Thursday, November 21, 2024

Thousands of visitors ‘purify’ Los Pinos, formerly home of presidents

President López Obrador thinks that Los Pinos, formerly the official residence of Mexico’s president, has been cleansed of the bad vibes left behind by previous occupants.

The cleansing process was accomplished, the president explained yesterday, by opening the mansion to the public and allowing the people to enter. Their presence left the house, occupied by presidents for the last 84 years, purified and clean.

López Obrador places a lot of stock in the power of the people. First they rejected Mexico City’s new airport in a public consultation, a decision the then-president-elect attributed to the fact that “the people are wise.” Now they have the power to rid haunted homes of their ghosts.

He told the first of his daily, 7:00am press conferences yesterday that what cleanses and purifies is the presence of the people.

The president made it clear during the election campaign that he would not live at Los Pinos, because “it has bad vibes and is haunted.”

The residence is to be transformed into a cultural center. “We want to integrate this area into the greater Chapultepec Forest, giving us the largest recreational and cultural space in the country and the world.”

Los Pinos opened to the pubic on Saturday, the day of López Obrador’s inauguration, and it has since proved to be a popular attraction.

As of yesterday, more than 60,000 people had entered its gates.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Claudia Sheinbaum rides in a camo military jeep with two military leaders at the Revolution Day parade in Mexico City's main plaza

President Sheinbaum leads Revolution Day parade in Mexico City

0
As the first female supreme commander of the Mexican armed forces, Sheinbaum was also the first woman to lead the annual parade.
Container ships arriving into the Port of Manzanillo in Mexico

Port of Manzanillo to receive 64 billion pesos in investment

0
The funds will help transform Mexico's largest port into the largest one in Latin America, but cartel violence could mar the project's promise.
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum at her daily press conference, pointing with her index finger straight into the camera as if taking a reporter's question. Behind her is the logo for her presidency, a black and white illustration of a young Mexican Indigenous woman in a traditional white Mexican dress and holding the Mexican flag.

President Sheinbaum: Prime Minister Trudeau supports keeping USMCA intact

2
Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters Wednesday that at the G20 Summit, Canada's Justin Trudeau assured her of his support for the trilateral trade deal.