Coup d'Etat in Spain?

I feel your pain guys. It's really pretty depressing to see how the 'ruling elite' have progressively locked down Western (and global) society so that no true voice of the people is allowed to hold any significant power. While it's possible that the vote was rigged, it's pretty difficult to say anything categorical about it, because there is no hard evidence. That tends to be the way vote rigging works, very covert, and not even a hint of it in the media.

That doesn't mean you can't 'wonder' about it in articles or comments on articles, but perhaps the main approach should be to point out that the majority of ordinary people, who tend to be a majority in any country, want security and safety above all else, especially when they have been made to feel very insecure and unsafe for many years (ISIS, refugees etc.) This in itself is a gross manipulation of the people by the 'elite' - exploiting people's need for strong, benevolent authority - so that the malevolent and supremely self-interested 'elite' can hold on to power.

Take some solace in the fact that this is happening everywhere in the Western world. At the very least, the fact that a large number of people support Podemos is positive, even if they have been effectively disenfranchised and ignored. In the USA, for example, there is no such thing as Podemos, and I don't think there is even a significant percentage of the population who even sees just how corrupt and psychopathic their forced choice of Presidents are.
 
Joe said:
I feel your pain guys. It's really pretty depressing to see how the 'ruling elite' have progressively locked down Western (and global) society so that no true voice of the people is allowed to hold any significant power. While it's possible that the vote was rigged, it's pretty difficult to say anything categorical about it, because there is no hard evidence. That tends to be the way vote rigging works, very covert, and not even a hint of it in the media.

That doesn't mean you can't 'wonder' about it in articles or comments on articles, but perhaps the main approach should be to point out that the majority of ordinary people, who tend to be a majority in any country, want security and safety above all else, especially when they have been made to feel very insecure and unsafe for many years (ISIS, refugees etc.) This in itself is a gross manipulation of the people by the 'elite' - exploiting people's need for strong, benevolent authority - so that the malevolent and supremely self-interested 'elite' can hold on to power.

Take some solace in the fact that this is happening everywhere in the Western world. At the very least, the fact that a large number of people support Podemos is positive, even if they have been effectively disenfranchised and ignored. In the USA, for example, there is no such thing as Podemos, and I don't think there is even a significant percentage of the population who even sees just how corrupt and psychopathic their forced choice of Presidents are.

Ok, thank you... You just make us a sott comment for the web... :P ;D

We'll keep that focus without affirm or deny whether there was electoral fraud... thank you very much!!!
 
Precisely, because the "official spanish government" is composed by the sons of the dictator's henchmen.
Game on!

#Síndics1OAbsolució

ACT IN GIRONA FOR THE ABSOLUTION OF TRADE UNIONS OF THE 1-O Monday 19 October At 7 p.m. Live by:
@TVGirona And for YouTube https://youtube.com/user/lesvoltes https :// t.co/o8YYrxdafn * By administrative order the event will be held without public.

The university community is on the side of the #Síndics1Oabsolució and the students, spearhead of the social mobilizations of our country, could not be less. On November 4 students will also fill the City of Justice!
#estudiantsAmbSíndicshttps://m.facebook.com/story.php?stor

'We have mobilized, we have gone on strike and we have protested for many just causes: for the Republic, for the reduction of public prices, against repression, for peace, against war ...'

During October 2017, students and youth were the spearhead of the Republican popular mobilization and in favor of the self-determination referendum. We also made the referendum possible '

Síndics de l'1 d'octubre
Catalonia sindics1octubre.cat Joined March 2020

The troubled lives of Catalan presidents are an echo of Catalonia’s troubles within Spain ǀ View

Opinions expressed in View articles are solely those of the authors.

last updated: 19/10/2020 - 13:10
To become the first carbon-neutral continent: that’s the ambitious goal for Europe declared by the Commission president Ursula von der Leyen in 2019.

And the route to achieving it, by 2050 no less, is with the European Green Deal - a wide-ranging set of ideas, including cleaning up the air and water, renovating buildings, and getting populations to live healthier, less carbon-intensive lives.

Today marks the start of the European Union’s Green Week, in which a number of events will examine how EU policies such as the Green Deal can help protect and restore nature, leaving it room to recover and thrive.

So, where better to start than with the Green Deal? Let’s take a look in more detail at the plan which von der Leyen described as “Europe’s man on the moon moment”.

What’s the goal?

The Green Deal aims to transform Europe into the first climate-neutral, or carbon-neutral, continent in the world.
Carbon-neutrality means there is no more carbon emitted into the atmosphere than there is absorbed in carbon sinks, which are systems that absorb more carbon than they emit, such as soil, forests and oceans.

It wants to achieve this by 2050, by drastically cutting down on carbon emissions.

This goal is actually also set out in the Paris Climate Agreement that was adopted in 2015, and which the EU signed up to.

Ultimately, the need to achieve carbon neutrality is crucial if the world is to avoid catastrophic climate change, by limiting global warming to below 2°C, with efforts to keep it below 1.5°C.

What does the Green Deal entail?

The EU describes it as an “action plan” to achieve the above goals, providing information on the science, the changes needed, and the financing available to achieve those changes.
It calls for action in all parts of the economy, including:
  • investment in environmentally-friendly technologies
  • supporting industry to innovate
  • rolling out cleaner, cheaper and healthier forms of private and public transport
  • decarbonising the energy sector
  • ensuring buildings are more energy efficient
  • working with international partners to improve global environmental standards
Member states have been told to present long-term strategies to the Commission, every 10 years, showing how they plan to make the drastic reductions in emissions needed to reach the target.
These plans must cover:
  • Emission reductions and enhancement of carbon sink removal
  • Specific sector plans including electricity, industry, transport, the heating and cooling and buildings sector, agriculture, waste and land use, land-use change and forestry
  • Progress on transition to a low greenhouse gas economy
  • Estimates of long-term investment, and strategies for research, development and innovation
  • Expected socio-economic effect of the decarbonisation measures
The first national long-term strategies were due by 1 January 2020. As of October 2020, a large number of countries still haven’t submitted their plans.

How will EU member states pay for these transformations?

In January the Commission unveiled its financial plan for the Green Deal, aiming to invest at least €1 trillion over the next ten years.
It wants to achieve this using a mix of private and public funds, including a quarter of the EU budget.

One of the key tools of the transition will be the Just Transition Mechanism (JTM), which is designed to ensure no country is left behind and the goals are achieved in a fair way.

The JTM will help to target the most-affected regions with at least €150 billion from 2021-2027, the EU says. The JTM platform will provide technical and advisory support.

The most affected regions are those that rely on carbon-intensive activities for their economies, or that have the most people working in fossil fuels.

What’s the current state of play?

On 7 October 2020, the European Parliament backed climate neutrality by 2050 and a 60 per cent emission reduction target by 2030 compared to 1990 levels.

The goal will become legally binding if a new Climate Law is adopted by Parliament and the Council, but this has not yet happened.
It still needs to be discussed between all three EU institutions, where they will need to agree on whether to aim for a 40, 50 or 60 per cent emissions reduction.

And despite recent talks, member states were unable to agree on a plan for target for shorter-term emissions reductions by 2030, pushing the talks until the next summit in December.

There is also a push for all member state countries to individually become climate neutral, but currently just five EU countries have set this target in law: Sweden, Denmark, France, Germany and Hungary.

Why would the NYT's stoke the coals of the past?

Vox, an ultranationalist party in Madrid, is working to remove memorials to Socialist figures of the 1930s, calling the effort a warning that a “law of historical memory” should be abolished.
Published Oct. 18, 2020Updated Oct. 19, 2020, 4:47 a.m.
MADRID — Leftist politicians in Spain have worked slowly but steadily over the years to remove symbols commemorating the former dictator Gen. Francisco Franco from public spaces across the country.

Now, despite denouncing those efforts, their political opponents are trying to use the same law to persuade the authorities in Madrid to erase memorials to Franco’s rivals.

This past week, city employees removed a plaque from the home of Francisco Largo Caballero, a Socialist who became prime minister of the Republican government in 1936, a few months after Franco and other generals started a military coup that plunged Spain into a civil war.

Largo Caballero fled to France when Franco claimed victory in 1939. He was later arrested during the Nazi occupation and sent to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. He died in exile in Paris in 1946. The plaque was taken down on Thursday — the 151st anniversary of his birth.

Juan E. Pflüger, spokesman for Vox, the far-right party behind the removal of the plaque, said the action was a warning to the leftist coalition leading the national government that the legislation, called the “law of historical memory,” should be abolished.
“We want to remove the law and leave history in peace,” Mr. Pflüger said.

The “law of historical memory” was enacted in 2007 with the aim of condemning the Franco regime and forbidding the exaltation of leaders or symbols related to the military coup and the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s. The Spanish government used the same law last year to exhume Franco’s remains from a basilica that he built outside Madrid.

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez responded on Twitter that the warnings from Vox were “unacceptable.” He added:
“Let us continue building a Spain worthy of those who fought so we could be what we are now: free.”

Spain has long been bitterly divided about whether to stir the bones of its past, but the dispute has intensified since 2018, when Mr. Sánchez took office with a promise to revive the historical memory law that had been approved by a previous Socialist government and then ignored by a conservative administration. One of the measure’s main goals is to help finance the opening of more than 2,000 mass graves across Spain.

Vox is pressing for the removal or alteration of monuments dedicated to Largo Caballero and another Socialist politician of the 1930s, Indalecio Prieto, including a boulevard named after Prieto on the outskirts of Madrid.

In a recent speech in the Madrid assembly, Javier Ortega Smith, a Vox lawmaker, said that the efforts were “not revisionism, but putting an end to a historical lie.” He called the two politicians “sinister characters in our history that should not form part of the names of the streets and squares.”

Vox argues that, far from deserving exaltation as defenders of democracy, both Socialists helped spark revolutionary unrest before the coup took place, and then joined a Republican government that allowed the summary executions of Fascist opponents once the war got underway.

merlin_165057780_fcbeaf56-afa9-4974-9506-46c9259dfc4b-superJumbo.jpg

A rally in Madrid in November 2019 protesting plans to alter a memorial in a city cemetery for people killed under Franco’s orders.Credit...Chema Moya/EPA, via Shutterstock

More than 200 historians, from Spain and abroad, have signed a report forcefully rejecting Vox’s account of the roles of Largo Caballero and Prieto in the 1930s.

Paul Preston, a British historian who signed the report and is a leading expert on the Spanish Civil War, said in an email that it was “malicious and unfair” to equate leftist politicians like Largo Caballero and Prieto with some of Franco’s generals, whom he described as “mass murderers.”

Ramón Silva, a Socialist politician, said the city politics of Madrid had been “contaminated” by the emergence of Vox, now the third-largest party in Spain. He noted that the plaque at Largo Caballero’s birthplace was erected in 1981, shortly after Spain’s return to democracy, with the support of politicians from all parties.

Madrid’s city politics shifted last year, after elections that led to José Luis Martínez-Almeida, a politician from the conservative Popular Party, taking over as mayor from Manuela Carmena, a leftist politician. Mr. Martínez-Almeida is running Madrid in coalition with Vox and Ciudadanos, a center-right party.

Since taking office, Mr. Martínez-Almeida’s administration has removed plaques from a Madrid cemetery memorial naming over 2,900 people killed under Franco’s orders. The city government argued that the memorial should honor victims without identifying them or saying which side they supported in the civil war.

Opposition politicians in Madrid said they planned to challenge the removal of the Largo Caballero plaque in court.
Teresa Amor, a spokeswoman for the Socialists in Madrid, said the dispute showed that the country still needed to come to terms with its history.

“Spain has not healed the wounds of our past and also certainly needs to do a lot more homework about its Fascist dictatorship,” she said. “We still have plenty of people who don’t understand that winning a war is not the same as gaining legitimacy.”


Oct 18, 2020 / 26:56

Our new paper on @PhysRevE is out: Topological versus spectral properties of random geometric graphs https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.042306 We consider random matrix theory measures to characterize the organization of random geometric graphs.
 
Remind me this... Session 05/09/2020 :

Q: (Ark) I have a question. I have a certain vision and I would like to know if this is my wishful thinking, or a good thing that I have envisioned. My vision is the following: As a response to pollution and industrialization and so on, we have this emergence of the "Green Parties". Now, my vision is that there will be very soon the beginning of a social movement like Green Peace but AGAINST all these lies. This will explode. People will go into parties fighting against these lies, okay? And it will lead even to social unrest and I see it not in the distant future. Now, is it my wishful thinking, or something like this is going to happen?

A: Expect it.

Q: (L) So in other words, it's like Łobaczewski said: psychopaths always think that they can impose their distorted way of thinking on normal human beings, and it may work under tactics of terror for a period of time. But eventually the terror will wear off, and the anger will replace it. It's going to be basically the villagers with the pitchforks and firebrands.
 

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