Electoral justice is not influenced by influencers
In a twist that no one saw coming (well, maybe everyone except him), the Superior Chamber of the Electoral Tribunal decided that Adrián Marcelo Moreno, the influencer who seems to confuse “freedom of expression” with “freedom to be a misogynistic troll”, does not have the right to challenge his sanction for political gender violence. The reason? Their arguments had less substance than a viral kitten meme.
When “it’s just a joke, bro” costs you more than likes
It turns out that our digital protagonist, in a burst of creativity worthy of a cheap soap opera scriptwriter, published a video on YouTube attacking Mariana Rodríguez, then candidate for the municipal presidency of Monterrey. Of course, he called it “political criticism”, because apparently in his personal dictionary, “criticism” is synonymous with “sexist attack”. The electoral authorities, with that annoying habit of applying the laws, reminded him that political gender violence is not content to gain engagement.
The local Court, followed by the Monterrey Regional Court, confirmed what anyone with two functioning neurons already knew: that the video was not “political opinion”, but a clear case of gender-based harassment. But Adrián, true to his character as “victim of censorship”, alleged that his constitutional rights were being trampled. Luckily, the Superior Chamber did not let itself be fooled by the drama and gave a resounding “no, thank you” to his challenge.
The reason? Simple: there was no judicial error, no constitutional issues to analyze, nor anything to justify his legal tantrum. In other words, he basically tried to use the system as if it were a “skip ad” on YouTube, and the Court responded with the legal equivalent of “follow us on Patreon to skip the rules.”.
Moral: being an influencer does not make you immune to the consequences
So, dear content creators, take note: freedom of expression is not a free pass to be assholes. And if you think that an electoral court is going to swallow the story of “it’s just that they cancel me”, you better think twice. Or three. Or, in Adrián’s case, maybe he never thought about it.
Meanwhile, Mariana Rodríguez continues her life, probably without losing sleep over the digital outbursts of someone who, apparently, still does not understand that social networks are not a “consequence-free zone”.
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