Why so much HATE against Mexico?
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Why would Americans be jealous of anything Mexico has? Boxing wise America has a better history and presently has more top fighters than Mexico. Sure, they have more paper belts but who from Mexico is actually ranked in P4P lists? JMM and that's it. Mexicans dominate lower divisions but most of their fights are against other Mexicans and third world countries. Americans are fighting the best in the world, countries that actually have real athletes in boxing. Mexican boxing is nothing compared to American boxing, not even remotely on the same level of history or importance.
As for other things, things that matter like cash, lifestyle, or anything else that matters...........what can I say other than Americans don't go to live in Mexico. While Mexicans come in droves to try to come into this nation.
Mexico is a great boxing nation, with great food, women and people but please don't try to say Americans are jealous of Mexico.Comment
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Mathysse is argentian and lara is Cuban.Well they work hard and it's not like Mexicans have it the easiest, the Hispanic fighters for the most part always have the raw end of the deal.
devon alexander vs mathysse
judah vs mathysse
broner vs ponce delon
mike jones vs soto karass 1
williams vs lara
and the list keeps on going..
saludosComment
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You're just another jealous rican that envies Mexico.ALL PROVEN CHEATERS OR QUITTERS. Now go suck a **** ***ing hypocrites
Mares
Castillo
Ortiz
Hoya
Israel Vasquez
Raul Marquez
Julio C. Chavez
Tony Ayala Jr
Julio Diaz .
Marco Antonio Rubio
Rafael Marquez
Israel Vasquez
Jhonny Gonzales
Alfonzo Sanchez
Tomas Rojas
Castillo
Chavez jr
Margaplaster
Puerto Rico is living off of Mexico's reources.
you, like all ricans, are living om welfare from the US through Mexican Gold, that the US stole in the 1840's.
As you can see, you and the ricans are hypocrites that live off of Mexico's resources.
Margarito never cheated. He tried to use plaster inserts against Mosley cause Mosley was on Steroids.
all those Mexican fighters that quit were Old and past their primes.
Cotto kneeled down to Margarito.
Juanma was exposed as overrated and beaten by Salido.
Puerto Rico only has 1 world champion, while Mexico has about 20 World Champions right now.
again, its a Jelousy thing that you have.
Live with it.
Last edited by MexicanPoster; 08-14-2011, 05:32 PM.Comment
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Its the truth.
Here are some facts from a different site.
By 1189, the city of London was an absolute mess. The population had grown rapidly, and many of its inhabitants lived in squalor. London did have public and private facilities called garderobes. A garderobe was a toilet, or bank of toilets, either in a private castle or public hall. It was connected to a pipe through the side of the building that housed it. The waste emptied directly into a pit, moat, or river directly outside the building. A huge public garderobe emptied directly into the Thames river, causing stench and disease for the entire population of London. The Thames river was squalid and ripe with the smell of rotting sewage. A public law, written in 1189 by the London Health Board, stated that garderobes must be walled in, or at least 5 1/2 feet from the nearest neighbor. The law did little to improve sanitary conditions.
The garderobe was no longer built by the year 1530, and the close stool was the newest modern convenience. The close stool was simply a chair with a hole cut into the seat, and a porcelain or metal pot underneath, which needed to be removed and emptied. The stool was often equipped with handles for traveling. This was a great invention for Kings and Queens, Noblemen and Ladies. The poor still relieved themselves in the street, or in a bucket or cistern inside their homes called a chamber pot.
What did these people do with the waste? They threw it out into the street, of course. They would shout "gardez l'eau" (watch out for the water) before tossing the contents of their chamber pot out an open window or door, usually to the dismay of the passers by on the street. In the early 1800's, Londoners would rather live with the stench and filth than pay higher taxes to have underground sewer systems installed. The public had not yet made the association with sewage and disease.
R.H Mottram, in 1830, stated in a public report regarding the streets of Leeds, England: "568 streets were taken in for examination . . . Whole streets were flooded with sewage . . . The death rate in the clean streets was 1 in 36; and in the dirty streets; 1 in 24." Children seemed to be dying at an amazing rate. Death rates for children were 480 per thousand in the city, while in the country, the death rate for children was 240 per thousand. The rulers, as well as the public, knew that something must be done. Cholera was rampant and the smell was unbearable. Louis Pasteur, a noted scientist, convinced Europe that if drinking water came from a well, it may be contaminated from any number of nearby cesspits, and if it came from a river, it was most certainly contaminated. The Cholera epidemic between 1844-1855 claimed 20,000 lives, and something had to be done, so London built a sewer system. With the new sewer system came the need for a toilet that flushed with water in order to prevent the future spread of disease, so the flush toilet was born.
[they later, got their flushing ideas from Mexico's natives]Comment
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You sir might need to look up on your History, specifically in Rome (England isn't the only place in Europe).Its the truth.
Here are some facts from a different site.
By 1189, the city of London was an absolute mess. The population had grown rapidly, and many of its inhabitants lived in squalor. London did have public and private facilities called garderobes. A garderobe was a toilet, or bank of toilets, either in a private castle or public hall. It was connected to a pipe through the side of the building that housed it. The waste emptied directly into a pit, moat, or river directly outside the building. A huge public garderobe emptied directly into the Thames river, causing stench and disease for the entire population of London. The Thames river was squalid and ripe with the smell of rotting sewage. A public law, written in 1189 by the London Health Board, stated that garderobes must be walled in, or at least 5 1/2 feet from the nearest neighbor. The law did little to improve sanitary conditions.
The garderobe was no longer built by the year 1530, and the close stool was the newest modern convenience. The close stool was simply a chair with a hole cut into the seat, and a porcelain or metal pot underneath, which needed to be removed and emptied. The stool was often equipped with handles for traveling. This was a great invention for Kings and Queens, Noblemen and Ladies. The poor still relieved themselves in the street, or in a bucket or cistern inside their homes called a chamber pot.
What did these people do with the waste? They threw it out into the street, of course. They would shout "gardez l'eau" (watch out for the water) before tossing the contents of their chamber pot out an open window or door, usually to the dismay of the passers by on the street. In the early 1800's, Londoners would rather live with the stench and filth than pay higher taxes to have underground sewer systems installed. The public had not yet made the association with sewage and disease.
R.H Mottram, in 1830, stated in a public report regarding the streets of Leeds, England: "568 streets were taken in for examination . . . Whole streets were flooded with sewage . . . The death rate in the clean streets was 1 in 36; and in the dirty streets; 1 in 24." Children seemed to be dying at an amazing rate. Death rates for children were 480 per thousand in the city, while in the country, the death rate for children was 240 per thousand. The rulers, as well as the public, knew that something must be done. Cholera was rampant and the smell was unbearable. Louis Pasteur, a noted scientist, convinced Europe that if drinking water came from a well, it may be contaminated from any number of nearby cesspits, and if it came from a river, it was most certainly contaminated. The Cholera epidemic between 1844-1855 claimed 20,000 lives, and something had to be done, so London built a sewer system. With the new sewer system came the need for a toilet that flushed with water in order to prevent the future spread of disease, so the flush toilet was born.
[they later, got their flushing ideas from Mexico's natives]
Latrines, Aqueducts etc etc, all before Europeans even knew America existed, Cloaca Maxima was built around 800 (?) years previous, you're trying to tell me that the Aztec were the only people not using buckets to remove waste and we must of got the idea from them ?.Comment
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mexi****s are the dirtiest cheaters in the game and last night's fight proved it, I said it before and I will say it again F uck abner mares and the rest of his cheating mexi****s.Comment
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i hate those cartels who run that **** country. yet, we snort their cokes like there's no tomorrow. lol
AMERICA!!!
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