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FOCUS: Why Hillary Clinton's 90s Nostalgia Is So Dangerous Print
Saturday, 02 July 2016 11:47

Frank writes: "Donald Trump's campaign to 'Make America Great Again' is one big, flatulent exercise in delusional nostalgia, as so many have noted. Given the likely outcome of the American presidential contest, however, it is Hillary Clinton's delusional nostalgia that may ultimately prove more harmful for the country."

Hillary Clinton. (photo: Brian Snyder/Reuters)
Hillary Clinton. (photo: Brian Snyder/Reuters)


Why Hillary Clinton's 90s Nostalgia Is So Dangerous

By Thomas Frank, Guardian UK

02 July 16

 

Times were good in the last years of Bill Clinton’s presidency. But to put the arch-deregulator in charge of an economy wrecked by financial bubbles is sheer folly

onald Trump’s campaign to “Make America Great Again” is one big, flatulent exercise in delusional nostalgia, as so many have noted. Given the likely outcome of the American presidential contest, however, it is Hillary Clinton’s delusional nostalgia that may ultimately prove more harmful for the country.

Campaigning in Kentucky recently, she promised that, should she be elected, she would task former president Bill Clinton with “revitalizing the economy, because he knows how to do it”. A few minutes before, she had recited her husband’s qualifications for this job: “In the 90s, everybody’s income went up, not just people at the top. We lifted more people out of poverty than at any time in our recent history.” And so on.

Ah, the 90s. It seems that Hillary, too, longs to make America great again, and she reminded the audience in Kentucky of the specific elements of our lost golden age. First among those gauzy memories: “A budget that is balanced and in surplus” – like the budget Bill Clinton built in the good old days before the spendthrift George W Bush administration came in. There were other ways in which the GOP had diverged from Clinton orthodoxy as well, like their desire to “Cut taxes on the wealthy [and] get out of the way of regulation of all kinds,” sins that, Hillary said, contributed directly to the financial crisis of 2008.

American columnists have already expressed their annoyance with Hillary for offloading her duties-to-come onto her husband and thus compromising the first female presidency before it’s even started. But what really lends distinction to her announcement is the perversity, the sheer incoherence of the kind of policies she seems to hope her husband will recommend.

Take her apparent belief that balancing the federal budget is a good way to “revitalize” an economy stuck in persistent hard times. Nostalgia might indeed suggest such a course, because that’s what Bill Clinton did in the golden 90s, and those were happy days. But more recent events have taught us a different lesson. Europe’s turn toward budget-balancing austerity after the financial crisis is what made their recession so much worse than ours. President Obama’s own quest for a budget-balancing “grand bargain” is what destroyed his presidency’s transformative potential. There is no plainer lesson from the events of recent years than the folly of austerity and the non-urgency of budget-balancing.

And deregulation! Before I watched the video of that Hillary Clinton campaign event, I had never heard someone denounce deregulation and hail the economic achievements of Bill Clinton in the same speech. That kind of mental combination, I’ve always assumed, puts you in danger of spontaneous combustion or something. After all, Bill Clinton is America’s all-time champion deregulator. He deregulated banks. He deregulated telecoms. He appointed arch deregulators Robert Rubin and Larry Summers to high office, and he re-upped Ronald Reagan’s pet Fed chairman, Alan Greenspan. He took some time out to dynamite the federal welfare system, then he came back and deregulated banks some more. And derivative securities, too.

Yes, we all know that times were good in the last few years of Bill Clinton’s presidency. But unless 90s nostalgia has completely paralyzed our brains, we also know that this was due in large part to a series of financial bubbles. It is true that a different person was in the White House when the last of those bubbles exploded, but even a child understands that doesn’t get Bill Clinton entirely off the hook for it. Nor would it be a good idea to get Bill working on another Nasdaq bubble, even assuming such a thing is possible.

It all puts me in mind of a little nostalgia of my own. One of the reasons I voted for Barack Obama over Hillary Clinton during the hopeful summer of 2008 was because I thought we needed to shut the door on the Clinton legacy once and for all. Obama won the nomination and, thanks to a global economic crisis, became president. But then he proceeded to bring back some of the very Clinton appointees that had done so much to precipitate the disaster in the first place.

Now we have Hillary’s word that the man who masterminded it all will soon be back for yet another try. What is the power these bad ideas of yore have over otherwise intelligent leaders? Hillary Clinton is a capable person, and yet it is as though she has taken no notice of what is actually happening around her in the present day. Look at where we are now: soaring inequality, a recovery that never seems to come, a fraying middle class, a furious public, and improbable protest candidates drawing millions of votes. But all of it is as nothing, I suppose, when compared to the golden allure of the past.

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FOCUS: The Supreme Court Decision OKs Legalized Bribery in Bob McDonnell Case Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Saturday, 02 July 2016 10:53

Reich writes: "The Supreme Court has unanimously thrown out former Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell's 11-count corruption conviction because the state prosecutor defined 'bribery of a public official' too broadly."

Robert Reich. (photo: Rolling Stone)
Robert Reich. (photo: Rolling Stone)


The Supreme Court Decision OKs Legalized Bribery in Bob McDonnell Case

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

02 July 16

 

he Supreme Court has unanimously thrown out former Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell’s 11-count corruption conviction because the state prosecutor defined “bribery of a public official” too broadly.

This is nuts. There’s no factual dispute that McDonnell accepted gifts and loans worth more than $175,000, including a Rolex watch, designer clothes, lavish vacations, and use of a Ferrari sports car, from a businessman who had sought the governor’s help in promoting a dietary supplement. But the Court held that simply meeting with someone in exchange for a personal gift or campaign contribution is not an “official act” and therefore doesn’t constitute federal bribery. Writing for the Court, Chief Justice John Roberts reasoned that “the basic compact underlying representative government assumes that public officials will hear from their constituents and act appropriately on their concerns,” and that if corruption is defined too broadly “officials might wonder whether they could respond to even the most commonplace requests for assistance, and citizens with legitimate concerns might shrink from participating in democratic discourse."

Roberts may be correct in the abstract but the facts of this case show clear-cut bribery. The Court’s decision gives the wealthy and powerful even more license to corrupt our system, and it underscores the urgent need for stricter state and federal campaign-finance laws.

What do you think?

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In Response to Trump, Another Dangerous Movement Appears Print
Saturday, 02 July 2016 08:50

Taibbi writes: "The 'too much democracy' train rolls on. Last week's Brexit vote prompted pundits and social media mavens to wonder aloud if allowing dumb people to vote is a good thing. Now, the cover story in The Atlantic magazine features the most aggressive offering yet in an alarming series of intellectual-class jeremiads against the dangers of democracy."

Donald Trump. (photo: Bill Clark/Roll Call)
Donald Trump. (photo: Bill Clark/Roll Call)


In Response to Trump, Another Dangerous Movement Appears

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

02 July 16

 

Fears of demagoguery are provoking a frightening swing in the other direction

he "too much democracy" train rolls on.

Last week's Brexit vote prompted pundits and social media mavens to wonder aloud if allowing dumb people to vote is a good thing.

Now, the cover story in The Atlantic magazine features the most aggressive offering yet in an alarming series of intellectual-class jeremiads against the dangers of democracy.

In "How American Politics Went Insane," Brookings Institute Fellow Jonathan Rauch spends many thousands of words arguing for the reinvigoration of political machines, as a means of keeping the ape-citizen further from power.

He portrays the public as a gang of nihilistic loonies determined to play mailbox baseball with the gears of state.

"Neurotic hatred of the political class is the country's last universally acceptable form of bigotry," he writes, before concluding:

"Our most pressing political problem today is that the country abandoned the establishment, not the other way around."

Rauch's audacious piece, much like Andrew Sullivan's clarion call for a less-democratic future in New York magazine ("Democracies end when they are too democratic"), is not merely a warning about the threat posed to civilization by demagogues like Donald Trump.

It's a sweeping argument against a whole host of democratic initiatives, from increased transparency to reducing money in politics to the phasing out of bagmen and ward-heelers at the local level. These things have all destabilized America, Rauch insists.

It's a piece that praises Boss Tweed's Tammany Hall (it was good for the Irish!), the smoke-filled room (good for "brokering complex compromises"), and pork (it helps "glue Congress together" by giving members "a kind of currency to trade").

Rauch even chokes multiple times on the word "corruption," seeming reluctant to even mention the concept without shrouding it in flurries of caveats. When he talks about the "ever-present potential for corruption" that political middlemen pose, he's quick to note the converse also applies (emphasis mine):

"Overreacting to the threat of corruption… is just as harmful. Political contributions, for example, look unseemly, but they play a vital role as political bonding agents."

The basic thrust is that shadowy back-room mechanisms, which Rauch absurdly describes as being relics of a lost era, have a positive role and must be brought back.

He argues back-room relationships and payoffs at least committed the actors involved to action. Meanwhile, all the transparency and sunshine and access the public is always begging for leads mainly to gridlock and frustration.

In one passage, Rauch blames gridlock on the gerrymandering that renders most congressional elections meaningless. In a scandal that should get more media play, Democrats and Republicans have divvied up territory to make most House districts "safe" for one party or another. Only about 10 to 20 percent of races are really contested in any given year (one estimate in 2014 described an incredible 408 of the 435 races as "noncompetitive").

As Rauch notes, meaningless general elections make primaries the main battlegrounds. This puts pressure on party candidates to drift to extremes:

"Walled safely inside their gerrymandered districts, incumbents are insulated from general-election challenges that might pull them toward the political center, but they are perpetually vulnerable to primary challenges from extremists who pull them toward the fringes.

"Everyone worries about being the next Eric Cantor, the Republican House majority leader who, in a shocking upset, lost to an unknown Tea Partier in his 2014 primary."

Most people would look at a problem like this and conclude that the solution, if one is needed (is the defeat of a supercilious reptile like Eric Cantor really a bad thing?), would be to end crooked gerrymandering.

Not Rauch. He leans more toward blaming the decision to allow direct-voting primary processes in the first place. His piece longs for a time when party insiders were free to pick candidates without interference.

He gushes, for instance, over a passage in a biography of George H.W. Bush that describes how his daddy, Prescott Bush, got into politics:

"Samuel F. Pryor, a top Pan Am executive and a mover in Connecticut politics, called Prescott to ask whether Bush might like to run for Congress. 'If you would,' Pryor said, 'I think we can assure you that you'll be the nominee.'"

Commenting on this, Rauch writes, with undisguised sadness:

"Today, party insiders can still jawbone a little bit, but, as the 2016 presidential race has made all too clear, there is startlingly little they can do to influence the nominating process."

You see, we would never have to risk these Trump/Bernie Sanders episodes at all, if only there was no voting and we turned over the process to insiders sipping highballs in a Pan Am executive's basement!

Rauch views Sanders as the flip side of the Trumpian coin. Both men, he says, "have demonstrated that the major political parties no longer have intelligible boundaries or enforceable norms."

So what does Rauch propose to do about these usurpers who come out of nowhere, and, without so much as the permission of a Pan Am executive, run for public office?

One of Rauch's solutions is to force candidates to get permission slips to go on the electoral field trip:

"There are all kinds of ways the parties could move insiders back to the center of the nomination process. If they wanted to, they could require would-be candidates to get petition signatures from elected officials and county party chairs…"

Rauch compares "outsiders" and "amateurs" to viruses that get into the body, and describes the institutions that failed to prevent the likes of Trump from being nominated as being like the national immune system. Revolt against party insiders is therefore comparable to "abusing and attacking your own immune system."

This lurid metaphor is going to be compelling to a lot of people when Donald Trump is still moving in the direction of the nuclear football. But these "too much democracy" critics all leave out a key part of the story: It's all bull.

Voters in America not only aren't over-empowered, they've for decades now been almost totally disenfranchised, subjects of one of the more brilliant change-suppressing systems ever invented.

We have periodic elections, which leave citizens with the feeling of self-rule. But in reality people are only allowed to choose between candidates carefully screened by wealthy donors. Nobody without a billion dollars and the approval of a half-dozen giant media companies has any chance at high office.

People have no other source of influence. Unions have been crushed. Nobody has any job security. Main Street institutions that once allowed people to walk down the road to sort things out with other human beings have been phased out. In their place now rest distant, unfeeling global bureaucracies.

Has a health insurance company wrongly denied your sick child coverage? Good luck even getting someone on the phone to talk it over, much less get it sorted out. Your neighborhood bank, once a relatively autonomous mechanism for stimulating the local economy, is now a glorified ATM machine with limited ability to respond to a community's most basic financial concerns.

One of the underpublicized revelations of the financial crisis, for instance, was that millions of Americans found themselves unable to get answers to a simple questions like, "Who holds the note to my house?"

People want more power over their own lives. They want to feel some connection to society. Most particularly, they don't want to be dictated to by distant bureaucrats who don't seem to care what they're going through, and think they know what's best for everyone.

These are legitimate concerns. Unfortunately, they came out in this past year in the campaign of Donald Trump, who'd exposed a tiny flaw in the system.

People are still free to vote, and some peculiarities in the structure of the commercial media, combined with mountains of public anger, conspired to put one of the two parties in the hands of a coverage-devouring billionaire running on a "Purge the Scum" platform.

But choosing a dangerous race-baiting lunatic as the vehicle for the first successful revolt in ages against one of the two major parties will have many profound negative consequences for voters. The most serious will surely be this burgeoning movement to describe voting and democracy as inherently dangerous.

Donald Trump is dangerous because as president, he'd likely have little respect for law. But a gang of people whose metaphor for society is "We are the white cells, voters are the disease" is comparably scary in its own banal, less click-generating way.

These self-congratulating cognoscenti could have looked at the events of the last year and wondered why people were so angry with them, and what they could do to make government work better for the population.

Instead, their first instinct is to dismiss voter concerns as baseless, neurotic bigotry and to assume that the solution is to give Washington bureaucrats even more leeway to blow off the public. In the absurdist comedy that is American political life, this is the ultimate anti-solution to the unrest of the last year, the mathematically perfect wrong ending.

Trump is going to lose this election, then live on as the reason for an emboldened, even less-responsive oligarchy. And you thought this election season couldn't get any worse.

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Bill Clinton and Loretta Lynch Just Made Hillary's Email Problems Even Worse Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=23815"><span class="small">Chris Cillizza, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Saturday, 02 July 2016 08:47

Cillizza writes: "A big part of politics is appearances and perceptions. If something looks bad, people will likely conclude it is bad - even if there's no actual evidence or proof of its relative badness. Politicians know this; it's why they don't wear funny hats or get in tanks (anymore)."

Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton and her husband former president Bill Clinton wait to go on stage at the Story County Democratic Picnic in Ames, Iowa, November 15, 2015. (photo: Melina Mara/WP)
Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton and her husband former president Bill Clinton wait to go on stage at the Story County Democratic Picnic in Ames, Iowa, November 15, 2015. (photo: Melina Mara/WP)


Bill Clinton and Loretta Lynch Just Made Hillary's Email Problems Even Worse

By Chris Cillizza, The Washington Post

02 July 16

 

big part of politics is appearances and perceptions. If something looks bad, people will likely conclude it is bad — even if there's no actual evidence or proof of its relative badness. Politicians know this; it's why they don't wear funny hats or get in tanks (anymore).

And it's why Bill Clinton and Attorney General Loretta Lynch should have known better when they huddled privately at the Phoenix airport earlier this week. Lynch is the nation's top cop and, as such, oversees the FBI, which is conducting an investigation into whether Hillary Clinton or any of her associates broke the law in setting up a private email server for her electronic correspondence during her four years as secretary of state. Meeting privately with the former president of the United States who also happens to be Hillary Clinton's husband looks really, really bad.

Lynch insisted in the wake of the meeting that it was purely cordial, saying Wednesday that the two spoke about “his grandchildren and his travels and things like that.” She added that the email probe never came up.

That answer, not surprisingly, didn't satisfy lots and lots of Republicans — and even some Democrats. "I think she should have said, 'Look, I recognize you have a long record of leadership on fighting crime but this is not the time for us to have that conversation,' " Delaware Democratic Sen. Chris Coons said of Lynch in an interview with CNN. " 'After the election is over, I'd welcome your advice.' "

Lynch bowed to the public pressure caused by her impromptu meeting Friday morning, announcing that she will accept whatever recommendation federal prosecutors make in the email case. Lynch repeatedly acknowledged in an interview with The Post's Jonathan Capehart at the Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado that her meeting with Bill Clinton had cast a shadow over the investigation. After much prodding from Capehart, she even basically acknowledged the meeting never should have happened in the first place.

"I certainly wouldn't do it again," she said.

While a Justice Department official who spoke to The Post insisted this was standard operating procedure -- and Lynch insisted this determination had already been made prior to her meeting with Bill Clinton -- Lynch's announcement was clearly a direct response to questions raised by her meeting with the former president earlier this week. She admitted it was, noting that details about the investigative process are rarely shared publicly.

Lynch handled tough questions from Capehart about as well as she could have. But that still isn't likely to change much of anything. If the FBI now returns something short of an indictment for Clinton and her top aides, Republicans will cite the Lynch-Bill Clinton meeting as evidence that the process was tainted from the start, that a Democratic administration simply can't be trusted to look deeply into the person the party is preparing to nominate for president. (Republicans, including Texas Sen. John Cornyn, are already calling for the appointment of a special prosecutor in the email case.)

There might have been no way — in lots of peoples's eyes — that Clinton could be fully exonerated on the email controversy even before this Bill-Lynch meeting. But, if there ever was that chance, it's gone now. It's like playing a basketball game in which you felt like the refs gave your team a hard time and then finding out that the other coach had dinner with them the night before the game. It's possible, of course, that nothing was even mentioned about the impending game; they might all just have been in the same restaurant and sat together for a drink or whatever. But no one would ever be able to convince you that there wasn't something nefarious going on at that dinner. And, it just plain looks bad.

Increasingly, the Clintons' defense on the email story is summed up in two words: "Trust us."

Trust Hillary Clinton that the thousands of emails she decided to delete as totally personal were totally personal and didn't mention work at all — despite the fact that a State Department email release earlier this week fundamentally undermines that argument.

(photo: The Washington Post)

Trust Bill Clinton (and Lynch) that their huddle in Phoenix was purely friendly and never touched on the email server investigation.

Trust Hillary Clinton that the only reason she set up the server in the first place was out of "convenience."

Trust them both that this whole thing is simply a Republican witch hunt and/or a trumped-up "scandal" created by a bored and adversarial media.

The problem with the "trust us" defense? Poll after poll suggests that a majority of the public simply doesn't trust them — saying that the words "honest" and "trustworthy" don't apply to Clinton. In an NBC-Wall Street Journal poll released this week, 41 percent said that Donald Trump would be better about being "honest and straightforward," while just 25 percent said Clinton would be better on those things. (One in three said neither candidate would be good on those traits.) And, according to the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll, six in 10 registered voters believe Clinton has handled her email issues poorly.

This whole mess created by Lynch and Bill Clinton will only make those numbers worse, further exposing Hillary Clinton's biggest weakness in the eyes of voters. And she has her husband to "thank" for it.

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Mexico's Education Reform Is Being Imposed With Bloodshed Print
Saturday, 02 July 2016 08:33

Knoll writes: "Jesus Cadena heard the church bell ring and knew that it meant someone was in need. Nochixtlan, his small town with a largely Indigenous Mixtec population, lies at the crossroads of major highways between Mexico City and Oaxaca City, and had just been taken over by police."

A masked Mexican soldier. (photo: AFP)
A masked Mexican soldier. (photo: AFP)


Mexico's Education Reform Is Being Imposed With Bloodshed

By Andalusia Knoll, teleSUR

02 July 16

 

Amid a growing number of state imposed massacres, such as its most recent one in Oaxaca, Mexico still shines on the world stage.

esus Cadena heard the church bell ring and knew that it meant someone was in need. Nochixtlán, his small town with a largely Indigenous Mixtec population, lies at the crossroads of major highways between Mexico City and Oaxaca City, and had just been taken over by police. In the week prior, teachers had installed a road blockade at these crossroads in opposition to neoliberal education reforms that they believe limit their labor rights, fail to recognize cultural and economic diversity, and open the doors to privatization.

Jesus ran immediately to the church from where the bells were sounding and came face to face with a crisis center in the middle of a bloody battle. He jumped into an ambulance and sped off to help injured people at the front lines where federal and state police had opened fire on an unarmed population. Then one of those bullets caught him in the stomach and his 19 years on this earth came to an end.

Education reform is being imposed at bloodshed in Mexico and Jesus is one of its most recent victims. He, along with campesino Silvano Sosa who left 5 children behind, local pharmacist Anselmo Cruz, and nine more, according to the teachers union CNTE, were killed at these barricades on June 19. Many of them had not previously participated in the protests and had just come out to help in a critical moment. Days later a community radio broadcaster and anarco-punk activist Salvador Gil Olmos was found beaten to death presumably by police in the Mixteca city of Huajuapan, just 60 miles from Nochixtlan.

In the days after the massacre, the streets filled with mass funerals for the latest victims of a government's war on its own people, where assault weapons seem to have preceded the use of dialogue. Teachers have been protesting the education reform for three years and the government says its repeal is non-negotiable.

In the center of Nochixtlan, next to the burnt out municipal hall engulfed by the flames of the town’s collective outrage, the market is coming to life and the vendors are frying up nopales, potatoes and chile seasoned meat. A helicopter flies low above the market, it's white and unmarked. All vendors jeer at the hovering aircraft and one says the spanish equivalent of "shit is going to hit the fan again." The helicopter makes the rounds, dipping down close to the houses where families are still huddled around mourning their dead.

As the Zapatistas stated in a recent communique:

“It is as if the resistance has awoken a collective sense of urgency in the face of the coming tragedy. It is as if every swing of a police baton, every canister of tear gas, every rubber bullet, and every arrest warrant were eloquent slogans: ‘today I attack her, him; tomorrow I’m coming for you.’”

The Mexican government with the support of various media outlets, which serve as itsmouthpiece, emphasized that those who died in Nochixtlán were not teachers. If they weren't teachers did it make it easier for the government to claim that they were outside instigators who had forced the police to open fire, because they had fired first? Or does it allow them to further discredit the teacher movement, attempting to show that their own barricades aren't made up of teachers, and continue to convince the population that teachers at large are in favor of the education reform? Regardless of the motive, the outcome is further delegitimization of the teachers' movement and those who support of it as well as a criminalization of the victims.

Within less than a week of the massacre, the parents of the 43 disappeared students from Ayotzinapa visited Nochixtlán, as their endless search for their children and justice, is now bound up with the profound grief parents in Nochixtlán. Ayotzinapa, which means place of turtles in Nahuatl, has gained a new definition with the word representing the collusion between organized crime and government. Nochixtlán, which means place of nopal worms in Mixteco, will now become synonymous with education reform imposed at bloodshed.

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, who just arrived in Canada earlier this week for the "Three Amigos Summit," was greeted by dozens screaming "murderer." Protest acts like this have become routine for his international visits. In a press conference with Justin Trudeau and Barack Obama, Peña Nieto was asked about his recent crackdown on teachers and he responded that the demonstrations go beyond fighting for a cause and are "causing problems to the communit[ies] that they belong to.” He then stated that the teachers should use the “mechanisms” of the “rule of law” to fight for their cause.

While Trudeau did mention his concern about human rights, the image that was projected to the world was the two state leaders jogging happily alongside each other. Rocco Trigueros, with the group of Mexicans in Vancouver protesting Peña Nieto's visit, told the local Metro News that if "the human rights abuses continue, Canada should stop its commercial relationship with Mexico to make the government reconsider its policies."

How is it that Mexico is able to save face, when there is a constant crisis of human rights violations with tens of thousands disappeared and more than a hundred thousand people murdered? A new Amnesty International report just came out documenting police's role in sexually torturing women they detain.

It's important to note that when the news of the Nochixtlán massacre first made headlines, the governments said their troops were unarmed, and when international agencies showed photos to call their bluff, they responded that the photos were false. Then when media outlets published the photo's metadata, the government finally ceded saying that yes their officers were armed, but only those who arrived at the very end, which also is sharp contrast to residents testimonies that first guns were fired early in the morning.

Nochixtlan is now another town's name added to the list of mass killings by Mexican state forces where the government claims they were in an ambush situation, and prays that it won't be investigated. These include, Apatzingan, Michoacán, where 16 people were murdered by federal police on January 6, 2015; Tanhuato, Michoacán, where 42 were killed on May 22nd, 2015 on a ranch; and Tlatlaya, Mexico State, where 22 were killed by the Army on June 30, 2014. While numerous journalistic investigations have debunked the ambush myths in these massacres, those responsible for pulling the triggers and ordering the operations remain free.

Jesus' mother, Patricia Sanchez, says that while she will fight for justice for her son, she has no reason to believe that anyone will actually be held responsible. But even if they are, "they will never bring my son back to me." She may not know the names Apatzingan, Tanhuato and Tlatlaya, but does know that impunity reigns.

As long as the international community, such as the governments of the United States and Canada, provide political cover to Mexico, the possibility that human rights will cease to be sacrificed at the altar of neoliberal reforms, and for justice to dismantle institutionalized impunity, remains unlikely.

In the meantime, more people will be murdered or disappeared by the state.

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