Chairo (slang)

"Chaira" redirects here. For the Bulgarian power plant, see Chaira Hydro Power Plant.

Chairo (feminine chaira) is a pejorative epithet used in Mexico to describe an individual who holds a far-left ideology.

Similar terms in other Spanish-speaking counties include perroflautas in Spain, zurdos in Argentina and comunachos in Chile.[1]

Etymology

In the 1960s, a chairo or chaqueto was an adolescent who was believed to masturbate in excess and as a result was self-absorbed and distracted.[2]

In her blog at El Universal, prominent blogger Tamara de Anda relates how she and her friends first tried to popularize chairo in high school to describe "neo-hippie" students that would take up camp in the best part of the school's garden.[2] She describes these students as beautiful and self-assured, that they wore fashionable clothes, went to raves and took acid and tachas. Although they came from nice homes in the south of Mexico City (see Jardines del Pedregal and San Ángel).[2] De Anda and her friends would mock these students as elitists and fake as they claimed to be left-wing whilst going to protests in their best clothes.[2] At this point to de Anda, the chairo was viewed as somewhat cool for the things that their wealth provided them.[1] The word started to acquire its current meaning in the mid 2000s. De Anda gave new impetus to the word circa 2004 when she began to use it in her blog, Plaqueta, and to describe her left-leaning friends.[2]

In 2005, while de Anda attended the Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales, she created a satirical documentary titled Los Chairos which consisted of interviews with the "chairos" of Mexico City.[1] The popularity of her blog helped increase views for the video and helped disseminate the term. Chairo then began to deform from describing something cool and fun to a word used to indicate and mock those who were demonstrating against the system.[1]

Stereotype

The term has been further popularized by social media and now encompasses a large array of attributes. Most commonly seen as a 20-something college student, the term has also been extended to journalists, academics, writers and artists.

Common traits attributed to the chairo include: a vast leftist-anarchist ideology, some sort of nationalist view (sometimes grounded on indigenismo), being indignant and fighting "the System" and globalization.[2] They are against Zionism and American imperialism. A chairo is sometimes seen as a radical that sympathizes with Socialism that is in line with Chavismo.[2] They believe that the 2006 and 2012 elections were stolen from Andrés Manuel López Obrador through electoral fraud.[2] They read La Jornada and Aristegui Noticias (see Carmen Aristegui).[2] They can have the belief that violent acts of anarchism are justified because they believe they live under a Fascist dictatorship.[2]

According to journalist Luis Castrillón,

Other stereotypes include wearing Che Guevara shirts and smoking marijuana or ingesting peyote.[1] They adhere to the philosophy of Noam Chomsky and read the works of Eduardo Galeano.[2]

A picture of writer Daniel Malpica (editor of Radiador Magazine) became a popular image macro of the "typical chairo".

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Nosotros los chairos". Chilango. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Los chairos". Milenio. Retrieved 21 November 2015.

External links

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