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My solution to deal with them

So young people have tried to protest the current insecurity crisis in mexico since october but PAN and PRI partyist that tried to enter and co op the protests culminating in yesterday. (the nazis come from PAN)

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    They’re angry that she’s taking legal action over sexual assault.

    Essentially indistinguishable from the “Israeli” right to r*pe rally.

  • SkingradGuard [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    I heard this on the radio by my country’s state-ran radio, and they tried to make it seem like a good thing, innocently protesting “crime and safety” as if Sheinbaum isn’t trying to alleviate those things.

  • Rojo27 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    Got to love seeing all the whitewashing going on in social media over these protest. From “the irony of the Mexican president building a wall around the presidential palace” to “ohhh look, Luffy’s Jolly Roger!” Fuck all of these fash and their enablers in the West.

      • Redcuban1959 [any]@hexbear.net
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        2 days ago

        At least back in the 2010 they were mostly young people (thought still financed by the large conservative parties, the local elite and the US), nowadays it seems like all these people are at least 35 years old. How tf is that GenZ?

        • thelastaxolotl [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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          2 days ago

          some GenZ wanted to protest the goverment in general but because the PAN and PRI forced themselfs into the protests they lost a bunch of support in the capital (people protested in States like Jalisco and Queretaro but because they are under PAN, MC and other parties governors international media ignored them)

          in the capital they were pretty small compared to for example the femenists who normally movilize like 6 times the people

    • thisisnotausername@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      Oh man, there’s so much fascism in Latam, people just don’t know it is fascism…

      There are Nazis too, but not that many.

      We sometimes call them Morenazis, where I come from. More from “moreno” meaning someone with dark skin. The dummies really think the nazi-nazis will accept them cause their grand-grand-grand-dad was german and they are a bit whiter than the rest of Latam.

    • Redcuban1959 [any]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      Fascism, Falange (Spanish Fascism) and Nazism has existed in Latin America since the early 1930s, those were ultra-nationalist, xenophobic and fanatic groups that wanted to take control of the country from the oligarchal liberals and conservatives (who had by that point ruined the country). Some groups failed spetacualy during the coup attempts, though they did manage to influence some military groups during the 1930s - 1940s. Most of them got banned by the late 1930s, and were basically dissolved by 1946.

      After that they divided into three groups: Those who got into mainstream politics and became a part of the Military Juntas of the 1960s - 1980s (as seen in Argentina, El Salvador, Brazil, Uruguay and Chile). Those who became irrelevant and kept doing their weird brown shirt stuff and no one cared about them. And those who became far-left fighters mostly because they hated the US or had a genuine change of ideological views (as seen with Priest Helder Camera in Brazil and weird people like José Joe Baxter who was a nazi in his youth and became a trot, peronist and maoist and joined the vietcong to fight the Americans, he was killed by the CIA when he was helping the Sandinistas in Nicaragua).

      Neo-Nazism as seen here, existed since the late 1980s, but it got really popular around the early 2010s thanks to the Conservative Wave and the popularity of Western Social Media. Neo-Nazis are still seen as bad people, and most people usually avoid association with them.