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aurabogado's profile
Aura Bogado
Aura Bogado
Aura Bogado
Verified account
@aurabogado

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Aura BogadoVerified account

@aurabogado

Reporter @reveal covering immigration. Dodgers fan. Misser of the 15" of hair I recently donated. Seed saver. Occasional bead worker. Amateur cancer haver.

Oakland, CA
Joined July 2008

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    1. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      There are a lot of articles about earthquakes, soft soil, and Mexico City. Their common subtext is "dumb/silly Mexicans should know better!"

      28 replies 607 retweets 1,019 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      None of these articles are written by actual Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, or other latinxs (who are all underrepresented in media as it is).

      2 replies 93 retweets 347 likes
      Show this thread
    3. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      Mexico City is a metaphor and living example of the legacies of always-violent colonization. It's the logical conclusion of conquest.

      4 replies 180 retweets 439 likes
      Show this thread
    4. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      Mexico City used to be Lake Texcoco. People started settling near the lake several thousand years ago, building complex cities nearby.

      2 replies 112 retweets 348 likes
      Show this thread
    5. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      Prior to colonization, sophisticated aqueducts supplied freshwater from Lake Texcoco to people living in places like Tenochtitlán.

      2 replies 95 retweets 356 likes
      Show this thread
    6. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      Tenochtitlán was the capital of the vast Aztec empire; it was essentially an artificial-ish island in Lake Texcoco's shallow end.

      1 reply 77 retweets 292 likes
      Show this thread
    7. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      The Aztec empire, like any empire, was not without its faults. But it was built to either benefit or cause little damage to the environment.

      1 reply 82 retweets 288 likes
      Show this thread
    8. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      When the Spanish colonized the Aztec, the genocide wasn't only against people, but also culture -- which is synonymous with the environment.

      2 replies 134 retweets 381 likes
      Show this thread
      Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

      Keep in mind that colonization is fundamentally about destruction. Part of what the Spanish destroyed was Lake Texcoco itself.

      12:46 PM - 21 Sep 2017
      • 113 Retweets
      • 354 Likes
      • Brian Oaster Matt ❄️ Kylee Ehmann ❄️ Robin Nagle / #EleNão bot.LOLA Tiffany Gholar imp kade Susie Martinez
      1 reply 113 retweets 354 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          Because they didn't respect Aztec knowledge about how to control flooding, the Spanish DRAINED THE ENTIRE LAKE. Think about that hubris.

          3 replies 192 retweets 480 likes
          Show this thread
        3. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          Even though they were repeatedly warned against doing so by the Aztec, the Spanish built their own capital on what used to be Lake Texcoco.

          2 replies 135 retweets 345 likes
          Show this thread
        4. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          The story of how we got Mexico City is relatively recent history. It's the result of violent/foolish colonization, based on racist hatred.

          3 replies 140 retweets 393 likes
          Show this thread
        5. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          Look at the buildings that were destroyed in Mexico City *and* the buildings that weren't: Catholic churches damaged. Aztec pyramids intact.

          4 replies 187 retweets 542 likes
          Show this thread
        6. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          So many white writers are pointing out that Mexico City was built on soft soil. But they fail to mention that colonization made it that way.

          5 replies 404 retweets 813 likes
          Show this thread
        7. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          "Mexico City is like building on Jello!" they write. How did it get that way? Bc Europeans destroyed a lake like they destroyed a people.

          2 replies 346 retweets 729 likes
          Show this thread
        8. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          Writing about earthquakes/soft soil/Mexico City without explicitly writing about colonization is a second erasure, a legacy of colonization.

          6 replies 271 retweets 703 likes
          Show this thread
        9. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          When your subtext is that Mexicans are dumb/silly for building in Mexico City, you're reifying the violence of colonization.

          6 replies 121 retweets 492 likes
          Show this thread
        10. Aura Bogado‏Verified account @aurabogado 21 Sep 2017

          *Fellow writers, and white ones especially: please don't steal my thread to write a new article as if you knew this all along. Thank you.

          24 replies 126 retweets 765 likes
          Show this thread
        11. End of conversation

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