Well it is that time of year again !!!!......cinco de mayo !!.....another excuse for people to get fucking hammered !!!!........they really do not need an excuse .....but if they fuck up .......they can blame the cartel fuckers (mexicans ).....now pablo is gone they cannot blame him .....)... ........listen it is like st patricks day .......alcohol and food .......any reason to get plastered/hammered/fucked up/drunk as fuck/pissed/jan leeming.... ...steaming/blootered/snottered/elephant's....elephant's trunk.....drunk..............you get the idea......because the mass of people hate their fucking lives ......if you did a survey....... and stopped a thousand people on their way to work .......this would give you the average .....pissed of worker.....and any escape via drugs/alcohol.......it's a fucking fact jack .....i am just telling it like it is .......Listen i live in Scotland........ in a shitty fucking frozen...... religiously divided ......fucking breeding stalls...... and alcoholism was rampant......people hate reality ........reality is for people who cannot handle drugs .......and drugs are for people who cannot handle reality.... .......simple as pie my friends ...... ......but at the end of it a ll .....when the buzz wears off .....you are right back to where you started only poorer,......yep .....skip!!!!! ......who fucking said life was easy ......
Anyways ....... enjoy your nachos and tequila ......
Cinco de Mayo
Recent News
Cinco de Mayo, holiday celebrated in parts of Mexico and the United States in honour of a military victory in 1862 over the French forces of Napoleon III.
When in 1861 Mexico declared a temporary moratorium on the repayment of foreign debts, English, Spanish, and French troops invaded the country. By April 1862 the English and Spanish had withdrawn, but the French, with the support of wealthy landowners, remained in an attempt to establish a monarchy under Maximilian of Austria and to curb U.S. power in North America. On May 5, 1862, a poorly equipped mestizo and Zapotec force under the command of General Ignacio Zaragoza defeated French troops at the Battle of Puebla, southeast of Mexico City; about 1,000 French troops were killed. Although the fighting continued and the French were not driven out for another five years, the victory at Puebla became a symbol of Mexican resistance to foreign domination. The city, which was later renamed Puebla de Zaragoza, is the site of a museum devoted to the battle, and the battlefield itself is maintained as a park.
The day is celebrated in the state of Puebla with parades, speeches, and reenactments of the 1862 battle, though it is not much noticed in most of the rest of the country. In the mid-20th-century United States, the celebration of Cinco de Mayo became among Mexican immigrants a way of encouraging pride in their Mexican heritage. Critics observed that enthusiasm for the holiday celebration did not take off with a broader demographic until it was explicitly linked with the promotion of Mexican alcoholic beverages and that many U.S. festivities tended to both perpetuate negative stereotypes of Mexicans and promote excessive drinking.
Cinco de Mayo is not to be confused with Mexican Independence Day, which falls on September 16. The latter holiday was established in 1810, some 50 years before the
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