Talk:Jaime Rodríguez Calderón

Suggested edit regaring unfair defamations

 * I had made this edit regarding the media manipulation of Televisa, which is a reality the news media in Mexico wants to hide from us, so I suggest the edit below, which was previously on the article, on an even more extended form but was removed because your allegations of lack of neutrality. Also the Spanish sources voices, and the note are all super-clear for anyone with Spanish knowledge, I once edite something that was neutral on Spanish, and someone removed all my edits to make it look as if I only edited articles involving politics and then banned my account of Wikipedia in Spanish. I'm afraid it's removal here, and suspect you could be a Pe;abot (as those in Mexico hired to tell only what's convenient). Because why you didn't place it under discussion, after removal as is the standard procedure?

Also Rodrigo Medina whom as I said bribed was recently found guilty of crimes (yet to update it) adding more fuel to the fire.Rosvel92 (talk) 19:37, 29 January 2017 (UTC)Rosvel92
 * Your language about fairness suggests you are trying to undo damage you perceive to someone's reputation. I don't speak Spanish, so I can't attest to what the sources say, but considering that he is an active politician and it is an ongoing controversy, it would probably be best not to keep referring to a station as "biased" or label the section as "unfair defamation" per our WP:NPOV policy. TonyBallioni (talk) 21:32, 29 January 2017 (UTC)

Televisa unfair defamation against Jaime Rodríguez "El Bronco" Calderón
Televisa found in itself on evidence of on-going media manipulation and political bias controversy showing bias against Nuevo Leon's governor Jaime "EL Bronco" Rodríguez Calderón whom is a potential 2018 presidential candidate, it happened on September 11, 2016, during a Live-Television News broadcast from "Monterrey al Dia" where Televisa news reporter, Karla Minaya, mistankely said: "hay que tratar de que el gobernador, por cierto, entre lo menos posible" ("we have to try that the governor, for sure, is mentioned the least possible") showing clear signs of political bias from the network. The Mexican newspaper El Universal published on social media a video of the event, which was covered by national news media although Televisa didn't mention the story and declined to comment. El Bronco's predecessor Rodrigo Medina de la Cruz had spent 4000 millions of pesos on bribing television news media (Televisa included), to clean his image. Sick of the corruption, El Bronco bowed to not spend a single peso in favoring news media coverage, so in retaliation the Mexican Televisa news unfairly mention him the least possible, or with biased news coverage of unfair criticisms and defamation. In El Bronco's own words:"Hay 314 denuncias de carros robados y recuperamos 229, pero como no le pagamos a Televisa, Multimedios y TV Azteca, no lo sacan. Hemos logrado desintegrar bandas roba carros y roba traileres, y lo hemos hecho dicho en todas las ruedas de prensa, pero Televisa, Multimedios y TV Azteca no lo sacan." (There's 314 denouncements of stolen cars, we retrieved 229, but since we didn't bribe Televisa, Multimedios and TV Azteca they don't show it. We have disbanded a band of thieves of cars and trucks. We have said it on every press round, but Televisa, Multimedios and TV Azteca don't show it.)