Date: June 9th, 2025 5:31 AM
Author: AZNgirl PD defending Darnell in Dad's Murder Trial
Arguments that the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) is invalid or illegitimate come primarily from historians, legal scholars, and activists who critique the circumstances under which it was signed. These arguments generally fall into the following categories:
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1. Coerced Consent / Unequal Bargaining Power
Mexico was under military occupation when it signed the treaty—U.S. forces had captured Mexico City.
The treaty was signed under duress, which, under modern international law principles (e.g., Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 1969), would render an agreement potentially void.
Key argument: A treaty signed under threat of continued invasion or annihilation is not a free contract between equals.
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2. Unconstitutional Process in Mexico
Mexico's president at the time, Manuel de la Peña y Peña, signed the treaty during a chaotic post-war interim government.
Some critics argue that this interim government lacked legitimacy or full authority to cede more than half of Mexico’s territory.
Domestic opposition to the treaty was intense within Mexico; some Mexican lawmakers and intellectuals argued that such vast land cessions were not constitutionally permitted under Mexican law.
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3. Violation of Indigenous Sovereignty
The treaty transferred lands populated by Native American nations (e.g., Apache, Navajo, Comanche) without consulting or recognizing their sovereignty.
These groups had never recognized Mexican or U.S. authority in the first place.
The argument is that the treaty was a colonial document that ignored the rights of third-party nations, violating principles of self-determination.
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4. Treaty’s Promises Were Broken
The treaty guaranteed the civil, political, and property rights of Mexican nationals in the ceded territories (Article VIII and IX).
In practice, these promises were not honored:
Many land grants were not recognized or were tied up in courts for decades.
Mexican-Americans faced discrimination, disenfranchisement, and dispossession.
Some argue this breach of treaty terms retroactively undermines its legitimacy, or at least calls into question its legal force.
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5. Racial and Expansionist Ideologies
The war and treaty were driven by Manifest Destiny—a racialized ideology of Anglo-Saxon supremacy and territorial expansion.
Critics argue the treaty was a product of imperialism, not a fair international agreement.
It served to legitimize conquest under the pretense of legality.
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6. Lack of Modern Legal Standards
The treaty was signed long before modern international law codified standards for treaty validity, human rights, and self-determination (e.g., United Nations Charter, 1945).
From a modern perspective, the treaty might be seen as violating jus cogens norms (peremptory norms of international law), especially regarding:
Wars of aggression
Forced cessions
Denial of civil rights
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Summary
Argument Basis
Coerced Consent Treaty signed under military occupation
Unconstitutional under Mexican law Interim gov’t lacked full legitimacy
Indigenous Sovereignty Ignored Native nations never consented
Treaty Violations by U.S. Promises to Mexicans in ceded lands not upheld
Racist/Imperialist Motivations Manifest Destiny ideology taints legitimacy
Violates Modern Legal Norms Would not meet standards of Vienna Convention or UN Charter
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Let me know if you want legal citations or court cases where these arguments have been raised (e.g., in land disputes or UN submissions).
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5735138&forum_id=2#48998740)