From the Cell
“My daughters were indignant that we had raised them to believe that they were living in a democracy and did not have to worry about preserving their rights.”
“My daughters were indignant that we had raised them to believe that they were living in a democracy and did not have to worry about preserving their rights.”
Though Spain clutches Catalonia in an ever-tightening chokehold, on October 1, 2017, the indefatigable mobilization of the Catalan people still breathed life into democracy.
Spain’s politicians underhandedly, yet firmly, grip the pens of the nation’s reporters—the separation between politics and press is an illusion, and a flimsy one at that.
In the traditional Spanish baroque pews of the Tribunal Supremo de España (The Spanish Supreme Court), the ideological vestiges of Franco’s fascist regime are still alive and kicking.