Why 82% of Mexico is Empty

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @dhv2852
    @dhv2852 Год назад +7240

    As a northern Mexican I can confirm, our cities are designed more similarly to American ones (large distances between living, industrial and commercial sections) and a big emphasis on car transportation. Compared to city planning in the center, that is more similar to European cities.

    • @أدرار_ؤمعروف
      @أدرار_ؤمعروف Год назад +67

      هذا يعني أن تخطيط مدن الشمال أفضل؟

    • @dhv2852
      @dhv2852 Год назад +582

      @@أدرار_ؤمعروف It is subjective, because excessive car reliance makes the cities very un-walkable and are a hurdle for low-income families, that at the end of the day represent the majority of the country. But at the very least it is better planned and living neighborhoods are a bit safer.

    • @patrickbatemanfromohio
      @patrickbatemanfromohio Год назад +246

      i love Mexico, greetings from Pakistan😇
      viva México! I love tacos!

    • @eulyer3722
      @eulyer3722 Год назад +224

      @@أدرار_ؤمعروف if you own a car sure, but on a country with 44% poverty it's a cons

    • @anthonycabrera5474
      @anthonycabrera5474 Год назад +303

      @@أدرار_ؤمعروف As someone living in the center (Guadalajara), I really don't like driving that much and that is one of the reasons I love Guadalajara because the government keeps expanding our light rail system, I only drive on emergencies or dates.

  • @HanaTheRussell
    @HanaTheRussell Год назад +11874

    "It's to hard to cut down rainforests to make farmland, it takes so much time and money and the yield isn't even good." God wow it's almost like a sign that we SHOULDN'T BE CUTTING DOWN THE RAINFOREST lol.

    • @aprendizdecapivara2841
      @aprendizdecapivara2841 Год назад +339

      Solution: just burn it

    • @SirBoggins
      @SirBoggins Год назад +559

      @@aprendizdecapivara2841 Or preserve it

    • @eel.3170
      @eel.3170 Год назад

      @@SirBoggins b u r n

    • @JimmyM1975
      @JimmyM1975 Год назад +30

      I agree

    • @patrickbatemanfromohio
      @patrickbatemanfromohio Год назад +324

      man why arent govt around the world not concerned about climate change and deforestation? all they care about is disputed territories, war and money.

  • @lucalopez9604
    @lucalopez9604 Год назад +9655

    As a Mexican, this just made me realize that for most of the world, traveling between cities doesn't usually involve zigzagging around mountains and in some cases even going through them...

    • @AtomicBoo
      @AtomicBoo Год назад +387

      Y nisiquiera para todos los mexicanos, la carretera mexico 15 desde nogales sonora hasta sinaloa, exceptuando las "curvas de nogales" es casi puro derecho, muy bonita la verdad, el proyecto lo que sea de cada quien esta muuy bien hecho.

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 Год назад +505

      If you actually drive across the United States and Especially Canada or Alaska your mind would be blown how far and how many mountains you have to go over to get to the next even small town.
      I ran out of fuel twice because there was Nothing but sage brush land for over 200 miles in between each place.
      -COMANCHE NATION

    • @nicolasnarvaezolaya1992
      @nicolasnarvaezolaya1992 Год назад +170

      En Colombia andar en carretera es una odisea así, esquivar montañas, atravesar túneles, esquivar derrumbes, etc

    • @Lilianjade
      @Lilianjade Год назад +91

      Lol what ? That is the case in almost every part of the world where it is mountainous . Use your brain more

    • @victoriadealba5558
      @victoriadealba5558 Год назад +173

      There was a Mexican guy teaching Spanish in France and he said his students complained about having to travel for ONE hours in bus, because they felt it was too much, and we were like pues donde vives like you hago una hora de mi rancho a la capital de mi estado nada mas

  • @coffeebeanB
    @coffeebeanB Год назад +821

    I was born and grew up in Mexico and the one thing i missed the most (and still do) is seeing mountains. I came from a very mountainous place in Michoacan were temperatures were cool, so when i moved to Illinois, it was a shock to my body, humid as hell and flat haha

    • @dansmodacct
      @dansmodacct Год назад +48

      Well, outside of the midwest, the United States has no shortage of mountains!

    • @Spockston
      @Spockston Год назад +9

      I live in anchorage alaska, which is a port town at sea level, surrounded on 2.5 sides by mountains, and the other two sides are rivers//inlet

    • @emilybaldwin1437
      @emilybaldwin1437 11 месяцев назад +7

      I’m from Florida. I’m used to humid and flat, high altitude makes my head hurt and I get so dizzy 😭. They’re so gorgeous though I’m jealous

    • @WinterInTheForest
      @WinterInTheForest 10 месяцев назад +13

      Why don't you go back

    • @teeonefifteen5944
      @teeonefifteen5944 10 месяцев назад +10

      Try Wyoming, Colorado, Utah even California has some cool mountain towns

  • @jasonwoods5326
    @jasonwoods5326 Год назад +2894

    My wife is from Yucatan. she had noted that her home of Merida was isolated from the rest of Mexico until the mid 20th century, when the first reliable roads were built to the center. The local Yucateco dialect is unique, since being developed in isolation. These is also a heavy French influence in cuisine and architecture, since Merida was more easily in contact with French culture. New Orleans was easier to reach than Mexico City.

    • @sergicalcantara
      @sergicalcantara Год назад +170

      French culture is the second/third biggest influence in Mexico. Millions of Mexicans have French ancestry. Especially in certain areas like you said. German culture is also very big here. I heard Yucatán is beautiful. I hope I can visit one day! 👍🏼

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Год назад +50

      Merida is growing at a crazy fast rate. Regards. 👍

    • @uchee211
      @uchee211 Год назад +32

      Man, I so want to visit Merida after seeing a youtube vlog of the city!

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Год назад +10

      @@uchee211 let me know if you want tips 👍

    • @shereef3823
      @shereef3823 Год назад +20

      @@ricardokowalski1579 very interested in tips...hoping to retire to anywhere between Veracruz, and the Yucatan near the water.

  • @FernandoGomez-hg4rn
    @FernandoGomez-hg4rn Год назад +3603

    Another funny fact: most cities in the US-Mexico border are densely populated because in the past (pre-1990s) it was very common for people to move to the border, work on the American side, then go back home at night. Crossings were very common and migration was small in comparison, as there was no need to migrate. My grandfather used to own a cotton field in Matamoros, and he recounted lots of stories about going to Brownsville for leisure or business (selling crops, buying seeds and tools and machines, etc).

    • @colinmarshall6634
      @colinmarshall6634 Год назад

      Another victim of the Patriot Act. There was open and free cultural exchange across the border until 2001, without all of the nonsense about immigration.

    • @cloroxbleach
      @cloroxbleach Год назад +346

      It’s still common, I’m from El Paso. People even come to school here at UTEP/high school and then they go back to Juarez for the night. What you can earn here in the states will allow you to live very comfortably out there in Juarez I’ve been thinking about getting some land because of it

    • @mamberroi0935
      @mamberroi0935 Год назад +119

      It’s still super common lol

    • @thanosmaster-abel559
      @thanosmaster-abel559 Год назад

      @@cloroxbleach just comes to
      Show USA is on top. All these mothers rather give birth in USA just to take advantage

    • @summeronio9751
      @summeronio9751 Год назад +160

      Here in Texas, people still do that everyday. I live in Mc Allen and work in Matamoros

  • @fooloco
    @fooloco Год назад +1624

    When I flew from Tijuana to Cancun; we flew along the northern/central portion of Mexico and as someone that likes to always look out the windows, I was blown away by how much of it was vast emptiness with no city lights or pretty much any signs of civilization. Every so often we would come along a noticeably-sized city or town, but one thing I found very interesting is we would be flying through dark parts with no sign of a big city or town for many miles and then you would see a small handful of lights just out there in the middle of nowhere. These small communities or homes are really living off the grid.

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +86

      Yea have done that trip many times and have traveled all over Mexico and in some of the worst barrio's. Many people live off the grid. The average salary is like 600 USD a month. .. minimum wage is 207 pesos for 8 hour work day. About 11 USD.

    • @alexalexx245
      @alexalexx245 Год назад +52

      you flew over the jungle and the Gulf of Mexico, obviously you weren't going to see great civilization.

    • @CiaoBello21
      @CiaoBello21 Год назад +30

      LMAO you know how to save money. Tijuana definitely is cheapest to fly if you live in SoCal 👍🏽

    • @nido.del.aguila2667
      @nido.del.aguila2667 Год назад +14

      @@alexalexx245 wtf is that suppose to mean?

    • @pahwraith
      @pahwraith Год назад +39

      This is how flying from Chicago to seattle is like. 😂😂😂

  • @mmeggnn
    @mmeggnn Год назад +112

    I spent holidays in Riviera Maya every year when I was a kid, I forgot the local town we’d go to from our resort but my time in Mexico was indescribable. Every local I met as a little girl treated me like family, got to know my family over a language barrier, and genuinely spread so much joy into my experiences. we made friends with workers (they knew me when i was 9mo old til i was 12), got to know their story and struggles, lended a helping hand where we could, but most importantly just shared time together. ill never forget the young women and men and their work ethic, and especially their perspectives on life and the world. if you go to mexico, please talk to the locals you meet and get to know them. thank them for caring for you while you spend time in their country, spread kindness, & i promise youll meet some of the most amazing people. there are still days when i think of those i met, and wish i could see them again now that im not a little girl! it makes me sad, but i hope one day to be able to go back and find them and give them a hug.

    • @angel2641
      @angel2641 5 месяцев назад +4

      Thanks for taking the time to actually be around the locals. Shows humility and kindness.

    • @SomnusLucisCaelum
      @SomnusLucisCaelum 10 дней назад

      You're really kind and I'm glad you made so many beautiful memories in my country ❤ hope you will one day meet again with some of them!

  • @rainyseason1975
    @rainyseason1975 Год назад +747

    In Mexico people tend to keep generational families together. I went to visit a friend there and she had three generations in her home. They take care of their own family members. They don't typically spread out and leave grandma in a nursing home.

    • @koiue.g8709
      @koiue.g8709 Год назад +43

      Moving to another city or to another region is also not tagt common

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +38

      It's how it used to be in Europe, it tends to be the case in poorer, pre--industrial nations.

    • @koiue.g8709
      @koiue.g8709 Год назад +48

      @Wade Chadwick I know, I grew up with no grandparents just like the western ways and I absolutely hate it however how is México a pre industrial nation?

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +13

      @@koiue.g8709 I'm extremely lucky, I had mine and I still live in a house with four generations.
      It is not meant as a slight, and it is not technically correct but 'modern' nation is a bit vague. Industrialisation leads to modernity but it's at different paces for each nation. The UK went through industrialisation in the 1800s but it took over 100 years for the old family ways to be eroded by the state. As the state becomes more powerful and dominant it replaces the local culture and family, a stronger centraliseed power does this. Mexico with it's 'band' geography still allows for the other bits to hold to traditional ways for longer.

    • @koiue.g8709
      @koiue.g8709 Год назад +9

      @Wade Chadwick yes you are really lucky, some tradicional ways has it's advantages , and now with your explanation you are right about México, many parts of the country are still very traditional and outside the central government rule, an example of this are the regions plagued by war where the government can't put any order

  • @peterzaldivar3520
    @peterzaldivar3520 Год назад +863

    A newer highway was built between Durango and Mazatlan on the west coast. It took something like a decade to finish. From Durango, you’re surrounded by cacti, as you head into the mountains, there are nothing but pine trees, waterfalls, massively high bridges. Then, all of a sudden you’re driving through the jungle until you get to the beach. It’s about a 3 hour drive.

    • @alexandermendoza381
      @alexandermendoza381 Год назад +51

      I remember well when they finished it, it lined up perfectly with a visit to a guy and the transitions between areas still amaze me when we pass

    • @ErikGiovani
      @ErikGiovani Год назад +59

      Cut down traveling time from like 11 to 3 hours lmao, that bus ride was bruuutal before

    • @coolcactus8861
      @coolcactus8861 Год назад +50

      Mazatleca here, ever since the highway was finished we saw a boom of tourism and the city and grown a lot thanks to that. It's not rare to see a lot of cars with durango license plates lol.

    • @ninjaswordtothehead
      @ninjaswordtothehead Год назад +25

      That sounds like an awesome drive.

    • @javierguerrero8966
      @javierguerrero8966 Год назад +8

      My parents are from Durango,

  • @freddyrodales8580
    @freddyrodales8580 Год назад +892

    As a mexican i love how you explained how our own geography has affected our development as a country! Great video!

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад

      I HOPE he adds a second to the video via Edit.

    • @bklynjoe96
      @bklynjoe96 Год назад

      Yea and I'm sure the corrupt evil US govern ment po lie ticians had no affect in the development of your country. Your current state is due to only geography. My God you people (the world) are all fast asleep.

    • @freddyrodales8580
      @freddyrodales8580 Год назад +2

      @Justin Y. I am engaged to one 👍🏼

    • @PinkyBStinky
      @PinkyBStinky Год назад +2

      @Justin Y. I know 2 Somalis who have only had Mexican girlfriends I don’t think you’re far off my friend

    • @pahwraith
      @pahwraith Год назад +3

      @Justin Y. no, Im a mexican who dated eritrean/somali girls in college. They were 🔥🔥🔥, would gladly marry one. Theyre hard to meet where I live now.

  • @archerseo
    @archerseo Год назад +317

    Everytime I visited Mexico I really found it to be beautiful and the people were very friendly. Here in the US I have also found lots of Mexican people are willing to help you when your car breaks down or need help. I just really love the people of Mexico and hope the relations between both countries can improve and we can become closer as nations. So both countries can prosper more!

    • @mariazayas9557
      @mariazayas9557 Год назад +60

      Thank you. Not everyone thinks like you. Im 72 i have been insulted and im scared of people telling me to get out . They say i am from the carteles. Im a person who doesnt bother anybody. I have had 2 heart surgeries. Thank you again. God bless you.

    • @archerseo
      @archerseo Год назад +19

      @@mariazayas9557 God bless you my friend! I hope more kind hearted people come into your life so you can have more peace of mind with humanity. There are good people out there. I am so sorry you have been through such things. What a shameful thing to judge someone based upon the color of their skin. May you find joy in the time you have left and eventually be wrapped in the arms of Jesus Christ. Bless you!

    • @bloodaonadeline8346
      @bloodaonadeline8346 Год назад +16

      The USA has really good relations with Mexico we just wish they’d stop shipping drugs here and illegally entering the country/allowing south and central American immigrants to do the same.

    • @johningle1
      @johningle1 Год назад

      ​@bloodaonadeline8346 - the CIA allows the drugs in. They want citizens watching TV and doing drugs. Bread and circus. Meanwhile the US government rapes the world of resources so you can sit around and complain about immigrants online.

    • @youtubesucks7807
      @youtubesucks7807 Год назад

      ​@bloodaonadeline8346 The USA is having the drugs shipped here they jsut want their connections doingnit not smaller people outside eof their circle. 😂 If you really think the US government is clean and friendly think again bud, they want the drugs they just want it their way Its what pays the majority of their bills 😂😂 they're just control hungry

  • @Anvilbanger
    @Anvilbanger Год назад +524

    Interesting perspective! I live in Mexico's jungle/rain forest region. May I offer one small correction? Excessive rain does NOT hamper the "drying" (curing) of concrete (TM 5:00). In fact, concrete cures harder under water than it does in air.

    • @Matt_from_Florida
      @Matt_from_Florida Год назад +62

      Yep. Concrete bridges all over the world attest to that!

    • @k.b.392
      @k.b.392 Год назад +39

      True...concrete needs to be sprayed with water everyday for 7-10 days (maybe 2-3 times/day) to cure. If it dries too fast, it might crack if not mixed correctly.

    • @13thbiosphere
      @13thbiosphere Год назад +26

      But setting it on wet unstable ground can be a problem

    • @seguridadcorporativa2419
      @seguridadcorporativa2419 Год назад +15

      Hablaba de ASFALTO no de Concreto... él está bien en su afirmación.... y tu tambien técnicamente hablando...pero no en tu refutación.

    • @eliascorteslopez1094
      @eliascorteslopez1094 Год назад +1

      Or we can all admit that the money to build roads goes to corrupt politicians.

  • @josemorales5117
    @josemorales5117 Год назад +557

    I was raised in Mexico City, and I remember as a kid when relatives came to visit from surrounding states, some of the eldest will get altitude sickness for the first days. And some would never recovered, so they only stay for a couple days tops.

    • @anandsharma7430
      @anandsharma7430 Год назад +77

      You guys must have biological features adapted to high altitude living, like the inhabitants of Nepal and Tibet. Their blood has more oxygen carrying capacity and their muscle tissues are adapted to better use oxygen. Also, higher lung capacity and stamina. Just a guess, but worth investigating. Central Mexican athletes should do better at marathons than athletes from plains-dwelling populations in Mesoamerica.

    • @josephsainz3746
      @josephsainz3746 Год назад +49

      You are correct, I am from the southeastern part of Mexico, which is flat land, and whenever I travel to a mountainous area in the center, my body feels very strange due to altitude sickness.

    • @josemorales5117
      @josemorales5117 Год назад +49

      @@anandsharma7430 that's why when move to Denver, the climate and weather is very similar to Mexico City. Although Denver sits at 5280ft and Mexico is over 7000ft

    • @oaxtec765
      @oaxtec765 Год назад +31

      @@anandsharma7430 well yes and no, I'm American but have lived off and on in Oaxaca for 15 years and while I may not possess "biological features" for mountain life, my body gets completely adjusted after only a day or two. Also tons of athletes from Europe or Eastern Africa will come to train here, like American athletes go to Denver, because it gives them better lung capacity and cardio abilities.

    • @GAURON123
      @GAURON123 Год назад +18

      Is not the high altitude, is the shitty air

  • @Aqueous92
    @Aqueous92 Год назад +864

    Fun fact: The factory shown in 23:12 was Fundidora de Hierro y Acero Monterrey (or Fundidora for short), and was closed and declared in bankruptcy. Only to become a large natural park, cultural centre, host of mayor events like concerts and festivals, and overall a great way for families to spend their weekends as Fundidora Park. Also shown in 27:21

    • @abrodking6584
      @abrodking6584 Год назад +32

      Tecate Pal Norte's festival in fundidora is only roughly a month away!

    • @soupfan1
      @soupfan1 Год назад +46

      If you panned the camera a bit to the left my house could be seen! Really weird tbh.

    • @pitnay
      @pitnay Год назад +11

      Se ve muy chido la verdad, ojalá vaya algún día

    • @violetg3878
      @violetg3878 Год назад +9

      @@pitnay no te arrpentiras monterrey es la mamada somos con madre los regios aunque digan que somos codos somos de un gran corazon somos ahorradores que es diferente hahaha

    • @javierorozco3927
      @javierorozco3927 Год назад +9

      Wow i jusy looked up the park. Esta hermoso. That is how you re-unite land back to its people.

  • @Invisible_Gh0st
    @Invisible_Gh0st Год назад +108

    I don't know how my kindergarten brain understood all of this. He makes it so simple, yet goes very thoroughly through the information. He even includes details from wars, times of crisis, and the past in general. I'm taught more here than in my school. . .

  • @arturohurtado7
    @arturohurtado7 Год назад +1232

    Mexico Valley sounds very similar to the "sabana de Bogotá" where i live, is a flat valley in the middle of the Andes mountain range at 8000 ft from sea level, very agricultural advantages but difficult to access. I understand why here in Colombia we feel very familiar with Mexicans and Mexican culture. 🇨🇴🇲🇽

    • @ileanahes4100
      @ileanahes4100 Год назад +51

      Love Colombia! 🇲🇽❤️🇨🇴

    • @fallendown8828
      @fallendown8828 Год назад +57

      Also it is the only place in Colombia that isn't as hot as hell, Quito in Ecuador is literally cold despite being on the equator itself. Elevation is the reason

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Год назад +35

      In a similar vein, Cusco, the former capital of the Inca Empire is at 11,200 feet, and La Paz, still Bolivia's capital, is at just under 12,000 feet. This is understandable if you consider that to the west of the mountains is the driest desert on earth, and to the east is the Amazon.

    • @brayanargandonaflorentino548
      @brayanargandonaflorentino548 Год назад +20

      I love Colombia, they're like us in México but more lush and vibrant

    • @robinsss
      @robinsss Год назад +5

      a large percentage of the water used in Mexico City comes from Lake Mead in Nevada
      the eastern side of the mountains in northern Mexico perfectly matches the shape of the Chihuahuan desert
      clear proof that those mountains are blocking the rain clouds to the desert area
      they should reduce the size of the mountain range and see if the clouds will float pass

  • @jdimas2011
    @jdimas2011 Год назад +585

    I traveled all over Mexico (mostly by car) when I was a kid. The variety of the land and the terrain is pretty diverse. One time we drove from the center of the country to, I think, Mazatlan. It did not look that far on the map. However, it took us almost all day. We had to use this 2 lane road that was high up in the mountains. No real shoulder on the road to speak of. It was sometimes above the clouds. My dad was stressed out driving it but he did a great job. Later on I found out this particular road was called "La espinazo del Diablo" The devils spine!

    • @qqqq513
      @qqqq513 Год назад +50

      El* espinazo del diablo is brutal, many have died there and it is also said to be home of dwelling ghosts for that reason. But you can enjoy some pretty interesting views above and under the clouds that cover the valley in wich it lays.
      It was substituted by el puente Baluarte (Baluarte bridge) and it was the highest cable-stayed bridge in the world for a couple of years and it keeps the title in the Americas. Let that fact speak by itself about the hostility of the previous Devil's Spine.
      You might wanna google it and show it to your father so you can see how much stress and time you could have saved since 2012 when the Baluarte was finished.

    • @tobynewman5450
      @tobynewman5450 Год назад +14

      ​@@qqqq513 Just Googled it, thing is massive. Bet it must be awesome to travel on :) looks beautiful as well.

    • @hectorservin2308
      @hectorservin2308 Год назад +8

      You must have been traveling to Durango then. I’ve been on that Baluarte bridge and it makes it so the trip from Durango to Mazatlan is only 2 hours as opposed to 6-7

    • @qua7771
      @qua7771 Год назад +5

      Can someone tell me the right way to make a burrito? I'm Italian, but I like burritos.

    • @Six7666-w2r
      @Six7666-w2r Год назад +2

      @@qua7771 bro ma cerca su Google scusa

  • @barsxsalicia
    @barsxsalicia Год назад +555

    Back in the early 2000’s, taking a bus from one state to another was such a beautiful peaceful experience I remember as a child. My parents always liked to leave in the middle of the night and the bus ride was so calming. Very very dark, surrounded by city at first but then just deserted land and you could see the mountains in the distance. I always enjoyed it so much.

    • @CuliacanDgoNYC
      @CuliacanDgoNYC Год назад +22

      From puebla to tijuana was my childhood roadtrips...

    • @CuliacanDgoNYC
      @CuliacanDgoNYC Год назад +6

      Now I'm in new York

    • @janethparedes3361
      @janethparedes3361 Год назад +11

      Primera Plus bus rides and a core childhood memory of mine:)

    • @justotorres8970
      @justotorres8970 Год назад +20

      I remember as a kid in my Grandparents rancho en San Luis Potosi the nights were something else. There were nights that it was so dark it was Black. (Noches negras) people would call them. You couldn't see your hands of how dark it was outside.

    • @fairchild1737
      @fairchild1737 Год назад +6

      I remember my family 55 years ago we went on a bus ride and we got to watch a volcano eruption. Does anyone know the name of the volcano 55 years ago? Memories.

  • @seraph3761
    @seraph3761 6 месяцев назад +9

    As an American who has always been curious of my neighbors, this was a very satisfying watch. I feel the fog of uncertainty and unknown has made me appreciate my neighbors much more. They have always been good to me and i to them whenever we’ve interacted. I grew up in the mountains myself in Utah at 4,300 feet above sea level. Looking at Mexico with 7,300 feet above sea level is amazing. Everytime i drove out east where it was flat, the humidity was unbearable, so i can relate wanting to go to a higher elevation to escape the cons of the lower elevation flat lands.

  • @PontifexByzantinus
    @PontifexByzantinus Год назад +1156

    Learned more about Mexico in 30 minutes watching this than I have in a lifetime previously.

    • @BasileusHorus
      @BasileusHorus Год назад +8

      BROTHER! 🤝

    • @shirleyalston3074
      @shirleyalston3074 Год назад +5

      Absolutely YYYEEESSS...I must purchase a 🌎🌍 globe and map... Thank you... This was absolutely fascinating...😊😮😊

    • @alatorre33
      @alatorre33 Год назад +14

      I would recommend listening to mexicans to learn about mexico

    • @PontifexByzantinus
      @PontifexByzantinus Год назад +14

      @@alatorre33 done that too and never learned this much.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +3

      Same here...we'll said

  • @jlvaviation9140
    @jlvaviation9140 Год назад +313

    Mexican here. This is one of the best summaries concerning geography and its economic implications ever. Great work.

    • @mattbrown5511
      @mattbrown5511 Год назад

      Not to mention the rampant corruption of everyone in Mexico. From the President to the guy pushing a food cart, all are corrupt.

    • @WingManFang1
      @WingManFang1 Год назад +6

      Don’t forget the capitol City will be underground in less than 100 years because of the lakebed it’s built on. Y’all the new Venice

    • @milamilla1977
      @milamilla1977 Год назад +2

      Oh, I'm so sorry, but I don't remember why Texoco lake was drained? What was the reason?

    • @jlvaviation9140
      @jlvaviation9140 Год назад +4

      @@milamilla1977 To the best of my knowledge; big floods in the 18th century, some of which lasted for years and lead people in central Mexico City to essentially live on top of their houses. It became just too inconvenient, so the Spanish decided to carry out a civil work, the “Trench of Nochistongo” (Tajo de Nochistongo), to drain water out of the valley into the Moctezuma river.

    • @milamilla1977
      @milamilla1977 Год назад +2

      @@jlvaviation9140 thank you!

  • @Ese.vato100
    @Ese.vato100 Год назад +1713

    As a Mexican who is a fan of this channel, I am happy Joseph is making another video solely about Mexico. Keep it up man!

    • @blah2blah65
      @blah2blah65 Год назад +60

      As an American (as they call us) who is a fan of Mexico, I am happy you are happy with this video!

    • @itsytyt5192
      @itsytyt5192 Год назад +1

      Ha

    • @itsytyt5192
      @itsytyt5192 Год назад

      Ha

    • @embreis2257
      @embreis2257 Год назад +18

      would be nice if this channel would also use the metric system as all of the world except the US is used to it. maybe most of the viewers come from outside the US too

    • @arturogarcia9946
      @arturogarcia9946 Год назад +2

      Smart people knows how to survive like me😆

  • @jayflo714
    @jayflo714 Год назад +105

    Even though the mountains of Mexico have hindered its economic development, it protected many isolated communities from outside influence, which is why Mexico has so many beautiful cultures, languages and traditions.

    • @rejvaik00
      @rejvaik00 10 месяцев назад +3

      Yes, but it also means it's harder for Mexico to unite under a central authority and it also means it's much easier for these isolated communities to potentially rebel and attempt secession
      We saw that first hand in the 1990s when much of Southern Mexico used the isolation and neglect from Mexico City as a rallying cry for secessionist ferver and this wasn't helped by many indigenous tribal groups also adding their voices to this issue

    • @ashokathegreat4534
      @ashokathegreat4534 5 месяцев назад +2

      All of you speak spanish lol

    • @RodrigoCen7456
      @RodrigoCen7456 4 месяца назад +12

      ​@@ashokathegreat4534
      You go deep enough in the country side you run into Indian tribes that still speak their native language. Mind you these aren't isolated tribes like in the Amazon and they most certainly do know Spanish as a second language. It's just pretty surreal pulling up to a village in Mexico but all the locals are talking 'gibberish'

    • @arteks2001
      @arteks2001 4 месяца назад +4

      ​@@ashokathegreat4534 Many Mexicans are bilingual (native language and Spanish).

    • @eduardoleoremesquivel6179
      @eduardoleoremesquivel6179 23 дня назад

      ​@@ashokathegreat4534Te falta mucha educación básica.

  • @elvistek2062
    @elvistek2062 Год назад +1079

    As a Mexican, I nodded in affirmation throughout the entire video for both the pros and cons geography has given to my country. Great info packed video. I’ve been a long time sub and it always gets me happy when my country get mentioned in this channel.

    • @luiskross6454
      @luiskross6454 Год назад +17

      You forget the US took all Mexico good land and left you with a bunch of mountains, I consider texas to be part of mexico

    • @elvistek2062
      @elvistek2062 Год назад +39

      @@luiskross6454 well Texas left by themselves and then joined the USA soon after. Besides, they’ve always had a “Texan before anything” type of identity so I would have to disagree with that part of your comment. However, you would be right on the rest. Regardless of the reasons, the rest of the border states were taken by the USA. I don’t think I forgot anything though, since the video only speaks of Mexico as it is after the Mexican-American war (when all that territory is lost) and even if we counted them, all that territory is still very sparsely populated. If you look those states’ population densities, the majority of their population resides in their main metropolitan areas like Albuquerque (NM), Phoenix (AZ), Las Vegas (NV), Los Angeles/San Diego (CA), Austin (TX), etc so the video’s argument still stands.

    • @thetapheonix
      @thetapheonix Год назад +24

      @@luiskross6454 That’s a stupid take. The U.S. did not take anything, TX left. TX is not a part of Mexico anymore than it or Mexico is a part of Spain. Tx was only a part of Mexico for about 30 years, it was a Spanish colony for over 300. Your argument is weak.

    • @30jatinangor61
      @30jatinangor61 Год назад +1

      Barnum effect

    • @iseytheteethsnake6290
      @iseytheteethsnake6290 Год назад

      @@thetapheonix dam white immigrants from East! Taking someone else’s land and exploiting and ruins them later!

  • @kaileyolsson
    @kaileyolsson Год назад +743

    my mom immigrated from mexico, specifically from her hometown of cuernavaca (1 hour south of mexico city). when i visited for the first time as a teenager, i was struck by how mountainous and beautiful the whole region was. the drive from the airport in mexico city to cuernavaca was fucking wild, weaving through all these mountains and valleys. also the fact that there are these gigantic volcanoes all across mexico??? i didn’t even learn until the end of the trip that that big mountain i kept seeing from a distance in cuernavaca was a whole ass volcano (popocatépetl). scared the shit out of me 😭

    • @AxlFG
      @AxlFG Год назад +44

      Now in days if you travel nearby, you can see the Popocatepetl smoking, it's something else to see that

    • @netzyr.c.3402
      @netzyr.c.3402 Год назад +59

      I'm from Cuernavaca too, and I have the opposite experience, going to USA for the first time and stand in flat land whitout any mountain around make me very anxious for a few months

    • @EduardoVazquez-uf6kr
      @EduardoVazquez-uf6kr Год назад +22

      When I go to Puebla to visit my dads Pueblo, it’s beautiful because you see all the trees goin up as we’re surrounded by mountains and two volcanoes lol one being Popocatépetl

    • @ethanplace2194
      @ethanplace2194 Год назад +23

      Little chicken lol
      I'm from Atlixco Puebla and is a privilege to have Mr Popocatepetl in my backyard seeing him smoke and feel ground cracking is THE BEST!! 😍😍😍🫶🫶🫶🫶

    • @cevidepez
      @cevidepez Год назад +14

      And don't forget the other 5 volcanes that are here in México city (yes, five IN México city)

  • @dudmic
    @dudmic Год назад +245

    Fun fact, well actually not that fun, it's also the place where the most volcanic activity happens in Mexico, the capital itself being surrounded by volcanoes and some of them are even inside the city, it's all because 3 tectonic plates meet there North American, Caribbean and Cocos. Probably the most dangerous volcanoes are the ones covered in glaciers, since even a small eruption can cause a lahar.

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Год назад +11

      Reminds me of Mt. Rainier, near where I live in Seattle. We're all scared as hell of the possibility of an eruption causing a lahar (although that would pose more danger to Tacoma), and of course of the possibility of megathrust earthquakes caused by the Cascadia Subduction Zone (also like Mexico City).

    • @Cruz474
      @Cruz474 Год назад +4

      There is glaciers in Mexico?

    • @KingdomOfDimensions
      @KingdomOfDimensions Год назад

      @@Cruz474 A quick search tells me "Mexico has about two dozen glaciers, all of which are located on Pico de Orizaba (Citlaltépetl), Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl, the three tallest mountains in the country." Mountains that happen to be volcanos, which is a worrying prospect as andyjay729 said.

    • @pottertheavenger1363
      @pottertheavenger1363 Год назад +13

      @@Cruz474 yes

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Год назад +5

      John - You are right. In southern Mexico City there is a big pyramid half-buried in lava. The thing is legit right there on a university campus, and the offending volcano ("Xitle") is inside city limits, iirc.

  • @leegalen8383
    @leegalen8383 Год назад +45

    All of this guy's videos should be used in high school. I learn more than I ever knew in 66 years and it makes the world make more sense.

    • @frescoservice5124
      @frescoservice5124 Год назад +1

      A lot of people in the are talking down on this video WHY ?

  • @Lin-26
    @Lin-26 Год назад +209

    I’ve traveled from Houston to San Luis to Oaxaca to visit family and let it tell you, it was a blessing to see at the different terrains. From cactus booms to extreme hill tops. I was able to pass by Puebla and see the volcano near by. All with different temperatures. It was extremely beautiful to see everything

    • @bogart281
      @bogart281 Год назад

      so why don't you move back

    • @Lin-26
      @Lin-26 Год назад +17

      @@bogart281 i never lived there lol

    • @cnwil4594
      @cnwil4594 Год назад +10

      @@bogart281 Observing beauty with it's limiting living opportunities is different than actually living there. I never realize how much harsh terrain (thousands of miles) was between US and Mexico's most populated cities. Jeez, and to think people trying to leave Mexico risk their lives to get to the US.... So, it makes one think is this border situation is just exaggerated by some people, mainly MTGreene, Trump, etc.

    • @TotalFatalies
      @TotalFatalies Год назад

      @@bogart281 you have the biggest brain for someone who drank lead and radioactive water from Philadelphia

    • @alarhu
      @alarhu Год назад

      ​@@cnwil4594 everything in the US mainstream media is exaggerated, specially negative news from Mexico.

  • @NarsilRenewed
    @NarsilRenewed Год назад +174

    Thank you so much for this video! I have been closely researching Mexico for the past 2 years, watched hundreds of videos and read hundreds of pages on it, but this was, without an exaggeration, the single most informative video on Mexico I have seen to date.

    • @133774c05
      @133774c05 Год назад +10

      Check the Mexican-American border series from Kraut, it is very extense but very densely packed.

    • @reeverfalls2069
      @reeverfalls2069 Год назад +12

      I’d also like to mention watching “How the U.S Stole Mexico” by Johnny Harris. Really eye opening watch.

    • @zochbuppet448
      @zochbuppet448 Год назад

      Extremely Interesting topic
      But he is a goof.
      He loves numbers and and statics and tries to pack them in the video he makes, but you cant hear any of it because the moron always has some idiotic background music fighting with, and drowning out the info he ratting out.
      I usually just give on on most of his videos 10 minutes in.

    • @enriquepatino1193
      @enriquepatino1193 Год назад +1

      Where u from?

  • @hilding2063
    @hilding2063 Год назад +948

    It always amazes me how much geography actually defines prosperity of a country.

    • @hypertectonics7009
      @hypertectonics7009 Год назад +55

      Some have even said that geography is destiny.

    • @william9922
      @william9922 Год назад +15

      How would that amaze you….. lmao

    • @mssha1980
      @mssha1980 Год назад +2

      Soo true. And cities as well

    • @krypticunlimited6925
      @krypticunlimited6925 Год назад +5

      Don’t forget agriculture and natural resources as well.

    • @fernandovargas5338
      @fernandovargas5338 Год назад +19

      Almost always. But for example, the second largest city, Monterrey, is outside the plain and very far north. It’s close to the dessert and still by far, the richest city in Mexico, despite geography

  • @Cora761
    @Cora761 2 месяца назад +130

    My interest is how do most of you guys make so much wealth, I'm just curious about the whole process. I still haven't figured out what to invest in yet.
    Somebody once told me "It costs you more to be poor." 🤯

    • @Kelvineachael
      @Kelvineachael 2 месяца назад +4

      Speaking of investments of passive income, Well I picked the challenge to put my finances in order. Then i invested in cryptocurrency, stocks, through the assistance of my discretionary fund manager

    • @christenmadison260
      @christenmadison260 2 месяца назад +5

      Beatrice O Wendy is considered a key Crypto Strategist with one of the best copy Trading Portfolios and also very active in the cryptocurrency space.

    • @PreciousLoveday-uz8ss
      @PreciousLoveday-uz8ss 2 месяца назад +2

      This is correct, Beatrice O. Wendy strategy has normalized winning trades for me also and it's a huge milestone for me looking back to how it all started..

    • @aaron32118
      @aaron32118 2 месяца назад

      Hi, How can I reach her directly please???​@@christenmadison260

    • @aaron32118
      @aaron32118 2 месяца назад

      ​@@christenmadison260How can someone get connection to that Woman y'all speaking bout !!!?

  • @theguythatcoment
    @theguythatcoment Год назад +139

    Living in chiapas you get a sense of how big the jungle is and how unbelievable dense and dangerous is. Is like a big wall of torns and a deafening white noise from all the animals. I also had Dengue twice, chikungunya and got bitten several times by spiders, scorpions and other insects, even doing something a simple as touching a plant had led me to ER due to extreme allergic reaction. I've had googled so many times for insects i've found nesting or eating my plants without avail that I'm sure that no biologist has ever set foot near where i live. Not many people are as stupid as me, but many people had died and no, no one will go look after you if you go missing in the jungle.

    • @mikeramos8136
      @mikeramos8136 Год назад +44

      The jungles down there are so impenetrable that new Mayan pyramids and weird animals are still being discovered.

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +13

      Sounds cool i have been all over Mexico and Chiapas is one of my favorite states along with Oaxaca. Where at in Chiapas? Would love to have a farm and nursery in Chiapas.

    • @mikeramos8136
      @mikeramos8136 Год назад +11

      @@garycastronova7939 the Lacandon Jungle in south eastern Chiapas. Even neighboring Tabasco, Mexico has thick, impenetrable jungle except that theirs seasonally floods into a tropical swamp like the Everglades.

    • @Matt_from_Florida
      @Matt_from_Florida Год назад +11

      In *Alaska "gone missing"* (GOOGLE it) is a term that doesn't exist in our other 49 states! That's what happens when you strike off into the wilderness sometimes.

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +4

      @@mikeramos8136 Yea i like Tabasco but from what I saw there is a lot of open land for livestock. I spent a day there with my ex girlfriends friend. They have a ranch and grow cacao. I like Tabasco but am aware of the flooding in some places.

  • @DigitalNeb
    @DigitalNeb Год назад +869

    As an American, I'm eager to have better relations with Mexico. There's so much potential for Mexico, the US, and Canada to work together. With the world becoming less stable, I want to pull my close allies even closer. I'm hoping for a future where our three countries can work as team to ensure the security and prosperity of all our people.

    • @DigitalNeb
      @DigitalNeb Год назад +3

      @@jamesb6857 -_-

    • @manicpepsicola3431
      @manicpepsicola3431 Год назад +16

      I really feel this for sure

    • @44RisingSun44
      @44RisingSun44 Год назад +140

      I think most Americans feel this way, unfortunately there's a loud minority that makes it seem like we're completely intolerant to the rest of the world (& most other Americans at that lol). If the differences between the US & Mexico should teach us anything it's that people are stronger when united than as disparate connected entities.

    • @OLLG89
      @OLLG89 Год назад +43

      Boy, I do hope so in the future we can set all the ill will aside and work together as a region. Let the past be water under the bridge and look into the future. Politicians love to blame the issues on someone else and making imaginary enemies, but the common folk just want peace and prosperity and I hope, in the near future, this can be possible for the North American region. Cheers from Monterrey.

    • @Abstract.Noir414
      @Abstract.Noir414 Год назад +19

      Mexico would have to get a grip on their borders because its easy to cross into mexico

  • @jonnelacecodog3490
    @jonnelacecodog3490 Год назад +406

    Love Mexico from "the Mexico of Asia" (Philippines) 🇵🇭❤🇲🇽

    • @SirBoggins
      @SirBoggins Год назад +18

      Same from a fellow pinoy

    • @tonym6566
      @tonym6566 Год назад +54

      Filiprimo!

    • @Medstudent2024
      @Medstudent2024 Год назад

      @@SirBoggins pinay too much sexing

    • @SirBoggins
      @SirBoggins Год назад +18

      @@Medstudent2024 lol wut?

    • @PrimericanIdol
      @PrimericanIdol Год назад +24

      Mexico should have colonized the Philippines.

  • @Jakob.Hamburg
    @Jakob.Hamburg 8 месяцев назад +7

    I learned a lot about this country through your video. Nice overview, well presented. Thank you for showing.

  • @kylekoeller7644
    @kylekoeller7644 Год назад +475

    I love the map shown at 18:36! It really shows the massive elevation difference visually

    • @vahgarimo9864
      @vahgarimo9864 Год назад +30

      It’s really exaggerated tho

    • @69johndz
      @69johndz Год назад +13

      Yeah...that really put things in perspective for me.

    • @aetherian31
      @aetherian31 Год назад +28

      @@vahgarimo9864 That's the point.

    • @Longliveyt-n7z
      @Longliveyt-n7z Год назад +1

      @@vahgarimo9864 it’s not

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Год назад +3

      @@Longliveyt-n7z It's exaggerated relative to the width. It only increases by less than 1% of the total width (~1mi high, 400mi wide), but the map shows it increasing by like 20% of the width.

  • @benwilson5460
    @benwilson5460 Год назад +91

    I just recently visited Yucatan Mexico. I went to see some Mayan ruins. The guide was telling us that there is only 1 highway that connects the end of Yucatan to the rest of Mexico. It was really cool to drive the road and see the scattered small villages throughout the jungle and swamps of the Yucatan peninsula.

    • @user-hy8zy3zq8c
      @user-hy8zy3zq8c Год назад +10

      Fun fact: “Mayan” people are called maya, Mayan usually refers to the language

    • @emello4you
      @emello4you Год назад +12

      Fun fact: that's where the asteroid hit, that eliminated the prehistoric Dinosaur era 66 million years ago.

    • @scrossman27
      @scrossman27 Год назад +3

      Visited there as well a few years back. Fun fact, the resort employees referred to themselves as Mayan. 🤷‍♀️

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 Год назад +2

      @@user-hy8zy3zq8c Funner Fact: Contrary to 3rd grade, there was no “extinction event” that wiped out the Maya, only centralized power due to… oh dear. Climate change.

  • @theavgeek8283
    @theavgeek8283 Год назад +242

    I kept thinking why real life lore channel wasn't uploading its videos, it's one of my favorite channels but after watching this and the Ukraine video, I have just realized how drastically the video quality has changed and how much more the videos seem better than before. Thanks for the improvement

    • @leftward_hoe
      @leftward_hoe Год назад +6

      this channel is good for forming your baseline knowledge. i will say the videos are very well-made with respect to flow of content and visuals are pretty good too. but what i notice severely lacking is meaningful, forward-thinking analysis. it's hard for me to put into words in a short comment, which is kind of how that same problem arises with short informational videos like these. the fact that Mexico is located directly adjacent to the world's largest nuclear military superpower, the current world hegemonic leader, the current world police, influences just about everything the country could ever aspire to accomplish. this video talks about how "good" the cheap labor is in Mexico without ever attempting to touch on analysis of quality of life for such workers or any sort of class analysis for those types of people. those northern cities mostly exist in less-than-hospitable biome, why are we acting HAPPY that people have to move there to have any hope of making a living?? this video mentions "capital" acquisition, without attempting to discuss any alternative way of structuring an economy in a country where "acquiring capital" has historically proven to be difficult. again, the video is good for what it is, but what it is turned out to be a very American capitalistic centered discussion. i think anyone who understands Mexican history will see that this video kind of feels a little icky in a way that is hard to describe succinctly. car production as its major export? aren't we looking to move AWAY from depending on cars and fossil fuels? natural gas supercharging the economy? again, aren't we supposed to be looking for ways to move AWAY from relying on those kinds of things? this video definitely leaves me wondering, what the hell is Mexico going to do when the way the world operates changes? if America's global influence starts to shrink more than they are comfortable with? Mexico fostered one of the world's first thriving civilizations. Mexicans are wonderful people, i studied Spanish and focused on learning Mexican history in my curriculum. i hate to see how their people are now so exploited and their industries focused on technologies that we know are killing the planet are being spoken of with such charm and positivity in this video.

    • @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou
      @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou Год назад

      ​@@leftward_hoe
      Gas automobiles aren't going anywhere.

    • @GrandTourVideos
      @GrandTourVideos Год назад

      ​@@leftward_hoeInstead of complaining why not make changes in your life that will help the planet. Stop eating meat. Stop using single use plastics. Ride a bike instead of driving a car. Help the homeless. There's a million things you can do to help change the world, yet here you are complaining on RUclips.

  • @pswish2163
    @pswish2163 Год назад +8

    I have driven from Puerto Escondido to Oaxaca City a few times. It is a brutal drive.

  • @watchful-i
    @watchful-i Год назад +68

    I’m currently living in the mountains in Hidalgo Mexico which is part of this region. Everything he said is so accurate and it’s cool to be experiencing it.

  • @rileynicholson2322
    @rileynicholson2322 Год назад +63

    I feel like this also helps partially explain the relative affluence of Switzerland. They are a mountainous and landlocked country, sure, but because they are between several of the most powerful and wealthy nations in Europe, they are able to maintain trade anyways.

  • @tuxedoapps3532
    @tuxedoapps3532 Год назад +179

    Fascinating and so well presented. As a Texan we used to travel quite often to Mexico. I had no idea that Mexico City was at such a high elevation. Thanks for educating me on many facts.

    • @keyfield8967
      @keyfield8967 Год назад +1

      you are braver than me...

    • @thatspellsmoon
      @thatspellsmoon Год назад +5

      @@keyfield8967 how is that brave?

    • @nom3nnescio
      @nom3nnescio 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@thatspellsmoonthey're murican, they're afraid of anything unknown

  • @vizcarraorozco4740
    @vizcarraorozco4740 Год назад +3

    Just Brilliant!!!! Thanks for making it, and sharing it! Insightful.

  • @becky_lafea
    @becky_lafea Год назад +140

    I grew up in Cd. Juarez a border town. My husband is from Mexico City and I've always seen the differences between the two states, but this really has opened my eyes to different views and understandings. Just like that video states its a very complex topic, thanks for taking the time to make this video.

    • @frionelmessi2572
      @frionelmessi2572 Год назад

      Chilango nooooooo

    • @schris3
      @schris3 Год назад +6

      Actually I live in El Paso, but despite its problems Juárez will always be my home. Arriba Juárez!!

    • @harry12
      @harry12 Год назад +3

      based on my experience residents from Valley of Mexico don't really have any good impressions of border cities...

    • @Palikawii
      @Palikawii 4 месяца назад

      Juárez!!! Vivi ahí cuando era bebé, pero tuvimos que cambiarnos cuando se puso muy peligroso 😢 mis papás trabajaban en las aduanas entonces si era muy riesgoso vivir ahí aparte conmigo de bebé, pero tanto que extraño mi cuarto, sigo acordándome jasjsj 😭 todavía tenemos la casa pero la estamos rentando, quisiera regresar a esa casa algún día

  • @Presidentofthepresident
    @Presidentofthepresident Год назад +384

    I think what’s crazy about the varied geography of Mexico is that even within one country there are millions of different people living in completely different parts of the country, some in mountains, others in deserts, others in mountain deserts or coastal deserts, jungles, at varied elevations above sea level and so many different climates, it’s crazy that they all call one country home: Mexico

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak Год назад +12

      The endurance of the human spirit.

    • @elliottwilliams9221
      @elliottwilliams9221 Год назад +26

      That’s literally the same as the US and large diverse South American, African and Asian countries. It’s not exclusive to Mexico which is basically a subcontinent

    • @frescoservice5124
      @frescoservice5124 Год назад +39

      @@elliottwilliams9221USA doesn’t have any jungles and did you just compared extremely large continents to Mexico

    • @chefsteve1571
      @chefsteve1571 Год назад +1

      ​@@frescoservice5124Thats pretty insane to compare with

    • @cjthompson420
      @cjthompson420 Год назад +10

      @@frescoservice5124No? He said COUNTRIES. reading helps…,

  • @WorldWide2017
    @WorldWide2017 Год назад +57

    Mexico is indeed very mountainous. There's a drive to a forest from my parents' ranch that is only about 20 miles in distance, and yet it takes almost an hour to get there because of the elevation going up and down throughout the route.

    • @zacharyconner9319
      @zacharyconner9319 Год назад +1

      you mean mounins

    • @Hh-yd3dj
      @Hh-yd3dj Год назад +1

      Ranch sounds nice. Drive sounds nuts

    • @Matt_from_Florida
      @Matt_from_Florida Год назад +3

      I like the "third lane" (passing lane) concept practiced in Mexico.

  • @jackperson3626
    @jackperson3626 4 месяца назад

    Thanks!

  • @androidLA
    @androidLA Год назад +109

    Traveled to Monterrey in northern MX for work years ago, and as a Mexican/American I was impressed of how modernized the city was. Very industrious city.

    • @conexionneuronal8820
      @conexionneuronal8820 Год назад

      what were you expecting, a ranch?, hollywood is guilty for making foreigners think that Mexico y is a ranch with only brown people

    • @servandopereira3482
      @servandopereira3482 Год назад +3

      In some places, not all the city

    • @AlexTrip.
      @AlexTrip. 5 месяцев назад

      San Pedro is in the Metropolitan area and is actually the most expensive county in Latin America

  • @ELACAnatomyHelp
    @ELACAnatomyHelp Год назад +84

    This amazing video is a MUST SEE for US residents. It helps us to understand fundamentals of Mexico's economy (and geography) in half an hour. It's not a big deal to invest half an hour to understand our neighbor.

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Год назад

      Mexican 🌮🌯🌯🌯🌮🌮🌮🌯🌯🌯🌯

  • @MiningTheWorldYT
    @MiningTheWorldYT Год назад +166

    Fun fact: northern Mexico may be incapable of supporting large populations, but it still contributes a great deal to the Mexican economy through the mining of silver (24% of global production) and other metals including gold, copper and zinc.

    • @QuantumNoir
      @QuantumNoir Год назад +17

      Monterrey has the richest zip code in Latin America.

    • @maYTeus
      @maYTeus Год назад +20

      @@kz023 Without the civil unrest of cartels, Mexico could become too co-ordinated and become a rival. 🤠

    • @gabomarquez2720
      @gabomarquez2720 Год назад +1

      ​@@maYTeus American imperialism is fked they could try to have a monopoly on a wolrd scale but all of what they build will come crashing down by their own actions.

    • @gabomarquez2720
      @gabomarquez2720 Год назад +8

      @Kieron ZX U talking about Ovidio Guzmán, son of THE Chapo Guzmán.

    • @SuperCatacata
      @SuperCatacata Год назад +13

      @@kz023 Fun fact, Mexico could have an easier time dealing with them if the govt wasn't so corrupt.
      Lets not simply take the easy route and blame it all on the big bully up north, it makes sense for them to do what they are doing since it benefits them. Mexico's problems start with it's own incompetence. And expecting someone other than Mexico to fix it is just entitlement. Especially when fixing it offers no benefit to the US, as you've stated. It's like the US asking Mexico for help with their school shooting problem, and blaming Mexico for the fact that all these illegal/smuggled guns are being found in the hands of said children after crossing the border. Foolishness.

  • @michaelanthonysr.
    @michaelanthonysr. Год назад +8

    This is a great clip. Very informative.
    Covers so very interesting historical and environmental aspects.
    Kudos for content!!

  • @Monsuco
    @Monsuco Год назад +324

    As an American who lives in Colorado, I can kinda relate to the high altitude living thing. It's difficult for our state to deal with infrastructure in the mountains. One of the major transportation corridors through the USA, interstate 70, runs through my state and has been in desperate need of widening for decades. Nobody has ever bothered to fix this problem because it would cost so much to blast new tunnels through the Rocky Mountains and to widen roads that snake along mountain passes.

    • @iseytheteethsnake6290
      @iseytheteethsnake6290 Год назад

      Don’t widen don’t listen to the car companies propaganda! Densify if limited land and add better alternatives!

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 Год назад +33

      Widening roads isn't really a great idea, instead more public transportation should be built

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 Год назад +16

      ​@@greenmachine5600 that's a horrible idea, if you wanna take public transportation go ahead. You wanna be packed into a can full of strangers with god knows what and on god knows what more power to you.

    • @iseytheteethsnake6290
      @iseytheteethsnake6290 Год назад +33

      @@brianfitch5469 big lanes ruin cities and makes everything more expensive and less convenient! Not everyone wants to live in a car! To do anything that always “needs” a car! So stop destroying businesses just for bigger freeways! You’ll get MORE traffic not less! More walkways and bikeways separate from freeways! Like a path that goes UNDER not over through freeways so that people don’t have to exaggeratingly walk to the sky and back, and tall trucks don’t have to worry about pathways in the way.

    • @michellebosse3312
      @michellebosse3312 Год назад +9

      We do it in Canada. It can be done.

  • @FMFF_
    @FMFF_ Год назад +169

    I remember visiting my grandma 1 year and then we decided to go visit some more distant family. Being distant in both meanings, I actually got motion sickness on the trip because the mountain pass we took was made up of dozens of zigzags and lasted so long.

    • @anna-gt2mu
      @anna-gt2mu Год назад +1

      Eareaeareaeareaeareaeareaeareacool.era

    • @Longliveyt-n7z
      @Longliveyt-n7z Год назад +4

      I have to endure that every time I go to Mexico 😭

  • @Guerraedgar123
    @Guerraedgar123 Год назад +63

    Visited the most southern part of Mexico with my wife last summer and was shocked by the little amount of roads and infrastructure through the jungles of Mexico.

    • @EblemTorres
      @EblemTorres Год назад +1

      Let me guess? the coast of Oaxaca? yes it is somewhat undeveloped and visitors seems to like it, to experience the "third world", many tourist areas near the coast are in porpuse with unpaved roads and "African tropical setting" even if locals and gvt have money to pave roads or improve but they like to seem like that... and many areas are untouched, lots of rainforests a paradise for people who loves the nature.

    • @Guerraedgar123
      @Guerraedgar123 Год назад +2

      @@EblemTorres It was in Chiapas although Oaxaca is definitely still on my list, I'm from Aguascalientes where the state has grown substantially with all these factories moving in. Seeing such a green place was very refreshing.

    • @alexgomezpelaez5763
      @alexgomezpelaez5763 3 месяца назад

      ​ @EblemTorres Hello, I am from Oaxaca, the real reason why there is so little development on the coast is because it is an abandoned and very corrupt region, the majority of the budget of the State of Oaxaca is invested in the Valles Centrales region or in Salina Cruz .

    • @alexgomezpelaez5763
      @alexgomezpelaez5763 3 месяца назад

      considero que la costa tiene un aspecto más "cubano" que "africano"

  • @Murdoc111210
    @Murdoc111210 11 месяцев назад +2

    Man I really love your content and just learning about different countries and hoped that eventually you made a video on Mexico then bam this was on my recommended page. I love my country and learning about it so thank you thank you for teaching me. Thank you for your content

  • @jaimethomas8064
    @jaimethomas8064 Год назад +373

    I grew up in Texas my whole life, thought I knew a lot about Mexico, and then this video showed me I still had a whole lot to learn. Thanks for making this video! Great stuff.

    • @8drot186
      @8drot186 Год назад +4

      porque se cambiaron de bando 😔

    • @Native_Creation
      @Native_Creation Год назад +10

      and there's always more to learn about Texas as well

    • @jaimethomas8064
      @jaimethomas8064 Год назад +2

      @@Native_Creation Agreed! I learn more about my state all the time - fascinating place.

    • @teddywestside4816
      @teddywestside4816 Год назад +11

      Just cause you eat tacos doesn't mean you know mexico .

    • @jaimethomas8064
      @jaimethomas8064 Год назад +6

      @@teddywestside4816 Killer insight!

  • @Akash.Chopra
    @Akash.Chopra Год назад +346

    Cutting down the jokes and increasing the information is a wonderful change to this channel. Keep up the great work!

    • @Nobodyfromnowhere42
      @Nobodyfromnowhere42 Год назад +34

      come on , some of their jokes were well made , i liked them

    • @Fit_soldier
      @Fit_soldier Год назад

      @@Nobodyfromnowhere42so did your mom

    • @youngfreshtodeath2826
      @youngfreshtodeath2826 Год назад

      Yeah jokes are good fool where's your sense of humor

    • @jiji7250
      @jiji7250 Год назад +12

      the video is still 30 minutes for some reason lol

    • @indigo_editzz
      @indigo_editzz Год назад +13

      @@jiji7250 *29:58 🤓

  • @nathangale7702
    @nathangale7702 Год назад +106

    I'm a big fan of all of Mexico. I used to live in the south, so that's probably my favorite, but that's when I discovered my near super-human ability to live in the tropical heat, so I understand why it's not the most popular place to live...

    • @mikeramos8136
      @mikeramos8136 Год назад +7

      Very hot and humid year round

    • @liberatedentrepreneur149
      @liberatedentrepreneur149 Год назад +6

      Yeah I live in Cancún. Been here for a few years now. If you don't have an AC running, it's awful here.

    • @Toomuchbullshitt
      @Toomuchbullshitt Год назад +13

      @@liberatedentrepreneur149 that’s saying a lot because Cancun has the mildest weather out of the entire Yucatán Peninsula due to the constant sea breeze.

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +5

      @@Toomuchbullshitt i spent the last three years in Mexico traveling all over the country but spent most of my time in Playa del Carmen Cozumel Mahahual Chetumal.. anywhere along the coast there is a nice breeze but walk a few blocks inland and you know you're in the jungle...

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +5

      @@liberatedentrepreneur149 Yea along the beach the breeze keeps it cook but a few blocks inland and you know you're in the banana belt. spent the last 3 years in Mexico most of it in playa del Carmen Cozumel Mahahual Chetumal area. Would love to go back but my ex girlfriend took all my money hahaha so I'm back to working and saving money..

  • @scottrichards3587
    @scottrichards3587 8 месяцев назад +1

    FYI: Concrete curing is not much affected by humidity. It is a chemical process. It can be used in jungles. ACI offers many educational courses, I took an introductory one and was certified as level one field inspector.

  • @fortium1025
    @fortium1025 Год назад +100

    I lived and worked in Puebla for two years and absolutely love Mexico. I'm thrilled by any opportunity for Mexico to realize its potential. I'm a bit jaded towards their government as I see them as extremely abusive of their people and natural resources. I hope the day comes when Mexico enjoys the rule of law, and higher value placed on human rights. When they do, it will be heaven on earth!

    • @ixcaflores3878
      @ixcaflores3878 Год назад +8

      It's gotten somewhat better at least with the latest president cracking down on terrorist groups and corrupt tycoons. It hasn't been enough but it's something

    • @elviradelacruz5504
      @elviradelacruz5504 Год назад +2

      Thank you to said that

    • @lav7161
      @lav7161 Год назад +6

      Exactly. I love going to Mexico but not feeling protected is a huge red flag for me. At least in the U.S, you know that if you call the police that something will get settled.

    • @ixcaflores3878
      @ixcaflores3878 Год назад

      @Ziplokk that's a rather cynical point of view. Funny enough compared to previous years many Mexicans don't think moving to the USA OR Canada is all that much of an improvement. Currently most immigrants are south Americans that are still suffering from corrupt politicians

    • @KB-ke3fi
      @KB-ke3fi Год назад

      The cartels are taking it over.

  • @ricardofrags1190
    @ricardofrags1190 Год назад +32

    i grew up in chihuahua and 1 thing i missed is that everything was within walking distance, stores and everything was within walking distance, here in USA you need to drive everywhere at least in oklahoma

    • @oblivion_born7365
      @oblivion_born7365 Год назад +9

      I think especially in Oklahoma bro, i moved to eastern Colorado as a kid, I miss Juarez.

    • @thomasgrabkowski8283
      @thomasgrabkowski8283 Год назад +1

      It's also related to the fact that much higher percentage of Mexicans don't have cars compared to US as cars are a lot less affordable to the average Mexican than average American

    • @owlman_
      @owlman_ Год назад +6

      ​@@thomasgrabkowski8283 No, it's just that most cities are planned like old Europeans towns -- and heavy city center with some neighborhoods as opposed to the US where everything is city sprawl and suburbs. To get groceries in Mexico you walk 10 minutes. In the US you drive 10 minutes.

    • @WSlopeAggie
      @WSlopeAggie Год назад +4

      @@oblivion_born7365 If you're still here in Colorado and want walkable, move up to the mountains or somewhere downtown in Castle Rock, Denver, or Colorado Springs. Expensive, but the only way you get truly walkable areas. My personal favorite walkable areas are Telluride and Ouray

    • @joaquinflores3547
      @joaquinflores3547 Год назад

      @@thomasgrabkowski8283 most family I have that live in a small town of Mexico in the state of Guerrero have a car

  • @williamgrimberg2510
    @williamgrimberg2510 Год назад +67

    Wow, just learned more about Mexico than any other podcast . Thank you .😊

  • @giancarlosp7
    @giancarlosp7 15 дней назад +2

    Excellent video. Mexico and the U.S. have a strategic partnership. Both need each other to strive.

  • @josepablomunozguerrero2548
    @josepablomunozguerrero2548 Год назад +352

    As a Mexican, this video was a joy to watch :)

  • @alfiemandella2258
    @alfiemandella2258 Год назад +162

    Mexico have such a beautiful culture with beautiful people and i wish i want to travel mexico soon 🇲🇽♥️🇵🇭😍amo a mis hermanos mexicanos de filipinas

  • @CESAR-io6ob
    @CESAR-io6ob Год назад +38

    Excellent video! Super informative to give us a sense of how Mexico is constituted both geographically and economically. You outlined the advantages and challenges its own terrain poses extremely well.
    ¡Gracias! (Julio Cesar) from Tijuana, Baja California. I like your awesome videos!

  • @michaelcarlos8686
    @michaelcarlos8686 Год назад +2

    Great vid as always. How to get someone to watch something I didn’t even know I was interested in.

  • @FlowerItzel18
    @FlowerItzel18 Год назад +163

    As a Mexican from the coast of the South of Mexico (Guerrero), I am sooo glad the larger population is up north because I get the beaches all to myself when I go on vacation 🙌🏼😅

    • @analuz731
      @analuz731 Год назад +3

      Period 🤚

    • @Suyira
      @Suyira Год назад +5

      Guerrero is just poblated in Chilancingo, acapulco,taxco, and iguala

    • @curtiserecacho1401
      @curtiserecacho1401 Год назад

      😆 🤫

    • @arribaficationwineho32
      @arribaficationwineho32 Год назад +3

      As a gringa, I loved Acapulco in the late 1980s. I doubt I would attempt to to that now

    • @keyfield8967
      @keyfield8967 Год назад +4

      You can have mexico all to yourself- I will never "gamble" on visiting that cess. Cartels or federales- take your pick...

  • @jzuffoletto
    @jzuffoletto Год назад +140

    As an American who has lived in central Mexico for the past two years, this is by far the most informative and concise explanation of why things are the way they are down here. Outstanding, sir.

    • @coindog432
      @coindog432 Год назад +10

      Why do you live there?

    • @dsxa918
      @dsxa918 Год назад

      You take a cup, fill it with paint and pour it in people's pockets or purses.
      Easier access to both pockets and paints

    • @Wasteland88
      @Wasteland88 Год назад +4

      ​@@coindog432 What does it matter?

    • @ARES-zf5fz
      @ARES-zf5fz Год назад +4

      @@coindog432 It’s pretty chill in here

    • @JM-kv2kn
      @JM-kv2kn Год назад +3

      @@coindog432 Better food, people, and climate. If you can keep a US salary, Mexico is paradise.

  • @michaelrichmond408
    @michaelrichmond408 Год назад +162

    I’m from Michigan , I really want to travel across Mexico and explore all of the natural beauty and strong culture throughout and visit as many Pueblos Mágicos as I possibly can. 😂 those towns look so beautiful and inviting. Plus nothing beats Mexican food!!!

    • @Fernacho_Flopínez
      @Fernacho_Flopínez Год назад +24

      Feel free to come to Mexico! we're waiting for you with open arms, hopefully someday you will have the opportunity to come to Mexico, greetings to Michigan, USA.

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +15

      I spent the last 3 years traveling all over Mexico, many of the pueblos mágicos too. if you need some advice i can help. The main price of advice is to learn Spanish before you go, stay far away from the local police they are corrupt and will try to extort you. The locals are friendly mainly because they want your money. Ii did meet some nice people who opened their homes to me. Very gracious of them. I also met some real nasty people. Overall more friendly than USA.
      The food is okay but I have had better Mexican food here in California. Sure the tacos and most food is cheaper than here but the meat quality is not as good. Oaxaca does have the best food in Mexico in my opinion but the birria de chivo in Chapala Jocotepec was the best meal i had in Mexico.

    • @alexalexx245
      @alexalexx245 Год назад +3

      @@garycastronova7939
      all foreigners complain about the police 😅

    • @garycastronova7939
      @garycastronova7939 Год назад +2

      @@alexalexx245 well yes because the police think they have money. The police tend to ignore the locals when tourists are around...not all police it's mainly the policía turística and municipal.. and it only happened in Playa del Carmen to me but they tried in Puerto Vallarta. Everywhere else they didn't bother me.

    • @Top_Pulla
      @Top_Pulla Год назад +2

      Bruh me-too but man those cartels scare you away Mexico is so fucking beautiful and man if these food trucks taste better then most resteraunts just imagine the food there

  • @JLneonhug
    @JLneonhug Год назад +132

    This is great. I nearly knew next to nothing about Mexico till this mini documentary (besides obviously the US stereotyping in films etc). What a fascinating country. Thank you.

    • @Longliveyt-n7z
      @Longliveyt-n7z Год назад +22

      It’s a gorgeous country with a lot beautiful culture sadly overshadowed by the organized crime that runs rampant

    • @BOG0690
      @BOG0690 Год назад +6

      It's great. I get tired of only hearing tourist-related things

    • @fcplop98
      @fcplop98 Год назад +10

      @@Longliveyt-n7z theres more to mexico than cartels. just like theres more to the usa than drug problems

    • @leanne123
      @leanne123 Год назад

      Not the same at all. The cartels are roaming the country terrorizing people and mudering many innocent people every day. It is dangerous. My husband's son was killed by them.

    • @vicariouswitness
      @vicariouswitness Год назад +2

      Learning is great

  • @martharisinger2000
    @martharisinger2000 Год назад +19

    I enjoyed your content!
    I moved to Mexico 5 years ago.
    I moved to Durango a northern state.
    Dry desert hills hot dry and dusty weather with beautiful cool evening sunsets. The sky is full of stars!
    A short 5 hour drive gets me to Mazatlan Sinaloa. And the Pacific Ocean. The road down is amazing, the tunnels and bridges are jaw dropping.
    Thanks

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones Год назад

      short five hour drive? stop being crazy

    • @Ms666slayer
      @Ms666slayer Год назад +1

      @@moaningpheromones Si es gringo para ellos manejar 5 horas no es mucho,. haya hacer viajes por carreter que duran dias es algo normal.

  • @lilhecca
    @lilhecca Год назад +42

    Oh how i love that you showed the elevation map! I remember my childhood years in the high jungly cerros of Oaxaca and Veracruz! My family ancestors are said to have always reside close to ‘Pico De Orizaba’, or Orizaba, Veracruz, and the surrounding areas.

  • @eduardomorales3092
    @eduardomorales3092 Год назад +1

    Wow! didn't know or never saw any information like you are providing within this documentary, as a Mexican I am impressed by the massive information you provide here, nice job!!!

  • @Maximiliano1744
    @Maximiliano1744 Год назад +56

    21:05 most of the guns in Mexico come from the United States, though. Cartels can just buy assault riffles in a Texan Walmart and then smuggle it across the border back into Mexico.

    • @assertivekarma1909
      @assertivekarma1909 Год назад +5

      High end weapons for elite soldiers maybe, most others utilize cheaper second hand, third hand weapons, many come from cycled paramilitaries etc, Soviet surplus...

    • @yoitzep
      @yoitzep Год назад +3

      I also noticed this small mistake :)

    • @mawlinzebra
      @mawlinzebra Год назад +7

      Operation fast and furious.

  • @jaredcreel1690
    @jaredcreel1690 Год назад +50

    Very detailed, I’ve been to central Mexico several times but this really opened my eyes to the geography and history

  • @lisbon1492
    @lisbon1492 Год назад +49

    This is such a great channel. It presents so many important concepts behind geopolitics in a manner that is easy to understand. If you are a teacher in any grade (middle school, high school, or college), I highly recommend using this channel!

  • @BrendaHaltom-cs6ck
    @BrendaHaltom-cs6ck 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am learning more about the world through your channel! Thank you so much! Now I know more about Mexico than I ever have!🇺🇸😀

  • @lesterstone8595
    @lesterstone8595 Год назад +108

    I loved the explanation of how the elevation affects the weather. When I visit Mexico City in July people are often amazed that I know to take a sweater or light jacket because it is always chilly during that time even though it's blazing hot in the USA. 🥶

    • @KimonSheri
      @KimonSheri Год назад

      Ocean air

    • @FargonNemeloc
      @FargonNemeloc Год назад +9

      Thats also why we have a program in México city called "no drive today" (hoy no circula), the geographic formations around the center of México makes it a pot where we have constant thermic inversions, which trap all contaminants in the valley, to such point that sometimes in the news, health institutions recommend not going out of home and keep it sealed from outside
      The program has the intention of controlling contaminant emissions, also all cars have to get an evaluation of contaminant released every year and have installed a catalytic converter to further control emissions

    • @sergiomarincontreras5647
      @sergiomarincontreras5647 Год назад +3

      Mexico City has fresh temperatures in summer days because of rain season where it is possible to see hail every day. Some central parts of Chiapas and Oaxaca too.

    • @mikefett5989
      @mikefett5989 Год назад +1

      Sounds like Salt Lake City, but worse

    • @sashamoore9691
      @sashamoore9691 Год назад +2

      It not blazing hot in the USA. It cold in San Fran during the summers, same goes for most of norcal. Mexico City is hot all the time

  • @gera_eb2588
    @gera_eb2588 Год назад +35

    Thanks for this video, entertaining facts and neat editing. Throughout the 30 minutes never got bored and was astonished by the many facts you explained. I’m a northern mexican, and I found the whole video very interesting and my professional future promising haha.

  • @jbw53191
    @jbw53191 Год назад +38

    As a resident of Mexico, I really enjoyed this video. Very informative! I am happy to live in the temperate zone in the high, cool mountains. The climate is absolutely perfect.

    • @yelgnoow
      @yelgnoow Год назад +5

      And mango is so cheap

    • @broadcasttttable
      @broadcasttttable Год назад +1

      May I ask what city, altitude, and seasonal temp ranges? Thanks.

    • @jbw53191
      @jbw53191 Год назад +7

      @@broadcasttttable I live in the Lake Chapala region. Altitude is 4,900 ft. Temperature range is 45° to 85 °

  • @sunoo_sandia
    @sunoo_sandia Год назад +7

    Let me tell you that Veracruz is such an awesome place to visit! I'm from the port of Veracruz and it's really pretty here, there's a lot of fun stuff to do ^^

    • @josieeus4118
      @josieeus4118 20 дней назад

      Hey I’m from the port of Veracruz too

  • @cardenasr.2898
    @cardenasr.2898 Год назад +100

    One important fact to highlight was the importance of railways to shift a growing part of Mexico's population up north. The American railroads invested heavily in lines between central Mexico and the US border, which in turn fostered the urban growth of places that were mere towns like Juárez or Monterrey, or didn't even exist before the railways were built, like Torreón. Decades before the maquiladora boom, those border states were already well integrated to the US economy.

    • @armandoruiz8758
      @armandoruiz8758 Год назад

      America is not a country America it's a continent. The United States government is actually using the name of a continent. We are U S citizens. Citizens of the United States. The United States is a country but America is not a country America it's a continent. The whole entire continent was named America after Amerigo Vespucci in the year 1507. Everyone on the American continent is an American likewise Asia are Asians Africa are Africans and Europe are Europeans.

    • @cardenasr.2898
      @cardenasr.2898 Год назад +2

      @@armandoruiz8758 ¿A quién le importa esto? A tirar Spam a otra parte

    • @bebop2523
      @bebop2523 Год назад

      @@armandoruiz8758 Mexico is also “the United States” lmao, the full name of the country is “The United States of Mexico.” And if citizens of the USA aren’t supposed to use the term “American” then what are they, “United Statesians”? But then Mexicans could also be “United States ends” because their country is also another United States.

  • @amysifuentes55
    @amysifuentes55 Год назад +57

    Yeah.. my parents were born in Durango. It was definitely tough to get food and water in my moms Pueblo. She’d have to travel by foot for over an hour to get clean water. and when it rained… my dads rancho would FLOOD insanely. He said everything was by donkey, horse, foot or tractor but it’s cool to be from somewhere not many people reside to. Never have met another durangueño. My parents are so tough to survive harsh environments 🏜️🦂

    • @michaelpcooksey5096
      @michaelpcooksey5096 Год назад +5

      Is there any way to build a cistern to catch that rainwater? Also, to catch flood water in prepositioned ponds so it could be used after filtering? My father in law used a cistern to catch rainwater for drinking on his farm. He would let the rain clean the roof for awhile, then swing a pipe from the roof guttering that sent it into an underground concrete tank. He used a hand pump affair to get it out when needed.

    • @xpxpe5645
      @xpxpe5645 Год назад +5

      My nana is from Durango City but she came to Tijuana to live when she was 8 years old

    • @k.b.392
      @k.b.392 Год назад +2

      St. John's, US VI houses have cisterns. They don't have wells 'cause when it rains, the rain evaporates too fast to collect; so I was told. I was there & lifted a door in the floor to see a lot of water. I did NOT drink the water. I cooked pasta with it, tho.

    • @Moises505130
      @Moises505130 Год назад +3

      Both my parents are originally from Durango, but we live in USA now. Yes, they said it was difficult as it could get very cold and flooded as well. It's good to see another duranguense here.

    • @michaelpcooksey5096
      @michaelpcooksey5096 Год назад +3

      @@k.b.392 Boiling the water there to kill microorganisms sounds like a good idea, especially if you did not grow up in the vicinity.

  • @Travelsandmore333
    @Travelsandmore333 Год назад +18

    The reason the Yucatán peninsula has so much jungle is because most of this region is protected under a “biosphere reserve”. Meaning it cannot be destructed. It is also an area with a unique ecosystem, fauna and countless archeological site that we Mexicans love and appreciate.

  • @louisehaley5105
    @louisehaley5105 Год назад +5

    6:39- the tropical biome didn’t stop the Maya from developing agriculture in the absence of modern farming methods - what was their secret ?

    • @AlbertoSegovia.
      @AlbertoSegovia. 3 месяца назад

      Interesting,😊

    • @An-kw3ec
      @An-kw3ec Месяц назад

      Corn-maize, a very adaptable plant, that like rice and wheat, forms a base for agriculture and a huge range of food, mayans adored that plant.
      And most of yucatan is dry tropical forest instead of real jungle, so there's a drier cooler season, making tropical diseases least likely to occur at that time of the year.

  • @slwyee54
    @slwyee54 Год назад +33

    I remember as a college student taking a bus from Laredo with my Mexican American roommate all the way to Guadalajara to visit her relatives. Great video on Mexico. I understand the country more and can’t wait to visit again as a 69 yr old. This time to Mexico City.

  • @23uncbball
    @23uncbball Год назад +73

    Hope the economic growth in Mexico's north and American southwest continues. Only thing holding then back is water, but if cooperation in technology and water infrastructure comes in the future, I wouldn't be surprised if these regions led a North American manufacturing Renaissance. Best of luck to both countries.

    • @blah2blah65
      @blah2blah65 Год назад +8

      I deeply appreciate your thoughts. It sounds like you are not American nor Mexican, and yet you wish the best for both countries (and have great insight into the limiting factor of water!). I feel the same way. I wish best of luck to even the countries that are supposed to be my enemies. I'm an American so you can guess who they might be.

    • @neilpatrickhairless
      @neilpatrickhairless Год назад +7

      Cooperation in water infrastructure comes to places like Arizona about the time they elect some people that live in Arizona and understand basic infrastructure and actually work as opposed to adopting "owning the Libs on Facebook" as an all-encompassing political platform and life motto

    • @vizsla8579
      @vizsla8579 Год назад

      Delusional gringo. The Spanish speaking world is gunning for the downfall of the American empire. We need to secure lebenstraum for the growth of our people.

    • @jesuusch
      @jesuusch Год назад

      As a Mexican who was born in the Southwest US, I have hope for my ancestor’s country and for my home state that they get the recognition that they deserve.

  • @PNWDOM
    @PNWDOM 9 месяцев назад +10

    I was born in Colorado Springs. No wonder I have such a connection with Mexico. Currently in CDMX loving life!

  • @royalstory111
    @royalstory111 Год назад +107

    First, Mexico has a diverse landscape that includes deserts, mountains, and dense forests, which can make certain areas difficult to access or inhospitable for human habitation. In addition, some of the country's northern and southern regions are located in extreme climate zones that may deter settlement. For example, the northern part of Mexico is prone to drought, while the southern part is susceptible to hurricanes and other extreme weather events.
    Another factor is historical patterns of settlement. Mexico's population has traditionally been concentrated in urban areas and along the coast, while the interior and more remote regions of the country have seen less development and migration. This is partly due to economic factors, as many of Mexico's major industries, such as tourism and manufacturing, are concentrated in the coastal regions and cities.

    • @SirBoggins
      @SirBoggins Год назад

      Well said!

    • @Grigory108
      @Grigory108 Год назад

      thanks! Was looking for this TL;DR to save 29 minutes!

    • @blairc158
      @blairc158 Год назад +5

      ​@@Grigory108 nothing in this comment is what the video covers at all. doesn't even seem to line up factually, it honestly reads like it was AI generated

    • @Yha1000itz
      @Yha1000itz Год назад +2

      Not really in the coast. (When we talk about population)
      Veracruz is not even the 40th largest city in the country (Even if is the 6th largest port).
      The biggest ports in the country are Mazatlan, Culiacán (Those located in Sinaloa) Hermosillo (Sonora) and the border cities of Tijuana and Matamoros.
      The first 3, were of recent development, and the other 2, are actually border cities.
      Which seems interesting...
      Mexico is like another Afganistan, but with sea, and close to the USA. With the potential to become another Switzerland.

    • @Grigory108
      @Grigory108 Год назад

      @@blairc158 can you do TL;DR? Or link to a comment that does it? The author inflates the core of the story beyond acceptable limits, bolstering and repeating himself like viewers are idiots.

  • @Lugladen28
    @Lugladen28 Год назад +49

    Great job, I really liked your explanations that even me as a mexican haven't noticed, it is also worth noting that the historic core is slowly depopulating in favor of the more attractive nothern and in some extension southern cities, for the first time in centuries the capital have seen a decline in population, and with the US iniciative to steer away from China and turn Mexico into the new microchip manufacturer for the americas im looking forward to see what the future looks like for my country.

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Год назад

      >
      Geopolitical analyst Peter Zeihan sees a VERY bright future for Mexico and the United States both, growing with the strengths of each.
      That is a LOT more attractive than being involved in wars or potential wars in trouble spots around the world ---Ukraine and Taiwan being two of many.

  • @oppositeofh8
    @oppositeofh8 Год назад +23

    wow, what a difference this makes in understanding mexico & its economy. thanks for the detailed lesson, i really learned so much.

  • @FATHERKNOSEBEST
    @FATHERKNOSEBEST 3 месяца назад

    As a 66 year old American of Mexican ancestry, this post reminds me of that old Eagles song ;-)
    .The reference “Dead Head sticker on a Cadillac” ties in to the next part of the verse: “a little voice inside my head says you can't go back” and “those days are gone forever, I should just let them go”.
    I LOVE BOTH COUNTRIES AND WE ARE JOINED AT THE HIP 😎😇😎

  • @Michallote
    @Michallote Год назад +24

    23:03 that's UNAM, my university! I really live your videos, it helps us get the perspective of outsiders of what Mexico is like and struggles with. Even though I am mexican and already knew most of what you covered, I'm still impressed of how you achieve to piece together knowledge into clear and concise explanations. Haha you managed to teach me a lot about my own country

  • @Cena_vela
    @Cena_vela Год назад +12

    My family is from the north, from Sinaloa to be clear. It’s humid and HOT where we’re from BUT if we drop a seed ANYWHERE a tree grows. Sinaloa has some of the most fertile land in Mexico. Truly beautiful agriculture tbh.

    • @jimdandy8996
      @jimdandy8996 Год назад +1

      Isn't it dangerous there?

    • @y4go650
      @y4go650 Год назад

      @@jimdandy8996 Sinaloa is huge dude

    • @jimdandy8996
      @jimdandy8996 Год назад

      @@y4go650 Yeah, and hugely dangerous.

  • @HaroldDVasquezLopez
    @HaroldDVasquezLopez Год назад +27

    Great video on how geography can play a big role in shaping the destiny of a country like México 🇲🇽, I’d love to see a video or more about how geography and a centralized government has affected Peru a country that has shared similar history to Mexico. Greetings from Lima. 🙌🏻

  • @EmpoweredADHD
    @EmpoweredADHD 5 месяцев назад +1

    The way you say mountains is blowing my mind

  • @pacopeso8474
    @pacopeso8474 Год назад +25

    I have been living in Queretaro for the past five years. Great city and climate. Viva Mexico!

    • @FargonNemeloc
      @FargonNemeloc Год назад +1

      Tho' the slightly arid climate, the temperature makes it a real joy to live in

  • @holzlastname1976
    @holzlastname1976 Год назад +59

    I visited Mexico this past year a place called Xiltilia it was gorgeous i hope to be able to return the people were super kind the food was amazing but the scenery was even more spectacular Edward James a surrealist architecture artist built amazing buildings that look like they are from out of a dream. My husband made some friends down there that he kept in contact with so I hope that they can visit us or we may visit them in the future ❤

    • @carlosw1687
      @carlosw1687 Год назад

      Where are you from? Welcome to México hope you get back here anytime you want

    • @karlaalexa211
      @karlaalexa211 Год назад +2

      @@carlosw1687 no necesitas agradecerle 😭😂

    • @TheGoodContent37
      @TheGoodContent37 Год назад +1

      The place is called "Xilitla", not " Xiltilia". Kind correction. It's one of my favorite places in the world.

    • @enriquepatino1193
      @enriquepatino1193 Год назад +1

      Yeah this land stay in San Luis Potosi, more expecific huasteca potosina, that is me land, I living in capitol san luis potosi, when wanna come here to know a culture and food enchiladas potosinas, u are welcome girl