Considering Zapatismo as the first anti-systemic movement to emerge after the supposed end of ideologies, this paper analyzes the discourses of the EZLN during its first stage (1994-1996). Inserting it within the new cycle of protests of the 1990s, we analyze the discourses of this movement until the signing of the San Andres Accords on February 16, 1996 in order to try to establish the keys to the political, economic and social thinking of a movement that gave hope back to the left in the 1990s.