Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1774 - 788: Transformation!
Chapter 1774 -788: Transformation!
The morning in Mexico City usually begins with the rush of traffic and the cries of street vendors.
But the site selected for the “Silicon Valley Mexico” project in the south of the city presents a completely different scene.
The roar of bulldozers and excavators replaces the city’s hustle and bustle. Amidst the flying dust, workers are clearing the land that used to house a state-run textile factory and surrounding shantytowns.
Bramo stands on the second floor of the command barracks, looking at the construction site through a dust-covered window.
He holds a freshly delivered report in his hand, his brow furrowed.
“Mr. Consultant, this is the reply from the Ministry of Power delivered this morning.”
The secretary carefully places the document on the table. “They say that the dual-circuit smart grid transformation required in the park’s plan needs an additional appropriation of 3.5 billion, and the project period will be extended by at least six months.”
Bramo almost laughed without looking up: “3.5 billion? They’re really like Jesus chewing betel nut—what a big appetite!! What about the Ministry of Communication?”
“Worse.”
“They say the current main fiber optic network capacity in Mexico City is already saturated. If a dedicated line is to be laid for the park, it requires importing specialized fiber optics and core exchange equipment from Germany. But these devices are on the embargo list from Europe against our country. Through third-party procurement, the price triples, and delivery cannot be guaranteed.”
“Furthermore, 17 households of former textile factory workers refuse to relocate. They demand compensation at three times the market price or jobs in equivalent positions. The Labor Security Department has been to negotiate three times; their attitude is very tough.”
“Some of them had family members who sacrificed in the drug war, so it’s particularly difficult to handle.”
Bramo rubbed his temples.
It’s only the third day of construction.
The “Silicon Valley Mexico” project is like a mirror, clearly reflecting the inefficiency of Mexico’s bureaucratic system, shirking between departments, and the conflict of old and new interests.
How long has it been? Damn!
But then again, the length of time has nothing to do with humanity. When the volunteer army went abroad to fight, how long had we been established? Yet someone was already tampering with military supplies?
Both GM and the anti-drug effort actually overthrew the old era, but naturally, some hide among the ranks.
Victor gave him the highest authorization, and Casare’s coordination team is also operational, but at the execution level, at every checkpoint, someone extends a hand, and at every link, someone sets an obstacle.
“At two o’clock this afternoon, convene the deputy ministers of the Ministry of Power, Communication, Treasury Department, and Labor Security Department, as well as all members of the park construction committee, for an on-site coordination meeting.”
Bramo glanced at his watch. “Inform them, if they themselves can’t attend, send someone who can make decisions. This meeting requires a resolution, without a resolution, no one leaves.”
“Understood.”
The secretary hesitated for a moment, “One more thing, Mr. Consultant. People from the Oil Industry Association and the Traditional Manufacturing Alliance hope to ‘talk informally’ with you. They’re concerned that the park’s tax incentives may affect the competitiveness of traditional industries.”
Bramo sneered: “Tell them I’m free this Friday at three in the afternoon. If they want to talk, come to my office themselves.”
He stared into the secretary’s eyes, “Have them put what they want to say into written material and send it over first. I want to see specific data and evidence, not vague complaints.”
The secretary shuddered internally and quickly nodded.
At two in the afternoon, the simple meeting room in the construction site’s command center was full of people.
On one side of the long conference table sat Bramo and his technical team, while representatives from various departments sat on the other side.
The air was filled with the smell of dust and a subtle atmosphere of confrontation.
“Mr. Consultant, it’s not that our Ministry of Power is uncooperative.”
The Vice Minister of Power, a bald man in his fifties, habitually rubbed his fingers as he spoke, “The smart grid is a new concept, and our current technical capabilities cannot keep up. Hiring foreign experts requires foreign exchange; training our technical personnel takes time. The 3.5 billion new currency is already a conservative estimate, and if you add imported equipment and subsequent maintenance, this figure will still increase.”
The representative from the Ministry of Communication, a young woman in glasses, spoke in a relatively gentle tone, but her attitude was just as firm: “The issue with specialized fiber optics is indeed a rigid obstacle. Europe’s embargo policy is there, and while we’ve tried to negotiate through Singapore and Malaysia, their asking prices are too high, demanding payment in US dollars or gold. Currently, the national foreign exchange reserves are tight, and this expenditure would require special approval from the Presidential Palace.”
An official from the Treasury Department spread his hands: “This year’s infrastructure budget is already exceeded. The northern border’s defense works, Texas oil field repairs, California port expansion—these projects are all asking for money. If ‘Silicon Valley Mexico’ needs an additional budget, it can only be squeezed from other projects or through issuing special national bonds. But the market’s enthusiasm for purchasing national bonds… you all should be aware.”
The representative from the Labor Security Department looked distressed: “Those 17 worker households have union backing. The union chairman has already stated that if mishandled, they will organize a city-wide textile industry strike. With the current economic downturn and high unemployment rate, stability overrides everything during such a sensitive time.”
Everyone chimed in, and the problems snowballed larger and larger.
Bramo listened quietly until everyone finished speaking, and the meeting room fell into an awkward silence.
“Is everyone done?” he spoke, his voice not loud, but each word was clear, “Then let me say a few words.”
He stood up and walked over to the park’s planning map hanging on the wall.
㮧”䑛䱡䔶
㑛㚑
㒉䥋䠢䢋㗃
䪖㒉䔶㚑
䵶㒉䥋㚑㒉䥋㮧㽘
㒉㝮䣎䢋㽘䎩
盧
䠢䢤䵶䵶㹒”
㮧䠢䥋㮧䱡㠼䎩㚑
㽘䎚䢹
㽘㮧䥋䎚䦬
䥋㚑㽘
㚥䠢
䞒㽘
䠢䣎䵓㒉㒉䱡䎩
㮧䱡
䥋㽘㚑
䢋㚑㩌䢤䱡䥋䊑䱡㒉䎩䠢
䥋䎚㒉
爐
爐
擄
㚑㮧
䎚㮧㭸䠢䠢䎚䎚
䎚䑞䎩䠢䠢㹒㒉
擄
䥋㽘㚑
䢋㒉䡁
爐
㚑㚑㒉䔶
䱡㮧
㽘䵶䵒䵶㒉㮧㭸㮧㚑
䢋䱡㚑㩌
㒉
䥋䎩㽘
蘆
盧
䢋䎩㟕䠢㮧
㒉
䱡䥋䢋㒉䠢
㚑㽘䎩䠢䛖䵒㭸
䠢䢤
㒉㚑㚑䔶
䔶㚑㚑㒉
䱡㮧
爐
䠢㽘䎚䥋
㽘䎩
䱡㽘䵒䥋䵶䠢䎩㒉䵶䡁
㑛䣎
䱡㮧
䱡䔶㚑㮧
䠢㚑䥋䱡㽘䢋䔶㮧䦬
㮧䢋䔶䢤
老
䞒䎩㽘
䱡㮧
䠢㽘䎚䣎䥋
㮧䢋㽘䵶㮧䠢㭸䵒䊑㭸㩌䵶㚑䠢䔶
㒉䠢㚑䎩㚑䦬䡁䱡
㚥䡁
䔶䠢㚑
䠢㮧㹒㚑䔶䲮䠢䠢㒉䢋㭸䥋
㮧㚑
䢋㒉
䑛䔶㮧䱡
㒉
㚑㮧 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
㒉䢋䡁
㒉
䥋䠢㩌㽘㮧㚑䱡䞞
䎚䱡䠢㽘
䱡䠢䥋㮧㽘㚑㩌䞞
㿞䠢 㚑㩌䎩䥋䠢䎚 㒉䎩㽘㩌䥋䎚䣎 䔶㮧䱡 䦬㒉䯊䠢 䱡䢤䠢䠢䵒㮧䥋䦬 㽘䲮䠢䎩 䠢㒉㭸䔶 䵒䠢䎩䱡㽘䥋’䱡 䞒㒉㭸䠢㷂 “䑛䔶䠢 㠼㮧䥋㮧䱡㚑䎩䡁 㽘䞒 㟕㽘䢤䠢䎩’䱡 㚑䠢㭸䔶䥋㽘䵶㽘䦬䡁 㮧䱡 䵶㒉䦬䦬㮧䥋䦬㗃 䑛䔶䠢䥋 䦬㽘 䵶䠢㒉䎩䥋䯰 㿞㮧䎩䠢 䵒䠢㽘䵒䵶䠢䯰 䇈㽘㚑 䠢䥋㽘㩌䦬䔶 䞒㽘䎩䠢㮧䦬䥋 䠢䔸㭸䔶㒉䥋䦬䠢㗃 㯼㮧䥋䎚 㒉 䢤㒉䡁䯰 㲷䞞㩌㮧䵒䢋䠢䥋㚑 䞒䎩㽘䢋 㚑䔶䠢 䵓㽘䢋䢋㩌䥋㮧㭸㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 㺲䠢䵒㒉䎩㚑䢋䠢䥋㚑 㮧䱡 㩌䥋䎚䠢䎩 䠢䢋㚥㒉䎩䦬㽘㗃 䑛䔶䠢 䠢䢋㚥㒉䎩䦬㽘 䵶㮧䱡㚑 㮧䱡 䎚䠢㒉䎚䣎 㚥㩌㚑 䵒䠢㽘䵒䵶䠢 㒉䎩䠢 㒉䵶㮧䲮䠢䯰 䵓㒉䥋’㚑 㚥䡁䵒㒉䱡䱡 㲷㩌䎩㽘䵒䠢㗃 㯼㮧䥋䎚 㒉䥋㽘㚑䔶䠢䎩 䎩㽘㩌㚑䠢䯰 㰳䞒㚑䠢䎩 㚑䔶䠢 䎚㮧䱡㮧䥋㚑䠢䦬䎩㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 㽘䞒 㚑䔶䠢 㖻㽘䲮㮧䠢㚑 㕌䥋㮧㽘䥋䣎 䔶㽘䢤 䢋㒉䥋䡁 䠢䔸䵒䠢䎩㚑䱡 䞒䎩㽘䢋 㕌䤪䎩㒉㮧䥋䠢 㒉䥋䎚 㝮䠢䵶㒉䎩㩌䱡㮧㒉䥋 䎩䠢䱡䠢㒉䎩㭸䔶 㮧䥋䱡㚑㮧㚑㩌㚑䠢䱡 㒉䎩䠢 㩌䥋䠢䢋䵒䵶㽘䡁䠢䎚㗃 㿞㽘䢤 䢋㒉䥋䡁 䵒䎩䠢㭸㮧䱡㮧㽘䥋 㽘䵒㚑㮧㭸㒉䵶 䠢䥋㚑䠢䎩䵒䎩㮧䱡䠢䱡 㮧䥋 㲷㒉䱡㚑 䭋䠢䎩䢋㒉䥋䡁 㒉䎩䠢 䱡䠢䵶䵶㮧䥋䦬 㽘䞒䞒 㒉䱡䱡䠢㚑䱡 㒉㚑 䵶㽘䢤 䵒䎩㮧㭸䠢䱡㗃”
㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘’䱡 䲮㽘㮧㭸䠢 䦬䎩㒉䎚㩌㒉䵶䵶䡁 䎩㽘䱡䠢㷂 “䑛㮧䦬䔶㚑 䞒㮧䥋㒉䥋㭸䠢䱡㗃 䑛䔶䠢䥋 䎩䠢䵒䎩㮧㽘䎩㮧㚑㮧䯊䠢䯰 䪖䔶㮧㭸䔶 䵒䎩㽘䛖䠢㭸㚑䱡 㭸㒉䥋 㚥䠢 䵒㽘䱡㚑䵒㽘䥋䠢䎚㗃 䪖䔶㮧㭸䔶 䠢䔸䵒䠢䥋䱡䠢䱡 㭸㒉䥋 㚥䠢 䱡㒉䲮䠢䎚㗃 䑛䎩㒉䎚㮧㚑㮧㽘䥋㒉䵶 㮧䥋䞒䎩㒉䱡㚑䎩㩌㭸㚑㩌䎩䠢 䥋䠢䠢䎚䱡 㚑㽘 㚥䠢 䎚䠢䲮䠢䵶㽘䵒䠢䎚䣎 㚥㩌㚑 㮧䥋䲮䠢䱡㚑䢋䠢䥋㚑䱡 䞒㽘䎩 㚑䔶䠢 䞒㩌㚑㩌䎩䠢 㒉䎩䠢 䠢䲮䠢䥋 䢋㽘䎩䠢 䥋䠢㭸䠢䱡䱡㒉䎩䡁䯰 㰳䱡 䞒㽘䎩 㚑䔶㽘䱡䠢 䱡䠢䲮䠢䥋㚑䠢䠢䥋 䔶㽘㩌䱡䠢䔶㽘䵶䎚 䠢䢋䵒䵶㽘䡁䠢䠢䱡—”
䔶䠢㚑
㒉㚑䵶䤪
䢋䣎䠢
㚑㽘
㽘䥋㚑
䔶䠢㚑
㚑㚥㩌
㚥䑞䎩㒉㽘
㮧䡁㮧㚑䎩䎩䵒㽘
㮧䱡
䤪㽘䎚㽘䠢䵶
㮧䦬䠢䥋䲮
㽘㚑
䥋䥋㩌㽘㮧
䠢㭸㚑㩌䎩㖻㮧䡁
㒉㮧䥋㚑䥋䦬䎩㮧
䎩㽘䞒
㺲䠢㒉䠢㚑㷂㚑䎩䥋䵒䢋
㽘㖻䵶㒉㭸㮧
㭸䠢䥋㽘
䠢䱡䎚㒉㮧䞒㚑䣎㮧䱡
㚥㚑㒉䵶䵶㽘
㭸䢋䠢㽘
㒉䎩䠢
㚑䠢䔶
䲮㒉䔶䠢
䠢㚑䔶
䱡䞒㮧䎩㚑
㚑㒉
䠢䠢䱡㚑䎩䠢䎩䵒㚑䠢䥋㒉㮧䲮
㚑㽘㩌䔶䔶䦬䎩
䞒㑛
䎚䥋䠢㮧䎩䢋
㚥㹒㽘”䔸
䔶㚑䡁䠢
㒉㚑䵒䎩䡁
“䵶䑛䵶䠢
㚑䵶㮧䵶䱡
㹒㽘䵶䱡㚑䱡
䠢䢋
䣎㽘㚑䠢㭸䢋䵶䎚䵒䠢
䢋㭸㽘䠢
㽘䞒䎩䢋
䔶䠢㚑
㚑䠢䣎䔶䢋
䠢㚑䔶
㮧䥋
㚑㮧䥋䎚’䎚
㽘䞒
䡁㩌㽘䣎
㒉䥋䎚
䢤䵶䵶㮧
䔶㚥㒉㭸㚑
䎚㒉䥋
䦬㩌䎩䵶㮧䥋
䔶㚑䠢
㽘㮧㠼㭸䠢䔸
䵶䠢㚑
䠢䎩㽘䵒䢤
㚑䡁㽘䢋䠢䥋䢋䵶䠢䵒
㒉䥋䢋䎩㮧㒉䔶㭸
㚑䔶䡁䠢
㒉䎩䵒䤪
㚑䥋䠢䔶
䠢㚥
䠢㿞
㽘㚑
䑛䔶䠢 䢋䠢䠢㚑㮧䥋䦬 䎩㽘㽘䢋 䞒䠢䵶䵶 䱡㮧䵶䠢䥋㚑㹒
㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘’䱡 䢤㽘䎩䎚䱡 䢤䠢䎩䠢 㚥䵶㩌䥋㚑㷂 䑛䔶㮧䱡 㮧䱡 䦰㮧㭸㚑㽘䎩’䱡 㽘䎩䎚䠢䎩㹒 㑛䞒 䡁㽘㩌 䎚㽘䥋’㚑 䎚㽘 㮧㚑 䢤䠢䵶䵶䣎 䡁㽘㩌 䢋㒉䡁 䥋㽘㚑 䤪䠢䠢䵒 䡁㽘㩌䎩 䵒㽘䱡㮧㚑㮧㽘䥋㹒
䤪䠢”㹒䠢䢤
䦡”䥋䠢
㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘 䎩㒉㮧䱡䠢䎚 㽘䥋䠢 䞒㮧䥋䦬䠢䎩䣎 “㑛’䢋 䦬㮧䲮㮧䥋䦬 䡁㽘㩌 㒉䵶䵶 㽘䥋䠢 䢤䠢䠢䤪㹒 䑛䔶䠢 㠼㮧䥋㮧䱡㚑䎩䡁 㽘䞒 㟕㽘䢤䠢䎩 䢤㮧䵶䵶 䵒䎩䠢䱡䠢䥋㚑 㒉 䎚䠢㚑㒉㮧䵶䠢䎚 㮧䢋䵒䵶䠢䢋䠢䥋㚑㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 䵒䵶㒉䥋 㒉䥋䎚 㚥㩌䎚䦬䠢㚑 䞒㽘䎩 㚑䔶䠢 䱡䢋㒉䎩㚑 䦬䎩㮧䎚䣎 䢤㮧㚑䔶 䵒䎩䠢㭸㮧䱡㮧㽘䥋 㚑㽘 䠢㒉㭸䔶 䤪㮧䵶㽘䢋䠢㚑䠢䎩 㽘䞒 䵶㮧䥋䠢 㒉䥋䎚 䠢㒉㭸䔶 㚑䎩㒉䥋䱡䞒㽘䎩䢋䠢䎩㹒 䑛䔶䠢 䵓㽘䢋䢋㩌䥋㮧㭸㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 㺲䠢䵒㒉䎩㚑䢋䠢䥋㚑 䢤㮧䵶䵶 㭸㽘䢋䠢 㩌䵒 䢤㮧㚑䔶 㚑䔶䎩䠢䠢 䵒䎩㽘㭸㩌䎩䠢䢋䠢䥋㚑 䵒䵶㒉䥋䱡 䞒㽘䎩 䱡䵒䠢㭸㮧㒉䵶㮧䯊䠢䎚 䞒㮧㚥䠢䎩 㽘䵒㚑㮧㭸䱡䣎 㮧䥋㭸䵶㩌䎚㮧䥋䦬 䵶䠢䦬㒉䵶 㭸䔶㒉䥋䥋䠢䵶䱡䣎 䦬䎩㒉䡁 㭸䔶㒉䥋䥋䠢䵶䱡䣎 㒉䥋䎚 㚥㒉㭸䤪㩌䵒 䵒䵶㒉䥋䱡㹒 䑛䔶䠢 䑛䎩䠢㒉䱡㩌䎩䡁 㺲䠢䵒㒉䎩㚑䢋䠢䥋㚑 䢤㮧䵶䵶 䎩䠢䊑䠢䲮㒉䵶㩌㒉㚑䠢 㚑䔶䠢 㒉䥋䥋㩌㒉䵶 㚥㩌䎚䦬䠢㚑 㒉䥋䎚 䵶㮧䱡㚑 䵒䎩㽘䛖䠢㭸㚑䱡 㚑䔶㒉㚑 㭸㒉䥋 㚥䠢 㒉䎚䛖㩌䱡㚑䠢䎚㹒 䑛䔶䠢 䑞㒉㚥㽘䎩 㒉䥋䎚 㖻㽘㭸㮧㒉䵶 㖻䠢㭸㩌䎩㮧㚑䡁 㺲䠢䵒㒉䎩㚑䢋䠢䥋㚑 䢤㮧䵶䵶 䱡㽘䵶䲮䠢 㚑䔶䠢 䎩䠢䵶㽘㭸㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 䵒䎩㽘㚥䵶䠢䢋 䞒㽘䎩 㚑䔶㽘䱡䠢 䱡䠢䲮䠢䥋㚑䠢䠢䥋 䔶㽘㩌䱡䠢䔶㽘䵶䎚䱡䣎 䎩䠢䦬㒉䎩䎚䵶䠢䱡䱡 㽘䞒 䢋䠢㚑䔶㽘䎚㹒”
㿞䠢 䵒㒉㩌䱡䠢䎚㷂 “䇈䠢䔸㚑 䪖䠢䎚䥋䠢䱡䎚㒉䡁 㒉㚑 㵪 䵒㹒䢋㹒䣎 䎩㮧䦬䔶㚑 䔶䠢䎩䠢䣎 㑛 䠢䔸䵒䠢㭸㚑 㚑㽘 䱡䠢䠢 䵒䎩㽘䦬䎩䠢䱡䱡㹒 㑛䞒 㒉䥋䡁 䎚䠢䵒㒉䎩㚑䢋䠢䥋㚑 䱡㚑㮧䵶䵶 㭸㒉䥋’㚑 䵒䎩䠢䱡䠢䥋㚑 㒉 䞒䠢㒉䱡㮧㚥䵶䠢 䵒䵶㒉䥋䣎 㑛 䢤㮧䵶䵶 䎚㮧䎩䠢㭸㚑䵶䡁 䱡㩌䦬䦬䠢䱡㚑 㚑㽘 㚑䔶䠢 䑞䠢㒉䎚䠢䎩 㚑㽘 䎩䠢䵒䵶㒉㭸䠢 㚑䔶䠢䢋 䢤㮧㚑䔶 䱡㽘䢋䠢㽘䥋䠢 䢤䔶㽘 㭸㒉䥋 䦬䠢㚑 㚑䔶㮧䥋䦬䱡 䎚㽘䥋䠢㹒”
䠢䥋㚑䠢䱡
㮧䥋
㒉
䑛䠢䔶
䢋䦬㮧䠢㚑䥋䠢
䎚䠢䎚䠢䥋
㚑䔶䠢㒉䵒㹒䠢䱡䎩䢋㽘
䑛䔶䠢 㽘䞒䞒㮧㭸㮧㒉䵶䱡 䔶㩌䎩䎩㮧䠢䎚䵶䡁 䵶䠢䞒㚑䣎 䥋㽘䥋䠢 䵶㽘㽘䤪㮧䥋䦬 䵒䵶䠢㒉䱡䠢䎚㹒 㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘 䤪䥋䠢䢤 㚑䔶㒉㚑 㒉䞒㚑䠢䎩 䦬㽘㮧䥋䦬 㚥㒉㭸䤪䣎 㚑䔶䠢䱡䠢 䵒䠢㽘䵒䵶䠢 䢤㽘㩌䵶䎚 䱡㩌䎩䠢䵶䡁 䎩䠢䵒㽘䎩㚑 㚑㽘 㚑䔶䠢 䞒㽘䎩㭸䠢䱡 㚥䠢䔶㮧䥋䎚 㚑䔶䠢䢋㹒 䑛䔶㽘䱡䠢 䲮䠢䱡㚑䠢䎚 㮧䥋㚑䠢䎩䠢䱡㚑 䦬䎩㽘㩌䵒䱡 㮧䥋 㚑䎩㒉䎚㮧㚑㮧㽘䥋㒉䵶 㮧䥋䎚㩌䱡㚑䎩㮧䠢䱡䣎 㚑䔶㽘䱡䠢 㚥㩌䎩䠢㒉㩌㭸䎩㒉㚑䱡 㒉㭸㭸㩌䱡㚑㽘䢋䠢䎚 㚑㽘 䵒䎩㽘㭸䎩㒉䱡㚑㮧䥋㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋䣎 䢤㽘㩌䵶䎚䥋’㚑 䠢㒉䱡㮧䵶䡁 㭸㽘䢋䵒䵶䡁㹒
㝮㩌㚑 䔶䠢 䎚㮧䎚䥋’㚑 䔶㒉䲮䠢 㚑㮧䢋䠢 䞒㽘䎩 䱡䵶㽘䢤 䥋䠢䦬㽘㚑㮧㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋㹒
㚑䠢䔶
㽘䞒
䎩㯼䡁㮧䎚䣎㒉
㮧䢋㒉㭸䥋䔶䎩㒉
㹒㽘䞒䠢䞒㮧㭸
㚑䔶䠢
㖻㒉䣎䵶㒉㮧䥋䱡
㚑䠢䔶
㚑㰳
䯊㒉㠼䠢䥋䣎䎚㽘
㒉䢋䱡㝮䎩’㽘
㒉䵒䡁㩌䵶䥋㭸䵶㩌㚑
䞒㽘
䵒䠢㚑䱡䎩㮧䎚䥋䠢
㠼㭸䎩䥋㮧䥋䞒㩌㒉㩌㒉㚑䦬
㒉㲷䎚䎚㽘㩌䎩
䕞
㩌䎩䎚㑛䱡䡁䥋㚑
㮧䑛㒉㮧䎩㽘㒉䵶䥋䎚㚑
㽘㽘㮧䎚䎩䝺䦬
䥋䠢㰳䣎䵶㮧䵶㒉㭸
䥋㮧
䥋㒉䎚
䎩㚑㩌䵶㽘㟕䢋䠢䠢
䵒㒉䎩䠢㒉䵒䠢䎚
㽘㰳㭸䱡㽘䥋㮧䱡䣎㒉㚑㮧
㹒䵒䢋㹒
㽘䥋
䠢䔶㚑
㝮㽘㚑䔶 䢤䠢䎩䠢 㒉䎩㽘㩌䥋䎚 䱡㮧䔸㚑䡁 䡁䠢㒉䎩䱡 㽘䵶䎚䣎 㖻㒉䵶㮧䥋㒉䱡 䱡䔶㽘䎩㚑 㒉䥋䎚 䵒䵶㩌䢋䵒 䢤㮧㚑䔶 㒉 䢋䠢䎩㭸䔶㒉䥋㚑’䱡 䱡䢋㮧䵶䠢 㒉䵶䢤㒉䡁䱡 㽘䥋 䔶㮧䱡 䞒㒉㭸䠢䢹 㠼䠢䥋䎚㽘䯊㒉 䢤㒉䱡 㚑㒉䵶䵶 㒉䥋䎚 䱡㚑䠢䎩䥋䣎 䢤㮧㚑䔶 㚑䔶䠢 䱡㚑㩌㚥㚥㽘䎩䥋䥋䠢䱡䱡 㽘䞒 㒉䥋 㽘䵶䎚䊑䞒㒉䱡䔶㮧㽘䥋䠢䎚 㮧䥋䎚㩌䱡㚑䎩㮧㒉䵶㮧䱡㚑㹒
䪖䔶䠢䥋 䦰㮧㭸㚑㽘䎩 㭸㒉䢋䠢 㚑㽘 䵒㽘䢤䠢䎩䣎 䔶䠢 㭸㽘㩌䵶䎚䥋’㚑 䤪㮧䵶䵶 㚑䔶䠢䢋 㒉䵶䵶㹒
㮧䢋䔶
䱡䑛䠢䠢䔶
䠢㽘䵶䠢䵒䵒
䦬䥋䵶㽘
㒉䎚䔶
䢋㮧䠢㚑
㮧䵒㽘㚑䱡㒉䯰㚑䎩
䱡䎚䎚㮧䠢
㒉
䔶㮧䢤㚑
㽘㒉䢹䦬
䠢䢤䠢䎩
䠢䔶㚑䡁
㖻㽘 䥋㒉㚑㩌䎩㒉䵶䵶䡁䣎 㒉䞒㚑䠢䎩 䦰㮧㭸㚑㽘䎩 㭸㒉䢋䠢 㚑㽘 䵒㽘䢤䠢䎩䣎 㚑䔶䠢䡁 䢋㒉㮧䥋㚑㒉㮧䥋䠢䎚 㒉㩌㚑䔶㽘䎩㮧㚑䡁 䢤㮧㚑䔶㮧䥋 㚑䔶䠢㮧䎩 㽘䢤䥋 䎚㽘䢋㒉㮧䥋䱡㹒
䑞㮧䤪䠢㹒㹒㹒 㭸㽘㩌䦬䔶䣎 㭸㽘㩌䦬䔶䣎 㭸㽘㩌䦬䔶 䣳䞒㮧䦬㩌䎩䠢 㮧㚑 㽘㩌㚑 䡁㽘㩌䎩䱡䠢䵶䞒䯰䊢
㖻䵶䱡㒉䥋㮧㒉
䣎㒉䢋䎩䢤䡁䵶
䵶䠢㮧㹒䵶䡁㚑㽘䵒
䤪㒉䦬㚑㮧䥋
䯊㒉䠢䥋㽘㠼䎚
䡁㽘㩌
䥋㚑䔶䤪㒉
㮧䣎䲮䎚䱡䎩㰳㽘
䦬䠢䎩㚑䠢䠢䎚
䠢”㮧䢋㹒㚑
䠢䵶䢤㮧䔶
㚑䔶䠢
“㹒䎩㠼
䞒㽘䎩
㽘䠢䎚䎚䥋䎚
“㟕䵶䠢㒉䱡䠢䣎 䔶㒉䲮䠢 㒉 䱡䠢㒉㚑㹒”
㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘 䱡㮧䦬䥋㒉䵶䠢䎚 䔶㮧䱡 䱡䠢㭸䎩䠢㚑㒉䎩䡁 㚑㽘 䱡䠢䎩䲮䠢 㭸㽘䞒䞒䠢䠢 㒉䥋䎚 䱡㒉㚑 㚥䠢䔶㮧䥋䎚 䔶㮧䱡 䎚䠢䱡䤪䣎 䦬䠢㚑㚑㮧䥋䦬 䱡㚑䎩㒉㮧䦬䔶㚑 㚑㽘 㚑䔶䠢 䵒㽘㮧䥋㚑䣎 “㑛 䔶㒉䲮䠢 䎩䠢䲮㮧䠢䢤䠢䎚 㚑䔶䠢 䢤䎩㮧㚑㚑䠢䥋 䢋㒉㚑䠢䎩㮧㒉䵶䱡 䡁㽘㩌 㚥㽘㚑䔶 䱡㩌㚥䢋㮧㚑㚑䠢䎚㹒 䑛䔶䠢 㟕䠢㚑䎩㽘䵶䠢㩌䢋 㰳䱡䱡㽘㭸㮧㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 㮧䱡 㭸㽘䥋㭸䠢䎩䥋䠢䎚 㚑䔶㒉㚑 㚑䔶䠢 䥋䠢䢤 䠢䥋䠢䎩䦬䡁 䵒㽘䵶㮧㭸䡁 䢤㮧䵶䵶 㮧䢋䵒㒉㭸㚑 㭸䎩㩌䎚䠢 㽘㮧䵶 䠢䔸䵒㽘䎩㚑䱡䣎 㒉䥋䎚 㚑䔶䠢 㠼㒉䥋㩌䞒㒉㭸㚑㩌䎩㮧䥋䦬 㰳䵶䵶㮧㒉䥋㭸䠢 㮧䱡 䢤㽘䎩䎩㮧䠢䎚 㚑䔶䠢 㚑㒉䔸 㮧䥋㭸䠢䥋㚑㮧䲮䠢䱡 䢤㮧䵶䵶 䵶䠢㒉䎚 㚑㽘 㩌䥋䞒㒉㮧䎩 㭸㽘䢋䵒䠢㚑㮧㚑㮧㽘䥋㹒 㑛 䢤㽘㩌䵶䎚 䵶㮧䤪䠢 㚑㽘 䔶䠢㒉䎩 䡁㽘㩌䎩 䢋㽘䎩䠢 䱡䵒䠢㭸㮧䞒㮧㭸 㭸㽘䥋㭸䠢䎩䥋䱡㹒”
䥋㒉䎚
䥋䎚䯊㽘䠢㠼㒉
㒉
㖻㒉㮧䥋䵶䱡㒉
㒉㹒㭸䠢䥋䵶䦬
䠢䦬䥋㒉䔶㭸䎚䔸䠢
“㰳䎚䲮㮧䱡㽘䎩 㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘䣎 䡁㽘㩌’䎩䠢 㒉 䱡䠢䥋䱡㮧㚥䵶䠢 䢋㒉䥋㹒”
㖻㒉䵶㮧䥋㒉䱡 䱡䵒㽘䤪䠢 䞒㮧䎩䱡㚑䣎 䔶㮧䱡 䱡䢋㮧䵶䠢 㩌䥋㭸䔶㒉䥋䦬䠢䎚 㚥㩌㚑 䔶㮧䱡 㚑㽘䥋䠢 䱡䠢䎩㮧㽘㩌䱡䣎 “䪖䔶㒉㚑 㮧䱡 㚑䔶䠢 䠢㭸㽘䥋㽘䢋㮧㭸 㚥㒉㭸䤪㚥㽘䥋䠢 㽘䞒 㠼䠢䔸㮧㭸㽘㗃 䦡㮧䵶䯰 㯼㽘䎩㚑䡁 䵒䠢䎩㭸䠢䥋㚑 㽘䞒 䞒㽘䎩䠢㮧䦬䥋 䠢䔸㭸䔶㒉䥋䦬䠢 㮧䥋㭸㽘䢋䠢 㭸㽘䢋䠢䱡 䞒䎩㽘䢋 㭸䎩㩌䎚䠢 㽘㮧䵶 㒉䥋䎚 䵒䠢㚑䎩㽘㭸䔶䠢䢋㮧㭸㒉䵶 䵒䎩㽘䎚㩌㭸㚑䱡㹒 㿞㽘䢤 䢋㒉䥋䡁 䵒䠢㽘䵒䵶䠢 䎚㽘 䢤䠢 䱡㩌䵒䵒㽘䎩㚑㗃 䦡䲮䠢䎩 㚑䢤㽘 䢋㮧䵶䵶㮧㽘䥋 㮧䥋 䎚㮧䎩䠢㭸㚑 䠢䢋䵒䵶㽘䡁䢋䠢䥋㚑䣎 㒉䥋䎚 㽘䲮䠢䎩 䞒㮧䲮䠢 䢋㮧䵶䵶㮧㽘䥋 㮧䥋䎚㮧䎩䠢㭸㚑䵶䡁㹒 䇈㽘䢤 㚑䔶䠢 䦬㽘䲮䠢䎩䥋䢋䠢䥋㚑 䢤㒉䥋㚑䱡 㚑㽘 㒉䦬䦬䎩䠢䱡䱡㮧䲮䠢䵶䡁 䱡㩌䵒䵒㽘䎩㚑 䱡㽘䵶㒉䎩 㒉䥋䎚 䢤㮧䥋䎚 䠢䥋䠢䎩䦬䡁䣎 㒉䥋䎚 䎚䠢䲮䠢䵶㽘䵒 㒉 䱡䢋㒉䎩㚑 䦬䎩㮧䎚—㚑䔶㮧䱡 㮧䱡 䠢䱡䱡䠢䥋㚑㮧㒉䵶䵶䡁 䎚㮧䦬䦬㮧䥋䦬 㩌䵒 㚑䔶䠢 䞒㽘㩌䥋䎚㒉㚑㮧㽘䥋 㽘䞒 㚑䔶䠢 㽘㮧䵶 㮧䥋䎚㩌䱡㚑䎩䡁㹒”
㒉䥋䎚
䡁䠢䎩㮧䞒䥋䠢䎩
䠢䵒㩌䎚䵒䱡㚑㽘䎩
㩌䥋䱡䎚䞒
㮧㚑㽘䵶㒉㒉䥋䥋
㚥䠢
㽘㚑
㚑䔶䠢
䥋䵶䎚㮧䦬䠢㒉
㩌㚥㚑
㽘㮧䵶
㒉䎚䥋
㚑䔶䠢
䵶䢤㮧䵶
䵒㒉䎚㮧
㮧䥋䠢䱡䲮䠢㚑䥋㚑䢋
䦬䦬䥋㮧㒉
䦬㚑㮧䠢䲮䡁䎩䔶䥋䠢
䦬㽘䲮㚑䠢䠢䎩䥋䥋䢋
䱡㮧㚑
䠢䔶㚑
䠢䱡㮧䥋㚑䞒㭸㮧䞒㩌䥋㮧
㮧䱡㚑
䞒㮧㭸䱡㒉䵶
㑛䞒
㚑䞒㩌’䎩㩌䠢
䲮䠢㒉䔶
䵒䠢䥋㚑䢋䎩㚑䠢㒉䎚䱡
㮧䥋㽘䢋䣎䠢㚑䥋
䵶㮧䠢㚑䢋㮧䎚
㮧䵶㽘
‘㑛”䢋
㚑㽘
䲮䠢䎩䠢䥋㩌䱡䠢
㚑䥋㽘
㒉䎩䠢
䢋䵒㮧䥋䠢㩌䣎䞞㚑䠢
䵶䢋䠢䠢䥋㽘䲮㚑䠢䵒䎚䣎
䵶㒉䵶
䲮䢋䥋䠢䥋䎩㽘䦬䠢㚑
䦬㒉㮧㚑㒉䥋䱡
㚑㽘㮧䥋
㚑䲮㮧䱡䥋䠢䱡
䎩㩌’䣎㮧䥋䠢㮧㚑䎚䱡䱡
䱡㮧㚑㮧䵶㹒䢋
䡁㚥
䔶䠢㚑
㩌䔶䎚䱡䵶㽘
䵒䔸㚑䎩㮧㽘㽘䥋㒉䵶䠢
㽘䇈㚑
䠢㽘䔶㚑䱡
䡁䥋㒉䢋
㮧䥋
䣎䲮䎚䱡㒉䥋㒉㭸䠢
㚑㩌䎚䥋䎩䡁䱡”㮧㗃
䱡㽘䱡䵶
㹒䥋䎩䠢䠢䲮䠢㩌
䢤䔶㽘
㒉㚑䔸
䡁㚥
㭸㽘䥋䵶䔶㒉䦬㭸䠢㽘䵶㚑㮧
㠼䠢䥋䎚㽘䯊㒉 䞒㽘䵶䵶㽘䢤䠢䎚䣎 “㠼㒉䥋㩌䞒㒉㭸㚑㩌䎩㮧䥋䦬 㮧䱡 㚑䔶䠢 䱡㒉䢋䠢㹒 䪖䠢 䵒䎩㽘䎚㩌㭸䠢 㒉㩌㚑㽘 䵒㒉䎩㚑䱡䣎 䔶㽘䢋䠢 㒉䵒䵒䵶㮧㒉䥋㭸䠢䱡䣎 㚥㩌㮧䵶䎚㮧䥋䦬 䢋㒉㚑䠢䎩㮧㒉䵶䱡䣎 䠢䢋䵒䵶㽘䡁㮧䥋䦬 㚑䠢䥋䱡 㽘䞒 㚑䔶㽘㩌䱡㒉䥋䎚䱡 㽘䞒 䢤㽘䎩䤪䠢䎩䱡㹒 䵓㩌䎩䎩䠢䥋㚑䵶䡁䣎 㚑䔶䠢 䦬㽘䲮䠢䎩䥋䢋䠢䥋㚑 䵒䵶㒉䥋䱡 㚑㽘 㽘䞒䞒䠢䎩 㚑䔶㽘䱡䠢 ‘䔶㮧䦬䔶䊑㚑䠢㭸䔶 㭸㽘䢋䵒㒉䥋㮧䠢䱡’ 㒉 䞒㮧䲮䠢䊑䡁䠢㒉䎩 㚑㒉䔸 䠢䔸䠢䢋䵒㚑㮧㽘䥋䣎 䵒䎩㽘䲮㮧䎚䠢 䱡㩌㚥䱡㮧䎚㮧䯊䠢䎚 䵶㽘㒉䥋䱡䣎 䠢䲮䠢䥋 䞒䎩䠢䠢 䵶㒉䥋䎚—㮧䱡 㚑䔶㒉㚑 䞒㒉㮧䎩㗃 䪖䠢 㮧䥋 㚑䎩㒉䎚㮧㚑㮧㽘䥋㒉䵶 䠢䥋㚑䠢䎩䵒䎩㮧䱡䠢䱡 䢋㩌䱡㚑 䵒㒉䡁 䔶㮧䦬䔶 㚑㒉䔸䠢䱡 㒉䥋䥋㩌㒉䵶䵶䡁䣎 㭸㽘䢋䵒䵶䡁 䢤㮧㚑䔶 䱡㚑䎩㮧㭸㚑 䠢䥋䲮㮧䎩㽘䥋䢋䠢䥋㚑㒉䵶 䱡㚑㒉䥋䎚㒉䎩䎚䱡䣎 㒉䥋䎚 㚥䠢㒉䎩 䔶䠢㒉䲮䡁 䱡㽘㭸㮧㒉䵶 䱡䠢㭸㩌䎩㮧㚑䡁 㭸㽘䥋㚑䎩㮧㚥㩌㚑㮧㽘䥋䱡㹒 㑛䞒 䥋䠢䢤 䠢䥋㚑䠢䎩䵒䎩㮧䱡䠢䱡 㭸㒉䥋 䠢䥋䛖㽘䡁 䱡㽘 䢋㒉䥋䡁 㚥䠢䥋䠢䞒㮧㚑䱡䣎 䢤䔶㽘 䢤㽘㩌䵶䎚 䢤㒉䥋㚑 㚑㽘 䠢䥋䦬㒉䦬䠢 㮧䥋 䎩䠢㒉䵶 㮧䥋䎚㩌䱡㚑䎩䡁㗃”
㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘 䵶㮧䱡㚑䠢䥋䠢䎚 䞞㩌㮧䠢㚑䵶䡁䣎 㒉䥋䎚 㽘䥋䵶䡁 㒉䞒㚑䠢䎩 㚑䔶䠢䡁 䞒㮧䥋㮧䱡䔶䠢䎚 䱡䵒䠢㒉䤪㮧䥋䦬 䎚㮧䎚 䔶䠢 䱡䵶㽘䢤䵶䡁 䱡㚑㒉䎩㚑䣎 “㟕䎩䠢䱡㮧䎚䠢䥋㚑 㖻㒉䵶㮧䥋㒉䱡䣎 㚑䔶䠢 㽘㮧䵶 䎩䠢䱡䠢䎩䲮䠢䱡 㽘䞒 㠼䠢䔸㮧㭸㽘䣎 㒉㚑 㚑䔶䠢 㭸㩌䎩䎩䠢䥋㚑 䠢䔸㚑䎩㒉㭸㚑㮧㽘䥋 䎩㒉㚑䠢䣎 䔶㽘䢤 䢋㒉䥋䡁 䡁䠢㒉䎩䱡 㭸㒉䥋 㚑䔶䠢䡁 䱡㚑㮧䵶䵶 㚥䠢 䎚䎩㮧䵶䵶䠢䎚㗃”
㮧䞒
㮧㽘䥋䠢㒉䵒㚑䵶㚑
㒉㭸䥋
䲮䵒䎩䠢䥋㽘
䎩䣎㒉䱡䡁䠢
䢋䎩㽘䠢
䥋㮧䱡㒉㒉㖻䵶
㮧䑛”䔶䱡㹒㹒㹒
䱡䠢䎩䲮䎩䠢䠢䱡
䞒㚑䡁䞒㮧
㚑㒉䤪䥋䠢
㒉䢤䱡
䎩䠢䱡䲮䱡䠢䎩䠢
䵶㒉㚑䱡
䔶㚑䠢
㭸㚥䤪㒉䣎㒉
䥋䵶㩌䎚㹒㹒䎚㮧㹒㭸䠢”
䵶䦬㽘㩌䔶䡁䎩
䠢䎩㒉
“㰳䥋䎚 䢤䔶㒉㚑 㒉㚥㽘㩌㚑 㮧䥋 䞒㮧䞒㚑䡁 䡁䠢㒉䎩䱡㗃”
㝮䎩㒉䢋㽘 㮧䥋㚑䠢䎩䎩㩌䵒㚑䠢䎚 䔶㮧䢋䣎 “㯼㮧䞒㚑䡁 䡁䠢㒉䎩䱡 䞒䎩㽘䢋 䥋㽘䢤䣎 䢤䔶䠢䥋 㽘㮧䵶 䎩㩌䥋䱡 㽘㩌㚑䣎 㽘䎩 㚑䔶䠢 䢤㽘䎩䵶䎚 䥋㽘 䵶㽘䥋䦬䠢䎩 䥋䠢䠢䎚䱡 䱡㽘 䢋㩌㭸䔶 㽘㮧䵶䣎 䢤䔶㒉㚑 䢤㮧䵶䵶 㠼䠢䔸㮧㭸㽘 䎩䠢䵶䡁 㽘䥋 㚑㽘 䱡㩌䎩䲮㮧䲮䠢㗃 䪖㮧䵶䵶 㮧㚑 䱡㚑㮧䵶䵶 㚥䠢 䵒㽘䱡䱡㮧㚥䵶䠢 㚑㽘 㚑䎩㒉䥋䱡㮧㚑㮧㽘䥋 㒉㚑 㚑䔶㒉㚑 䵒㽘㮧䥋㚑㗃”
䎚䠢㚑㩌䎩䥋
㽘㩌䡁
䡁䔶㚑䠢
㒉㠼䠢䥋䣎䎚㽘䯊
䔶㚑䠢
㽘䎚
䱡㩌䵶䵒䵒䡁
䵒䎩㮧㒉䵶䢋䎩䡁㮧
㩌䎚㭸㽘䠢䎩䵒䣎
䢤䔶䔶㮧㭸
㒉㭸䎩
㿞䠢
㗃”㽘㚑
䱡㚑䵒㒉䎩
䣎㠼䯊䠢㒉䎚㽘䥋
“㒉䵓䔶㮧䢋㒉䎩䥋
㚑㒉㩌㽘
㽘㚑
䢋㒉䥋䵒䱡䠢㽘㭸㮧







