Aqui a algunos les encanta criticar la forma de expresarse y de actuar de Hipolito, pero como dije alguna vez, eso parece estar de moda. Lean lo que hizo el nuevo presidente de Mexico, Vicente Fox, especialmente el segundo y tercer párrafo. Eso salio en un escrito del Financial Times.
http://news.ft.com/ft/gx.cgi/ftc?pagename=View&c=Article&cid=FT3EOVZ98GC&live=true&useoverridetemplate=ZZZUGORQ00C&tagid=IXLU6AE43DC&subheading=americas
It was evident as he prayed before the Virgin of Guadalupe, Mexico's patron saint,
and begged for enlightenment. Mexicans adore their "dark little Virgin", but during
the long era of rule by the anti-clerical Institutional Revolutionary party, no
president ever knelt at her shrine.
Minutes later, Mr Fox was whisked from the sublime to the slums. With none of the
pomp of a leader of 100m people, he sat down for breakfast with 100 street
urchins, some of them high on paint thinner, all unwashed, irreverent and
undoubtedly authentic.
"Whatever change means, I hope it's for the better," said 16-year-old Cecilia
Sanchez, as she sipped a steaming drink poured out by Mr Fox into a polystyrene
cup. Then, a dark suit was carried through the crowds, and Mr Fox ducked into a
nearby house to put it on.
He next appeared in Congress, looking the epitome of a president, and pledged
to launch Mexico on a path of reform that he promised would transform it into a
country of hope. "What is in play over the next six years is not just the change of a
party in power," he said. "It is something much more significant and profound: the
hopes of millions of Mexicans."