3.9 C
New York

NATO and Andalusia

Juventud Infantista de Nación Andaluza

Andalusia’s privileged location is both a source of pride and a punishment for our nation. The Spanish state and its international policy have forced us, against our will, to participate in NATO’s criminal activity.

NATO’s presence in Andalusia is dangerous, unwanted, and contrary to our interests. The bases in Rota, Morón, Viator… and Gibraltar place Andalusia at the logistical center at the gateway to the Mediterranean and violate Andalusian sovereignty, ceding our lands to foreign interests.

That is why Nación Andaluza strongly opposes them; we want to expel the colonialist clutches of the United States, England, and Spain from our land. In addition, against our interests, these foreign bases have been established with the criminal expropriation of the Andalusian worker’s only livelihood: their meager lands. 

These bases have become a center of subtraction that has conditioned the local economy, creating an economy based on servility and kidnapping the Andalusian worker, who apparently depends on them.

This last point leads the working class in the area to initially be reluctant to expel them, which is why the work we do at Nación Andaluza is so important. They take advantage of the precariousness cultivated and imposed by the Spanish state and the European Union, which, in the service of NATO, maintain Andalusia and other inland colonies as a space dedicated to the exploitation of its people, its land, and its resources in a completely subtractive and impoverishing manner.

This precariousness is completely palpable and visible, and it has a devastating impact on Andalusian youth. The outlook for the young working class is the worst in the entire European Union. Young Andalusians find themselves, completely artificially and arbitrarily, in a completely precarious situation. A situation sought by these foreign agents to create workers with low expectations who are willing to emigrate to work abroad for a pittance.

This leaves us with our youth unable to emancipate themselves, unable to have a home of their own, unable to survive, a youth punished and destroyed. Thus, the work we must do is indispensable and more necessary than ever. The Andalusian working class and its youth need more than ever to organize forcefully against the elements that threaten us and keep us in this situation: NATO, the United States, England, the European Union, and Spain.

Related articles

spot_img