Discontinued dictatorship

Changing names to things is to camouflage reality to deceive.

We are responsible for what we do and for what we must do. When businesspeople make a mistake, they suffer the consequences. When a public manager makes mistakes, we all suffer from taxes and consequences. With digitisation, large private firms have cut administration staff by half, but public institutions have not. There are thousands of administration workers too many, which can be amortised (without suffering) by being pensioned off. Primary healthcare doctors, judges and police are certainly short, but there are too many ministries, administration workers, universities, managers, official systems, trade union subsidies, official cars, etc. Citizens need good private or state-assisted services, not bad public services. Communism intends the whole sector to be public (financed with taxes), which suffocates private activity. So every unnecessary public job means fewer private businesspeople, more poverty and more debt. The difference between old and modern communism (the latter practiced by Zapatero and Sánchez) is the way to remain in power: the old one is physical, enslaves citizens by force, but the modern one is mental, with educational indoctrination, lack of information and tampered ballot boxes. Its method consists in injecting an authoritarian non-democratic system, but differs from brutal dictatorship by tampering with ballot boxes with closed inaccessible electoral rolls. Modern dictatorships are distinguished from brutal “oriental” despotisms that repress by force; this no longer occurs in civilised Europe; this is not a matter of forcing citizens, but of “disarming them” with sub-information, like a frog that slowly boils in cold water (ballot boxes) and ends up parched; indoctrinating at school (language, equality, gender), deceiving them by (subsidised) mass media and confusing with contradictory messages from the lying government and spokespeople. The greater disinformation is, the less it is perceived by citizens not used to protests, and the opposition party which, when faced with authoritarian cheek, waits with moderation for the economy to grant it power, but is unaware that increasing debt camouflages very bad economy. Without going to streets, citizens do not see the dictatorship before them, and being right is not enough. Modern despotism frees a minority sector of the press, but without contracts or subsidies. Detecting a dictatorship is hard when citizens spend most of their time surviving, and when public opinion disguises reality. Official organisations INE (National Statistics Inst.) and CIS (Sociological Research Centre), and ministries,manipulate surveys, concepts and data to confuse (500,000 unemployed not working for months, but paid dole and called “discontinuous permanent workers”). Real inflation is higher than that officially stated; we vote inaccessible electoral rolls closed by political bosses from dubiously unhealthy parties. Voting totalitarians is being an accomplice of unforeseeable harm because laws change so that politicians rob public money, and only commit offences if they are fools (by leaving evidence of personally becoming wealthier). Rebel conspirators will do so again, but it will be no crime. They will be freed like rapists and abusers are. Who will dare stop them? Will the country see another war or be divided? It is no good being an ostrich because this will happen. Separation of powers is breached; the Office of Public Prosecutor defends the government; they free similar criminals; governments continuously leave us in debt; 4,100 million euros a month for 18 years; 100,000 Spaniards’ private properties are seriously affected with impunity; legal male/female equality is inexistent; they indoctrinate against Spain (linguistic excuse) at schools in 30% of the country: the Basque Country, Catalan, Navarre and Valencian Communities, the Balearic Islands; they promote socialism disguised as equality nationwide and at all education levels in the public sector; the self-employed are fiscally pursued so we depend on State subsidies; history is made official by punishing freedom of interpretation; territorial inequality widens by benefiting separatists; the middle class is disappearing because poverty increases; abortions; taxes go from 47% to 56%, but public services worsen; the Spanish per capita income has not grown since 2005; the national GDP has gone from world position 8 to 16; pensions are financed with debt. Since 2004 we have suffered a discontinuous dictatorship; if “other moderates” govern without changing totalitarian laws, education, taxes, feasibility of pensions, what will they do when separatist attacks are confirmed?

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