Democracy will be the same word around the world, but it however will not necessarily mean the same thing. As our cultures have become so diversified in the recent years so has our view of democracy.
The …show more content…
It is a government that contains various parties which usually acquire popularity during elections. Around 1867, equity still not being provided, the Mexican economy was raised by the rich landowners taking away the peasants few lands. You ask, “How does this relate to democracy?” Will its outcome surely does, because this deprivation caused riots to breakout. As well as, extreme social unrests. Ex-president, Porfirio Diaz, claimed that the government was a democracy though no one has the power to go against him. To the people of Mexico rights, freedom, voice and no …show more content…
I was born there and thankfully came to America when I was five. The time period when I was born was one of the worst one’s ever. To my luck my mom worked at a hospital and my father was a school principal. I lived perfectly fine but “what about all the other people?” for years and years the people of Cuba have suffered communism. They don’t have a voice. They live in fear and anything that they do whether intentionally or not could take a turn for the worst. For them democracy means being able to travel, without so many restrictions, the chance to a better future, the end to hunger, the right to better houses, better classrooms, better jobs, and just simply a way better life. In conclusion, democracy to the people of Cuba means freedom of speech. They aren’t allowed to speak their minds freely, and that can be depressing because you aren’t able to express