Andrés Manuel López Obrador greets a young girl in a departures lounge at the airport in Campeche, #Mexico, following a campaign rally, on June 26. The presidential candidate dubbed #AMLO by TV pundits, who adjoined his initials to save breath, made three stops on the Yucatán Peninsula before heading back to Mexico City, where he delivered a final speech at the Estadio Azteca on July 27 ahead of the elections on July 1. Polls predict he will win the race with a home run. As López Obrador has soared toward the highest office in the land, he has campaigned mostly in the pueblos—small towns and villages like his native Tepetitán. It is here that López Obrador’s brand of leftist nationalism can be best understood. Many pueblos have been hit hard by the downside of globalization, their craft trades wiped out by factory-made imports, their farmers crushed by agribusiness, their young trekking to the U.S. to lay bricks and pick fruit. In their plazas, López #Obrador has promised crowds that he would revive the pueblos and their people, building roads, repairing schools, paying for pensions and subsidies. “I have a dream that there isn’t emigration, that Mexicans can work and be happy where they were born, where their family is, where their culture is,” López Obrador told a rally in Jerez, Zacatecas, giving a nod to Martin Luther King Jr. “And those who want to leave go because they choose to, not out of necessity.” Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @christopher_vii—@viiphoto for TIME #??

timeさん(@time)が投稿した動画 -

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 6月30日 05時39分


Andrés Manuel López Obrador greets a young girl in a departures lounge at the airport in Campeche, #Mexico, following a campaign rally, on June 26. The presidential candidate dubbed #AMLO by TV pundits, who adjoined his initials to save breath, made three stops on the Yucatán Peninsula before heading back to Mexico City, where he delivered a final speech at the Estadio Azteca on July 27 ahead of the elections on July 1. Polls predict he will win the race with a home run. As López Obrador has soared toward the highest office in the land, he has campaigned mostly in the pueblos—small towns and villages like his native Tepetitán. It is here that López Obrador’s brand of leftist nationalism can be best understood. Many pueblos have been hit hard by the downside of globalization, their craft trades wiped out by factory-made imports, their farmers crushed by agribusiness, their young trekking to the U.S. to lay bricks and pick fruit. In their plazas, López #Obrador has promised crowds that he would revive the pueblos and their people, building roads, repairing schools, paying for pensions and subsidies. “I have a dream that there isn’t emigration, that Mexicans can work and be happy where they were born, where their family is, where their culture is,” López Obrador told a rally in Jerez, Zacatecas, giving a nod to Martin Luther King Jr. “And those who want to leave go because they choose to, not out of necessity.” Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @christopher_vii@viiphoto for TIME #??


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

14,826

249

2018/6/30

池松壮亮のインスタグラム
池松壮亮さんがフォロー

TIME Magazineを見た方におすすめの有名人