Tyrant or Citizen
G. G. Vega
Translated by Ana Vanessa Torre
Tyrant or Citizen
Written By G. G. Vega
Copyright 2018 G. G. Vega
All rights reserved
Distributed by Babelcube, Inc.
www.babelcube.com
Translated by Ana Vanessa Torre
Cover Design 2018 G. G. Vega
Babelcube Books and Babelcube are trademarks of Babelcube Inc.
Table of Contents
Pag. 1
Pag. 2
We do not need tyrants, we are many and we are humans
Translated by Ana Vanessa Alves Torre
Republic of Paraguay
2017
Pag. 3
I write this book with great humility in my heart, being an adult person, with all the experiences of my half century of life, having spent so many things since my childhood, in a country, devastated by two wars, a nation that since its origin has experienced the abuse of exploiters, aggressors, opportunists and rapists, has endured the tyranny of one of the worst dictators in Latin America, has suffered discrimination and humiliation from neighboring countries, who mutilated him. Nation whose citizens have silently suffered the torture of being ruled by liars, opportunists, thieves, cynics, people without scruples, without sensitivity and essentially without respect for the rights of their fellow men. As a person who has adapted to the global changes of the promising technology of communication, and has taken advantage of it to acquire general knowledge about modern societies and their histories. This book is the contribution as a common citizen, without political or social influences, in a country where in such circles, money comes first and then values and human rights. Without pretending in any way that this book is considered political or ideological, with the sole intention of sharing a deep sense of concern for the final destiny of humanity.
Pag. 4
INDEX
C hapter 1- The right of each one
Chapter 2- Force, a necessary evil
Chapter 3- The right to react
Chapter 4- The past is not forgotten
Chapter 5 Rights are for being respected
Chapter 6 - The future
Pag. 5
The right of each one
In our world, a country is a society formed and organized by individuals.
Every nation guarantees its identity and legitimacy when it has a National Constitution, consistent with respect for the rights and universal values of justice.
All of us who live within the territory of that nation belong to the same nation, even foreigners temporarily depend on the administrative system of the nation where they are located.
Although the stay of a foreigner is temporary or permanent, they are also subject to and protected by the same National Constitution.
Pag. 6
We are all subject to the same laws while we are within that territory.
We all have rights and obligations that we must respect and must be respected by all.
The authority of an individual, who works in a position within the administrative organization of the government of a country, does not grant him the right to violate that National Constitution, nor does any of the laws that affect the citizen's rights of all.
No excuse is valid to violate this law that is for all, the law of being all equal, before the laws of the nation.
When this rule is violated, the imminent nation is evidently under the influence of the tyranny virus.
Pag. 7
T yranny can not be a Constitutional law of any nation, because being tyranny, destroys the concept of nation, because a nation is an organized society of many individuals, and it is essential to respect the right of the other individual, by nature itself of the life of any being, because the living beings, we are all different from each other, and none has total right over the life of another.
In any type of organization, even in the animal world, even in the most brutal species, the right of one ends where the other begins , and the only insinuation or intention to violate that right generates a generally violent reaction, reaction generated by the Violated right of the other.
Pag. 8
The imposition by force or violence, of one's will over the other's right, is sufficient justification and reason for a reaction.
This is the basic foundation of every organized society, of every nation, that of respect for the rights of the other.
No law, no religion, no philosophy, no thought has the legitimate right to violate this law or natural rule of organized human coexistence.
What made it possible for humanity to organize itself socially, forming nations, peoples, groups and families, is and will always be the submission of each individual to the obligation to respect the rights of others, all having the same commitment to their peers .
Pag. 9
Strength, a necessary evil
T he use of force to repel the intentions to violate the rights of others, is the authority granted by the very society that makes up a nation, to the leaders they choose, who are generally paid a salary to guarantee efficiency, in their service to the society or nation to which they belong.
The problem in nations with tyrannical authorities is that they use that force in an unfair and disproportionate way, reaching completely criminal levels, levels that no citizen would be satisfied with.
Generally this behavior is overlapping, or justified with blatant and cynical lies, and evidently reveals the nature and intentions of such authorities.
Pag. 10
N ot only by law should we respect the rights of others, it is something that has the force of natural law, the obligation to respect others and to demand respect for your rights to others.
In this sense, neither the Muslims, nor the Buddhists, nor the atheists, nor the Christians, nor the scientists, nor the philosophers, nor the sociologists, nor the psychopaths, nor the rulers, nor the politicians, nor the criminals, nor the Economists, neither men nor women, have the right to impose their values by force, beyond what has been established by majority as law.
It can not be imposed by force or brutal and criminal violence, principles or beliefs, over the right of decision of each individual.