amount paid to France for the  Louisiana Purchase, the United States 
purchased from Mexico 525,000  square miles - the third largest land purchase in history.  
 The  largest land purchase was the
 Louisiana Purchase of 828,000 square miles  from France, and the second largest land purchase was the 
586,412  square miles of Alaska from Russia after it lost the Crimean War to  Britain. 
 
 The land acquired by the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo became the U.S. States of: 
California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of: Arizona, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming. 
 
 The Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo began:
"
In  the Name of Almighty God - the United States and the United Mexican  States animated by a sincere desire to put an end to the calamities of  the war....
have, 
under the protection of Almighty God, the  Author of Peace, arranged, agreed upon, and signed the following Treaty  of Peace..." 
 
 In contrast to Mexico's many secular governments, the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo guaranteed:
"If...
God forbid...war should unhappily break out...they...solemnly pledge...the following rules...
All  churches, hospitals, schools, colleges, libraries, and other  establishments for charitable and beneficent purposes, shall be  respected,and all persons connected with the same protected in the discharge of their duties, and the pursuit of their vocations...Done  at the city of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the 2ND DAY OF FEBRUARY, 
in the year  of the Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty-eight." 
 
 Since  the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo, there developed
 a stark contrast in the  safety and economic status of the land 
north of the border and the land 
 south of the border. 
 
 This is most obvious when comparing border  cities of
 San Diego, El Paso, Laredo, and Brownsville with 
Tiajuana,  Juárez, Matamoros, and Nuevo Laredo.During the same period of time that Mexico has had several dozen different governments, the United States, other than the period of the Civil War, has had only one. 
 Californian Ronald Reagan
 Californian Ronald Reagan stated of America in 1961:
"In  this  country of ours, took place the greatest revolution that has ever  taken  place in world's history. The only true revolution.
Every other revolution simply exchanged one set of rulers for another."  
 As both sides of the border have similar  climate, geography, plants, and in many cases similar cultural-racial makeup, reasons for the disparity must lie deeper. 
 
 Increasing concern is developing over Islamic infiltration of Mexican drug gangs.
Growing numbers of those entering America across the southern border are OTMs (Other Than Mexicans). 
 
 Many come from Islamic countries such as: 
Afghanistan,  Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Pakistan, Yemen, Qatar, Algeria, Somalia, Malaysia,  Libya, Eritrea, Indonesia, and
 Lebanon.Among  the political differences north and south of the border are America's Judeo-Christian traditions of  self-government.
The Declaration of Independence explained government was not to dominate, but to secure to each person their Creator given rights:
"All men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights...That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men."
America's impartial system of rule of law  was meant to guarantee there would never be rule by the whims and caprices of a dictator. 
 President Ronald Reagan
 President Ronald Reagan, who had been California's 33rd Governor, stated in 1983:
"
Of  the many influences that have shaped the United States of America into a  distinctive nation and people, 
none may be said to be more fundamental  and enduring than the Bible...
The Bible and its teaching helped  form the basis for the founding fathers' abiding belief in 
the  inalienable rights of the individual, rights which they found implicit  in the 
Bible's teachings of the inherent worth and dignity of each  individual." 
 THREE SECULAR REASONS Why America Should Be Under God
 THREE SECULAR REASONS Why America Should Be Under God