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Topic: Firebombs and Accusations Fly in ‘Ruthless’ Election Campaigns in Mexico (Read 297 times)

legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1217
Let's see how fast the cartel turns one of her loved one's head into a conch shell...

More than 90% of the Mexican politicians are associated with one or more drug cartels. This includes a number of politicians who claim that they are anti-cartel on the outside. Anyway who cares about Mexico? Just deport the Mexican illegals, build a concrete wall along the Rio Grande, and close the border. You will be all right.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



Let's see how fast the cartel turns one of her loved one's head into a conch shell...


xht
sr. member
Activity: 462
Merit: 250
hey you, yeah you, fuck you!!!
Trailing badly in the polls, and with elections just around the corner, Roxana Luna reached for transcendental salvation.

In a ceremony outside the government headquarters of Mexico’s Puebla State, Ms. Luna, a candidate for governor, unleashed a troupe of Aztec dancers across the colonial building’s cobblestone forecourt. They hopped around wearing leather skirts and spectacular feather headdresses. One drew designs in the air with smoke from burning tree resin. Another blew a conch shell.

Ms. Luna explained to bemused onlookers that the event last week was a purification ritual intended to flush out “the curse” of bad government, along with fear, coercion, vote buying, apathy and violence.

“People who feel desperate turn to ritualistic cleansings,” she said. “We’ve been cursed.”

It is election time in Mexico again, with voters going to the polls on Sunday for municipal and regional elections, including the governorships in 12 of Mexico’s 32 states.

While some might quibble with Ms. Luna’s technique, few would argue against her appeal to clean up Mexico’s electoral politics. Mexican political campaigns have never been for the faint of heart, and this year has been no different, with rough-and-tumble contests that have made a certain presidential contest north of the border look almost quaint in comparison.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/05/world/americas/firebombs-and-accusations-fly-in-ruthless-election-campaigns-in-mexico.html
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