Boys only a mother could love?
And what kind of "Mutha" are you talking about.....
I'm guessing the Mayans and Azteca also went crazy with tattoos..... looks like I was right.
____________
http://64.233.187.104/search?q=cache:iHMJ-mrO9fEJ:www.rankmytattoos.com/tattoos/cultural-tattoos/mexican-tattoos/+Mayans++tattoos&hl=en
Mexican tattoos are a highly decorative and rapidly growing sector of the tattoo community. With their elaborate use of color and vivid imagery, no single tat style seems to merge the ancient and the modern like these popular tattoo designs.
Mexican tattoos derive much of their look from the ancient art of the Mayans and the Aztecs. Though both cultures employed the use of tattoos, mostly to mark slaves and convicts, Mexican tattoos are influenced by the religious art these cultures used to appease the fickle gods that ruled their everyday life, not the crude lines they called tattoos. Examples of this can be found in Mayan gods like Chac and Ah-Puc, with their connections to fertility and death, which makes for striking tattoo designs with rich use of color and exaggerated physical features.
Some of the most popular Mexican tattoos are those of the Aztec variety. Aztec tattoos are not only visually striking, but they represent a nationalistic pride of ancient Mexico. Tattoos of this type that remain popular are Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent messiah, and Chalchiuhtlicu, the god of youth.
Mexican tattoos also echo the bridge between the pagan and the Christian world. The catholic influence on Mexican art can be found in tattoos that show Day of the Dead motifsmost recognizable with skeletons in highly stylized and celebratory tableaus. These continue to be some of the requested tattoos around.
Another, somewhat controversial, form of Mexican tattoos is prison gang art. Often administered both inside prisons and in outside tattoo parlors, Mexican tattoos of this kind declare ones allegiance to the Mexican prison subculture and most notably the Mexican mafia and its arch rival, La Nuestra Familia. The Mexican Mafia, or ESE as it is known, has the instantly recognizable image of an eagle holding a snake, while La Nuestra Familia is portrayed by a tattoo depicting a sombrero with a machete through it.
No matter what kind of Mexican tattoo it is, all of them seem to share the role of celebrating ones affiliation to a culture. This continues to make them popular tat choices. Because of their cultural importance, its imperative that your tattoo artist has experience in the genre so that your tat looks as good as it can be-and is worthy of a heritage that is thousands of years old.