This video presents a critical analysis of the Mexican government's governance failures, highlighting how political priorities like election preparation (2027) have led to institutional neglect of critical issues including organized crime violence, food inflation, and human rights violations. The content emphasizes that effective democratic governance requires addressing citizen demands through dialogue rather than suppression, and that governments must prioritize collective well-being over political self-interest. The analysis demonstrates how systemic failures in security, economic policy, and institutional accountability create conditions where organized crime thrives and public trust erodes.
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Deep Dive
Censura desde Palacio Nacional: "No vean TV Azteca"Added:
Take a deep breath, wake up now.
The truth will not be silenced.
With the voice of the people, without fear of pain, we raise our cry seeking honor.
Open up to oxygen, Mexico, breathe free, the struggle is your voice. With strength and fire we never stop, with truth and passion.
Change will come.
How are you? How are you? Good night.
Thank you for joining me on this episode of Open the Oxygen, where we'll be discussing the latest in Mexican politics. And the thing is, regardless of what we've seen on social media, what's been seen in the morning press conference, the Mexican government is completely out of touch. These people are not governing for the country, they are working for themselves.
They are in the midst of an election campaign for 2027. Now it turns out that Andy López Beltrán is going to be a candidate for Tabasco. We don't know if it's because they were looking for him. We don't know if it's because they're retreating, we don't know if they kicked him out of Morena, no, of course we don't know. There's no way we're going to know. The only thing we do know is that the man had just said over the weekend that he was going to stay in Coahuila until Morena won the elections. But with the statistics we have, Morena isn't going to win a single district, maybe some proportional representation seats, but nothing more, because people here don't want them.
We're in the north, people don't want them, it doesn't work. And the events that have been reported in various media outlets and on social networks are revealing a situation where organized crime in this country continues to claim victims, even within the armed forces, while institutions tell us that everything is fine, that security is excellent. In the mass graves in these extermination centers, the identification tags used by the military have been found. There they are, lying along with voter ID cards, along with the clothes of other people who were disappeared, cremated, I do n't know what they did to them. On the other hand, we have protests that have been intensifying less than 17 days before the start of the World Cup. Protests in the Zócalo, protests in Oaxaca, protests in Chihuahua, protests in Coahuila, protests in Nuevo León, protests all over the damn country, and the government isn't doing a thing because they're focused on the 2027 elections.
All their attention is on drafting laws so they can control the 2027 elections.
The social protests are intensifying, and the executive branch is doing what it's always done, the only thing it knows how to do.
Responding with attacks, whether it's censorship, police, tear gas, whatever, is responding with attacks in any form.
This is the fourth transformation. These are the people behind the fourth transformation.
All those who promised well-being, those who said they were going to bring about a Mexico that would move forward, which we always knew were lies, that's how they are. They are bringing out their true selves.
While on one hand they are focusing on fixing their elections and their legal problems for 2027, on the other hand, they are suppressing all complaints, demonstrations, and disagreements with them.
All these episodes that we are seeing in the national life of the country, which are happening at the same time, are part of this same fabric of society. It is a country where impunity, bureaucracy, and political polarization prevent progress in finding real solutions that bring some benefit to the population for problems that are truly necessary, solutions that are pillars to end the entire crisis we are experiencing, because we are in a crisis, we are in a political, economic, social, and educational crisis.
We have problems with food inflation. We have problems with enforced disappearances and we have problems with a lack of dialogue between the citizens and the government, because the criminals have tables where they can sit down and talk with them.
One of the most shocking things I could have read today was the news that in Chiapas, on a property near the community of Pujilti, Pujiltic, in the municipality of Venustiano Carranza—I do remember that one because we all know Venustiano Carranza— the groups of mothers searching for their missing children, after four days of searching in areas of high risk for them because organized crime is present, located a clandestine extermination camp. They had been tipped off. They were told, "Hey, in this place." And they went and searched. It took them 4 days, but they found them. They found bone remains, burned, human fragments unearthed. Even one of those metal official identification plates from the Ministry of National Defense (Sedena) appeared. The badge belonged to a registered item or had the name of Miguel Ángel, Elías Mayo. That's the name that appeared there.
This discovery, or this plaque, not only confirms the brutality with which these people work, with which the cartels operate, but also the methods they use, such as burning, to make evidence of their crimes disappear. But it reveals something even more disturbing: not even those in uniform are safe in this country. The people that Cedena is literally protecting on the orders of Mexican politicians will also end up in those mass graves.
The mothers searching for their missing children, armed only with shovels, rods, and determination—because they truly have nothing else—have done the work that official institutions like the Attorney General's Office let slide due to bureaucracy, fail to do, or are afraid to do because they do n't want confrontations in territories dominated primarily by drug cartels.
All the evidence has been turned over to the ministerial authorities for analysis. But we have a question that may remain unanswered and that no one can answer. Well, what hope does an ordinary citizen have if the military itself ends up in clandestine graves?
The government's narrative that there is peace in this country, that everything is going very well, does not exist. It's going down the drain completely. It shows us that the government has lost territorial control, not only on the southern border, but in 75% of the country, because this happened in Chiapas, but the cartels do not know borders, much less geopolitical borders. So, we saw this in Chapas. But how is Guerrero? How is Oaxaca? How is Yucatán? How are Quintana Roo, Tabasco, and Veracruz doing?
Puebla, Morelos, Hidalgo, State of Mexico, Mexico City, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Sinaloa, Michoacán, Sonora, Baja California, North and South, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, Durango, Tabasco, Veracruz, San Luis Potosí, Durango, well, I've already mentioned Durango.
There are cases of this in every state.
We found one, one was found in Chiapas, but there are at least 4,500 other graves in the country that the Attorney General's Office seems to be ignoring. The violence is not distinguishing between civilians and security forces. They come with everything, they're after the money. And what is the federal government doing instead of defending the citizens?
Absolutely nothing.
Meanwhile, social conflicts continue to manifest themselves in the streets. The National Coordinator of Education Workers has staged several demonstrations in Mexico City today demanding attention to their demands, demands that have been ongoing for a very long time. We all know the people from the coordinating committee. We know that for years they go on strike to avoid working, or when they do n't have any excuses they invent one.
We know that's how they are, but we've never seen the Mexico City police end up gassing these people to prevent them from setting up a camp in front of the Zócalo. On the contrary, I had personally witnessed last year, while at the resistance camp, how the police made space for these teachers to set up their tents.
And now, these teachers who are complaining against the current government, it seems they weren't colluding with them, but are complaining about this government, they were greeted with fire extinguisher gas, just like they greeted us on November 15th.
The teachers did end up setting up their tents in the vicinity of a certain part of the historic center. They already warned because they were n't allowed to reach the Zócalo, and they said that no matter what it takes, they will reach the Zócalo.
The Ministry of the Interior, through Ms. Rosaicela Rodríguez, called for dialogue. If you really want a lot of dialogue now. Why bother before, right?
Rosaicela's famous phrase, Claudia Cheman's, when they told her, "Hey, you're not going to meet with the mothers searching for their missing children, and what for? Before it was 'what for,' and now we're going to have a dialogue, dude. We're fed up with dialogues, we want you to do something. You 're doing absolutely nothing."
She says it was just a containment line against the pushing and a vehicle with a sound system that the teachers were using, which tried to advance. I, honestly, in the videos I saw, didn't see any containment line at all; it was a line of attack. It was a line to stop, to hit, to destroy, to break up the demonstration.
This clash with the Coordinator isn't new. I mean, the Coordinator has been a recurring actor in these kinds of demonstrations. I mean, we all know what they're like, but now they're joining in within a broader context. There's widespread discontent in the country, where other groups like the Sevina community members in Michoacán are also confronting the security forces. Security at home in Michoacán, in the state of Michoacán, while they were demanding solutions to their agrarian problems.
Other community members. Well, in Michoacán the problem is that they remember that the self-defense groups were born there because the government didn't defend the communities, and they said, "We're going to arm ourselves and form a self-defense group."
And I think it was with Enrique Peña Nieto that they reached an agreement, and well, we put police there, now with Andrés Manuel and Claudia again, they haven't listened to them.
There are towns and places in Michoacán that are completely controlled by the citizens. The police don't go in. It's the citizens who decide who enters, who can and can't enter.
But now, in the places that the State supposedly controls, two community members were murdered, and when they went to complain, they were met again with tear gas, they were beaten, they weren't even allowed to talk. I think they're waiting for the violence to start so they can When the government and the Secretary of the Interior actually came out, I told them, "Listen, let's sit down and talk." Because when they arrived, they said, "Listen, we want to talk," but they weren't listened to. They show us that there are many povertys, unfulfilled promises, a lack of attention to indigenous communities, to rural communities, and the government is much more focused on resolving its narratives of control at the national level and on fixing the elections for 2027, because that is where they have their sights set.
The 2000 elections—everything they 're doing is related to the 2027 elections.
Meanwhile, screw the rest of us; food inflation continues to hit the wallets of Mexican families.
The price of the tomato, or tomate, as it is called in some regions, the ball tomato, the round tomato, the tomato that they call it in the center of the country. Here it's tomato.
Wow, it has registered price increases of up to 180% in some states.
And this is part of a general increase in prices for basic goods that ultimately erodes people's purchasing power. He says, "They raised my minimum wage, dude, but they only raised the minimum wage by 20%. The price of things is going up 180, so you end up buying less with what they gave you."
And then there was the controversy over water use, we were talking about it at noon with Tito, the reform regarding water. If farmers or concession holders want to prevent and save water so they can plant in the future, they could lose their permits because the government doesn't want them hoarding water. They say that even if it rains, you can't dig a well to store water because you 're hoarding it.
According to this, it's a government measure to prevent waste, but the truth is that it's penalizing efficiency and rewarding excessive consumption. I mean, if I can't use it later, I'm going to use it now, right? In a country where, especially in the northern part of the country, we have a drought that is affecting 40% of the national territory, where organized crime is also competing for control of dams and wells.
The political front, the front of these problems that the government is facing, one of them is on the institutional political front, between the institutions and politics, you know, it is not separate from everything that is happening in Morena. The party that is currently in power is also experiencing internal divisions. Rubén Moreira said it, for example, uh said Rubén Moreira, the former governor of Coahuila, by the way, that Andy López Beltrán could run for a federal deputyship in Tabasco. He says he will attend their campaign events, if they launch a campaign.
Andy López Beltrán resigned from his position as director of organization at the National Elections Commission of Morena, supposedly to seek legislative immunity, in a move that can only be seen as a strategy to shield himself from investigations he is facing in other countries, especially regarding the tax evasion case. That's why I'm telling you, everything they're doing is focused on 2027.
Augusto López, who wasn't dead, was out partying, the former Secretary of the Interior and former Governor of Tabasco also came out and supported him, saying that he also backs him. And well, we all know the comments on social media, right? He says, "It's because drug traffickers support each other." Yes, that's true. Don Augusto says that he was never sick, that it wasn't true. All that's left is for them to tell me that Enrique Inzunza's wife didn't faint and that Rocha Moya doesn't have breathing problems either, right? I mean, you see, now with the complaints that came from the United States, they all got sick over the weekend.
And while this is happening here in Congress, while everyone is discussing whether Andy will do it or not, or whether he has anyone's support or not, it turns out that the former director of educational materials at the Ministry of Public Education, Marx Sarriaga, accused his successor, Nadia López García, of being a PRIAN supporter.
He threatened to report her because her ideals are not those that correspond to the Ministry of Public Education, demonstrating that even within the ruling party there is no unity, they cannot agree on anything at all. Now Marriaga says that this woman, who is a plenary student, is doing everything she needs to ruin the textbooks that she had worked so hard to make for him. The textbooks that we have complained about so much on this program.
Now you're saying that these are just accusations of corruption. Nope, not that either.
Lily Tes denounced that the president of the council, Guadalupe Tadey, diverted 65 million pesos through a company owned by her children from money belonging to the National Electoral Institute. Well, it belongs to the Mexican people, but it was spent through the National Electoral Institute, according to audits by the Superior Audit Office of the Federation. This scandal adds even more figures—excuse me—to the criticism for the partisan use of Mexican consulates in the United States, because there are officials like the consul in Denver who have been singled out for carrying out proselytizing activities in favor of Morena, violating ethical codes and some international agreements and treaties, generating diplomatic attention with Washington, with the United States. In the face of all this, there is Claudia Chamb, and Claudia Chamb, who is the president of the Mexican Republic, is the one who can say, "Listen, yes, fix this, do that," she is the one who can remove people, the one who can really do the work, make things start moving, but as we know, she does not make the decisions.
Claudia Chamb opted for a communication strategy that served her purposes and said, "The communication strategy now will be confrontational. We're going to fight with everyone, starting with the morning press conferences. She's already proposed giving an award to the 'mythomaniac of the week.' Now it turns out that the government will dictate what is true and what isn't. They'll have their version and they'll give out their award, trying to change the narrative. I mean, we all understand that. But she also touted the arrival of a program called 'Big Time Lie Detector.'
And she did all this at the very same time she was directly attacking TV Azteca and other critical media outlets, saying, ' Don't watch TV Azteca.'
Why? Because TV Azteca has criticized her, because TV Azteca has asked her questions, because TV Azteca has challenged her.
So, from that position, this is the federal government that wants to tell us what we can do. The same person who said, 'If you don't want to pay for electricity, don't use it.' The same person who is supporting the one who said, "Why do you want two pairs of shoes?"
The same person who said, "You don't have to work to live well."
The same person who said the president wears a woman's dress.
There are journalists and other analysts like Leonardo Curcio who have responded and told her that in a democracy, in a true democracy, no one silences anyone, least of all from the head of state. That the right to information and free expression are fundamental pillars of any democracy in Mexico and anywhere else.
But these interventions by Claudia Chemban, from the opposition and a large part of society, are seen as an attempt to censor public debate, to use the morning press conference as if it were a political firing squad to punish those who are questioning the government. Claudia Chemban has also been criticized for ignoring the demands of all these indigenous and rural communities. She has responded evasively, changing the subject, according to her, to other more general achievements, such as a supposed 70% approval rating for her government, a popularity that only exists in the polls she herself conducts. She pays, because all the other polls tell us it's below 50.
Some say it's at 38, some say it's at 47, but all below 50, except for the ones she pays.
Now, the reform—there are the reforms they've been making in the area of security that are increasingly concentrating power in the state. Now it turns out that the National Guard has greater authority on federal highways. Starting today, May 25th, National Guard members will be able to issue tickets directly. Their orders will prevail even over traffic lights and road signs, and this is presented as a measure to improve road safety. But the truckers and motorists who have been interviewed, all of them are sure that this will end up leading to abuses and extortion, especially in the context where the National Guard is corrupt to the core by people who are only looking for money.
I mean, it's a historical case, we all know it. The Guard Since its inception, Nacional has been seeking funds.
If we think about everything that's happening, all these little problems that keep piling up, one after another, it's like a snowball, right? You have one, then another, and another, and it's like a sticky mess. You know, like those sticky, popcorn-shaped things you make, right? They start to accumulate, and it's a huge snowball. And then you still say, "Hey, what about the crisis of the disappeared?"
Because we have 124,000 missing persons in Mexico as well. Add another snowball, and we have a fight against inflation, and add another snowball. We have political polarization, add yet another. The social pressure in the face of all this has led to some setbacks, such as the withdrawal, for example, of criminal complaints against activists and journalists by some members of Congress, like, oh, what's his name? Sergio Mayer, who had accused... I do n't remember, Jorge, I don't know which journalist. I don't know what Jorge had accused him of, and they already dropped it. But that was through social pressure. Or the other congresswoman who was mistreating a dog—there's a video on social media—she was removing it and moving it around, and she came out to apologize through collectives, through what we do on social media, the Searching Mothers, the independent media—we can all demand accountability for what's happening in the country. We can all demand results, that Mexico works. We can all demand that it works, but we all need to be involved. We need to participate. The more we participate, the better.
It's May 2026, we're 17 days away from the World Cup, and now we have a Mexico where organized crime violence is wiping out even its adversaries, where corruption is permeating institutions that are key for the citizenry, where protests are contained by the government with tear gas or security lines, and where the executive branch responds to criticism. Not with solutions, but with criticism, denials, lies, and recommendations to avoid watching television channels.
Andy López Beltrán's resignation to seek legislative immunity, the support of these controversial former officials and candidates, the use of public resources for campaigning abroad—all of this reveals a system that prioritizes protecting its cronies and internal security over collective well-being. The challenge facing the Mexican government right now is very clear: they must move from rhetorical confrontation to effective action. They must resolve the crisis of disappearances, which requires immediate attention, intelligence, and genuine coordination between the Ministry of National Defense, state police forces, the National Guard, and all other relevant agencies.
Furthermore, even with the mothers searching for their missing children, it's not enough to offer only beautiful speeches. They must address the demands of the teachers' unions and the demands coming from the mountain communities, both Indigenous and non- Indigenous. Well, listen, it's necessary; we have to... To solve this, we need to implement coherent agricultural policies and stop blaming supermarkets.
We must defend freedom of expression, and that means accepting that the media, even critical media, are part of this damn democracy, not enemies to be defeated. They are media outlets you have to convince that you're doing the right thing, not silence so they can't point out your mistakes.
Mexico can no longer afford to move forward with these damn burdens.
Civil society, collectives, and the ever-vigilant press remain a necessary counterweight in this country. And if the government doesn't correct the problem, the discontent that has been accumulating in this mess I was telling you about, there will come a point when the mess is so big that it will explode, leading to greater instability in the country. We are already almost at a point of ungovernability.
What we are seeing in Mexico's recent history teaches us that ignoring the demands of collectives, of mothers, of The teachers, the farmers, the ordinary citizens—it only ends up deepening the divisions. The country deserves a government that solves problems, not one that points fingers; a government that engages in dialogue, not one that attacks; a government that builds trust, not one that destroys it.
A government that belongs to the Mexican people.
Because Mexicans need results, not speeches.
I don't know what you all think, but I don't want this country. I don't like my Mexico, the one I have right now. I do n't want to leave it to my children, my grandchildren, or anyone. But I do want it to you. Honestly, what we 're seeing is a complete mess.
Let me see. Fantomas, how are you?
Good evening, Fantomas. It's great to have you here. Antonio, thank you so much for coming. Edit Juvenil, good evening, Edit. Excuse me, I hadn't seen your messages. Hey, Francisco Flores, you arrived just in time.
Good evening, Francisco Jesús Espejel, how are you? Rosy Aguilera. It's so good to see you. Ramón Góngora, Ramón, how are you? It only has half the likes. Don't add yours, please, just leave your likes. And follow the channel, whichever channel you're on. If you haven't followed it, follow it.
This says Antonio CRZ, "In Chercherán, Michoacán, the community doesn't let the government in." "They have a curfew at night." Exactly. They have a curfew, and only those who are allowed to go out and those with authorization are allowed out.
But you do know the story of Cherán, Antonio. In Cherán, the drug traffickers arrived, all guns blazing, and now you'll see. And it was the women, man, it was the mothers who said, "No way, you're not getting past here." And they went and put rocks in the criminals' path. And then the drug traffickers' trucks came by, and they all got out armed. "Hey, take those rocks away, damn it!" And the women, well, I'm not taking them away, man. " Come on, do something, man!" And the women were unarmed, you know? And well, the drug traffickers chickened out, they didn't do anything, and since then, they've controlled the place. Uh, it was a very brave story, a very, very brave story.
Hm.
Greetings, Jorge, how are you? Good evening. Now, with Count Carpul, he... They were hospitalized. It was a complete setup. Yes, Ramón, I read that too. Uh, Laura Elena Camacho, good evening, Laura Elena. It's great that you're here. Lori Estrada, hi Fer, warm greetings to everyone except the leftists.
Thanks Lori, greetings. The weekly myth-maker awards are going to be won by all the scarecrows, says Ramón Góngora. They're going to... Hey, yeah, dude, those awards are going to be really weird. I mean, seriously, it's going to be... it's going to be... it's going to be super weird. Lori Estrada Peña, are you the same Lori Estrada?
How many accounts do you have, Lori Estrada?
Well, last year the ship had an accident on the bridge and before the collision they were doing propaganda in favor of Morena.
That's what they were doing when they crashed there in New York, right?
Mrs. Claudia doesn't know what it's like to be president. Let's see if she asks Calderón for some lessons. Verónica Villegas says. I completely agree with you.
Calderón could barely tell her how to govern.
Claudia thinks she's just the president of Morena, and in my opinion, she does n't deserve to be president of Mexico.
No, that woman doesn't govern for Mexicans, she governs for herself. Ronnie Haven, good morning, says the anarchist maid, she's lost touch with reality, she's telling us what to watch and what not to watch on TV. We're headed straight for communism. It's very worrying. You know, it is, huh? I mean, when the government starts telling you what you can and can't watch, and the government can tell you what you can and can't do.
And the government, when they start imposing laws that limit how you act, you're screwed. You're screwed.
Yes, please. Get the bad government out of Maryland. We do n't want communism in Mexico. No, the truth is, we don't. Claudia thinks she's running a tenement, she has no idea. Where does the corrupt stand?
No, never, they've never had a vision for the country. These people don't know what a country is. They don't know how to represent it with dignity. They think that governing is just saying, "Everyone do what you want."
No, dude. Governing is a scandal the size of the world. It's extremely complicated.
What do we have to do as citizens to prevent communism? It's very simple, Maryand. The first thing you have to do is become an activist, complain every time they try to impose any of these communist theories or idiosyncrasies on you. That's a no-brainer, but it has to be effective, it has to be active, you have to dedicate time to it. It's not just about sending WhatsApp messages when you have spare time from the couch, I mean, it does require a lot of time, and you have to educate yourself, you have to study, know exactly where, because many people who call themselves right-wing end up supporting exactly what the left wants to support. Good night, America. How are you, America?
Good evening. How are you? Leticia IP? Uh, Silvia Carlín, Ronnie Heaven, Maryland, thanks everyone. Good night. Did you see that it says there was no TV Azteca?
Guess what's happening, Darw. Ever since Claudia Chimbam said, "No, don't watch TV Azteca," well, TV Azteca's ratings started going up, dude. Exactly the opposite. Teresa Coberrubias says, "Narco-president, this is an ignorant woman who was way out of her depth in the role."
Yes, that's true.
Lor Estrada Peña says, yes, you're the same one. Okay, Carlos Felip Carlos FCH, good night, how are you? There should be an award for the most useless president of the six-year terms. I completely agree with you, uh, Antonio Acevedo, good night. My father was from Michoacán. Every time we went through his town, we passed through Cherán. Antonio, the history of Cherán is extremely impressive. It was really cool.
Hello, America. Se They greet you. If you use Laurel Elena too. If you use electricity or not.
Uh, yes. I mean, if you don't want to pay, then don't use it, right? She said.
We're going to end up like Cuba. That's where we are, that's where we are. They're already making the same laws. Look at that, Carlos, this thing about water, that you can't accumulate water. I mean, if it rains on your land, you can't accumulate it, you have to let it dry or run off because then you become a criminal. That's really stupid, huh? Or you could lose your license just for doing something to feed the animals with rainwater, especially in areas where there's a drought. It's messed up. The truth is, it's tough, huh?
I'd give my life to be another beast of an escort. Too much like Supreme Commander Calderón.
Mm.
Good night, America. Lori. Greetings, Lori. We'll be there soon. We have to take away their legislative power. We have to go vote.
Yes, indeed. We have to go out and vote in the states and at the federal level.
In 2027, Verónica, we have every opportunity to do so.
Eddie Barra says, "López Obrador's sons became millionaires overnight, they're lazy, they don't like to work, they want everything handed to them on a silver platter, they don't want to put in the effort, they want to be millionaires overnight."
Look, one of the things Tito was saying this afternoon was precisely that. He said, "Hey, I was telling him, Andy is looking for immunity." Tito said, right? He said, "I think what the hell is the point of fighting anymore?" Look, since Andy López Beltrán has been in charge of this Morena section, he's had elections in Durango and Veracruz, and they failed. He had the march in Chihuahua, and it failed. He ca n't hide the fact that he's spending money. He can't hide that he bought houses in Mexico City and rents them out on Airbnb. He can't hide that he bought houses in Seville, in the United States, and rents them out. Through Airbnb. He can't hide that he went to buy artwork, that he was in incredibly expensive stores paying 35,000 pesos a night, but with breakfast included, right? In a hotel over there in Japan, he could buy houses in Japan. I mean, he can't hide any of that, and he's receiving a salary of 80,000 pesos a month. No, I wish. So, nobody buys that story. I mean, honestly, nobody buys it.
Domingo del Prindingo, good evening. How are you?
It's great that you're here. I'm sending you a big hello.
Thanks for joining me.
Mm.
America says, "Congratulations to the morning press conferences for winning first place."
Who lies more?
Patricia Madrigalos, a bride at the morning press conferences.
Ebola is another threat that is approaching us. Uh, we have this problem, Antonio, because we're letting people from Congo in without any health checks, huh? And remember that the Congo is the epicenter of this epidemic.
Tonight on Acts, says the Tower.
Ah, very good. Patricia Madrigal, America. Gera Salazar, how are you? Gera also censors the chaos cries. Yes, hey, they're there too. Thank you, America, for your like. In fact, I was discharged when my supreme commander Peña left his six-year term and went to sleep when the Culiacanazo occurred; I lost comrades and brothers in arms. That's why he fired me, Darw says. Look, I didn't know that part of your story, Darw. Thank you, thank you for your service. Fer, if they swallow. What did you put? If they swallow that story about well-being. Yes of course.
Rocha Moya's children also have more properties than the prickly pear cactus.
Rocha Moya's children and Dan Augusto and Nale's children, Nale's nephews, Batres's, Latadei's, everyone's, they're all the same, the same mess, huh? Exactly. The same sink.
America says, "Supporting Governor Maru Campos." I think we're all with Maru Campos, dude. I mean, the truth is that Maru Campos represents, look, very strange, because they wanted to destroy her just like they did with Televisión Azteca and Maru Campos' ratings started to rise. Well, they tried to give her a hard time, but it turns out the lady started to outmaneuver them in the narrative, and she's still winning. That's why the summons was issued by the Attorney General's Office.
Please leave your like, says Tere.
America, Tere, Darw, the morning press conferences are just a smokescreen of gold.
Oh no, on the contrary, America, what do you think? That's what the comments are for. Hey, well, just like I said, how strange, today a leftist came in, posted a comment and left. I didn't even chase him.
So, there was no piñata today; they must be on strike because they didn't get paid either. Well, that's the end of this program, no further comments. Thank you all so much for watching us today. Ah, says Domingo, "The dictatorship has already begun, full force, prohibiting what to see and what not to see, that's how it starts."
I say, "You must know, Domingo del Pirningo, since you come from Cuba."
He said, "If I finish, it's just to laugh. If I say something weird, it's not understood.
Mm.
Oh, look, a leftist has arrived. How I enjoy seeing him suffer like rabid dogs, says Leonardo. No, Leonardo, believe me, in fact, we were talking about that, uh, how we're enjoying seeing you all tear each other apart. Some are going to appear, others are going to be interviewed. Will it be fair or not, America? Not at all.
What liquid do they use in Balzamador to put Claudia's makeup on? I don't know, Domingo. You know, what I was watching is that the Walking Dead series, dude, the girls look pretty, dude, dude, compared to Claudia, the way she came out this weekend.
The guys crying and throwing shade and crying when they're told the truth.
Yeah, they're going to give you information and it hurts.
Oh, oh, my God. I summon them. Yes. Hey, America, look, I was already They were going and they came to cause trouble. I saw that they repressed a demonstration in Michoacán, quite a few riot police against the people. The Morena government is detestable. Yes, you know, it is.
We were just talking about it on the program, they stopped a demonstration there, they stopped another one in Mexico City, near 5 de Mayo, a teachers' demonstration. They stopped others in other places. Well, what can I tell you? Listen, well, we're at the end now. Thank you all very much.
They're trying to stop or imprison Marco Campos. Do you think there could be uprisings? She has immunity, they can't do anything to her. The truth is, they can't do anything to her. The lady has immunity as governor. There could be uprisings.
Even in her best days, the scarecrow president wasn't pretty. No, honestly, no. You know, you know how when babies are born they give them a spanking, right? Claudia was born, the doctor saw her And damn, he started having several panic attacks, just from sheer shock.
Antonio, we're going to end up with isolated communities like in zombie movies, but instead of living, what? Walled-off to repel zombies, we're going to repel drug traffickers. Can you imagine when they take away your welfare assistance, you're going to cry, right? Well, no, they're not going to take it away, what's going to happen is that your purchasing power is going to decrease because the currency is going to depreciate. That 's all. Hey, well, thank you all very much. Um, thank you for joining me tonight to chat. Please subscribe to the channels. Uh, I have some surprises prepared for you on both Fer Valdés's channel and Ábrele al Oxígeno's channel, but they'll be revealed throughout the week. I still have a lot of work to do, it's computer work, and the truth is that today it seems my niece infected me with... Something. I don't know how I'll feel tomorrow morning, but my throat is getting worse and worse. Have a good night, everyone, and a headache, too. Have a great night, everyone.
Be good, subscribe to the channels, share, leave a like.
See you tomorrow at 12:30 on "Open the Oxygen" on these same channels and Mariana Benavides's. Take good care of yourselves.
Sending you a hug.
Take a deep breath, wake up there. The truth rises, it will not be silenced.
With the voice of the people, without fear of pain, we raise our cry seeking honor.
Open the oxygen.
Mexico, breathe free. The struggle is your voice.
With strength and fire we never stop.
With truth and passion, change will come.
From the streets we come to speak for justice and freedom. Ready to fight.
United we sing. Change will be. Open the oxygen.
Come wake up.
Open the oxygen.
Mexico, breathe free.
The struggle is your voice.
With strength and fire we never stop.
With truth and passion, change will come.
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