Diego
26.9K posts

Diego
@diego__mx__
jamás me he brincado una traba a la hora de ponerme el cinturón
Mérida, Yucatán Katılım Eylül 2009
1.5K Takip Edilen3.6K Takipçiler

@fernandoco9158 @rochamoya_ Que gusto ver que solo bots defienden. Ya esta despertando México !!!
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@rochamoya_ Queremos pruebas, nomas quieren manchar la imagen del gobernador y de mas funcionarios publicos.
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Rechazo categórica y absolutamente las imputaciones formuladas en mi contra, por la Fiscalía Federal del Distrito Sur de Nueva York, ya que carecen de veracidad y fundamento alguno. Y así se demostrará, con toda contundencia, en el momento oportuno.
Este ataque no es únicamente a mi persona; sino al movimiento de la Cuarta Transformación, a sus emblemáticos liderazgos, y a las y los mexicanos que representamos esa causa.
Se inscribe en una perversa estrategia para violentar el orden constitucional, específicamente la soberanía nacional que preconiza el artículo 40 de la Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, que nuestro movimiento defiende como principio invariable e innegociable.
A las y los sinaloenses les digo que, con el valor y la dignidad que nos caracterizan, demostraremos la falta de sustento de esta calumnia.
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@cukisdel44222 @rochamoya_ Jajajaja es un bot no mamen ni se desgasten
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@rochamoya_ Todos los sinaloenses sabemos el gran trabajo que nuestro gobernador Ruben Rocha Moya a desempeñado, los mexicanos no aceptamos estás calumnias . Cuenta con todo nuestro respaldo gobernador.
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@rochamoya_ Nadie te cree. Todos sabemos que tú y los principales de Morena son socios comerciales de los narcos. Disfruta el resto de tus días en prisión.
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@jmgmoron Gracias a la inestimable ayuda del clostebol, la ATP y la AMA.
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Si a Sinner le da por ganar Madrid, Roma y Roland Garros, se colocaría con 15.400 puntos en el Ranking, lo que sería la tercera mejor marca de la historia.
Top histórico de puntos ATP:
1️⃣ Novak Djokovic: 16.790
2️⃣ Roger Federer: 15.730
3️⃣ Rafa Nadal: 14.755
4️⃣ Carlos Alcaraz: 13.650
5️⃣ Jannik Sinner: 13.350

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@PandaMesta @jmgmoron Clásico comentario de un pendejo ardido porque seguro le va Alcaraz y le tiene envidia a Sinner. Felicidades, toma tu premio por el más pendejo 🥇!
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@jmgmoron Pues si lo dejan seguir consumiendo substancias no dudaría ni tantito en que pueda lograr eso y mucho más.
Ya vimos que su cuerpo no aguanta nada sin esas pequeñas ayudas.
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Diego retweetledi

@Marcos_Mtz84 Retrasado mental. Felicidades, el premio al más pendejo lo has ganado.
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Diego retweetledi

@CONEJITABCA @lpazosp Hasta para escribir está pendejo tu número. Se nota claramente que eres de las come croquetas que sigue defendiendo a narco morena.
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@lpazosp Y 999999999999...... del mundo opina que eres un pendejo hdtptisima madre
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Diego retweetledi
Diego retweetledi
Diego retweetledi

The White House’s declaration of an “intolerable alliance” between Mexican drug-trafficking organizations and the Mexican state formalizes what foreign governments, the Washington security establishment, and serious international media have already concluded: Mexico’s cooperation narrative has collapsed.
The Spectator´s recent article proves that the Mexican government is no longer viewed as a compromised or weak partner struggling with organized crime, but as a system that manages, protects, and monetizes it. We´re close to the end of diplomatic indulgence and the beginning of open institutional distrust.
For years, Mexico’s federal government relied on a dual-track strategy. Externally, it framed itself as a constrained but cooperative partner. Internally, it pursued appeasement: selective handovers of expendable narcos, symbolic seizures, and non-aggression toward the political-criminal infrastructure embedded at the state, municipal, and party levels. This model depended on foreign actors choosing stability optics over empirical evidence.
That tolerance is gone.
Treviño´s article reflects a consensus that has quietly solidified across US policy circles, foreign pressrooms, and NORTHCOM. The question is no longer whether collusion exists, but whether the Mexican state retains either the capacity or the will to dismantle it. The answer, inferred by outsiders, is no. The MORENA project is now viewed as structurally intertwined with organized crime, not episodically compromised. This distinction matters. It reframes Mexico from a weak partner to a captured system.
The appeasement strategy has reached diminishing returns. Handing over individual cartel figures does not disrupt networks when protection, financing, electoral coercion, and territorial control are anchored in political offices. Foreign governments understand this. The focus has shifted from tactical arrests to institutional accountability. Mexico has consistently refused to go there. That refusal is now interpreted as intent, not limitation.
This directly impacts Claudia Sheinbaum. Her presidency was marketed internationally as a technocratic reset with continuity minus excesses. That positioning is no longer credible. She is not being evaluated on personal competence or rhetoric, but on whether she is willing to sever the political-criminal machinery inherited from Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Every signal so far suggests continuity, not rupture.
Foreign actors do not expect Sheinbaum to dismantle cartels overnight. They do expect a demonstrable break with the protection architecture inside MORENA. That means investigations, prosecutions, exposure of financing channels, and cooperation that cuts into party power. The absence of such moves is already priced in as complicity. Silence is being read as alignment.
Mexico is no longer granted the benefit of contextual ambiguity. This is reputational damage that does not reverse with daily press conferences or nationalist counter-narratives. The patience has ended.
Strategically, this puts Sheinbaum in a narrowing corridor. Continuing the appeasement model may preserve internal party cohesion in the short term, but it accelerates external isolation and escalatory pressure from the United States and the Trump Administration. Breaking with the model would fracture MORENA regionally (perhaps nationally) and expose entrenched interests, but it is the only path to restoring minimal foreign credibility. There is no third option.
The core miscalculation of the outgoing regime was assuming that foreign partners would indefinitely tolerate managed chaos so long as cooperation theater was maintained. That assumption has collapsed. The current US posture indicates a readiness to treat Mexico not as a problematic ally, but as a hostile national security threat.

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Diego retweetledi

Pública hoy el periódico británico The Spectator que @lopezobrador_ lleva al menos 20 años vinculado al Cártel de Sinaloa. Y si, hay un narco estado en México.
spectator.com/article/yes-th…

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