En sesión a distancia con el PARLATINO, como presidente de la Comisión de Asuntos Políticos Municipales y de la Integración, cumplo con esta responsabilidad sin salir del país.
A la par, avanzamos con el quehacer legislativo. Ya son derecho vigente las reformas constitucionales que blindan a México: freno total a la injerencia extranjera en elecciones.
Consulta aquí la modificación:
https://t.co/oyJupEzYQH
o
Si en el sur hay narcopoderes, es porque en el norte hay narcomercados, y que más vale que los gobiernos de ambos lados se coordinen, se comuniquen y se corresponsabilicen de acabar con el enemigo común, que amenaza a ambas naciones por igual: el narcoterrorismo. Por ello, a México hay que respetarlo y tratarlo como un aliado confiable; ni piñata ni tiro al blanco @RicardoMonrealA
A dos años de su victoria electoral, la Presidenta @Claudiashein alertó de la embestida política, diplomática, judicial y mediática que enfrenta el movimiento de la 4T por parte de la ultraderecha internacional y nacional. #Columna, vía @Milenio. https://t.co/RBAmqn5m1o
El segundo aniversario del triunfo del Segundo Piso de la Cuarta Transformación deja precisamente la enseñanza de que la soberanía es una tarea permanente, y que su defensa requiere participación, conciencia y unidad @RicardoMonrealA
La Presidenta @Claudiashein eligió un lema que resume la esencia de su gobierno: “Honestidad, resultados y amor a la patria”, palabras con visión política que entienden al poder como instrumento al servicio del pueblo. #Columna, vía @El_Universal_Mx. https://t.co/SlFydzz8yF
En México decidimos las y los mexicanos.
Fue impresionante el sentimiento popular que se expresó en el país, con motivo de los dos años del triunfo electoral de la primera Presidenta, @Claudiashein.
Honestidad, resultados y amor a la patria.
Es un día importante. No solo se cumplen 2 años de la elección histórica con la que México decidió tener a su primera Presidenta: la doctora @Claudiashein, sino su mensaje, que orienta y define el rumbo del país.
Tras una sesión tensa, me reuní con la presidenta de la Mesa Directiva de la @Mx_Diputados, Kenia López, la coordinadora Ivonne Ortega y los coordinadores Elías Lixa, Rubén Moreira, Reginaldo Sandoval y Raúl Bolaños-Cacho, para reconducir los trabajos. Gracias por su confianza.
Desde mi curul, hice un llamado al orden en el Pleno de la Cámara de @Mx_Diputados, para preservar la civilidad parlamentaria y conducir la discusión con responsabilidad institucional y respeto al debate democrático.
El Al employees at a German airport asked if I was afraid to walk around in this t-shirt.
Nope. And the star never comes off.
When someone stares, I stare back. Bullies are like bloodhounds — they smell fear.
Ask yourself: why do people wear kaffiyehs without any fear of being attacked?
The answer captures the entire essence of the Arab-Israeli conflict — and the Jew hatred that has spread like wildfire since October 7th.
One side is entitled, propped up by endless global sympathy, free to throw emotional tantrums without consequence.
The other has always faced global hostility — and is perpetually expected to show restraint, shrink itself, go invisible, so as not to “provoke” those who are always one moment away from their next tantrum.
#Israel #palestine
El narcotráfico, en efecto, ha sido históricamente utilizado por Estados Unidos como un argumento recurrente en su relación con la región. Por ello, es pertinente recuperar lo señalado en un interesante editorial del diario La Jornada, publicado el fin de semana, en el cual se advierte que la narrativa que equipara al narcotráfico con el terrorismo no es fortuita, sino que responde a una lógica histórica a partir de la cual se han justificado distintas formas de injerencia y presencia militar @RicardoMonrealA
La fortaleza del Estado mexicano ante presiones externas es que la Presidenta @Claudiashein ha optado por la firmeza y la claridad. Cooperación sí, con respeto; justicia sí, con pruebas; diálogo sí, sin subordinación. #Columna, vía @El_Universal_Mx. https://t.co/THJMK4oEh6
Brooklyn, 1952. Judith Love Cohen, 19, asks her high school counselor about math classes.
The counselor smiles like she’s talking to a child. “Honey, nice girls go to finishing school. Learn to pour tea.”
Judith enrolls in Brooklyn College. Engineering.
Hundreds in the lecture hall. Women: one. Her.
“Boys laughed when I raised my hand,” she said. “So I raised it higher.”
She transfers to USC. Finishes bachelor’s + master’s. Never sees another female engineering student.
Graduates 1957. Class of 800. Women: 8.
America’s engineers: 0.05% women. She’s one of them.
Then NASA calls.
1960s. Apollo needs brains. Gender? Secondary. Competence? Everything.
Judith joins the team building the Abort-Guidance System for the Lunar Module. The AGS. The “oh crap” button. If the main computer dies, this box flies you home. Or you don’t come home.
“It had to work,” she said. “Because if you needed it, you were already dying.”
Orbital mechanics. Electrical chaos. Code that can’t glitch. She lives in equations for months.
August 1968. Nine months pregnant. Still at her desk.
Coworkers: “Go home, Judith.”
Judith: “The math isn’t due. I am.”
Morning contractions start. She grabs her printouts — pages of trajectories, circuits, logic — and drives to work.
Contractions get real. Team: “HOSPITAL. NOW.”
Judith: “Fine.” Takes the printouts.
Hospital bed. Nurses walk in. She’s between contractions, scribbling on computer sheets. “Ma’am, you’re in labor.”
“I’m in math,” she says.
Then it clicks. The final bug in the AGS. Solved.
Then she pushes. Baby boy: Thomas Jacob. You know him as Jack Black.
Next day she calls her boss. “I fixed the guidance problem.” Pause. “Oh. And the baby came too.”
April 13, 1970. 200,000 miles from Earth. BOOM.
Apollo 13. Oxygen tank explodes. Command Module dying. Three men crawl into the Lunar Module — built for 2 people, 1 day. They need it for 3 people, 4 days.
Primary computer stutters.
Backup comes alive.
Judith’s AGS.
It holds. Calculates burns. Aligns spacecraft. Verifies they’re not flying into deep space forever. “Without AGS, we don’t come home,” said Jim Lovell later.
April 17, 1970. Splashdown. Alive.
The world cheers the astronauts.
Inside NASA, engineers hug. “The backup worked.”
Judith’s backup.
Apollo 13 crew visits TRW to say thanks. Judith shakes their hands. No speech. Back to work.
She keeps going.
Hubble Space Telescope systems. TDRS satellites — ran 40 years. Papers. Patents. Mentors girls. Writes kids’ books: You Can Be a Woman Engineer. “Girls need to see it to be it,” she said. “TV gave them lawyers. I’ll give them astronauts.”
Raised four kids. Danced ballet with the Met Opera while doing engineering school. “My first loves,” her son Neil wrote, “were dancing and equations.”
July 25, 2016. Age 82. She’s gone.
Son Jack Black posts 2019: Photo of Mom, 1959, next to a Pioneer spacecraft. “My mom literally helped save Apollo 13. Finished the problem IN LABOR WITH ME. How do you top that?”
The counselor said “finishing school.”
Judith chose “finishing equations.”
Three astronauts owe their lives to that choice.
“They said I didn’t belong,” Judith said once. “So I built something that belonged in space. And brought them home.”
She never flew. But she made sure others could.
From a hospital bed. Between contractions. With a pencil.