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・ Yo Protesto
・ Yo quiero bailar
・ Yo quiero bailar (album)
・ Yo quiero bailar (song)
・ Yo quiero ser hombre
・ Yo quiero ser tonta
・ Yo quiero vivir contigo
・ Yo Rap Bonanza
・ Yo scale
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・ Yo Soy (Mariana Ochoa album)
・ Yo Soy (Pee Wee album)
・ Yo Soy (Perú)
・ Yo Soy (Yolandita Monge album)
Yo Soy 132
・ Yo soy aquél
・ Yo soy Bea
・ Yo soy Betty, la fea
・ Yo soy Boricua, pa'que tu lo sepas!
・ Yo soy Boricua, pa'que tu lo sepas! (film)
・ Yo soy el criminal
・ Yo soy Franky
・ Yo Soy la Bomba
・ Yo Soy La Reina
・ Yo soy tu padre
・ Yo Soy Venezolana
・ Yo Sé Que Mentía
・ Yo Tambien
・ Yo también tengo fiaca


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Yo Soy 132 : ウィキペディア英語版
Yo Soy 132

Yo Soy 132 is a social movement composed for the most part of Mexican university students from private and public universities, residents of Mexico, claiming supporters from about 50 cities around the world. It began as opposition to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) candidate Enrique Peña Nieto and the Mexican media's allegedly biased coverage of the 2012 general election. The name Yo Soy 132, Spanish for "I Am 132", originated in an expression of solidarity with the original 131 protest's initiators. The phrase drew inspiration from the Occupy movement and the Spanish 15-M movement. The protest movement was self-proclaimed as the "Mexican spring" (an allusion to the Arab Spring) by its first spokespersons, and called the "Mexican occupy movement" in the international press.
==Origins==

On May 11, 2012, then Institutional Revolutionary Party Mexican Presidential Candidate Enrique Peña Nieto visited the Ibero-American University to present his political platform to the students as part of the ''Buen Ciudadano Ibero'' (good Iberian citizen) forum. At the end of his discussion, he was asked by a group of students a question regarding the 2006 civil unrest in San Salvador Atenco, in which then-governor of the State of Mexico Peña Nieto called in state police to break up a protest by local residents, which led to several protestors being violently beaten, raped, and others killed (including a child). Peña responded that he did what was necessary, that he had no regrets, and that he would do it again if necessary. His response was met with applause by his supporters and slogans against his campaign from students who disliked his statement.
Video of the event was recorded by various students and uploaded onto social media, but major Mexican television channels and national newspapers reported that the protest was not by students of the university. This angered many of the Ibero-American University students, prompting 131 of them to publish a video on YouTube identifying themselves by their University ID card. The video went viral, and protests spread across various campuses. People showed their support of the 131 students' message by stating, mainly on Twitter, that they were the 132nd student—"I am 132"— thus giving birth to the Yo Soy 132 movement.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Yo Soy 132」の詳細全文を読む



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