Desk politics vs. street reality: Who foots the bill?
It's easy to sign decrees from an air-conditioned office, surrounded by advisors who only say "yes." It's easy to talk about "austerity" and "economic restructuring" when your paycheck doesn't depend on whether transport fares went up today or if the workshop has power.
The real political disconnection isn't an algorithm; it's the physical and emotional distance between power and the ground.
Presidential orders hit the monitors of the workshops, like that "PRESIDENTIAL ORDER N° 2" we showed in the image above. But when the decree clashes with the reality of metal and sweat, the question that arises on the street is immediate and painful: "Who does it protect?"
We, the workers, those who sustain production day in and day out, are tired of being the "adjustment" in their spreadsheets. We don't need speeches about modernization if the only modernization we see is the bureaucratic hurdles they impose on us.
True political innovation isn't a tweet; it's about stopping the obstacles for those of us who want to work and build from the ground up. As long as power remains shielded in its luxury offices, the disconnection will continue to pay its price on the street. And that price is paid by us.
What do you think? What is the clearest example of political disconnection you see in your daily life?
👇PoliticaReal
#CalleVs Desk A#adjustment
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