The history of the Mexican Revolution cannot be told without understanding the role of Ricardo Flores Magón, his brother Enrique and the core revolutionaries of La Junta that laid the intellectual foundation for ousting the Dictator Porfirio Diaz. Flores Magón’s weekly La Regeneración calling out the Diaz regime’s crimes, corruption, and illegitimacy so rankled the regime that La Junta became an internationally hunted group of “bad Mexicans.”
Lytle Hernandez beautifully lays the groundwork for a thorough understanding of the role of Flores Magón and his followers. From the beginnings of radicalization in Mexico City to their exile in the United States and Canada, the story of the Magonistas is a roller coaster of radical, underground agitation. Emiliano Zapata, Francisco Madero, Alvaro Obregon, and Pascual Orozco are but a few of the future revolutionaries of the Mexican Revolution (1910 to 1920) that read Regeneración and subscribed to many of Flores Magón’s convictions. The looming question of Lytle Hernandez’s thorough history of the movement is why Flores Magón and his followers did not succeed in providing the spark that set off the first social revolution of the 20th century. The author skillfully paints the picture of Flores Magón not only threatening the Diaz regime but in the process posing a palpable danger for American investments in Mexico totaling more than five hundred million by the first decade of the 20th century. As a result, the entire weight of the US government came down on the movement. The federal government undertook the hunt of the Magonistas with the US Marshalls Service, the Secret Service, and, after 1908, the newly constituted Bureau of Investigation. In a shocking abdication of US sovereignty, the Diaz Administration, with tacit approval of the US government, employed its consuls and private agents, most notably the Furlong Detective Agency, to not only provide intelligence but also capture and illegally deport fugitives to Mexico. By the time the Mexico exploded in revolution, Flores Magón and his followers, as well as scores of sympathizers were either imprisoned or killed.
The source material of the book is mostly secondary but covers a large swath of the existing historiography, albeit with a palpable slant to the left ideological spectrum which leads the author to wade into dangerous territory. For example, the Plan de San Diego raids in South Texas in 1915 and 1916 were not “a legacy of the P.L.M. [Partido Liberal Mexicana]” (p. 301) but rather a cynical political tool of the Mexican strongman Venustiano Carranza to force the US government to recognize him as president. It is also beyond dispute that Francisco Madero pursued land reform as part of his platform, albeit through legal reforms and not by force.
The ultimate failure of Ricardo Flores Magón and his movement was that it did not play a role in the Revolution that started in earnest in 1911. He had radicalized over the years in prison and on the run, and his health likely affected his judgement. As a declared anarchist, shunned by the people who finally ousted the dictator, and abandoned by his moderate supporters, Flores Magón died in a US prison from lack of medical care. Lytle Hernandez, in her justified admiration of the activism and persistence of the Magonistas, describes the movement as such: “The men and women who built the PLM were ordinary people: migrants, exiles, and citizens, farm workers, sharecroppers, miners, and intellectuals.” (p. 308) However, the leaders were not. They were intellectuals and brilliant, dedicated journalists who failed in their multiple attempts of armed revolt because they lacked organizational discipline (Juan Sarabia was arrested with the entire subscriber list of Regeneración on him), and military acumen. Most notably, they failed to connect with common Mexicans and, as a consequence, lacked broad popular support, precisely because they were not ordinary people.
Lytle Hernandez new history of Ricardo Flores Magón and his followers is a riveting account of an idealistic, radical movement that rattled not only the Mexican government but also the United States. Bad Mexicans is well researched and written in a way that is hard to put down. Lytle Hernandez did a masterful job to shine a light on a period in Mexican-American relations that has remained largely in the dark.
I received a free copy from the Publisher for this review.