History of the Conquest of Mexico, with a Preliminary View of the Ancient Mexican Civilization, and the Life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortés William H. Prescott (1843; 1891 David McKay edition), Volume II
If Volume I introduced readers to the astonishing world of ancient Mexico, Volume II is where the conquest becomes a full-blown collision of civilizations, religions, and empires.
Prescott follows Hernán Cortés and his small Spanish force as they march ever deeper into the Mexican interior, accompanied by thousands of indigenous allies and guided by the indispensable interpreter Doña Marina. Every step takes them closer to the heart of an empire ruled by Montezuma II, a monarch increasingly haunted by omens, prophecies, and uncertainty about the strangers advancing toward his capital.
What many people never learn is that Prescott does not describe the Mexica merely as warriors. He presents a civilization with laws, courts, schools, merchants, engineers, astronomers, poets, priests, and one of the most impressive cities ever seen in the Americas. Yet woven through every part of society was a powerful religious system centered on gods such as Huitzilopochtli, Tezcatlipoca, and the mysterious feathered serpent Quetzalcoatl.
Prescott describes vast temple complexes, an organized priesthood, sacred calendars, fasting, rituals, and ceremonies that governed daily life.
The most shocking event of the volume is the infamous Cholula massacre. According to the accounts Prescott follows, Cortés became convinced that a conspiracy had been laid against his army. At a signal, Spanish troops and their Tlaxcalan allies fell upon the city. Panic erupted. Nobles, warriors, and civilians were cut down as buildings burned and the streets filled with the dead. Prescott treats the episode as one of the darkest and most controversial moments of the conquest, a bloodbath whose memory would echo throughout Mexico.
The march then continues into the mountains. The Spaniards climb toward the great volcanoes overlooking the Valley of Mexico, enduring cold, altitude, and dangerous terrain before reaching one of the most celebrated moments in conquest literature. Below them lay a breathtaking landscape of lakes, cultivated fields, towns, floating gardens, and, in the distance, the gleaming island city of Tenochtitlan.
Nothing prepares them for the capital itself. Crossing the great causeways over the lake, they enter a city that left even hardened conquistadors astonished. Prescott describes broad avenues, canals crowded with traffic, markets overflowing with goods, palaces, gardens, temples, and a population numbering in the hundreds of thousands.
At the center of it all stood Montezuma II. Prescott portrays him not as a fool, but as an intelligent and experienced ruler trapped between political reality and spiritual fear. Reports of strange omens, prophecies, and traditions concerning the possible return of Quetzalcoatl weighed heavily on his mind. Whether those traditions truly influenced his decisions remains debated, but Prescott believed they were a crucial part of the emperor’s hesitation.
One of the most fascinating aspects of Volume II is that both sides believed they were acting within a divine drama. The Spaniards saw themselves as soldiers of Christianity carrying the Cross into a pagan empire. The Mexica interpreted events through their own sacred traditions, priests, prophecies, and gods. Neither side fully understood the other, yet both believed history and heaven were on their side.
This is a clash between two sophisticated worlds, each possessing remarkable achievements, deep religious convictions, extraordinary courage, and terrifying capacities for violence.
Volume II is the calm before the storm the tense, unforgettable march from Cholula to Tenochtitlan, where wonder, fear, prophecy, diplomacy, faith, and bloodshed converge before the empire’s fate is decided.
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How many people has Elon Musk personally murdered via his work helping defund USAID? I've run the numbers.
USAID, as people outside of CNN's viewership already know, operates largely as a CIA cutout, placing assets on the ground in countries where the U.S. govt is intervening politically.
USAID was instrumental is helping seed the following revolutions/coup d'états/civil wars:
Serbia — Bulldozer Revolution (Oct. 2000)
Venezuela — coup attempt + sustained OTI funding (April 2002)
Georgia — Rose Revolution (Nov. 2003)
Ukraine — Orange Revolution (2004)
Haiti — Ouster of Aristide (Feb. 2004)
Lebanon — Cedar Revolution (2005)
Belarus — opposition funding, "Jeans Revolution" and after — attempted, failed (2006)
Honduras — Coup against Zelaya (Jun. 2009)
Cuba — ZunZuneo / "Cuban Twitter" — attempted, failed (2010–12)
Tunisia — "Arab Spring" (2011)
Egypt — "Arab Spring" (2011–12)
Ukraine — Euromaidan / Revolution of Dignity (2014)
Bolivia — anti-Morales funding; 2013 expulsion; 2019 ouster
Kyrgyzstan — Tulip Revolution (March 2005)
Without U.S. intervention, it's hard to see how any of these would have gotten off the ground. Some back-of-the-envelope math on these conflicts' bodycount:
Venezuela (2002): 19
Haiti (2004): ~300
Maidan event (2014): ~100+ killed.
Bolivia (2019): 36
Donbas war (2014–2022): 14,200–14,400 military & civilian deaths.
Ukraine full-scale war (2022–present), deaths, both sides, mil + civ: roughly 350,000–500,000 killed.
So far we're up to somewhere north of 365,000 deaths, more likely north of 500K.
What else do we have?
USAID also helped fund poppy (heroin) farmers in Afghanistan. Unfortunately I haven't seen estimates of how many have died as a result of this taxpayer funded drug dealing, but I'm assuming they're not small numbers.
USAID also worked with groups sexually abusing/trafficking children in Kenya (2021), and the Central African Republic (2013).
Much earlier, during Vietnam, USAID helped the CIA arm & feed Hmong guerrillas fighting communist forces (not the worst thing). USAID also helped the Hmong militia & other warlords smuggle opium (a far less forgivable thing).
While the final tally is hard to properly calculate, if past is predicate, in helping shutdown USAID,
@elonmusk could be saving hundreds of thousands of lives, thousands of African children, & millions of people around the world susceptible to opiate addiction.
Get this man a Peace Prize,
@NobelPrize
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