My feeling is that Yolanda Diaz has seen Les Miserables too many times and is looking forward to having his own roadblock moment.
She doesn’t want peace and prosperity. She breathes revolution.
She is The Passionflower sent from beyond to save our time.
There are those who fantasize about their wedding dress, their promotion, an island with turquoise waters or, in my case, about being able to drive without a phobia behind the wheel.
I believe that when Díaz looks in the mirror he dreams of wearing a helmet and humming. Do you hear the people sing? while he leads a procession that marches spontaneously, joyfully and martyr-like along Madrid’s Gran Vía to confront… who?
Not even they know it. But fighting is a way of life. You can’t ask the heart for reasons.
The problem that Yolanda Díaz has is that she is the vice president of the Government of this country, despite her regret. It seems that she forgets, because she would like to see herself more as a clandestine anarchist who conspires against the oppressive power from the Marxist catacombs.
Unfortunately for her, she is a woman in a position of power.
How little revolution life is giving to Yolanda. To me, the fact that the vice president of a country does not stop telling me that democracy is in danger seems, to say the least, suspicious.
Madam, you have been in the Government for five years. If you have not put out the fire already, perhaps you are causing the fire..
Or that it doesn’t burn as much, I don’t know.
Yolanda Díaz is determined to go against everything and everyone. She wants to alert us that the extreme right has taken over our streets. But he also wants us to know that he is not like his government partners.
At the same time, he strives to make it clear to us that his Government is a reference in the world.
And I’m already messed up.
And while I mess around, she does the dirty work for Pedro Sanchezwho can calmly dedicate himself to convincing us that on his right there are only radical extremists because those on his left already convince us on their own.
Pedro Sánchez during the Government control session in Congress this Wednesday.
Efe
“We have the legitimate right to tell the Spanish people to go out and defend democracy as I did on May 1st and as I always do legitimately,” he said on the occasion of the ruling on the attorney general.
Exercise: Underline the word “legitimate” and discuss it with your partner. And then underline it again and again.
And if it’s not already clear to you that everything Díaz does is very, very legitimate, Write it in your blood as many times as necessary until the message sinks in..
“Let’s take democracy in our hands,” Yolanda Díaz cried to her Sumar colleagues. But it is confusing to urge revolution from a vice presidency.
Who are we marching against if not against power?
Aren’t you the power?
And who leads the march?
Do we march against power led by power?
It’s like a script Marx Brothers.
The vice president does not like the country she vice presidents because it needs conflict. He needs the Spanish people to do badly in order to throw him into a war in which to claim leadership.
That’s why he wants Telefónica to do badly, justice to do badly, women to do badly.
Be careful, Yolanda, it’s going to be that the people really start marching and get confused and end up in front of your window. I don’t know if a mob is going to calm down with your delicate Montessori pedagogue ways.
The worst thing that could have happened to Díaz is being vice president of Spain. You cannot give your life for the revolution from an office. You can’t convince the workers that the system that gives you 100,000 euros a year is broken. You can’t do everything, Yolanda.
The vice-presidency The miserable ones. Yolanda Díaz must decide once and for all If you want to be the protagonist of a musical or a leader of a Government.
