when the lie becomes the universal order

It is one of the bitterest conclusions of ‘The process’, one of Kafka’s most clairvoyant works, which these days is represented in Madrid. In his investigation to find out what he is accused of, Joseph K. finds no comfort in the priest who blurts out to him in the cathedral: “You don’t have to believe that everything is true; you have to believe that everything is necessary & rdquor ;. To which Joseph K. replies: “A devastating opinion. The lie becomes the universal order”.

That’s what he aspires to Vladimir Putin, by twisting language and reality to extremes that would have astonished the Orwell of ‘1984’. This Tuesday, in a speech with the paraphernalia that he surrounds himself with in his messages to Russia and the world, increased the caliber of his threats by accusing the West of “starting the war to impose its totalitarian values ​​& rdquor; and ensure that nothing will stop their offensive. Because Ukraine is “historical territory of Russia & rdquor ;, and what the United States and NATO want is to end “existence itself & rdquor; of his country. The president who has laminated freedom of the press announced the suspension of the agreement New START, which limits the number of strategic nuclear warheads that Washington and Moscow can deploy. After proclaiming that Russia is “invincible on the battlefield,” he said in words that the patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, who has defended the invasion, could have pronounced: “The truth is with us.”

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From Poland, the US President, Joe Biden, he replied in the middle of a sea of ​​​​Polish, American and Ukrainian flags: “Ukraine will never be a victory for Russia & rdquor ;. After stressing that the United States and its allies will defend democracy at all costs (“Our support for Ukraine will be unwavering & rdquor;), Biden recalled that “a year ago, the world was preparing for the fall of Kiev. Well, I just got back from kyiv and I can say that it’s still going strong.” But he stressed that “the United States and the nations of Europe do not seek to control or destroy Russia & rdquor ;.

Julius Caesar is very eloquent when in ‘The Gallic War’ he talks about his victories in the third person, but he does not stop praising the courage of his enemies, and shows his perspicacity when he assures that “men are almost always inclined to believe what what they want”.

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