A purely mafia attempt to cover up socialist political corruption in Spain

Socialism and its nostalgia for the Stasi: they use the Treasury as a political police

Readers of this blog know that I have no admiration or sympathy for Isabel Díaz Ayuso, but there are certain things that are not tolerable.

Santiago Abascal's intervention pointing out the real boss of socialist corruption
The socialist sect that sustains Sánchez and supports his corruption and authoritarianism

They try to cover up a crime by committing another crime

This Wednesday we have seen a way of exercising power that is not typical of a democratic government, but of a mafia organization: a Minister of Finance publishing data of a private citizen, falsely stating that they had been published by the media, when in reality they broke the news hours later. The published data corresponds to Ayuso's boyfriend, to whom the Treasury attributes alleged tax fraud committed before he had a romantic relationship with the president of the Community of Madrid.

Whatever the tax situation of Ayuso's boyfriend, what the Minister of Finance has done is commit a crime by leaking his tax data. And all this to cover up the PSOE corruption scandals. In fact, Televisión Española -controlled by the government- has dedicated its maximum attention to Ayuso's boyfriend while overlooking socialist corruption cases . They intend to cover up serious crimes that affect the government by blaming a woman for what her boyfriend did before they met. The socialists in Spain have reached that point of desperation: they try to cover up a crime by committing another crime, settling for people only paying attention to what they say.

The precedent of the Stasi in communist Germany

This way of acting is not new in the socialist ranks. This was what the citizens of communist Germany (the cynically self-styled "Democratic Republic of Germany", a crude disguise for a dictatorship) had to endure on a daily basis, since there was a political police, the Stasi, which was dedicated to persecuting those who disagreed with the government, resorting to a wide network of snitches and a constant invasion of the private lives of the citizens of that part of Germany.

In Spain there is no formally equivalent to the Stasi, but the socialist government of Pedro Sánchez is using the Ministry of Finance as a political police, breaking the law (once again, and there have been many times already) and putting the mechanisms of the State, which all Spaniards pay for, at the service of the interests of the Socialist Party.

Will the next thing be to persecute relatives of rival politicians or journalists?

It is worth wondering what we will see next: will opposition deputies or critical journalists be singled out if their partners have problems with the Treasury? It does not matter that these problems do not end with a judicial conviction of the person in question . The only thing that matters to this government is having bait for the news, with which it can cover up its own garbage. If this requires committing crimes, they commit them. It is not something new nor is it the most serious thing taking into account the long criminal history of Spanish socialism, which includes events such as the theft of gold from the Bank of Spain, the murder of Calvo Sotelo, the coup d'état of 1934, the terrorism of the GAL or the numerous cases of corruption that have affected socialist governments.

Socialism, specifically its communist franchise, was capable of creating things as aberrant as the Stasi. The Spanish socialists seem to be nostalgic for that political police, for the capacity that that dictatorship had to intimidate those who opposed the dominant left, even if it was in small areas and minor issues, such as the case of the Ayuso party. The more power socialism accumulates, the more intolerant and fanatical it becomes.

At this rate, we will end up seeing that any citizen who disagrees with the socialists on social networks will receive a surprise inspection from the Treasury. They want to instill fear and they are the ones who should feel it, because the things they are doing in Spain are exhausting the patience of millions of Spaniards and, as time goes by, the lesson that is to come will be every ever greater.

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Photo: PSOE.

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