Mexico's leftist president claims proof of woodland elves in bizarre social media post



Tens of thousands took to Mexico City's main plaza over the weekend to protest their leftist president and his policies. Rather than face the real concern of citizens, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's has evidently turned his mind to fantasy.

Obrador posted a poorly lit image of a tree and something possibly in it to his social media accounts over the weekend, intimating that it was photographic proof of the existence of a folkloric elf.

Obrador wrote that the image was captured "three days ago by an engineer, it appears to be an aluxe."

According to the Yucatan Times, an alux (plural: aluxo'ob) are knee-high "pixies" from local, often Mayan mythology, tasked with protecting plantations, cornfields, and properties.

"As in all goblin traditions, these little beings are often naughty and play practical jokes on people crossing their domains," wrote the Times. "Sometimes they take reprisals that become real nightmares, they are said to produce short screams, strong whirlpools and other phenomena when they get angry and some people consider aluxes 'allies of evil.'"

Obrador juxtaposed the badly pixelated nighttime photograph of an undistinguishable specter atop a tree branch with a "splendid pre-Hispanic sculpture in Ek Balam," an archeological site on the Yucatan peninsula, noting, "Everything is mystical."

\u201cLes comparto dos fotos de nuestra supervisi\u00f3n a las obras del Tren Maya: una, tomada por un ingeniero hace tres d\u00edas, al parecer de un aluxe; otra, de Diego Prieto de una espl\u00e9ndida escultura prehisp\u00e1nica en Ek Balam. Todo es m\u00edstico.\u201d
— Andr\u00e9s Manuel (@Andr\u00e9s Manuel) 1677365994

Obrador was roundly ridiculed.

Mexican novelist Mauricio Schwarz noted that the image allegedly captured days earlier "has been doing the rounds in Nuevo León since February 2021 and in Thailand since December of that year."

Schwarz added, "You are sad, very sad... and the country even more... If you believe it, you are stupid... if you know you are lying, you are malicious..."

\u201c@lopezobrador_ S\u00ed, Andr\u00e9s, un ingeniero hace tres d\u00edas tom\u00f3 una foto que hace las rondas en Nuevo Le\u00f3n desde febrero de 2021 y en Tailandia desde diciembre de ese a\u00f1o.\n\nDas pena, mucha pena... y el pa\u00eds m\u00e1s... Si te lo crees, eres tonto... si sabes que mientes, eres mal\u00e9volo...\u201d
— Andr\u00e9s Manuel (@Andr\u00e9s Manuel) 1677365994

A reverse-image search confirms Schwarz's suggestion. Images of Obrador's supposed alux have been online for at least two years.

In one instance, the photo was attributed to a man named Juan Pacheco, who allegedly saw a "witch on a tree" in Nuevo León, Mexico.

The Independent reported that this apparent diversion comes amid protests against the Obrador government's attempts to shrink the independent electoral authority in Mexico, which some allege may threaten the nation's democracy.

Last week, Obrador's proposals to cut funding for local election offices and reduce sanctions for candidates who fail to report campaign spending were passed along with others, reported Time.

On Thursday, the leftist president indicated that he would sign the changes into law regardless of whether he is challenged in court.

In addition to diverting some attention from the over 100,000 protesters who took to Mexico City over the weekend, Obrador's post may also serve to draw attention to his controversial pet project: a $15 billion 900-mile tourist train route through the heart of the defeated Maya civilization.

The Washington Post indicated that those involved with the project are "discovering an astonishing array of antiquities – and then tearing them down."

If there were pixies or faerie folk in the trees of the Maya Forest, then Obrador's train may have amounted to their demise.

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DHS disputes report that government cannot reunite 545 separated migrant children with their parents



A spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday disputed a report that the parents of 545 migrant children separated from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border cannot be found.

According to a report from NPR, court filings by the U.S. Justice Department and the American Civil Liberties Union indicate that 545 children separated under the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" policy have not been reunited with their families because the government cannot find their parents. Under the controversial policy, the federal government attempted to prosecute each and every migrant who entered the United States illegally. As a result, thousands of migrant children who came to the United States illegally were separated from their parents or adult guardians while the government prosecuted the adults accompanying those minors.

The policy of separating migrant children from parents being prosecuted for crimes did not originate with the Trump administration and was in fact in place during the Obama administration. However, because the Trump administration attempted to prosecute every migrant who crossed the border illegally, more children were separated from their parents than under previous administrations.

In 2018, after a successful lawsuit from the ACLU, a federal court ordered the Trump administration to reunite the separated families and the policy was discontinued that year.

NPR reports that the court order mandating migrant families be reunited did not cover about 1,000 families separated by a 2017 pilot program and that the federal government has thus far been unable to locate over half of those parents.

The DHS claims this is a false narrative, and that in reality many of the parents contacted by the federal government did not want to be reunited with their children.

"This narrative has been dispelled on numerous occasions. DHS has taken every step to facilitate the reunification of these families where the parents wanted such reunification to occur," DHS spokesman Chase Jennings said in a statement.

"The simple fact is this: after contact has been made with the parents to reunite them with their children, many parents have refused. In the current litigation, for example, out of the parents of 485 children whom Plaintiffs' counsel has been able to contact, they have yet to identify a single family that wants their child reunited with them in their country of origin. The result is that the children remain in the U.S. while the parents remain in their home country. The reunification process is a whole-of-Government approach involving CBP, ICE, and HHS."

Jennings further disputed the NPR story on Twitter.

This story is wholly inaccurate. In the current litigation, for example, out of the parents of 485 children whom Pl… https://t.co/gcY7G6a25H
— Chase Jennings (@Chase Jennings)1603310388.0

In response to the NPR story, several lawmakers and the Joe Biden presidential campaign condemned the Trump administration without addressing the rebuttal from DHS.

A statement from the Biden campaign called the NPR story's claims "an outrage, a moral failing, and a stain on our national character."

Biden on reports that the Trump administration has been unable to find the parents of 545 children separated from t… https://t.co/2H2PIK3bo2
— Johnny Verhovek (@Johnny Verhovek)1603306108.0

Rep. Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.), said it was "disgusting that this administration permanently separated families, leaving 545 children alone." Reps. Jason Crow (D-Colo.) and Judy Chu (D-Calif.) also criticized the Trump administration. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.) said the Trump administration "had no plan for reunification before initiating this cruel & inhumane policy of child separation, and the damage it has done is immeasurable."

House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) called the report "outrageous & unacceptable" and accused the Trump administration of xenophobia.

545 children were cruelly & deliberately torn from their parents by the Trump Admin & cannot be reunited with their… https://t.co/MjixZYQIhZ
— Steny (Wear a Mask) Hoyer (@Steny (Wear a Mask) Hoyer)1603289404.0

As did Rep. Andre Carson (D-Ind.).

545 children may never be reunited with their parents. The most tragic part is that this could have been prevented… https://t.co/SaDaMJPS96
— André Carson (@André Carson)1603289925.0