“The Gaitanist (Gaitanists were supporters of left-wing populist politician Jorge Eliécer Gaitán) Tribe,” a Colombian political cartoon from 1948 showing a horde of gigantic, stereotypically-depicted Gaitanist Negroes knifing a helpless White man, presumably to cannibalize him.
Owing to his dark skin, Gaitán (image 1) was nicknamed "El Negro" by many of his conservative political opponents, most notably Laureano Gómez (image 2), who was the leader of the hardline wing of Colombia's Conservative Party.
From 1932 onward, and in large part thanks to the aggressive attack campaign waged by the ardently conservative newspaper El Siglo (the same newspaper which published this cartoon), “little by little the name 'El Negro Gaitán' gained ground in the cafes and salons of Bogotá.”
"The Old Left wasn't about pushing cultural degen-"
Rühle also proclaimed that "for the first time, the conditions are given for the sexual community to become a union of free people who are neither economically nor spiritually dependent on one another... free love is completed in free marriage."
Quite unrelated, but this is a major reason of why users who say that Spain's prime mistake while colonizing the Americas was not doing what Britain did don't know what they are talking about.
Spain didn't have the logistical capacity to do what the British did across a much larger swath of land.
An even larger factor at play is population, this was a two-angle issue in our case, firstly, the Amerindian density in regions that we colonized (such as Méjico and the Andes) was far higher than in the Thirteen Colonies.
The following excerpts come from Antonio Cánovas del Castillo, a center-right liberal conservative politician who was extremely influential in late 19th-century Spain, being Prime Minister five times.
It's interesting to compare and contrast the racial views of the 19th-century center-right with the racial views of the modern center-right with their “opportunity zones” and “minority empowerment areas.”
The excerpts come from an interview granted on November 17 1896 to the journalist Gaston Routier of the French newspaper “Le Journal.” Cánovas was the Prime Minister of Spain at the time.