Spain is a clear example of the great damage that a ruler can do in a country where democratic checks and balances are failing.
Sánchez calls Abascal a 'traitor to the country' for criticizing him
Today, just two days before the first month of the catastrophe of the cold drop, Sanchez has appeared for the first time in the control session of the government in the Congress of Deputies to give an account of his disastrous management of that disaster. Or at least that is what he should have done. As usual, he has dedicated himself to lying, insulting and slandering the opposition.
In his reply to Santiago Abascal, Sánchez has defamed the president of Vox, accusing him of wanting to "destroy the State" and saying that "he does not even respect the military", and all this for the mere fact of criticizing the government and his late deployment of the Armed Forces (he waited four days to order it). But the socialist leader did not stop there: in addition, he accused Abascal of being a "traitor to the country" for criticizing the government's management of this catastrophe.
Sánchez's systematic betrayal of Spain
Once again, it is clear that Sánchez's cynicism knows no bounds and that all his attacks on the parliamentary opposition consist of what in psychology is called "projection", which consists of attributing one's own defects to others. It is Sánchez who has allied himself with the separatists and even with the heirs of ETA. It is Sánchez who has trampled on the rule of law to grant an unconstitutional amnesty to the authors of the 2017 separatist coup in Catalonia.
It is Sánchez who behaves as if he were the ambassador of Morocco, putting the interests of that country above the interests of Spain. It is Sánchez who continues to buy gas from Russia, thus helping Putin finance his aggression against Ukraine and his threats against the West. The clearest traitor to the Homeland that we have in Spain is precisely Pedro Sánchez, who is willing to do anything, even trample on the interests of Spain, to cling to power.
The socialist leader adopts the forms of the North Korean dictator
This is not the first time that a ruler has identified himself with the Homeland in order to call anyone who criticises the government a "traitor to the Homeland", a criticism that is part of the very nature of democracy and is among the duties of the parliamentary opposition. Dictators of all kinds have already made this confusion before. In North Korea, the communist dictatorship also considers it treason to criticise the tyrant Kim Jong-un. The same thing happened under Stalin's dictatorship, where any criticism of the dictator was punished with a shot in the back of the head.
With his shameful attack on Abascal, Sanchez has shown once again that he is a totalitarian, a ruler who detests democracy and who considers that something as normal in a democratic country as criticizing the actions of the government is a betrayal of the Homeland. Sanchez adopts the forms of the worst communist dictators to reject all criticism and to identify those who question him as traitors and enemies of the Homeland. A ruler who acts in this way is something worse than a corrupt person: he is a danger to democracy.
Abascal has spent years threatened by ETA for defending Spain
Of course, all my support to Santiago Abascal against the slander that Sánchez launched against him today. If the leader of Vox has done anything until now, it is to serve Spain even at the risk of his own life. Let us remember that Abascal has spent years threatened with death by the terrorist group ETA and having to have an escort precisely for defending the unity of Spain in his native region, the Basque provinces. I leave you here with Abascal's formidable response to Sánchez (the video is in Spanish, you can activate automatic English subtitles in the bottom bar of the player):
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Photo: PSOE.
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