How Indigenous Villages Outsmart CEOs, Bureaucrats, and That Dude Who Never Brings Beer to the BBQ
In Mexico's poorest areas, collective action, where communities participate in solving public problems, is crucial for effective policy. Scholar David Morales González emphasizes communication, prior evaluation, and even AI, citing successful indigenous community management.
Let me tell you something utterly preposterous. In the dusty, forgotten corners of Mexico—places your average politician couldn’t locate on a map if you bribed them with a lifetime supply of guacamole—there are villages doing democracy better than any of us. Yes, you heard that right. While the rest of the world is busy arguing about pronouns on Twitter and whether kale is a vegetable or a punishment, these communities are quietly proving that collective action isn’t just a buzzword. It’s a roaring, grease-stained engine of progress.
Now, before you roll your eyes and mutter, “Oh, here we go, another utopian fairy tale,” let me stop you. This isn’t some hippie drum-circle nonsense. This is about survival. About not letting your neighbor starve because, frankly, you might need them to help fix your roof when the next hurricane turns your SUV into a submarine.