Ayuso, the public and the Complutense

I spent five years in the Faculty of Information Sciences at the Complutense University and I cannot remain silent about what happened yesterday in that horrible concrete building that has formed so many illustrious journalists.

Thomas Osborne
Thomas Osborne
30 January 2023 Monday 14:06
8 Reads
Ayuso, the public and the Complutense

I spent five years in the Faculty of Information Sciences at the Complutense University and I cannot remain silent about what happened yesterday in that horrible concrete building that has formed so many illustrious journalists. Journalists of the real ones, of those who magnify the profession. Yes, I am proud to have studied there.

The social networks burned yesterday with what happened and demonstrated once again that each user can configure their own reality depending on the prism with which everything is looked at.

Elisa Lozano, the student with the best record in journalism and audiovisual communication (9.28) last year, asked in the presence of the president of the Community of Madrid: "Is Mrs. Ayuso doing something for us?" I think the question is appropriate: are the rulers doing something for us? Think about the answer and vote accordingly in May and in December.

Go ahead that any democrat should repudiate the escraches. Harassment is not acceptable, especially in a place where freedom should always prevail. But the rector was not fine considering Díaz Ayuso "illustrious" of the public university center in Madrid by reference. I can think of several "illustrious" from those four walls, from teachers to janitors, and I don't think inviting a politician who is gambling the elections in four months is the most appropriate. The public thing is, precisely, to think of the one below and treat him as the one above. The rest is politics.

Who was fine yesterday was the actor Antonio de la Torre and the tweeters recognized him. "Freedom for me is having the resources to think for myself," said the journalist. “I was able to study because public education exists. Those who make public education possible deserve to be illustrious workers,” he concluded. touche .

I think De la Torre hit the nail on the head because in Madrid there is not a commitment to the public as it should. I am outraged by requesting a medical appointment for my parents, now elderly, and who will not have the chance to be seen by their doctor for another two weeks. And if it's already late? It annoys me more if possible the families that have to wait more than a year to receive a euro from the Dependency law. I repeat, more than a year. I think there is no need to continue.

Of course there are other places where the same thing happens with the public. It is the argument that I always hear when I denounce these things. But I am also clear that whoever thinks that everything works well in Madrid is because they do not suffer from it.