Saturday, January 13, 2007

Ovulation And Urination

Tucumán.

not know where to start writing, I confess. I write this post to the distance from the outskirts of the city of Cordoba, chosen site want a holiday where you could find in the cool mountain air of something other than what you breathe Tucumán every day.

Tucumán is a province characterized by poverty, malnutrition, bribery, organized crime, death and impunity and corruption fueled by the desire for money and power in which there are many actors and actresses, lighting and set designers willing to carry out the script proposed by the director.

A pathetic script of a work sustained over time by dint of deceit and lies, full of betrayals and death interrupted these days (and briefly) by a flood of mud covering running the desolate streets and roads, now turned into rivers.

rivers running through the despair and anguish of thousands of people, including some structural poor barely survive in this decadent society. In the turbidity of water can only be a reflection of a world where nothing matters and everything does not matter.

But is not the same, what happens is that we are accustomed to see represented this script over and over again, with actors and actresses that change and rotate to the beat of the years with costumes and lighting in accordance with circumstances, and we appear there as mere spectators to laughter and drama crude comfortable sitting in our audience.
Let's face
. If we do not like to see this work, then write one that we like, we identify and help us to grow as a society.

Tucumán muddy and murky is the image that we see today, but that may change.
Water and mud are just symbols of a reality that we need to keep watching in silence.
Let's do something. Marcos
Bauzá.

Flooding is the most terrible in the history of this small province that gave birth the independence of Argentina, you can see that this is a result of between clearing explosive cocktail environmental and climate change.

can follow the subject in these newspapers and blogs including The Z Ga Tucumán and Tucumanga .

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