HuffPost Mexico Will Be The Change We Want To See In Our Country

Today we’re excited to announce the launch of HuffPost Mexico. Our site will be the 15th international edition of the Huffington Post, which was co-founded by Arianna Huffington in 2005 and was the first digital site to win a Pulitzer Prize. The Huffington Post has a global audience of 180 million people, and more than 100,000 people have blogged for the site around the world. These numbers are impressive, but what excites me most is not the opportunity to look out into the world, but rather to look within, and to start a conversation in Mexico that reaches all Mexicans.

Mexico is more than ready. The challenges currently facing Mexico’s media industry and the turmoil our country is experiencing offer us opportunities, as all crises do. We must learn to identify these opportunities and to take advantage of them.

I’ve always thought that an informed society is a society that makes better decisions. The arrival of this publication in Mexico means that a prominent global platform will shed light on issues that Mexicans care about, and ones that we should care about. The stories we aim to publish, which will delve into such topics as politics, the environment, women’s empowerment, welfare, health and lifestyle, should enable all Mexicans to live their lives better, on the personal, familial, and societal levels.


For me, HuffPost Mexico is a challenge, and a responsibility to promote the change we are seeking.

Sixty percent of Mexico’s population is online. The time is now for us Mexicans to reinvent ourselves.

“I feel that Mexico wants to change, but it doesn’t know how to go about it,” I said in conversations I had with HuffPost’s Executive International Editor, Nicholas Sabloff and with Arianna herself.

On this platform, we are committed to offering stories that inform, entertain, inspire and empower. Audiences, in turn, have the moral duty to keep themselves informed. In Mexico, change won’t come from the government. The potential for change lies within us. It lies in what the media can present, and in the questions and demands that people pose. Most of all, the possibility for change lies in the action we can take.

What’s the point of a deluge of social media insults or complaints if that’s as far as we’re wiling to go? More often than not, we are not even familiar with the details of the issue we’re heatedly debating.

In the internet era, we have two options: We can keep obsessing over likes and followers and scroll for hours on our cellphone screens, or we can use our time to produce and consume stories of substance. It’s been years since we could truly blame Televisa; Technology has disrupted the previously all-powerful media institution. Now, there are alternatives.

Huffpost Mexico will provide an alternative to the ridiculous and extreme nature of the national press. It will be built on freedom of expression, and its international character will set it apart. Because our platform will target society at large rather than government officials, experts or intellectuals, HuffPost Mexico will be able to adopt a tone at once informational and conversational as we delve into complex subjects, such as the teachers’ strikes.

Huffpost Mexico will also take on in-depth investigations to understand such issues as the role of the Institutional Revolutionary Party in the country. We aim to inspire our audience to go beyond questions like “Who’s ahead in the polls for the 2018 elections?”

For me, HuffPost is a challenge and a responsibility to bring about the change we seek in Mexico. The kind of journalism that we aim to produce here is not one that simply reports the facts, however. It is the kind of journalism that calls for finding solutions amidst troubling times. The result, hopefully, will be a kind of journalism that instigates new public policies and inculcates (though does not impose) ideas and energy for everyone who wants to be an agent of change in Mexico.

Let this be a great adventure in our lives.

Welcome to HuffPost Mexico, and thank you for reading.

This piece was written for the launch of HuffPost Mexico on September 1st. To read this article in Spanish from HuffPost Mexico, click here.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Welcome To The Mexican-American Election

 

WASHINGTON ― First, Donald Trump vows to build a “great” wall along the 1,989-mile U.S.-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it. Then Vicente Fox says there is no way his country will pay for a “fucking wall,” and Enrique Peña Nieto compares Trump’s “populism” to that of Hitler and Mussolini. Hillary Clinton, not to be outdone, attacks Trump as a dictatorial bigot, in large part because he called Mexican immigrants to the U.S. criminals, drug dealers and rapists.

Even the appearance of a taco bowl has become a key moment in the U.S. presidential race. Was Trump innocently trying to honor Mexican culture with his Cinco de Mayo tweet, or rudely taunting his critics? (The latter, I confirmed.)

And that was just the start of a North American political melodrama. 

On Wednesday ― in the strangest chapter yet, although every chapter has been the strangest chapter yet ― Trump flew to Mexico City at Peña Nieto’s invitation for a meeting of two men desperate for respect. Trump is way behind in the campaign polls, while Peña Nieto’s approval rating is an abysmal 23 percent.

Peña Nieto had issued a separate invitation to Clinton, but she is wisely staying out of the way for now, the better to watch the Mexican president and the American candidate somehow try to ignore a year’s worth of some of the nastiest rhetoric between the two countries since Santa Anna attacked the Alamo.

And ignore it they did. 

Improbably, at least for a time, the two men managed to sound like brothers in arms, linked by a shared desire to block illegal migration from Central and South America and fend off cheap manufacturing imports from outside of North America. As for the dangers of a porous border, Trump admitted that “it’s not a one-way street” ― acknowledging that Mexico suffers from an influx of dirty money and arms from the U.S.

“We will work together,” said Trump, sounding, for the moment at least, like the kind of let’s-paper-things-over politician that he has built his campaign on denouncing.

Oh, and one other thing: By his own account, Trump did not bring up the indelicate topic of who would pay for a border wall, should one ever be built. “We didn’t discuss” it, said Trump, even though it has been one of the two constants of his ever-changing immigration platform.

Tweeting later, Peña Nieto dropped the diplomatic niceties and insisted that the two had indeed discussed who would pay for the wall ― and that the Mexican position was that it would never be Mexico. In other words, Pena Nieto implied, his American guest was a liar. 

Trump evidently surprised Peña Nieto by accepting the invitation and racing to Mexico City before the Mexican president could change his mind. He was rewarded with controlled but gracious words from Peña Nieto, who could hardly greet his guest by calling him a fascist.

Instead, Peña Nieto said that despite Trump’s harsh words in past months, the American billionaire had displayed a “genuine interest in our society’s mutual well-being” ― which, obviously, remains to be seen.

Mexican citizens don’t vote in U.S. elections, of course. But this year, Mexico itself has taken center stage in the U.S. to a degree that’s causing strain in both countries. There is dark humor to be enjoyed, but when Mexico becomes a central issue here, it’s usually a sign that politics have become scary and a little crazy in El Norte.

When Americans vote this November, they will not only choose a new president (and Congress), but open a new chapter in a long, often contentious relationship with the country to their immediate south ― a history that includes a shooting war over Texas and New Spain in the 19th century and a war of words over trade in the late 20th.

This year, U.S. citizens of Mexican heritage who live and vote in strategically important states could well decide the outcome of the presidential race.

And U.S. policy toward Mexican immigrants hangs in the balance, as America goes through one of its periodic outbreaks of xenophobia, spurred by security concerns and historically high levels of immigration from around the world.

It is easy to pinpoint the moment when 2016 became the Mexico Election.

On June 16, 2015, a pudgy man with tangerine-colored hair rode a gold-toned escalator down to the lobby of the office tower he had named for himself on Fifth Avenue in New York City. There, surrounded by TV cameras and pink marble, he declared his candidacy for the U.S. presidency ― and his own personal war against the country and people of Mexico.

Mexico, Trump said that day, was “sending” people north “who have a lot of problems. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists.”

The solution, he said, was to quickly find and deport the estimated 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. ― a group that includes millions of people from Mexico ― and to build a three-story wall along the border. Trump would force Mexico pay for the wall, he said, by threatening to cut off private remittance payments by Mexican immigrants.

Trump’s presidential candidacy was initially dismissed as a sideshow, a vanity project from a reality-TV entertainer and shifty real estate mogul who shouted from the paranoid fringes of American politics.

But Trump’s accusatory, inflammatory approach eventually made him the Republican presidential nominee, and now he is facing off in the final round against Clinton, the Democratic leader of a brand-name machine with decades of experience and contacts.

The strategy that got Trump through the primaries, though, is now suppressing his chances in the general.

Trump is behind in the race, flagging in several of the key states he would need to win under the U.S. electoral system. As of Aug. 30, The New York Times put the odds of Trump winning the White House at just 12 percent.

True, immigration remains a top-five issue in the race. But 72 percent of all Americans favor finding a way for undocumented immigrants to “legally stay” in the U.S. And only 38 percent support the construction of a wall along the Mexican border.

The poll numbers matter for several reasons ― and they are poison for Republicans.

For one thing, Hispanics in general, and Mexicans in particular, are the largest minority group in the United States today. There are 60 million Latinos in the U.S., of whom some 35 million declare themselves to be of Mexican descent.

For another, about half of the estimated 11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. are from Mexico.

When Trump disparages Mexican immigrants, therefore, he is attacking a much wider ― and very influential ― group of legal American voters.

It is no way to win the “Hispanic vote.”

The general rule in American politics is that a Republican cannot win the presidency without garnering at least 40 percent of the Hispanic vote. President George W. Bush barely won in 2004 and got about 44 percent of that vote. In 2008, Sen. John McCain got 30 percent and lost. In 2012, Mitt Romney got 27 percent and lost.

“Right now it looks like Trump is going to set a new modern low ― 25 percent,” said Simon Rosenberg of the New Democratic Network, a Washington think tank that studies immigration.

In May, as Trump was wrapping up the GOP nomination, his then-campaign chairman dismissed the idea that the candidate would have to reach Bush-like levels of Latino and Mexican support.

Since most Latinos in general and Mexicans in particular are located in states such as California, New York and Texas ― none of which are competitive in the U.S. Electoral College ― the overall national number doesn’t matter, Paul Manafort told me. What matters is that Trump win support in states with smaller numbers of Mexicans and Latinos. There, he claimed, Hispanic voters will be less likely to base their votes on ethnic solidarity and won’t be so easily swayed by liberal Hispanic activists.

Manafort has since been fired, and his replacements know that Trump will continue to drive away Hispanics ― and moderate Anglo voters ― if he maintains his hard line on Mexico and immigration.

So in the past two weeks Trump has been trying to modulate, or at least obscure, his past positions.

The wall remains an unchanged part of his agenda. So does his theory that he can force Mexico to pay for it. So does his alleged determination to “immediately” find and deport “the bad ones” ― those undocumented immigrants with criminal records or other serious problems.

But he has stopped attacking – or even mentioning – Gonzalo Curiel, a federal judge born in the U.S. who Trump had said was inherently biased against him because his parents emigrated from Mexico.

And Trump now says he has sympathy for undocumented immigrants who have been in the U.S. for many years and lead quiet, productive lives.

Voters at his rallies, he says, are pleading for them.

“They’ve said, ‘Mr. Trump, I love you, but take a person that has been here for 15-20 years, and now throw them and their family out? It’s so tough,’” he said last week.

It seems unlikely that Trump has had a genuine change of heart. One suspects, rather, that his new team of advisers have simply taken a closer look at the Electoral College and noted that Hispanics are a key voting bloc in many parts of the country Trump badly needs to win.

Meanwhile, as Trump works to “modify” his stand, Hillary Clinton continues to make it clear that she favors a “path to citizenship” for undocumented immigrants. And she is carefully ― some might say obsessively ― targeting Hispanic voters as she works the states.

She picked as her running mate Tim Kaine, the governor of Virginia ― one of the states up for grabs in the Electoral College ― and a fluent speaker of Spanish. Kaine is also a Catholic, like two-thirds of Mexican-Americans, and has traveled and worked widely in Latin America.

Plus, as Clinton plans for what she hopes will be a victory in November, she has named as her “transition” chief Ken Salazar, a former Colorado attorney general, U.S. senator and secretary of the interior.

He is of Mexican-American heritage ― except that his family emigrated from Spain to what was then New Spain about 400 years ago.

That was about 300 years before Donald Trump’s ancestors arrived in New York from Germany.

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Sony intros two camera-focused additions to its Xperia X line

P8253134 Sony knows from phone cameras. After all, it’s the company’s companents that fuels the competition’s hardware. As such, it makes sense that it’s opted to focus on the feature for a pair of new additions to its Xperia X line, the flagship 5.2-inch XZ and 4.2-inch Compact. The company has moved to what it’s called triple image sensing technology, built around… Read More

Sony's Slick New Phones Are Actually Launching in the US For Once

Sony makes a damn fine phone
, but historically it’s been pretty difficult to get your hands on one in the US
. It usually requires smuggling it in from another country. So Sony’s plan to launch it’s newest Xperia phone in the US, just two months after it finally launched last year’s model here, is big news.

Read more…

Dyson’s Cinetic Big Ball vacuum just won’t stay down

Dyson Cinetic Big BallDyson wants to solve the drunken vacuum cleaner problem, and the British appliance company believes a big ball is the way to do it. The new Dyson Cinetic Big Ball promises, like a Weeble, to self-right if your over-enthusiastic cleaning ministrations make it topple over in the line of duty. Traditional canister vacuums, the company argues, can be naturally prone … Continue reading

Osmo Mobile turns smartphones into a motion tracking smart camera

oso-mobileIf you are the sort who prefers to enjoy the moment rather than being focused on a camera or smartphone screen recording video and shooting images, the Osmo Mobile might be just the device for you. The Osmo Mobile smartphone holder turns your smart device into a smart motion-tracking camera. What that means is that you don’t have to choose … Continue reading

Huawei Launches The Nova, Nova Plus Mid-Range Handsets

Image credit - Engadget

Image credit – Engadget

Sometimes spending close to a thousand bucks on a smartphone can be a rather painful experience, especially if you’re the type that likes to switch it up every now and then, meaning that you could be out several thousand a year if you change phones enough times. If you’d rather not drop that kind of cash, there are plenty of options that you can consider.

In fact during IFA 2016, Huawei announced a pair of mid-rangers in the form of the Huawei Nova and the Huawei Nova Plus. Both handsets are of the mid-range variety so in reality there’s really not much to shout about, but they are specced pretty decently so if you want a phone that’s good enough to get the job done, this could be it.

Starting with the Huawei Nova, this phone packs a 5-inch Full HD display, 3GB of RAM, a Snapdragon 625 chipset, 32GB of storage, a 12MP rear-facing camera, an 8MP front-facing camera, Cat 6 LTE, a 3,020mAh battery, USB-C, and Android 6.0 Marshmallow. The Nova Plus, as its name implies, will be the larger of the two phones.

It will come with a 5.5-inch Full HD display, a 16MP rear-facing camera with OIS, a 3,340mAh battery, but other than that the rest of its specs will be similar to the smaller Nova. In terms of price, Huawei has priced the phones at €399 and €429 respectively and will be available in October.

Huawei Launches The Nova, Nova Plus Mid-Range Handsets , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Samsung Makes The Galaxy J7 Prime Official

samsung galaxy j7 primeAbout a week ago, we heard rumors that Samsung had a higher version of the Galaxy J7 in the works called the Galaxy J7 Prime. It turns out the rumors were right as Samsung has officially taken the wraps off the phone, although we suppose the only downside here is that the handset appears to be exclusive to Vietnam for now.

However for those who are curious, the Galaxy J7 Prime is a slightly higher-end version of the Galaxy J7 that was actually launched earlier this year. For starters we’ll be looking at an increase in display resolution from 720p, to Full HD 1080p. It will also see an increase in base storage from 16GB to 32GB, but it will also retain its expandable memory so don’t worry, you’ll still be able to add on to that.

RAM has also seen an increase from 2GB to 3GB, and let’s not forget the addition of a fingerprint sensor which we’re sure is a welcome feature, and to top it off, a metal body instead of plastic. Other than that, we’re still looking at the same Exynos 7870 chipset with a 3,300mAh battery, a 13MP rear-facing camera, an 8MP front-facing camera, and will run on Android Marshmallow.

In terms of pricing, the Galaxy J7 Prime is set at around $280 but like we said, it seems to be exclusive to Vietnam for now and there is no word on whether Samsung will eventually bring it to other markets.

Samsung Makes The Galaxy J7 Prime Official , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Garmin Forerunner 35 Smartwatch Announced

Forerunner35-702x336When it comes to the wearables scene, Garmin has been making decent strides and if you’re after a wearable with a built-in heart rate monitor, you’re in luck as Garmin has taken the wraps off their latest gadget: the Garmin Forerunner 35 which like we said, will come with a heart rate monitor built into the watch itself.

When Garmin first got into wearables, their devices did not have heart rate monitors built into them. Instead users have to purchase a separate chest strap if they wished to monitor their heart rate, but like we said, Garmin has made some pretty decent strides then and the Forerunner 35 is an example of that.

According to Garmin, the Forerunner 35 will come with tracking features like distance, pace, setting personal records, GPS, how far they’ve run, how fast they’ve run, and so on. Users won’t even need to carry a phone with them either if they don’t want to as the data can be stored on the watch itself.

However when you’re done exercising, the Forerunner 35 will able to double up as a regular smartwatch with the ability to receive notifications from your phone as well as to control music playback and more. The Forerunner 35 is expected to be made available later this year in Q3 where it will be priced at $200.

Garmin Forerunner 35 Smartwatch Announced , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Rosetta 3D images comet dust before it bids farewell

Rosetta’s scientists are doing every bit of science they can before the European Space Agency crashes the probe into the comet it’s been studying. In fact, the spacecraft’s Micro-Imaging Dust Analysis System (MIDAS) has just analyzed dust samples Ros…