.
His column, entitled "Young people have more challenges" , has that air of irrational hope that the youth is in charge of worrying about the situation in the country and that the line of action must be one of increased participation in decision making, although his line of argument does not go much further. With the phrase "It's time to have faith that Guatemala will change and achieve our dreams and goals" can convince almost all of its readers, but as far as my reading allows me to peer into his mind, there is any concrete proposals.
Another is the story of Camilo Peña column entitled "Change begins with new ideas" , a politically incorrect approach to the series of central problems plaguing Guatemala for centuries and that ( oh, no!) has little to do with who is in power as I write these lines. On the contrary, says Peña, plays emancipate both " of that still left justified political and not scientific arguments [...] that has embroiled the country's history and critique of Western civilization at the same while demanding all the benefits that this has created materials ... "as statist right that all they have accomplished is to destroy the heroic image of the entrepreneur and the concept is destroyed and replaced by that of mercantilist benefit of government protection.
I totally agree with pain in young people, whose participation was catapulted over the previous year, must "establish itself as the beginning of a rational power, through concrete proposals and starting from a coherent ideological framework and logical as ProReforma. Hopefully this will be the year of the draft amendment to the Constitution because is the law (with a capital) and not the application of force where there was no way to progress.
.
0 comments:
Post a Comment