After Grant Wood - Ezio Macchione Peruvian Gothic (Anchored at '90)
How to isolate yourself finding salvation in Art 😁 ... please appreciate the sackcloth, it took me time! 😉 © Ezio Macchione ... and Grant Wood 😏

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After Grant Wood - Ezio Macchione Peruvian Gothic (Anchored at '90)
How to isolate yourself finding salvation in Art 😁 ... please appreciate the sackcloth, it took me time! 😉 © Ezio Macchione ... and Grant Wood 😏
By Alejandra Garcia
One month after holding the run-off election, Peru still has no President-elect. The winning candidate, leftist Pedro Castillo, hasn’t assumed the country’s leadership yet because the Peruvian right-wing insists that widespread election fraud has taken place, although justice authorities say otherwise.
Bible Genesis 3:8 proves that God is in form.
- That evening they heard the Lord God walking in the Garden. And they hid from him among the trees.When there is a sole empire of sinners in the world, then God appears on earth in human form. He grants true knowledge, peace and happiness to the world.Complete salvation is only possible after obtaining scripture based way of worship from a complete Guru.
True way of worship is available with Saint Rampal Ji Maharaj only.
Must take refuge in Him.The Creator is in form, He is not formless. He created human beings in His form.
Genesis 1: 27 - So God created human beings, making them to be like himself. He created them male and female.Supreme God Kabir appears whenever He wishes; He never takes birth from a mother because He is the Originator of all.
- Saint Rampal Ji Maharaj
Pedro Castillo ran as an anti-establishment leftist. Here’s why he won’t govern like one.
The recognition of Peru’s multiethnic society.
The party seeks to give citizens and civic groups greater tools for self-defense, collectively organize the youth, and enhance cultural autonomy and the recognition of Peru’s multiethnic society.
This is a more mainstream agenda focused on a more egalitarian and inclusive society rather than on radical expropriation. And there is a case to be made that in a country as rich as Peru in natural resources and with such extreme inequality, moderate leftism may serve as an antidote to the emergence of more extreme leftism.
Peru is experiencing a historic moment. Pedro Castillo, a man from the invisible country, rural, poor, with a white hat and a rising leadership, may become the next president.
By Marco Teruggi
The media violence, as well as the unification of historically opposed actors, was a reflection of the perceived threat of a possible victory of Castillo, who arrived with a central proposal: to re-found the country through a constituent process. Peru Libre’s candidate brought to the table the need to dismantle the Constitution drafted in 1993 under Alberto Fujimori and recover sovereignty over strategic mining and energy resources, central to the Peruvian economy.
By José Carlos Llerena Robles and Vijay Prashad
Half an hour’s taxi ride from the House of Pizarro, the presidential palace in Lima, Peru, is a high-security prison at the Callao naval base. The prison was built to hold leaders of Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path), particularly Abimael Guzmán. Not far from Guzmán’s cell is that of Vladimiro Montesinos, intelligence chief under former President Alberto Fujimori, who is also now imprisoned. Montesinos was sentenced to a 20-year prison term in 2006 for embezzlement, influence peddling, and abuse of power. Now, audio files from phone calls made by Montesinos from his prison indicate an attempt to influence the results of Peru’s presidential election after Pedro Castillo, the candidate of the left-wing Perú Libre party, won the election.
By the evening of June 6, 2021, Peru’s National Jury of Elections should have declared Pedro Castillo the winner of the presidential election. But it did not. A month later, matters remain in stasis as Peru does not yet have an official winner of the election.
Castillo’s opponent, Fuerza Popular’s Keiko Fujimori—the daughter of the former dictator Alberto Fujimori—has hired a range of Lima’s top lawyers to obstruct any decision by the state’s electoral commission. In addition, her team has cast aspersions against the campaign of Castillo and Perú Libre, accusing them—without evidence—of being financed by disreputable groups, including drug cartels. The Peruvian media, largely controlled by the oligarchy, have gone along with Fujimori’s allegations; their apparent goal is to paint Castillo as an illegitimate winner and to set aside the verdict of the electorate.
La justicia peruana ese día evaluará la solicitud de la Fiscalía para que la candidata presidencial se le aplique la medida de prisión preventiva.
Keiko Fujimori would know on June 21 if she returns to Prison
The Peruvian justice that day will evaluate the request of the Prosecutor's Office for the presidential candidate to apply the preventive detention measure. The Peruvian Justice will evaluate on Monday, June 21, the request of the Prosecutor's Office for the presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori (right) to return to Provisional Prison, pending a decision whether to open a trial for alleged Money Laundering in her previous campaigns elections (2011 ,2016), the authorities reported this Friday (11.06.2021).
The Fourth Permanent National Preparatory Investigation Court Specialized in Organized Crime will thus attend to the request of the Anti-corruption Prosecutor José Domingo Pérez, in charge of investigating the case.
The prosecutor's request came after verifying that Fujimori had contact during the electoral campaign with witnesses from the investigation, one of the prohibitions imposed within the probation granted to him a year ago.
The daughter and political heir of former President Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000) has already spent fifteen months in provisional prison between 2018 and 2020.
The leader of the Fujimori party Fuerza Popular is accused of alleged money laundering in the irregular financing of her previous electoral campaigns, where she concealed millionaire donations from large companies through a fictitious accounting.
Among the donations received are allegedly $ 3.6 million from Credicorp, Peru's largest financial corporation, and allegedly $ 1 million from the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht.
It will be decided whether to open a lawsuit against Fujimori After more than four years since the first investigations began, the prosecutor's file is under review by the Peruvian Justice, which will decide whether to open a trial against Fujimori.
In his indictment, the prosecutor Pérez requests more than 30 years in prison for Fujimori, who would temporarily evade the process if she managed to win the elections and proclaim herself the first woman to preside over Peru.
In this sense, Keiko Fujimori has tried to annul some 200,000 votes in the elections held on Sunday, when verifying that the count again left him as a loser for the third consecutive election after having been surpassed also in 2011 against Ollanta Humala and in 2016 against Pedro Pablo Kuczynski.
The official vote count already gives the mathematical winner of the elections to her rival Pedro Castillo (left), who leads Fujimori by some 51,000 votes, a narrow unbridgeable margin for the right-wing candidate unless her challenges take effect.
Fujimori denounces without credible evidence an alleged "systematic fraud" committed by her rival, and for this reason she has tried to annul thousands of votes in rural Andean areas where Castillo has had overwhelming support.
However, the electoral observation missions of the Organization of American States (OAS) and the Inter-American Union of Electoral Organizations (Uniore) highlighted that the electoral process was correct and successful, without serious incidents.