Corrupt people of yesterday, today and always


As if politics weren't going through a particularly critical moment, here, there, in general, as if the moment weren't complicated enough, here, there, in general, as if one decision taken weren't worse than the previous one, here, there, in general, as if the advance on the right hadn't become a universal norm, what we were missing here, what we were missing here, to themselves that one is more corrupt than the other and threatening elections in which it's difficult to vote for any alternative because the alternative has been lost for days trying to save itself. And let's not even talk about the heat, because it generates more distrust than usual, and it becomes difficult to believe and see how some can tear everything apart by churning mud for their egos and greed, and how the rest take advantage to hurl their partisan proclamations in the gap between one insult and another. policy, some will say. And perhaps it is, but that doesn't make it any less regrettable. when they argue that they didn't know because responsibility lies in the "ought to know." If it's not complicity, it's negligence, and both are undignified. different." And he continued: "We see men richer than ever, buying islands and palaces, and it might seem that this makes them happy. But greed becomes infinite, and they need more power, more money, and they all seem profoundly miserable. spies. Obviously, corrupt people aren't at all interesting, unlike spies, but both have that capacity to lie with a composure that leaves us frozen. They defend common interests, while others only defend their own interests. But corrupt people, like spies, don't always end up being discovered. Former Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has recently walked the Camino de San Jaime like any other pilgrim. With all the rights in the world. disturbed, in which democracy is not thought about, it only sinks.