En Defensa de la Verdad
Saludos a todos.
Escrito por don Juan Carlos, editor senior emérito.
La historia global demuestra cómo las oligarquías y el capitalismo industrial diseñaron estructuras para consolidar su poder, las cuales evolucionaron hacia el neoliberalismo contemporáneo y su herramienta más sutil: la meritocracia. En Europa y América Latina, estos sistemas se aplicaron desmantelando los derechos colectivos y transformando las conquistas de los trabajadores en mercancías reguladas por el mercado. Desde la consolidación de los grandes capitales en el siglo XIX hasta las reformas fiscales que hoy privatizan la salud y la educación, el modelo se instaló desprotegiendo al trabajador. Al reducir el rol del Estado, las élites corporativas lograron que la riqueza nacional se concentrara en unas pocas manos, limitando el progreso de las mayorías a las reglas del gran capital.
La gran trampa de este engranaje radica en su capacidad para envolver a los ciudadanos más incautos mediante el engaño ambicioso que los hace soñar con una realidad inalcanzable. A través de la narrativa de que el éxito depende exclusivamente del esfuerzo individual, el sistema persuade al trabajador de que la falta de oportunidades es un fracaso personal y no una consecuencia de los recortes económicos. Este espejismo oculta deliberadamente que los puntos de partida son radicalmente desiguales, pues mientras unos heredan redes de influencia y educación privada, el pueblo enfrenta escuelas precarizadas y salarios de subsistencia. Así, la ilusión de la movilidad social funciona como un anestésico que desactiva la autodefensa colectiva, transformando la legítima demanda de derechos en una competencia desleal donde las cartas ya están marcadas.
El Gran Rescate
Ante esta realidad, es indispensable pensar que los sectores populares despierten su conciencia cívica y rechacen con firmeza un modelo que los condena a la exclusión organizada. El camino para frenar estos abusos exige que los sectores vulnerables y la clase trabajadora elijan cautelosamente a líderes y representantes que surjan de sus propias bases; dirigentes con coherencia demostrada que pongan el bienestar social por encima de los intereses personales o corporativos. Debemos poco a poco transformar la plusvalía de la mano de obra en capital educativo y tecnológico propio, escalando la cadena de valor global a través de políticas estatales estrictas y reformas económicas nacionales. Sin embargo, para vencer las dinámicas del sistema neoliberal y evitar que las multinacionales extranjeras devoren nuestra economía interna, resulta fundamental construir un «Sistema Económico Abierto» o un Estado soberano con características propias de inserción global. La soberanía de la patria no se defiende validando el desmantelamiento de las garantías públicas ni aplaudiendo discursos que hipotecan el futuro de la juventud con deudas históricas. El pueblo debe organizarse en sus ciudades, sindicatos, universidades, escuelas, campos y territorios para recuperar las conquistas históricas, entendiendo que la dignidad no es un premio de mercado, sino una victoria colectiva que se defiende con educación, fiscalización y un voto consciente.
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In Defense of Truth
Greetings to everyone.
Global history demonstrates how oligarchies and industrial capitalism designed structures to consolidate their power, which then evolved into contemporary neoliberalism and its most subtle tool: meritocracy. In Europe and Latin America, these systems were implemented by dismantling collective rights and transforming workers' hard-won achievements into market-regulated commodities. From the consolidation of big capital in the 19th century to the fiscal reforms that privatize health and education today, the model established itself by leaving the worker unprotected. By reducing the role of the State, corporate elites managed to concentrate national wealth into a few hands, limiting the progress of the majorities to the rules of big capital.
The great trap of this mechanism lies in its ability to enmesh even the most unwary citizens through an ambitious deception that makes them dream of an unattainable reality. Through the narrative that success depends exclusively on individual effort, the system persuades the worker that a lack of opportunities is a personal failure rather than a consequence of economic cuts. This mirage deliberately conceals the fact that starting points are radically unequal; while some inherit networks of influence and private education, the common people face precarized schools and subsistence wages. Thus, the illusion of social mobility acts as an anesthetic that deactivates collective self-defense, transforming the legitimate demand for rights into an unfair competition where the deck is already stacked.
The Great Rescue
Given this reality, it is indispensable to think that the popular sectors must awaken their civic consciousness and firmly reject a model that condemns them to organized exclusion. The path to halting these abuses requires that vulnerable sectors and the working class cautiously elect leaders and representatives emerging from their own grassroots; leaders with proven coherence who place social welfare above personal or corporate interests. We must gradually transform the surplus value of labor into our own educational and technological capital, scaling the global value chain through strict state policies and national economic reforms. However, to overcome the dynamics of the neoliberal system and prevent foreign multinationals from devouring our domestic economy, it is fundamental to build an "Open Economic System" or a sovereign State with its own characteristics for global integration. The sovereignty of the homeland is not defended by validating the dismantling of public guarantees, nor by applauds to speeches that mortgage the future of the youth with historical debts. The people must organize within their cities, unions, universities, schools, countrysides, and territories to reclaim historical conquests, understanding that dignity is not a market prize, but a collective victory defended through education, oversight, and a conscious vote.
In Defense of Truth
Greetings to everyone.
Global history demonstrates how oligarchies and industrial capitalism designed structures to consolidate their power, which then evolved into contemporary neoliberalism and its most subtle tool: meritocracy. In Europe and Latin America, these systems were implemented by dismantling collective rights and transforming workers' hard-won achievements into market-regulated commodities. From the consolidation of big capital in the 19th century to the fiscal reforms that privatize health and education today, the model established itself by leaving the worker unprotected. By reducing the role of the State, corporate elites managed to concentrate national wealth into a few hands, limiting the progress of the majorities to the rules of big capital.
The great trap of this mechanism lies in its ability to enmesh even the most unwary citizens through an ambitious deception that makes them dream of an unattainable reality. Through the narrative that success depends exclusively on individual effort, the system persuades the worker that a lack of opportunities is a personal failure rather than a consequence of economic cuts. This mirage deliberately conceals the fact that starting points are radically unequal; while some inherit networks of influence and private education, the common people face precarized schools and subsistence wages. Thus, the illusion of social mobility acts as an anesthetic that deactivates collective self-defense, transforming the legitimate demand for rights into an unfair competition where the deck is already stacked.
The Great Rescue
Given this reality, it is indispensable to think that the popular sectors must awaken their civic consciousness and firmly reject a model that condemns them to organized exclusion. The path to halting these abuses requires that vulnerable sectors and the working class cautiously elect leaders and representatives emerging from their own grassroots; leaders with proven coherence who place social welfare above personal or corporate interests. We must gradually transform the surplus value of labor into our own educational and technological capital, scaling the global value chain through strict state policies and national economic reforms. However, to overcome the dynamics of the neoliberal system and prevent foreign multinationals from devouring our domestic economy, it is fundamental to build an "Open Economic System" or a sovereign State with its own characteristics for global integration. The sovereignty of the homeland is not defended by validating the dismantling of public guarantees, nor by applauds to speeches that mortgage the future of the youth with historical debts. The people must organize within their cities, unions, universities, schools, countrysides, and territories to reclaim historical conquests, understanding that dignity is not a market prize, but a collective victory defended through education, oversight, and a conscious vote.



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