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Thread 17978141

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Anonymous No.17978141 >>17978147 >>17978201 >>17978306
The best regions of Latam were settled by Jesuits
>Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, Urugya, South Brazil
>Jesuitic bulwarks
The most industrious regions and most willing to adopt openly new but working trends arriving from the old continent.

>Venezuela, Colombia, California, New Mexico, Central America
>Franciscan strongholds
strong social justice and marxist influences

>Peru, Mexico, Bolivia, Ecuator, Antilles, Guatemala
>Dominican forts
literally the Pajeets/Arabs Talibans of the New World


It is just a curious pattern desu
Anonymous No.17978144 >>17978153 >>17978306
California is the largest sub-national economy in the world thoughbeit
Also why include California and New Mexico if you're not going to include Texas?
Anonymous No.17978147
>>17978141 (OP)
>Benedictines
Just drinking some good beer.
Anonymous No.17978153 >>17978170
>>17978144
>economy centered around porn, drugs, nignogs, feminism and silicon idiots
Kek, truly role models
Anonymous No.17978170
>>17978153
>Kek, truly role models
Indeed
Anonymous No.17978201
>>17978141 (OP)
>Focusing the finger pointing at the Moon instead of the Moon
There is another key distinction over the areas you listed. Its much more likely that that criteria unlike which flavours of monks each one got decided their individual developement
(hint on the left)
Anonymous No.17978306
>>17978141 (OP)
>>17978144
Baja California was under Jesuits administration. Alta California was about to be evangelized when the Spanish king suppressed the order. The plans and resources for the missions in Alta California were immediately inherited by the Franciscans. It's part of the reason California turned out better. The other reasons of course being access to the Pacific Ocean, decent climate and soil, a more or less easy going native population, and a steady trickle of American and British sailors willing to jump ship, live in the missions, and build up the territory.