Thursday, August 18, 2011

community by antonio salazar esquivel (again) because i allready do one but i forgot to put my beautiful name







the community in Mexico is pretty you have a lot of diversity like chakas, punks, tonys, etc.





I like the place where i live because there are a lot of hookers crossing the street.





there is a lot of traffic because the people dont know what hooker to choose. there are alot of them.










i can go to the school whit fear of being steeled because the cops are a lot of thiefs, i dont know how to write thiefs, so profe if you see a mistake in my job... im sorry, goodbye =)

community by antonio salazar esquivel (again)

community by Michelle Montiel Linares



The community in Mexico is fucked, i mean the situation of the economy, just sucks, you even can buy a kilo of tortillas with the salary, I mean i have a cousin that steels in the metro because he dont have a good job.



the insecurity sucks too the cops are thiefs, i mean you cant trust in this guys they always want your money, thet dont want to help you.






it looks like the narcos fight for us instead of our friend Calderon, because their fucked too.


but i hope that "el Peje" win the next ellections.

and i hope there are no more "complos" against him.


Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Poverty and educational problems in Mexico

by Luisa Fernanda Aguilera Vazquez 34L
During an appearance in front of the "First Permanent Committee" of Mexico's Chamber of Diputies the Secretary of Public Security, Genaro Garcia Luna, stated that city police officers in Mexico have an "educational deficit" and pointed out that 70.2%of them lack any education or have an elementary education. 61% of city police are paid less than 4,000 pesos a month.
Juan Castro, head of Mexico's National Institute for Adult Education said that it will take at least 30 years to have 33.4 million Mexicans learn to read and write, as well as to have finish elementary and secondary schooling. He added that the current administration's goal is to reduce the number of uneducated Mexicans from 45.7% in 2006 to 40.9% in 2012.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

community troubles







One of the main problems facing Mexico are insecurity and corruption, this is because the economic situation in Mexico is bad, the prices of commodities increases as in the case of gasoline or tortilla and salaries are the same.





Politicians, who seem to decide how they themselves receive salariy must understand that is becoming harder to make a living in Mexico.





But there are other types of corruption, which occurs whithin the police forces, the police are seen as thieves in uniform, people do not trust them for the same reason that they know that cops are corrupts.





and the insecurity in Mexico increases because people dont know who is honest and who is a thief.





In a lot of communities there have been cases in which the population makes justice by their own hand.





but i hope that one day this situation change.

















Saturday, August 13, 2011

POST EXAMPLE

by MyAbilitator


The point is that you:

You can also add captions!
Include an image or video (some visual) ------------------------------------>
Write down original text (you can apply your reading strategies) NO COPY-PASTE!
Include links into the text, to show examples...
Include references 2 tell where you got the info from
Don't forget 2 give credit 2 yourself (so I can grade U) ALL POSTS ARE INDIVIDUAL

REFS

Monday, August 1, 2011

REMEMBER THE JOB'S ADMINISTRATION?

"A life of opportunity"

Ranks of the poor in Mexico climb by 3.2 million

Published July 30, 2011
| EFE

The number of people below the poverty line in Mexico rose by 3.2 million between 2008 and 2010 to 52 million, or 46.2 percent of the country's more than 112 million inhabitants, the National Council for the Evaluation of Social Development Policy, or Coneval, said Friday.The figures are based on Coneval's National Survey of Household Income and Spending. Coneval categorizes an individual as poor if he or she suffers deprivations in one or more indicators such as access to health care, food and housing, and earns less than 2,100 pesos ($179) a month in urban areas or less than 1,300 pesos ($111) per month in rural zones.People living in extreme poverty suffer deprivations in three or more indicators and have income of less than 978 pesos ($83.50) a month in urban areas or less than 684 pesos ($58.40) a month in the rural sector.The proportion of Mexicans who are neither poor nor "vulnerable" climbed from 18 percent to 19.3 percent, representing 21.8 million people. Indeed, a difference was noted in the income trends of the urban and rural poor, with the poorest 50 percent of urban dwellers seeing their incomes fall by 7.2 percent between 2008 and 2010 while the incomes of the poorest half of the population in rural areas rose by 2.5 percent in the same period.
The economic situation of Mexico's roughly 10 million indigenous people deteriorated, as the proportion of that population living below the poverty line climbed from 75.9 percent to 79.3 percent.