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New Mexico Rewrites the American Story

Episode 5527 Published 3 weeks, 1 day ago
Description
In this episode, we explore new mexico rewrites the american story. When you picture the historical formation of the United States, you're usually handed a very specific kind of one directional map. Right. The classic East Coast to West Coast narrative. Exactly. Manifest Destiny just. rolling across the continent like a tidal wave. But when you look at the historical sources for a place like New Mexico, that whole east to west map just completely shatters. It really does. It just doesn't apply there. So welcome to the deep dive. Our mission today is to unpack this region using a really comprehensive historical overview to show how New Mexico fundamentally rewrites the standard American story for you. Yeah, because we're looking at a centuries old crossroads. I mean, it's a place where ancient indigenous civilizations, Spanish conquerors, Mexican revolutionaries and American forces all just collided. And forged this incredibly complex, enduring cultural identity. Right. And the timeline we are dealing with two. And during the chaos of the expedition, some of his livestock escaped. And the biological implications of that escape are just staggering. Because the environment of the Great Plains was ecologically perfect for horses. Oh, wow. Yeah, those escapees tracing their lineage back to those specific mares, they reproduced rapidly. Within generations, indigenous tribes captured and adopted these wild herds. So this single accidental logistical error. effectively burst the continent -spanning horse culture of the Plains Indians. Exactly. It fundamentally revolutionized Native American mobility, hunting strategies, and warfare across all of North America. Talk about a butterfly effect. So the Spanish leave, but they return decades later to permanently occupy the territory. In 1598, Juan de Onata establishes the first Spanish settlement. And the historical record regarding his methods is incredibly grim. Yeah, it's brutal. When the Native Americans at a Como Pueblo, which, by the way, remains the
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