We demand peace
F
rom: SUSAN GIMENEZ

20 de Agosto de 2008

 

"I love my country and I see it hurts so much.
The policy is not mine, and I confess that often I find it difficult to understand.
The Argentines have already left many, fighting economic and political crises that we were playing in luck, from generation to generation.
We were able to survive "Rodrigazo" to the "corralito" and each and every elected governments and non-elected the last fifty years.
We come finally to an unsustainable reality: we live behind bars, families organize their lives in terms of not being assaulted, kidnapped or injured.
Sinh abound boys schools, hospitals without supplies, people without work ...
So here we could "narrow belt" or "apechugar to stop and leave the pot", as our grandparents said.
Today, the solution can not be individual, is no longer a matter of hair in solitude or wait for "passing the winter."
So I am glad what happened the night of debate on retentions in the senate, was a kind of open democratic education where it was shown that if we explain, we understand.
To disagree does not mean necessarily be divided.
Both senators who support the Government, like those of the opposition, spoke as people prepared and educated in giving the impression that one can trust.
The wonderful thing is that the following day, we all had the same impression, beyond the outcome of the vote, the evening of Thursday, July 17 we win all, we won grow, gain understanding, we won learn, and, above all things, not won in separate camps.
Ever since I can remember, I hear Boca-River, peronistas-radical, and so eternally until you get to the course today versus city.
Would not it be fabulous to leave the differences in the past and unite everyone for a country better?
I dream of politicians who want to go down in history as those who restored peace, security, education, and the rights of individuals.
I do not care at all its provenance politics: Peronist, radical center, left, socialist, who are now, those who left or those who want to come back from the countryside to the city.
We need patriots willing to fight to regain what once had: a prosperous country in which they could walk down the street, studying and thinking about the future.
This is a quiet village, and obedient worker, nobody wants to live well. 

We demand peace. "

Reproduction of textual editorial Susana Gimenez in his journal Susana August, n. 3

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