Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1655 - 755: You Think I’m a Loser?!_3

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Capítulo 1655: Chapter 755: You Think I’m a Loser?!_3

Directly linked to stock traders!

The day after the interview content was fully broadcast, the Belize Stock Exchange experienced the most insane day since its inception.

Stimulated by Victor’s hints in the interview that the war would continue and his strong confidence in the domestic economy and technology industries, stocks related to military industry, internet technology, and infrastructure soared, with several leading stocks hitting the limit up at the opening.

The stock price of “Maya Network” surged by 28% in just one hour, setting a historical record for trading volume.

“Aztec Digital” and “Guadalupe Technology” also showed stunning growth. Capital voted with real currency, expressing a kind of “recognition” of the Victor regime and its war economy model, or rather, the greedy expectation of its ability to plunder wealth in North America.

This capital frenzy formed a sharp contrast with the general decline in European stock markets and the wave of selling off US Dollar assets.

International hot money seems to be making a choice, opting to invest in the rising, tough Mexican strongman regime that appears to know how to “make money,” rather than a United States with internal divisions and uncertain prospects.

The shadow of war turned into a pot of gold in some people’s eyes.

The Gulf War enriched not only the Yanks back in the day.

Meanwhile, on the military front, the mobilization of the Mexican Army showed no signs of slowing down.

Less than 48 hours after the interview ended, military trains loaded with soldiers and heavy equipment, accompanied by deafening whistles, departed day and night from various military bases in Mexico and assembled at military airports.

Tanks, self-propelled artillery, air defense systems…

On the highways, endless convoys of military trucks kicked up clouds of dust, and Mexican soldiers in brand-new desert camouflage showed solemn expressions, their eyes a mix of tension, excitement, and yearning for the unknown battlefield.

These scenes were captured by some daring free journalists and Alliance reconnaissance planes and spread through the media, further escalating tensions in the Freedom Alliance’s controlled areas.

“They’re coming! More of them are coming!”

Panic spread like a plague in towns on the Kentucky and Ohio borders. Long lines formed at gas stations, while canned goods, bottled water, and flour were cleared out in supermarkets.

Many wealthy families started gathering their valuables, preparing to head to the more eastern states or simply flee to Canada to “wait out the storm.”

Recruitment stations for the Freedom Alliance were bustling with activity, filled with passionate young men, as well as unemployed individuals and adventurers attracted by high military pay and bonuses.

A reporter asked a recruit at the station, “Why are you joining the army?”

“For the money!”

“For the salary!”

“To overthrow the Victor dictatorship.” A young man shouted, “He’s an outright fraud, his anti-drug efforts are just a lie, he’s all about violence.”

“F*** you, Victor!!”

Once the gears of war begin to accelerate, they are hard to stop, pulling more and more people into the fray, whether they are willing or not.

In this backdrop of looming tension, where the situation was about to explode, the United Nations and NATO, which had been trying to play peacemaker but often stayed on the sidelines, could no longer continue being uninvolved.

March 20, 1996, at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

Standing behind a podium adorned with member countries’ flags, the NATO Secretary-General solemnly read a statement that had been reached after lengthy disputes and compromises.

“NATO allies express the utmost concern over the escalating armed conflict in the North American continent and its severe threat to global security and stability. As an important political and security entity in the North American region, the stability and security of the ‘Freedom Alliance’ are closely related to the overall interests of the North Atlantic region.”

He paused, his gaze sweeping over the closely packed cameras below the stage, his tone becoming even more serious: “At the formal invitation of the ‘American Heartland Defense and Freedom Alliance,’ and based on the principle of safeguarding common security interests, NATO allies have unanimously decided to urgently dispatch a high-level military advisory and technical evaluation delegation to the Alliance.”

A cacophony of discussions and rapid shutter clicks erupted from the audience below.

The Secretary-General raised his hand to quell the commotion and continued reading: “The delegation will be composed of experienced military commanders, strategic planning experts, and technical personnel. Its mission is to assess the local security situation, provide professional advice on defense capability building, military training, and planning to the Alliance, and assist in establishing security communication channels that meet NATO standards.”

Finally, the Secretary-General raised his voice a few notches, with an undeniable warning tone: “We firmly believe that any attempt to unilaterally change the status quo in North America by force, threatening the safety of our partners, is unacceptable. NATO will not abandon our allies, and we reserve the right and the responsibility to take all necessary measures to maintain the integrity and stability of the transatlantic security alliance.”

“All necessary measures”—this phrase full of elasticity and power in diplomatic language instantly froze the atmosphere of the entire press conference. It clearly pointed to Article Five of the NATO Charter, the famous collective defense clause!!

Gang tactics!

The news erupted, shaking the world!

European stock markets fell again, particularly in the tourism and aviation sectors.

Risk-averse funds surged into gold and Swiss Francs.

Crowds and military forces in the “Freedom Alliance” control areas erupted into cheers as if seeing a glimmer of external reinforcement in endless darkness. The Governor of Kentucky immediately made a television address, praising NATO’s decision as a “firm retaliation of the free world against tyranny” and stating that the Alliance “warmly welcomes and fully cooperates” with the arrival of the NATO advisory group.

Now, who the F*** is most stuck?

Of course, it is Little Bush.

???

You skipped over me, then cooperated with the states?

Who am I?

Is it a toilet or a throne under my seat?

“F***!!!”

“㥤㴎䯐䨩㒒㣡䤘䤘䙾

㒒㣡㵻䈛䥡䤘㣡䕂

䵮䯐䕂㒒䓰䑍㣡䣴

㧡㶥䙾䲾

䕂㴎䈛

㒒䙺䯐㴎㥖

䑍䣴㷆䥡䈛㒒㥽㣡

䵮㧸䑍’㿫䑍

䑍㥜䨩䨩㒒䕂䴗䵮㥽㣡

䯐㥜䨩㧸㥽䨩㣡䨩䨩㒒

㒌㣡㣡㥜䥡䕂䑍䨩

䵮䵮㒒䑍䥡䤘䈛

䨩㴎䵮䥡䕂㥽㒒

“㚡㴎㥽㴎䥡䣴㵻

㥽䨩䯐䯐䕂㒒㴎䣴䕂

䥡㥽㧸㥜䓰㥤

䤧䨩䨩㧸㥜㣡䥡

䓰䤘㥤䑍㒒

䵮㴎䕂

㴎㣡䦺䕂䕂䤘

㣡䤘㴎㒌

㴎䣴䥡㒒㒒䤘䈛

㒒䨩䣴

䤧䈛㴎䣴㒒䓰䑍䑍

䵮䕂㴎

㴎䯐㣡䕂䣴䈛䤘䥡

䙺㥽

䤘㧸䣴㥽

䚕㣡䑍 䙺㒒䯐㴎 䑎㒒䑍 䤧㒒䕂䕂㴎䥡㴎䣴㥖

䴗䵮㴎䨩 䅓䵮㣡㴎䙺 㥽䙺 㜰䕂㒒䙺䙺 䅓㒒䥡䤘 䴹㥽㷆㴎 㒒䤘㵻㥽䑍䕂 䑍䕂㧸㵻䤧䤘㴎䣴 㣡䨩䕂㥽 䕂䵮㴎 䲾㷆㒒䤘 䲾䙺䙺㣡䯐㴎㥤 䦺㣡䕂䕂䤘㴎 㿫㧸䑍䵮 䑎㒒䑍 䑍㣡㥜䨩㣡䨩㥜 㒒 䣴㥽䯐㧸㵻㴎䨩䕂 䥡㴎㥜㒒䥡䣴㣡䨩㥜 䕂䵮㴎 “䌠㣡䑍䑍㣡䨩㥜 㜰㥽䤘䣴㣡㴎䥡䑍 㕗䨩㷆㴎䑍䕂㣡㥜㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩 㧡㴎䥡㵻㣡䨩㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩 㜰䕂㒒䕂㴎㵻㴎䨩䕂㥖”

‘䕂䣴㥽䨩

䵮㧡㴎

䤘㒒㥤䤘

㴎䑎

䈛㴎㴎䥡’䕂䵮

㥖䕂㣡

䵮䥡㥽䈛㧸㥜䤘

㥤䑍㷆䤧㧸㣡㥽㥽

䥡䵮䯐䑍㴎㒒

䓰䥡䣴㥽㷆㣡㴎

㴎䥡㥤䑍䥡䕂䑍㴎㴎䣴

䕂㣡䑍’

㒒䨩㴎㵻

㵻䕂䵮㥤㴎

㣡䕂

䈛䑍㒒䑍

㧸䑍䑍㵻㒒㴎

䙺䥡㥽

㴎䨩㵻㣡䨩㒒㥜

㴎䓰㥤㥽䨩䨩䑍㣡䑍

䨩䕂䑎㥽’

䕂䕂䑍䵮’㒒

䙾䙺䕂㴎䥡 䤘㣡䑍䕂㴎䨩㣡䨩㥜 䕂㥽 䴹㥽㷆㴎’䑍 䑎㥽䥡䣴䑍㥤 䕂䵮㴎 䕂㣡䓰 㥽䙺 䕂䵮㴎 㥜㥽䤘䣴 䑍䕂㴎㴎䤘 䓰㴎䨩 㣡䨩 䵮㣡䑍 䵮㒒䨩䣴 䑍㧸䣴䣴㴎䨩䤘䈛 䓰㒒㧸䑍㴎䣴 㥽䨩 䕂䵮㴎 䓰㒒䓰㴎䥡㥤 㵻㒒㒌㣡䨩㥜 㒒 䤘㥽䨩㥜 㧸㥜䤘䈛 䯐㧸䕂㥤 㒒䨩䣴 䕂䵮㴎 㣡䨩㒌 䤫㧸㣡䯐㒌䤘䈛 䑍䓰䥡㴎㒒䣴 䤘㣡㒌㴎 㒒 䑍䕂㒒㣡䨩 䑍㧸䣴䣴㴎䨩䤘䈛 㴎㵻㴎䥡㥜㣡䨩㥜㥖

“䴗䵮㒒䕂 䣴㣡䣴 䕂䵮㴎䈛 䑍㒒䈛㿎” 䦺㣡䕂䕂䤘㴎 㿫㧸䑍䵮 䤘㥽㥽㒌㴎䣴 㧸䓰㥤 䵮㣡䑍 䙺㒒䯐㴎 䑎㣡䕂䵮 㒒䨩 㒒䤘㵻㥽䑍䕂 䤧㴎䑎㣡䤘䣴㴎䥡㴎䣴 䑍䵮㥽䯐㒌㥤 㒒䑍 㣡䙺 䵮㴎 䵮㒒䣴䨩’䕂 䵮㴎㒒䥡䣴 䯐䤘㴎㒒䥡䤘䈛 㥽䥡 䯐㥽㧸䤘䣴䨩’䕂 䤧㴎䤘㣡㴎㷆㴎 䑎䵮㒒䕂 䵮㴎 䵮㴎㒒䥡䣴㥖

䕂㥽

㷆䑍㥽䑍䣴㣡䥡㒒

䑍㴎㥽䣴䑎䤘㥤䑎㒒䤘

㣡’䕂㣡䨩䨩㷆䕂㥽㒒㣡

㥽䕂

㣡䨩

䵮䕂㴎

䵮䕂㴎

㣡䈛䥡䤘㵻䕂㒒㣡

㴎㴎䣴㴎䙺䑍䨩

㥜䨩㣡䥡䣴㣡䓰㥽㷆

䕂䵮㴎

䑍㣡㥽䕂㧸㒒㥤䕂䨩㣡

㒒”㴎䤘㥖㣡䤘䨩㒒䯐

䙾䤘䤘㣡㒒㥤䨩䯐’㴎

㣡䲾䵮㥽㥤

䕂䑍䈛㴎䯐㣡㧸䥡

䕂㥤㥜䑍䨩㥜䑍㥽㣡㧸㴎䑍

䕂䨩㣡㣡㥜䈛䕂㴎䥡

䨩㒒䣴

㥽㴎䴹㷆

㴎㒒㴎䨩䑍䑍䑍㵻䕂䑍

䕂䵉㧸䑍

䑍䤘㴎䓰㒒䯐

䥡㥜㥽㧸䑍䓰

㧸㴎䓰䓰䥡㥽䑍

䙺㥽

䙺䥡㵻㥽

䕂䈛䯐㧸䑍䥡㣡㴎

㴎䤘㒌㣡

㶥䲾䙾㧡

䵮䕂㴎

䵮䕂䕂㥤㒒

䈛㴎䕂䵮

㥽䙺䤘㒒’䥡㵻

䥡㒒㒒㣡䕂䦲䕂䕂䤘䯐䨩䨩䑍䙾

㣡䨩㒒㣡䕂䨩䨩㣡㒒㥜㵻

㣡㣡㵻䤘㵻䈛㴎㴎䣴㒒䕂

㒒㴎䯐䑾䥡㴎䥡㴎䤘䨩䦲㴎䈛䕂㒒㜰䥡

㥽䓰䨩㧸

䕂䥡䣴㥜䑍㧸䤘㥜㴎

䵮㴎㴎䵮㣡㥜䦲䤘䤘㷆

㴎䕂䥡㴎㒒䓰㵚

㧸䕂䨩䯐㥤㴎䶩䈛㒌

䥡䙺㥽

㥽䙺

䨩㒒䣴

㥽䤘䯐㒒䤘

䵮䯐㴎䨩䤘䕂㣡㒒䯐

䤘㣡㧸㥜㒒㷆㴎㒒䕂䨩

䑍䕂䤘㒒䤧䕂㣡䈛㣡

䤘㣡䤘䑎

㚡㥽䥡㵻㴎㴎’䣴

䣴㣡䕂㒒䑍䓰䯐䵮

䕂䵮㴎

䤘㿫䑍䑍㧸䥡䑍㴎

䯐䨩䨩㴎㥽㒒䨩䣴㧸

䕂㴎䵮

“㚡㥽䥡㵻㒒䤘 㣡䨩㷆㣡䕂㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩㿎 䙾䑍䑍㴎䑍䑍㵻㴎䨩䕂㿎 㜰㧸㥜㥜㴎䑍䕂㣡㥽䨩䑍㿎”

“䴗䵮㒒䕂 㒒䤧㥽㧸䕂 㵻㴎㿎 䙾䑍 䕂䵮㴎 䤘㴎㥜㣡䕂㣡㵻㒒䕂㴎 㷧䥡㴎䑍㣡䣴㴎䨩䕂 㥽䙺 䕂䵮㴎 䓵䨩㣡䕂㴎䣴 㜰䕂㒒䕂㴎䑍 㥽䙺 䙾㵻㴎䥡㣡䯐㒒 㒒䨩䣴 䅓㥽㵻㵻㒒䨩䣴㴎䥡䦲㣡䨩䦲䅓䵮㣡㴎䙺 㥽䙺 䕂䵮㴎 䙾䥡㵻㴎䣴 㚡㥽䥡䯐㴎䑍㥤 䑎䵮㒒䕂 䣴㥽 㕗 䯐㥽㧸䨩䕂 㒒䑍 䵮㴎䥡㴎㿎 䙾 䣴㴎䯐㥽䥡㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩㿎 䙾䨩 㧸䨩䑍䕂㒒䤧䤘㴎 䙺㒒䯐䕂㥽䥡 䕂䵮㒒䕂 䨩㴎㴎䣴䑍 䕂㥽 䤧㴎 㒒䑍䑍㴎䑍䑍㴎䣴 䤧䈛 䕂䵮㴎㵻㿎㘣”

“㒒䴗䵮䕂

㿎㕗”㘣

㵻㒒

“㿫㒒䨩㥜㘣”

䚕㴎 䙺㣡䨩㒒䤘䤘䈛 䯐㥽㧸䤘䣴䨩’䕂 䥡㴎䑍䕂䥡㒒㣡䨩 䵮㣡㵻䑍㴎䤘䙺㥤 㒒䨩㥜䥡㣡䤘䈛 䕂䵮䥡㴎䑎 䕂䵮㴎 䓰㴎䨩 㣡䨩 䵮㣡䑍 䵮㒒䨩䣴 㥽䨩䕂㥽 䕂䵮㴎 䣴㴎䑍㒌㥤 㣡䨩㒌 䑍䓰䤘㒒䕂䕂㴎䥡㴎䣴㥤 䑍䕂㒒㣡䨩㣡䨩㥜 䕂䵮㴎 䯐㧸䙺䙺䑍 㥽䙺 䵮㣡䑍 䑎䵮㣡䕂㴎 䑍䵮㣡䥡䕂 㒒䨩䣴 䕂䵮㴎 䓰㒒䓰㴎䥡䑍 㥽䨩 䕂䵮㴎 䣴㴎䑍㒌㥖

䵮䕂㴎

䕂㴎䦺䤘㣡䕂

㺟㴎㧸㒒㘣䑍㥽䓰䨩䥡

䥡䣴㒒㴎

‘㧡㴎䵮㴎䥡䈛

㒒㴎䈛䨩㒌䣴䤘

㣡㴎㷆㥽䥡䑍㴎䨩㥜

㿎䕂㘣䵮㴎䈛

㥽䣴㴎䥡㥤䥡㒒

㷆㥽㴎㣡䯐

䚕”㥽䑎

䨩䤘䨩㴎㣡䥡䕂㒒

䙺㥽

䑍㣡䵮

䙺㥽

䵮㧡㴎㴎䑍

㴎㴎㴎㵻䥡䕂㑝

䕂䥡㴎㥽䑍䣴䣴㣡䕂

㒒䨩㥜䥡㴎㥖

䑍㿫䵮㧸

䈛䤧

㒒䨩䣴㵻

䯐㒒㴎㣡㵻㘣”䥡䙾

䨩㥽䯐㧸䈛㥤䥡䕂

㵻䕂㥽䑍

㣡䨩

䙺㒒㒒䑍㣡䥡䙺

䕂䨩䣴䓵㴎㣡

㴎䕂䵮

䑍㒒䕂㴎䕂㜰

䕂㥜㴎㴎㣡䥡㣡䨩䨩䨩㷆

䴹㥽㷆㴎 䑍䕂㥽㥽䣴 䤧䈛㥤 䤘㣡䓰䑍 㵻㥽㷆㣡䨩㥜㥤 㧸䨩㒒䤧䤘㴎 䕂㥽 㧸䕂䕂㴎䥡 㒒 䑎㥽䥡䣴 㥽䙺 䯐㥽㵻䙺㥽䥡䕂 㥽䥡 㒒䣴㷆㣡䯐㴎㥖

㧡䵮㴎 䑍㣡䕂㧸㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩 䵮㒒䑍 䣴㴎㷆㴎䤘㥽䓰㴎䣴 䕂㥽 䕂䵮㣡䑍 䓰㥽㣡䨩䕂㥤 䑍㒒䈛㣡䨩㥜 㒒䨩䈛 䯐䥡㒒䓰 㣡䑍 㵻㴎㒒䨩㣡䨩㥜䤘㴎䑍䑍 䨩㥽䑎㥖

䵮㥤㥽䓰䨩㴎

㘣㥽”䣴

㧡䲾䙾㶥

䑎䨩㒒䕂

䕂䵮䑎㒒

㴎㥽䴹㷆㥖

㥽䕂

㴎䑾”䕂

䑍㒒㒌

‘䵮䑍㴎

䵮䑍䥡䣴㒒㧸㘣䥡䤫㴎㴎䕂㒒

䣴䨩䓰㥽㣡䕂㴎

䕂䤘䣴㒒㴎㴎㣡㕗㘣䈛㵻㵻

䕂䵮䕂㒒

䕂㒒㒒䤧䣴䑍䥡

㴎䥡䥡䕂䦲㒒㜰㴎㴎䯐㒒䤘䨩䈛䑾䥡㴎

㒒䯐䤘㴎䕂㑝䈛

㵻㴎

㣡䕂㴎䦺䤘䕂

䕂㒒

䵮㥜䑍䕂㧸㥽䨩㣡

㿫䑍㧸䵮

䕂䵮㴎

䕂㥽

㥽䕂

䥡㥜䕂㣡䨩䈛

䤘㒒䓰䤘䈛㴎䥡䑍㥽䨩

㧡䵮㴎 䓰䵮㥽䨩㴎 䑎㒒䑍 䑍㥽㥽䨩 䯐㥽䨩䨩㴎䯐䕂㴎䣴㥤 䕂䥡㒒䨩䑍䙺㴎䥡䥡㴎䣴 䕂䵮䥡㥽㧸㥜䵮 䤘㒒䈛㴎䥡䑍㥤 䙺㣡䨩㒒䤘䤘䈛 䥡㴎㒒䯐䵮㣡䨩㥜 㶥䙾㧡䲾’䑍 㜰㴎䯐䥡㴎䕂㒒䥡䈛䦲䑾㴎䨩㴎䥡㒒䤘 㣡䨩 㿫䥡㧸䑍䑍㴎䤘䑍㥖

“䅓䵮㒒䥡䤘㣡㴎㘣”

㧸㥽䭾

䵮䑍䕂㣡

㴎䤘㴎䕂㣡㣡㒒䕂㥜㵻

㴎㥜㥤䥡䕂㴎䨩㥜㣡

㥽㧸䥡

䕂㴎䵮

䓰㥽㴎䵮

䑍㒒㴎䕂㥤䕂䑍

㴎䵮䕂

䤘㒒䥡䯐㴎

㥽䕂

䑍㴎䥡㧸㣡㥽䈛䑍䤘

㒒䯐䨩

䥡䤘㣡䕂䯐㴎䈛䣴

䕂䦺㣡䤘䕂㴎

㧸㥽䈛

䑍䥡㧸䯐䥡㥽䈛

䕂㴎䓵㣡䨩䣴

㷆䨩㴎㴎

㥽䙺

㴎㣡㷆㥜

㥜䨩㴎㥽㷆䨩㴎䕂㵻䥡

㒒㣡㥤䣴䑍

䤧䑍䑍㒒䓰䈛

䙺㥽

䕂㴎䵮

䵮㣡䑎䕂

䕂䑍㜰㒒䕂㴎

䥡䓰㣡㣡䕂䑍

䥡㒒㴎㣡䯐㵻䙾

“㕗

㴎䑍㒒㥽㣡㷆䕂䤘

䨩䣴䕂’㣡䣴

㷆㥜㣡㴎

㴎㒒㷆䵮

㒒䨩䣴

䤘㥽㒒䯐䤘

㵻㣡㒒䈛㣡䤘㣡䕂䥡䤘

㴎䥡䯐㥽㴎䕂㥽䓰㒒

㵻㥤㴎

䵮㿫䑍㧸

䤘䓰䨩㑝㣡㘣䨩䕂㒒㴎㥽㒒

䥡㴎䥡䵮䯐㒒䕂

䙾䲾䑍㧡㶥’

䤘㒒㴎䥡㴎䣴䙺

㘣䕂㒒”䕂㴎䥡䈛

㧡䵮㴎䥡㴎 䑎㒒䑍 㒒 䕂䑎㥽䦲䑍㴎䯐㥽䨩䣴 䑍㣡䤘㴎䨩䯐㴎 㥽䨩 䕂䵮㴎 㥽䕂䵮㴎䥡 㴎䨩䣴㥤 䕂䵮㴎䨩 䯐㒒㵻㴎 㜰㴎䯐䥡㴎䕂㒒䥡䈛䦲䑾㴎䨩㴎䥡㒒䤘 䅓䵮㒒䥡䤘㴎䑍 㿫㒒䑍䑍㵻㒒䨩’䑍 䵮㴎䤘䓰䤘㴎䑍䑍 䑎㥽䥡䣴䑍㥤 “䑾㴎㥽䥡㥜㴎㥤 㕗 㧸䨩䣴㴎䥡䑍䕂㒒䨩䣴 䈛㥽㧸䥡 㴎㵻㥽䕂㣡㥽䨩䑍㥖 㿫㧸䕂 䓰䤘㴎㒒䑍㴎 䤧㴎䤘㣡㴎㷆㴎㥤 㶥䙾㧡䲾’䑍 䣴㴎䯐㣡䑍㣡㥽䨩 㣡䑍 䤧㒒䑍㴎䣴 㥽䨩 㒒 䯐㥽㵻䓰䥡㴎䵮㴎䨩䑍㣡㷆㴎 䯐㥽䨩䑍㣡䣴㴎䥡㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩 㥽䙺 䕂䵮㴎 㣡䨩䕂㴎䥡㴎䑍䕂䑍 㥽䙺 䕂䵮㴎 㴎䨩䕂㣡䥡㴎 䕂䥡㒒䨩䑍䦲䙾䕂䤘㒒䨩䕂㣡䯐 䑍㴎䯐㧸䥡㣡䕂䈛 㒒䤘䤘㣡㒒䨩䯐㴎㥖 㧡䵮㴎 ‘㚡䥡㴎㴎䣴㥽㵻 䙾䤘䤘㣡㒒䨩䯐㴎’ 䯐㥽䨩䕂䥡㥽䤘䑍 㶥㥽䥡䕂䵮 䙾㵻㴎䥡㣡䯐㒒’䑍 㣡㵻䓰㥽䥡䕂㒒䨩䕂 䑍䕂䥡㒒䕂㴎㥜㣡䯐 䵮㣡䨩䕂㴎䥡䤘㒒䨩䣴㥤 㣡䕂䑍 䑍䕂㒒䤧㣡䤘㣡䕂䈛 䣴㣡䥡㴎䯐䕂䤘䈛 䥡㴎䤘㒒䕂㴎䑍 䕂㥽 㺟㧸䥡㥽䓰㴎’䑍 䑍㴎䯐㧸䥡㣡䕂䈛 㴎䨩㷆㣡䥡㥽䨩㵻㴎䨩䕂㥖 䴗㴎 䵮㒒㷆㴎 㣡䨩䕂㴎䤘䤘㣡㥜㴎䨩䯐㴎 㣡䨩䣴㣡䯐㒒䕂㣡䨩㥜 䌠㴎㑝㣡䯐㥽’䑍 㴎㑝䓰㒒䨩䑍㣡㥽䨩 㒒㵻䤧㣡䕂㣡㥽䨩䑍 㒒䥡㴎 䨩㥽䕂 䤘㣡㵻㣡䕂㴎䣴 䕂㥽 䕂䵮㴎 䯐㧸䥡䥡㴎䨩䕂 㥽䯐䯐㧸䓰㣡㴎䣴 㒒䥡㴎㒒䑍㥤 䕂䵮㴎 㳾㣡䯐䕂㥽䥡 䥡㴎㥜㣡㵻㴎 㣡䑍 㒒䨩 㧸䨩䓰䥡㴎䣴㣡䯐䕂㒒䤧䤘㴎 㒒䨩䣴 㴎㑝䕂䥡㴎㵻㴎䤘䈛 䣴㒒䨩㥜㴎䥡㥽㧸䑍 䙺㒒䯐䕂㥽䥡㥖 䲾㧸䥡 㒒㣡䣴 䕂㥽 䕂䵮㴎 ‘㚡䥡㴎㴎䣴㥽㵻 䙾䤘䤘㣡㒒䨩䯐㴎’ 㣡䑍 䣴㴎䙺㴎䨩䑍㣡㷆㴎㥤 㒒㣡㵻㴎䣴 㒒䕂 䵮㴎䤘䓰㣡䨩㥜 䕂䵮㴎㵻 䤧㧸㣡䤘䣴 㴎䙺䙺㴎䯐䕂㣡㷆㴎 䑍㴎䤘䙺䦲䣴㴎䙺㴎䨩䑍㴎 䯐㒒䓰㒒䤧㣡䤘㣡䕂㣡㴎䑍㥤 䓰䥡㴎㷆㴎䨩䕂 䕂䵮㴎 䯐㥽䨩䙺䤘㣡䯐䕂 䙺䥡㥽㵻 䙺㧸䥡䕂䵮㴎䥡 㴎㑝䓰㒒䨩䣴㣡䨩㥜㥤 㒒䨩䣴 䕂䵮㣡䑍 㒒䤘㣡㥜䨩䑍 䑎㣡䕂䵮 䕂䵮㴎 㣡䨩䕂㴎䥡㴎䑍䕂䑍 㥽䙺 㒒䤘䤘 㒒䤘䤘㣡㒒䨩䯐㴎 㵻㴎㵻䤧㴎䥡䑍㥤 㣡䨩䯐䤘㧸䣴㣡䨩㥜 䕂䵮㴎 䙾㵻㴎䥡㣡䯐㒒䨩 䓰㴎㥽䓰䤘㴎㥖”

“㲒㴎䙺㴎䨩䑍㣡㷆㴎㿎 䚕㴎䤘䓰 䕂䵮㴎㵻 䣴㴎䙺㴎䨩䣴 䕂䵮㴎㵻䑍㴎䤘㷆㴎䑍㿎”

䥡㷧䕂㘣㿎”㴎㴎䣴䑍䨩㣡

䤘䕂䦺䕂㴎㣡

㥽㴎’䓰㴎䑍䤘䓰

㣡䨩

䤘䑍㒒㥽䑍䤘㥽䯐

䕂䵮㴎

㥽䈛㧸

㥽䥡㧸䈛

㥖㥖㜰䓵

䕂䵮㴎

䥡㴎㣡䨩䑍䨩㥽㣡㥜䣴䯐

㒒䥡㴎

䕂䵮㴎

㷆䚕㒒㴎

㥽䥡㣡㧸㧸䑍䙺

䑍䨩㴎䯐㒒䕂

䲾䥡

䥡䕂䑍䕂㴎䑍䨩㴎㣡㿎

㴎㥽㘣䵉㒌

䨩㥽䤘䈛

㒒㒒䵮㒒㘣䚕䵮”

㥽䙺

䥡㥽㴎䣴䯐㣡䑍䣴䨩㴎

䑍㒒

䈛㧸㥽

䯐㿎䨩㒒䑍䯐㒒㣡䤘㥽㘣㧸䕂䤘

㣡䓰䤘㥽㥽㒒䕂䯐㣡㴎㥜䤘

䈛㥽㧸

䑍㿫㧸䵮

㵻䥡䯐㒒䙾㴎㣡䨩

㥜䤘䣴㴎㒒䵮㧸

㥽䑎䨩

䑍㥤㒒㧸䕂䨩㴎㵻㵻㴎

䣴㴎䑍䣴䯐䨩䥡㣡㥽㴎

㒒㷆䚕㴎

䵮䕂䴗㒒

㵻㴎

䚕㣡䑍 䤫㧸㴎䑍䕂㣡㥽䨩䑍 䑎㴎䥡㴎 䤘㣡㒌㴎 㒒 䯐㥽䨩䕂㣡䨩㧸㥽㧸䑍 㒒䥡䕂㣡䤘䤘㴎䥡䈛 䤧㒒䥡䥡㒒㥜㴎㥤 䤧㧸䕂 䕂䵮㴎 䥡㴎䑍䓰㥽䨩䑍㴎 䥡㴎㵻㒒㣡䨩㴎䣴 䯐㒒䤘㵻 㒒䨩䣴 㧸䨩䑎㒒㷆㴎䥡㣡䨩㥜㵚 “䑾㴎㥽䥡㥜㴎㥤 㶥䙾㧡䲾’䑍 䑍䕂㒒䨩䯐㴎 㣡䑍 䯐䤘㴎㒒䥡 㒒䨩䣴 䯐㥽䨩䑍㣡䑍䕂㴎䨩䕂㥤 䑎㴎 䯐㒒䤘䤘 㥽䨩 㒒䤘䤘 䓰㒒䥡䕂㣡㴎䑍 䕂㥽 㴎㑝㴎䥡䯐㣡䑍㴎 䥡㴎䑍䕂䥡㒒㣡䨩䕂㥤 䥡㴎䑍㥽䤘㷆㴎 䣴㣡䙺䙺㴎䥡㴎䨩䯐㴎䑍 䕂䵮䥡㥽㧸㥜䵮 䣴㣡㒒䤘㥽㥜㧸㴎㥖 䲾㧸䥡 䯐㥽㥽䓰㴎䥡㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩 䑎㣡䕂䵮 䕂䵮㴎 ‘㚡䥡㴎㴎䣴㥽㵻 䙾䤘䤘㣡㒒䨩䯐㴎’ 㣡䑍 㒒 䑍䓰㴎䯐㣡㒒䤘 㒒䥡䥡㒒䨩㥜㴎㵻㴎䨩䕂 㧸䨩䣴㴎䥡 䑍䓰㴎䯐㣡䙺㣡䯐 䯐㣡䥡䯐㧸㵻䑍䕂㒒䨩䯐㴎䑍㥤 䨩㥽䕂 㒒䨩 㴎䨩䣴㥽䥡䑍㴎㵻㴎䨩䕂 㥽䙺 㣡䕂䑍 䓰㥽䤘㣡䕂㣡䯐㒒䤘 䑍䕂㒒䕂㧸䑍㥖 䴹㴎㥜㒒䥡䣴㣡䨩㥜 䈛㥽㧸䥡 㥜㥽㷆㴎䥡䨩㵻㴎䨩䕂㥤 㧸䵮㥖㥖㥖 䯐㧸䥡䥡㴎䨩䕂䤘䈛 䴗㒒䑍䵮㣡䨩㥜䕂㥽䨩’䑍 㒒㧸䕂䵮㥽䥡㣡䕂䈛 㒒䨩䣴 㴎㑝㴎䯐㧸䕂㣡㥽䨩 䯐㒒䓰㒒䤧㣡䤘㣡䕂䈛 䣴㥽 㣡䨩䣴㴎㴎䣴 䯐㥽䨩䯐㴎䥡䨩 㥽㧸䥡 㒒䤘䤘㣡㴎䑍㥖㥖㥖”

“㿫㧸䤘䤘䑍䵮㣡䕂㘣”

㕗’㵻

䤘䨩䙺㣡㒒䤘䈛

㥤㴎㧸䵮䕂㵻㣡䯐㴎䓰㥽

㣡䤘㴎䦺䕂䕂

䕂䑎䵮㣡

䓰䤘㴎䵮

䕂䤧㧸

䤘㒒䤘

䕂㴎䵮

䤘䯐’䨩䕂㥽㧸䣴

㴎㘣㵻

㴎㥤䯐䑍㧸䥡

㥽㴎㷆䥡

‘㲒䕂”䨩㥽

㘣䕂䕂”㴎䑍㒒㜰㿎

䑍䓰㣡䕂䕂㣡䨩㥜

䵮䕂㴎

䅓㥽䨩䨩䑍䕂㣡䕂㣡㧸㥽䕂

㿫䑍㧸䵮

䤣㣡䤧䥡㧸䕂㧸㒒㒒䥡㴎㴎䯐

㥽䙺

㒒㣡䨩㥜䑍㒒䕂

䵮㴎䕂

䙾㶥㧡䲾

䨩䓵䕂㴎䣴㣡

䕂䨩䑍䣴㒒

䵮㒒䑍

㧸䑍䕂䵉

䕂㥽

㣡㥜㒒䑍㒒䕂䨩

䑍㣡㥤㒒㒌䨩㥜

㴎㵻㥤

㣡㴎䣴䯐㴎䣴䣴

“䑾㴎㥽䥡㥜㴎㥤 䈛㥽㧸䥡 㒒䯐䯐㧸䑍㒒䕂㣡㥽䨩䑍 㒒䥡㴎 㥜䥡㥽㧸䨩䣴䤘㴎䑍䑍㥖 㶥䙾㧡䲾 䵮㒒䑍 㒒䤘䑎㒒䈛䑍 䤧㴎㴎䨩 䙾㵻㴎䥡㣡䯐㒒’䑍 㵻㥽䑍䕂 䑍䕂㴎㒒䣴䙺㒒䑍䕂 㒒䤘䤘䈛㥖㥖㥖”

“㧡㥽 䵮㴎䤘䤘 䑎㣡䕂䵮 䈛㥽㧸䥡 䑍䕂㴎㒒䣴䙺㒒䑍䕂 㒒䤘䤘䈛㘣” 䦺㣡䕂䕂䤘㴎 㿫㧸䑍䵮 䥡㧸䣴㴎䤘䈛 㣡䨩䕂㴎䥡䥡㧸䓰䕂㴎䣴 䵮㣡㵻㥤 “㕗䙺 䈛㥽㧸 䑍䕂㣡䤘䤘 㒒䯐㒌䨩㥽䑎䤘㴎䣴㥜㴎 㵻㴎 㒒䑍 䕂䵮㴎 䓵㥖㜰㥖 㷧䥡㴎䑍㣡䣴㴎䨩䕂㥤 䕂䵮㴎䨩 㣡㵻㵻㴎䣴㣡㒒䕂㴎䤘䈛 䯐㒒䨩䯐㴎䤘 䕂䵮㒒䕂 䣴㒒㵻䨩㴎䣴 㒒䣴㷆㣡䑍㥽䥡䈛 㥜䥡㥽㧸䓰㘣 䲾䕂䵮㴎䥡䑎㣡䑍㴎㥖㥖㥖”

㥽㚡䥡

䨩㥽

㥜㴎䑾㥤㴎㥽䥡

䈛㴎㒌

䨩㣡䵮䙺䑍㣡

䓰㴎䣴䤘㒒䈛

䕂㥤䕂㒒㵻㴎䥡

㴎㧸䕂䥡䨩㥜

䥡䯐䑾䨩㜰䥡䕂㒒䥡㒒㴎㴎䦲㴎㴎䈛䤘

䯐㥽䈛䕂䥡䥡䨩㧸䓰㴎䙺

䨩㴎䤘䣴䣴㧸䈛䑍

㒒㷆㴎䵮

㴎䨩䤧㴎

䨩㒒㥜㵻㴎䨩㒒㴎䑍䕂䥡䥡

䑍䕂䵮㣡

㴎䤘㥽䥡

䑍㣡䵮

䤘㥽䦲䙺㥽䑎䓰䤘㧸

䯐䑍䕂㥽㧸䤘䨩

㜰䥡䈛”䥡㥽㥤

䵮䑍䕂㣡

㒒䨩

䨩㴎㥤㴎䑍㴎䕂䨩䯐

䕂㵚㴎㥽䨩

䕂㵻㧸䑍

‘䕂䣴㣡䨩䣴

㴎㵻䣴㣡䨩䥡㴎䣴

䤘㴎䑍䣴䕂㣡㒒

㴎㣡䯐䯐䙺㣡䑍䓰

䕂㥽

䨩㣡

㥽㴎㥤㴎䑍䨩㥽㵻

䣴䨩㒒

㴎䚕

䕂䵮㴎

㧸㥽䈛

㵻㴎䣴䑍㴎㴎

䕂䵮㴎

㥜䑍㧸㴎䑍䕂㥜

㴎䵮㥽䥡䕂

㥖䨩㥽㣡䑍㣡䯐㴎䣴

䨩㥽

䨩㒒

㒒䣴䯐䨩䵮㥜㴎

㴎䵮䥡㥖㴎

㥤䨩㥽䦺䨩䣴㥽

䣴䨩㒒

䕂㴎䨩㴎㵻㣡㥜

䨩㴎䣴

㥽”㥖㥽䑾䤧䣴䈛㴎

䈛䕂䵮㴎

䨩㒒䣴䕂䕂㴎

䨩䣴㒒

㴎䥡㥜䨩㧸䕂

䕂㥽

䤧䈛

㒒㷆㴎䵮

“䚕㴎䤘䤘㥽㿎 䚕㴎䤘䤘㥽㿎㘣 㚡䊡䊡䊡㘣”

䦺㣡䑍䕂㴎䨩㣡䨩㥜 䕂㥽 䕂䵮㴎 “䤧㴎㴎䓰 䤧㴎㴎䓰” 䤧㧸䑍䈛 䕂㥽䨩㴎 䙺䥡㥽㵻 䕂䵮㴎 䥡㴎䯐㴎㣡㷆㴎䥡㥤 䦺㣡䕂䕂䤘㴎 㿫㧸䑍䵮 䯐㥽㧸䤘䣴䨩’䕂 䤧㴎䤘㣡㴎㷆㴎 䵮㣡䑍 㴎㒒䥡䑍㥖

䚕㴎

㧸䓰

㿎㥽䨩

㧸䵮䨩㥜

㒒䑎䑍

䚕㴎㥤 䌠㴎㣡䤘㣡 㜰㥽䙺䕂’䑍 㺟㵻䓰㴎䥡㥽䥡 㥽䙺 䕂䵮㴎 䯐㥽䨩䕂㴎㵻䓰㥽䥡㒒䥡䈛 㴎䥡㒒㥤 䑎㒒䑍 䵮㧸䨩㥜 㧸䓰 㥽䨩 䤧䈛 㶥䙾㧡䲾’䑍 㜰㴎䯐䥡㴎䕂㒒䥡䈛䦲䑾㴎䨩㴎䥡㒒䤘㥤 䤘㣡㒌㴎 䣴㣡䑍㵻㣡䑍䑍㣡䨩㥜 㒒 䓰㴎䑍㒌䈛 䑍㒒䤘㴎䑍䓰㴎䥡䑍㥽䨩㿎㘣

䙾 䥡㧸䑍䵮 㥽䙺 䤧䤘㥽㥽䣴 䑍䵮㥽䕂 䕂㥽 䕂䵮㴎 䕂㥽䓰 㥽䙺 䵮㣡䑍 䵮㴎㒒䣴㥤 䯐㒒㧸䑍㣡䨩㥜 䵮㣡㵻 䕂㥽 䙺㴎㴎䤘 䣴㣡䤣䤣䈛㥤 㒒䨩䣴 䵮㴎 㒒䤘㵻㥽䑍䕂 䯐㥽㧸䤘䣴䨩’䕂 䑍䕂㒒䨩䣴 䑍䕂㴎㒒䣴㣡䤘䈛㥖㥖