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lunes, julio 17, 2006

Y SIGUE EL CORREO DEL BLOG

REPORTE DE LA MARCHA:

Que impresionante marcha, hay un ánimo estupendo. La gente esta convencida que Andres Manuel López Obrador es el verdadero Presidente de México. Por otro lado quiero aclarar que hubo dos grupos uno que llego al Zócalo y otro que se quedo a la altura de avenida Juárez. Por eso digo y lo puedo afirmar, ESTA ES LA MARCHA MAS GRANDE QUE HAYA VISTO MEXICO en toda su historia¡¡¡¡¡¡¡

Y por cierto no me dieron pal chesco y ningún changuis, fuí por mi propia voluntad. Para que les quede bien claro panistas de mierda.

Hay les mando a su pinche jefe panista que no va a pasar de ser una simple mierda, pa que les quede claro cabrones.


Estas son las imágenes que nos envía este lector:




OTRO REPORTE:
Quisiera compartir con ustedes una experiencia que muestra, en general, la calidad moral de quienes apoyamos a AMLO:

Estuve en la marcha por la democracia, dicen que éramos un millón cien mil, no sé, éramos todos... El comportamiento y el ambiente que privó fue de alegría, la alegría de saberse luchando por una causa noble; fue de solidaridad, la solidaridad de un pueblo que desea caminar por un rumbo de bienestar para todos; de camaradería, la camaradería de saberse entre amigos; de generosidad, la generosidad de darnos unos a otros; de cuidado, cuidado a las personas que traían niños y a los adultos mayores.

Pero en concreto, lo que más me conmovió fue lo siguiente: al término de nuestra fiesta democrática me regresé en el metro, llegaban los vagones arrojando vivas y vítores a López Obrador y los que estábamos en el andén coreábamos; cuando por fin pude entrar a un vagón estaba atascado, no cabía un alfiler. En el trayecto, un señor empezó a gritar: ¡Viva López Obrador! y todos repetimos, así lo hicimos tres veces; luego gritó: ¡Viva México! igual respondimos tres veces; pero luego gritó: ¡Muera Calderón! y nadie respondió. Esto para mi, expresa que quienes estamos dentro de este movimiento somos hombres y mujeres de buena voluntad como dice AMLO, que no deseamos mal a nadie sino verdaderamente el bien para todos.

Vamos a luchar por nuestra democracia: "como se pueda, con lo que se pueda y hasta donde se pueda".



DENUNCIA CONTRA LÍDER PERREDISTA DE DURANGO:
No se vale que aquí en Durango Capital todos los que votamos por el Sr. lópez obrador lo hicimos por convicción y sin presión de ningún tipo,lo hicimos por que queremos un méxico mejor.a pero el actual Presidente del Comité del PRD, Profr. José Arreola no saque la casta y no explote el espacio que le han dado los medios de comunicación para tomar una postura desidida y contundente a favor de la lucha en contra del fraude del 2 de julio, se da el lujo de llegar tarde a las rueda de prensa, se levanta para no salir en la foto,no asistó a la reunión con el actual Gobernador. Estoy indignada porque no sabe que se debe al Partido no a sus intereses personales y si sigue así mejor QUE REGRESE A SU ESCUELITA QUE ESTA EN LA SIERRA DE DGO. y deje de jugar al POLITICO. Es mi apresiación muy particular gracias.


COMENTO:
¿Ven por que decimos que este movimiento a favor de la democracia ya rabasó al PRD? No son los perredistas; es LA GENTE quien pide que se respete su voto.


SU HONESTIDAD HARÁ HISTORIA:




LA PERRA MOTA:
Acabo de ver a la Chepa Vázquez Marihuana en la TV con Denise Dresser. Estaba con esa sonrisa de "ya te chingaste, ja ja ja" diciendo que confiaba en el TRIFE, ¿no será que ya andan haciendo arreglos con los jueces? Porque cuando la perra enseña los dientes, carne quiere.


COMENTO:
A mi también se me ha hecho muy sospechosa la actitud de los panistas en los últimos días. Habrá que esperar y ver si los magistrados del TRIFE de verdad permiten que se cuenten los votos, o si lanzan al país al caos.



INFORMACIÓN INTERNACIONAL:
A pesar de que la prensa internacional ha tenido una actitud tendenciosa en relacion a las elecciones, quisiera traer a su atencion el sitio ZNet http://www.zmag.org/weluser.htm prensa independiente comprometida con el cambio, que ha publicado articulos criticos y correctamente informados sobre el proceso electoral en Mexico.

Aqui les envio los enlaces a los articulos mas relevantes:

Democracy in Mexico Part II // Stephen Lendman
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10563

Mexico´s fixed Election// Stephen Lendman
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10540

Mexico´s Democratic Transition Still Incomplete// Mark Engler
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10544

Mexican Election´s Mired in Anomalies// John Gibler
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10565




NOS ENVÍAN NOTA DEL NEW YORK TIMES:

Crowds Rally Again to Demand Recount in Mexico


Jennifer Szymaszek for The New York Times
Andrés Manuel López Obrador waves to thousands of supporters who gathered in Mexico City to back his call for a recount of the election.



By GINGER THOMPSON
Published: July 17, 2006
MEXICO CITY, July 16 — For the second time in eight days, thousands of supporters of the leftist presidential candidate, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, filled this city’s historic central plaza to demonstrate their support for his demand for a vote-by-vote recount of Mexico’s disputed July 2 election.

The crowds at this rally — several hundred thousand — were considerably larger than the last and seemed to indicate that the movement started by the embattled former mayor of Mexico City remained strong.

Mr. López Obrador told the throngs of people roaring his name that a recount was not too much to ask to resolve the political crisis that has gripped the nation since election officials declared his conservative opponent, Felipe Calderón, who appeared to be the winner by less than 1 percent of 41 million ballots cast.

That victory has yet to be certified by the Federal Electoral Tribunal as it weighs a legal challenge from Mr. López Obrador. In the meantime, he seems determined to keep up pressure on the tribunal to grant his demand for a recount.

Mr. López Obrador and supporters who helped organize the rally urged his followers to conduct nonviolent acts of civil disobedience, including boycotts of products made by Mexican companies that opposed his candidacy as well as those of some American companies, without explaining why.

He also asked them to stage sit-ins starting Sunday at the 300 district election offices across the country. The purpose, he said, was to prevent any tampering with ballot boxes.

At one point during his speech, Mr. López Obrador smiled as the crowd chanted, “You are not alone.” He told them that the movement he was leading was about more than one man or one political party. He said it was about the future of this country’s fragile democracy.

“I have the deep conviction that despite all the machinery of the state, and all the money of a privileged group, they will not be able to stop the free will of millions of Mexicans,” he said. “That is the greatest force of a democracy.”

Mr. Calderón and his supporters say that their victory is legitimate and that a recount will do more harm than good to an electoral system that was meticulously engineered to move Mexico toward democracy after decades of autocratic, one-party rule.

They have described Mr. López Obrador as so obsessed with power that he will stop at nothing to win, even using mass marches to try to bully his way to power over the decisions of the democratic institutions it has taken Mexico more than a decade to build.

Arturo Sarukhan, a leading adviser to Mr. Calderón, said his candidate would accept a recount if one was ordered by the electoral tribunal. But he said his candidate did not believe a recount was legally necessary, since the votes were counted on election night by citizens recruited at random to be poll workers.

“They are seeking to pressure the tribunal to say this is too complicated, let’s annul the whole thing,” Mr. Sarukhan said. “We are convinced this is not about a recount. This is about annulment.”

In a voluminous complaint before the electoral tribunal, Mr. López Obrador charged that the voting was riddled with mistakes and rigged against him by President Vicente Fox, who openly supported Mr. Calderón, who is from the same party.
He also accused business leaders of meddling in the election by conducting a campaign that depicted Mr. López Obrador as a danger to the political and economic stability Mexico has enjoyed over the last six years.

At 1:30 p.m. Sunday, Mr. López Obrador led about 200,000 supporters down one of the city’s main thoroughfares and into the Zócalo, as the city’s main plaza is known. About 200,000 more were already waiting there.

Rossana Fuentes Berain, a political analyst at the Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico, looked out on the crowd from the terrace of a hotel adjacent to the plaza and wondered whether Mr. López Obrador could keep a rein on the outrage he had unleashed.

“I am very worried,” she said. “If he can convince so many people that the democratic system isn’t working, then we are going to throw away 20 years of building trust and confidence.”

People interviewed at the rally said their distrust of the system had compelled them to come from as far north as Mexico’s border with the United States and as far south as the state of Chiapas.

Like the crowd of people who came out last week to support Mr. López Obrador, this gathering also seemed to be a broad cross section of people with different levels of education and incomes.

Many of those interviewed brought up the 1988 election, considered a pivotal moment in this country’s long history of electoral fraud. Some said that although there had been progress since then, it had not been enough to stop the entrenched oligarchies from using their powers to stand in the way of the will of the people.

Others said that although they supported Mr. López Obrador, they worried that his language had become increasingly volatile and could push the country into violence.
“People are tired of so much injustice,” said Pablo Huitrón Neguis, 44, an elementary school teacher. “We have fought years to have our votes respected, and now they are using the same old strategies to rob us again. López Obrador knows that if the people unite, there is no one who can stop us.”

There were lots of angry expressions from unlikely places.

“If blood must be spilled, then so be it,” said a housewife, Graciela Saavedra, 44. “We don’t want it, but we are tired of accepting fraud with our arms crossed.”
There seemed to be just as many calls for calm. “We know there was fraud,” said Pablo Serna, 27, a dentist from the north central state of Zacatecas. “But there is no reason to generate so much resentment. There is also no reason to discredit everything because the movement could turn against us.”

Although it was clear Mr. López Obrador would not back down from his fight, his appeals Sunday seemed toned down from earlier this week, when election officials challenged the credibility of several videos he presented as proof of fraud.

“He who owes nothing, fears nothing,” Mr. López Obrador said, explaining why in his view Mr. Calderon should not object to a recount. Later, he added, “The stain of an illegitimate election cannot be cleaned with all the water in all the oceans.”
Antonio Betancourt and James C. McKinley Jr. contributed reporting for this article.


NOS ENVÍA NOTA DEL FINANCIAL TIMES:

Large protest in Mexico against election result

By Adam Thomson in Mexico City
Published: July 17 2006 04:02 | Last updated: July 17 2006 04:02

Mexico City on Sunday hosted one of the biggest demonstrations in its history as people from around the country protested against the results of this month’s presidential elections and demanded a full recount of the vote.

According to local police, more than a million people marched on the Zócalo, the city’s main square, in support of Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the losing leftwing candidate. Independent estimates suggested the turn-out was slightly smaller.

On July 2, Mr López Obrador, a 52-year-old former Mexico-City mayor, lost to Felipe Calderón of the ruling centre-right National Action party by 0.58 per cent or just 243,000 votes.

He has responded by calling the election “fraudulent”, and has accused Mexico’s electoral authorities of “manipulating the counting”. He has vowed to continue organising mass protests until the country’s electoral authorities give in to his demands for a recount.

At Sunday’s demonstration, which far outnumbered an initial protest last week, Mr López Obrador called on supporters to begin a week of civil resistance and announced another mega rally on July 30 to keep up the pressure on the authorities.
“Democracy and the country’s political stability are at stake,” he told a sea of chanting supporters draped in the gold colours of his Democratic Revolution Party. The rally passed without violence.

Mr López Obrador confirmed last week that his strategy would be to seek an annulment of the election if the authorities did not grant a recount.
The Federal Electoral Tribunal, the highest electoral court, has until September 6 to announce whether it considers there is any merit to the complaints and how it intends to respond.

On Friday Mexican bonds rallied and the peso strengthened to a two-month high against the dollar, which analysts say reflect investors’ growing confidence that Mr López Obrador’s legal complaints will come to nothing and that the authorities will eventually confirm Mr Calderón as president-elect.

The business-friendly Mr Calderón has vowed to continue the economic policies of President Vicente Fox that have helped consolidate macroeconomic stability, reducing interest rates and inflation to historic lows while pushing up international reserves to historic highs.

The campaign team behind Mr Calderón, a 43-year-old Harvard-trained technocrat, has resisted calls for a total recount on the grounds that it is illegal, and last week told foreign journalists that Mexican law does not allow for an annulment of a presidential election.

But on the streets of Mexico City on Sunday, Mr López Obrador’s supporters appeared to be in a confident mood. On Paseo de la Reforma, one of the city’s main avenues, a group of Mexican youth sat on the roof of a lorry beating drums and chanting “vote by vote”, in reference to their insistence on recounting each and every one of the ballots cast.

People of all ages filed past holding posters saying “Hang on López Obrador, the people are rising up” and “We won”. One man dressed in black walked towards the Zócalo with a cardboard coffin balanced on his head with the word “Democracy” painted on the side.

In a radio interview last Friday, Mr López Obrador said he would call off the protests if the authorities granted a recount of the votes. He also said he would accept the result of the recount even if it went against him, though adding that he would only do so “under protest”.

“I won… [and] this election is fraudulent from start to finish.


Una razón más para apoyar al peje en el 2006.

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