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Saturday, November 23, 2024
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A scientist in the presidency

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For the first time, Mexico will have a scientist in the presidency, a doctor in environmental engineering, a master in energy engineering and a graduate in physics.

Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, scientific, political and academic, comes with solid experience resulting from her time in various instances of public administration, where she showed ample capacity to govern and make efficient use of available resources.  

The arrival to the executive branch of an academic like Dr. Sheinbaum will make the disastrous legacy of the leadership more noticeable. prianists in public universities; the rot inside the courts that cover up crimes and free criminals: and the decadence of the right that dared to launch as a candidate for Xochitl Galvez, a person whose vulgarity and ignorance contrasts with the enlightened arrogance of self-proclaimed "intellectuals" who sponsor her. 

That right, increasingly closer to the positions of Spanish and Argentine neo-fascism, has chosen to entrench itself in double standards and religious fanaticism that crushes women, in the fear of communism, and in anti-chairo sentiment opposed to equalization. citizen.  

Mexico with Claudia, as it does now Andrés Manuel López Obrador, will show that it is possible to dismantle the opprobrium and stop the warmongering that has the human species in suspense.  

Sheinbaum will lead with an intelligent hand the destinies of a nation that, due to its size and historical, economic and cultural strength, is called to consolidate its Latin American leadership and be a major protagonist on the international stage. 

The disasters of three decades of neoliberalism are still visible, and the National Regeneration Movement will have to redouble its capacity to confront the cultural and political war with the retrograde sectors opposed to democratic reforms, and to the distribution of income generated by economic growth.

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Ramon Gonzalez Ponciano
Ramon Gonzalez Ponciano
Guatemalan-Mexican. PhD in anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin and master's degree in the same discipline from Stanford University, where he has also been Tinker Professor, visiting researcher and affiliated researcher at the Center for Latin American Studies. He was visiting professor of the Education Abroad Program of the University of California in Mexico and collaborates as a guest lecturer in the Spanish Heritage, Continuing Studies programs and in the department of Spanish teaching at Stanford.
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