I rlly want to spread awareness about Mexico, but I’m really confused on what’s happening. Could you summarize a bit for me? Sorry if I’m being a bother!

vanellcpe:

No bothering at all my friend, in fact, thank you for asking. Basically, let me do a little timeline – summing up of the events that lead to this protests and events.

  • October 2, 1968 – First, we gotta mention events where the government indeed made clear they killed students but of course they cleaned their names by saying they were against the communal peace and were in fact planning terrorists acts upon everyone in general and not just the government. I’m talking about Tlatelolco massacreOne would think that with such display of violence we would learn to not trust the authorities but actually, that was just the tip of the iceberg.
  • December 1, 2006 – November 30, 2012 – As Felipe Calderon, our previous president took over the leadership of Mexico, he made it clear that his intentions were fighting the drug cartels and any sort of organized crime in the country in order to create a better and safer future for the upcoming generations, ironically slowly starting a war that has hardly gotten any better, but actually has caused deaths of over 90,000 people. Ever since this all started, it has become a normal practically daily thing to learn about another person being kidnapped, tortured and later disposed like garbage while the national administration does absolutely nothing.
  • September 26, 2014 – 48 Students from a rural area of Guerrero, Mexico (Ayotzinapa) “disappeared” while they were on their way to a pacific protest. These students were chased down and attacked by local authorities, luckily 5 escaped but later the remaining 43 were abducted, handed to a drug cartel and presumably killed to be disposed. All of this was done by the state, local authorities, the government.
  • October 3, 2014 – ONU and IACHR demanded to federal authorities in Mexico to do something else, if not everything in order to locate the missing students.
  • November 8, 2014 (Morning) – PGR (Attorney General of Mexico) declared that the 43 students who disappeared (Notice how the government refuses to say they were abducted, they just say the students pretty much magically vanished.) are most likely dead. According to their declaration, they have under their custody 3 members of the drug cartel that possibly are linked to the events of September 26th. These three men claim that the students were charred ALIVEusing mostly tires, plastic, disel, gasoline, and some other substances to perhaps cause them some of the most painful deaths, to later get their remains moved to a clandestine pit in the middle of nowhere to never be found.
  • November 8, 2014 (Afternoon) – Thousands of people, students, teachers, mothers, basically a tiny bit of every social class marched down from the Attorney General of Mexico installations all the way down to the Governmental Palace / National Palace (where the Enrique Peña Nieto — him who I do not recognize as my president — and his political party resides at.) There they again pacificallylighted up candles to pray for those who were abducted.
  • November 8, 2014 (Evening) – The National Palace is surrounded by elements of the national guard, military service and police men at practically all times, specially when protests like the one that took place earlier happen; however, for a good 60 to 80 minutes, they pretended to be blind, deaf and powerless as the government itself staged the violent act of lighting up on fire a door of the National Palace, letting it burn for a while and later extinguish that flame with an already prepared curtain of water conveniently right above the door the paid or false protesteracted on.
  • November 9, 2014 (Right now) – You never know when you’re going to die, but I’m damn sure nobodyis supposed to open their eyes and see a gun pointing at them. Nobody is supposed to be left somewhere to char. Nobody is supposed to act ignorant and hesitate to raise their voice in order to not piss off those who take advantage of those less fortunate. We are not supposed to live in fear.

I am terrified for my country, I am scared for my life. I am horrified by the cruelty and I am furious about the government’s actions. I’m tired, drained, exhausted, sick of living like this.

And since a picture is worth more than a thousand words, allow me to demonstrate my point.

Mexico 1968:

imageimage

Mexico 2014:

image

And if after this entire speech other whomever reads this still isn’t convinced that Mexico needs all the support we can get, under the cut you’ll find stronger but also REAL examples of the aftermath of these two events. 46 years and nothing has changed.

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