Friday, January 8, 2010

Fighting Xanax Impotence

Letter from a Basque mother to another ... Eight

I have received by mail and I am impressed ...

From mother to mother
saw your strong protest in front of TV cameras yesterday's demonstration in favor of the reunification of ETA prisoners and their transfer to prisons in the Basque country.

I saw you complained of the distance that separates you from your child and what is financially for you to go visit him because of that distance.

I saw all the media coverage devoted to this demonstration and you had support from other mothers in the same situation and others wanting to be in solidarity with you, and have the support of pastoral commissions, agencies and entities in defense of human rights NGO, s, etc., etc.

I am also a mother and I can understand your protest and indignation.

Huge is the distance that separates me from my son. Working and earning enough, are the same difficulties that I have to visit. With much sacrifice only I can visit on Sundays, because I work even on Saturdays to support and educate the rest of the family. Fortunately I also have the support of friends, family, etc.

If you still do not know, I am the mother of the young man who died while on his way to school and passing near a parked car, it exploded because of the sticky bomb that put your child in the basement of that car. At the next visit, when you're kissing and caressing your son, I will be visiting the mine and lay the flowers on his grave.

Oh, I forgot, earning little and sustaining the economy of my home, through the taxes I pay, your child will sleep on a comfortable mattress and eating hot meals every day ..

dear Another thing: neither the cemetery, or my home, never came to any representative of these entities are so closely with you to support me or devote a few words of encouragement, and even for tell me what are my rights.

If you agree with this letter, make it circular. Who knows

If together we can reverse this reversal of values \u200b\u200bthat exists in Spain, where terrorists and criminals have more rights than ordinary citizens who just want to live in peace.

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