Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1819 - 798: Strike Where It Hurts, Take Down the British!
Capítulo 1819: Chapter 798: Strike Where It Hurts, Take Down the British!
December 3, 1996, 21:50.
The air in the room carried the distinctive ozone scent of electronic equipment.
Twelve surveillance screens formed an arc-shaped wall, reflecting Admiral Kitchener’s face illuminated by blue light.
He held a laser pointer in his hand, the red dot roaming across the map of Europe.
“The British problem isn’t the army, it’s the people’s hearts.”
The red dot stopped at the Scottish Highlands, “In the past three years, London has cut funding to Scotland by 37%. Eighty percent of North Sea oil and gas revenue has gone to the Treasury Department, Edinburgh is left with crumbs. Last year, the Glasgow shipyard closed down, 3000 unemployed, London doesn’t care.”
Victor sat at the end of the long table, spinning a New Mexican Coin in his hand: “So?”
“So the Scottish National Party (SNP)’s support rate has risen from 34% before the Diana incident to 51%.”
Kitchener switched the screen, showing a set of poll data, “But that’s not the point, the point is those radicals who no longer believe in the parliamentary path.”
The third screen lit up, the image somewhat blurry, clearly a surreptitious shot, showing a dozen men in old military uniforms training in a forest clearing, using outdated L1A1 rifles.
The background showed rusted containers and makeshift tents.
“This is the ‘Highland Freedom Army.’
Kitchener said, “The members are mainly former British Army soldiers, unemployed miners, and bankrupt farmers pushed over the edge by London’s banks. They are small in scale, with a core of about eighty people, but they have a sympathy network among the Scottish public. The leader is Angus MacTavish, a former Sergeant of the Royal Scottish Regiment, Falkland Islands War veteran, who ran a small distillery after retiring, but three years ago it was seized due to ‘tax issues,’ later found to be an ‘error’ in the tax bureau’s computer, but the distillery was already bankrupt.”
Casare sneered: “Classic British bureaucracy style, then what?”
“Then MacTavish organized the first protest, during which the police broke three of his ribs. His son ‘committed suicide’ in prison, with strangulation marks on his neck, but the official report said it was hanging with a bedsheet.”
“Last March, he and seven other veterans formed the ‘Highland Freedom Army,’ with the slogan ‘Either Independence or Death.’
Victor finally stopped the act of coin spinning: “Do they have operational capabilities?”
“Limited.”
Kitchener pulled up new footage, “In the past eighteen months, they have blown up two regional offices of the tax bureau, attacked a whisky distillery acquired by English capital, and even painted anti-Royal Family slogans on the outskirts of Edinburgh Castle.”
Kitchener looked at Victor, “But they have recently acquired new equipment.”
The screen displayed a photograph: In the forest, several men surrounded a pickup truck, with a tarpaulin covering long, cylindrical objects.
Zooming in, one could see the outline of rocket launchers.
“Sweden-produced AT4 anti-tank rocket launcher, black market price 5,000 US Dollars each,” Kitchener said, “After tracking the money flow, it was found that the money was transferred from a shell company in Panama, after three hops, the source was an anonymous account in Zurich, the account holder’s name was fake, but the signature sample at the time of account opening matched our previously intercepted Phoenix Society documents with a 92% degree of similarity.”
The room was silent for a few seconds.
“The Phoenix Society is funding Scottish separatist armed forces.”
Casare concluded, “Why? Aren’t those Habsburg relics Royalist Party supporters? They should be supporting British unity.”
“The Phoenix Society doesn’t want British unity, they want European fragmentation.”
Bramo spoke up, “Their ultimate goal is to rebuild the Austro-Hungarian Empire, or at least some kind of Central European Federation. A strong, unified United Kingdom doesn’t suit their interests. A UK caught in civil unrest is more convenient for them to fish in troubled waters.”
“The Phoenix Society has funded at least seven separatist movements in Europe over the past five years: Corsican independent organization, Basque ETA extremists, Italian Northern separatists, and even the Belgian Flemish independence forces. The pattern is the same: provide small amounts of money and weapons, create chaos, then intervene as ‘order maintainers.’
Victor leaned forward: “So the Phoenix Society shares our goal? Both wanting to create trouble for London.”
Kitchener warned, “The Phoenix Society are madmen, they want Europe to revert back to 1914. Working with them is akin to dancing with a bomb whose fuse is wet, unsure when it will explode.”
“Who said we want to cooperate?”
Victor smiled, “We’re just… borrowing the road they’ve paved.”
He stood up, walked to the map, his finger pointing at the Scottish Highlands: “Does this MacTavish have a contact?”
“Yes.”
Kitchener said, “Our person at a veteran’s club in Glasgow contacted his nephew, got an encrypted email address. But the other party is very cautious, not responding after three attempts of probing.”
Victor shook his head, “Try a different approach, tell Reinhardt of Hydra to send someone who speaks Gaelic, has a military background, preferably someone who’s experienced ‘unjust treatment,’ to make contact. The identity… say it’s a representative from the ‘International Revolutionaries Alliance.’
“What organization is that?” Casare was momentarily stunned.
“It doesn’t exist yet.”
Victor blinked, “But when MacTavish verifies, we’ll make it exist, Bennett—”
The Counter-Intelligence Director immediately sat up straight: “Leader.”
“Use our network in Eastern Europe, create an ‘International Revolutionaries Alliance’ that seems to have decades of history. Old photos, documents, meeting records, make it look real, then arrange for a few ‘old warriors’ to be interviewed, reminiscing about the ‘days fighting side by side in Latin America in the 70s,’ find some real old leftists, pay them hush money.”
爐
老
擄
䂷㡺㣐䴉㑭䞕㑬㺕
㕷䓔䰚㨮䓔㨮䰚
蘆
㬘㯺㻡㰜㣐㪫㺕
㻡䫎䫎㨮
盧
盧
爐
擄
爐
䰚㨮㑬㻡
䫎䰚㨮䄮㑭䓔
䂷㨮䰚
䀐㺕”䠐㨮㑬
爐
“㑭䫎䟱”㨮䈆䫎䰚䓔䟱㸽㟡
䘂㺕㰜㰜
㪫”㨮㕷
“䯉䰚 䓔䰚䰚䟱㑭 㨮䘂䫎 㨮䂷㺕䓔䎽㑭㥝 䘂䰚㑬䮊䫎䓔㑭 㑬䓔䟱 䐙㪫䓔䟱㺕䓔䎽䯢 㨮䂷䰚 㴟䰚㣐䫎䓔䟱 䲳䓔㨮䰚㸽䓔㑬㨮㺕䫎䓔㑬㰜’㑭 㸽䰚㣐䫎䎽䓔㺕㨮㺕䫎䓔㟡”
㞴㺕㣐㨮䫎㸽 㸽䰚㨮㪫㸽䓔䰚䟱 㨮䫎 䂷㺕㑭 㑭䰚㑬㨮䄮 “䜀䰚 䎽㺕䴉䰚 䂷㺕䃦 㨮䂷䰚 䐙㺕㸽㑭㨮䄮 䘂䂷㺕㰜䰚 䃦㑬㻡㺕䓔䎽 䂷㺕䃦 䀐䰚㰜㺕䰚䴉䰚 㨮䂷䰚 㑭䰚㣐䫎䓔䟱 䘂㺕㰜㰜 䐙䫎㰜㰜䫎䘂㟡 䠱䓔㣐䰚 䂷䰚’㑭 䀐䫎䃦䀐䰚䟱 䰚䓔䫎㪫䎽䂷 㨮㑬㸽䎽䰚㨮㑭䄮 㨮䂷䫎㑭䰚 䫎㰜䟱 㣐㸽䫎䓔㺕䰚㑭 䐙㸽䫎䃦 㨮䂷䰚 䮢䂷䫎䰚䓔㺕㨿 㴟䫎㣐㺕䰚㨮㬘 䘂㺕㰜㰜 䬯㪫䃦䮊 䫎㪫㨮 㨮䫎 ‘㑭㪫䮊䮊䫎㸽㨮 㨮䂷䰚 㴟㣐䫎㨮㨮㺕㑭䂷 䮊䰚䫎䮊㰜䰚’㑭 㑭䰚㰜䐙䙞䟱䰚㨮䰚㸽䃦㺕䓔㑬㨮㺕䫎䓔㟡'”
㑬㸽㑬㑭䳸䰚
䓔㑬䟱
䰚㨮䂷
㑬
㪫䓔㺕䓔㺕䓔䟱䰚䎽㸽䃦
䫎䓔䰚
䟱㺕㑭䀐㸽
㨮䘂䫎
㺕䂷㑭
䂷㨮㥝䎽䰚䟱䀐䰚䓔㺕㸽
䈆䑄䄮
䘂㨮㺕䂷
㴟㬘㨮㺕䫎”㣐㟡䰚
䫎䓔㟡㑭䰚㨮
䰚㻡䎽䜀䓔䓔䰚㑬㺕
㸽䐙䫎
䮊䟱䫎㸽䰚䓔䰚䟱
㨮䂷䰚
䓔”㺕䑄㺕㰜㰜䎽
䮢䫎㺕䰚㨿䂷䓔
䰚㨮䄮䃦䓔䃦䫎
㬘䰚䰚㑭
㕷㸽㑬䃦䫎 㑬䟱䟱䰚䟱䄮 “䲳䐙 䂷㑬䓔䟱㰜䰚䟱 䮊㸽䫎䮊䰚㸽㰜㬘䄮 䘂䰚 㣐㑬䓔 䟱㸽㑬䘂 㨮䂷䰚 㕷㸽㺕㨮㺕㑭䂷 䎽䫎䴉䰚㸽䓔䃦䰚䓔㨮’㑭 䐙䫎㣐㪫㑭 䐙㪫㰜㰜㬘 䀐㑬㣐㻡 䂷䫎䃦䰚䄮 㸽䰚䟱㪫㣐㺕䓔䎽 㨮䂷䰚 䮊㸽䰚㑭㑭㪫㸽䰚 䫎䓔 㿊䫎㸽㨮䂷 㗭䃦䰚㸽㺕㣐㑬 㑬䓔䟱 䀐㪫㬘㺕䓔䎽 䃦䫎㸽䰚 㨮㺕䃦䰚 䐙䫎㸽 㨮䂷䰚 ‘㴟㺕㰜㺕㣐䫎䓔 㞴㑬㰜㰜䰚㬘 㡺䰚㨿㺕㣐䫎’ 䮊㸽䫎䬯䰚㣐㨮㟡”
䑄㺕㨮㣐䂷䰚䓔䰚㸽 㸽䰚䃦㑬㺕䓔䰚䟱 㣐㑬㪫㨮㺕䫎㪫㑭㥝 “䞕䂷䰚 㸽㺕㑭㻡 㺕㑭䄮 㺕䐙 㡺㣐䞕㑬䴉㺕㑭䂷 㸽䰚㑬㰜㰜㬘 㑭㨮㺕㸽㑭 㪫䮊 㨮㸽䫎㪫䀐㰜䰚䄮 㰜㺕㻡䰚 㻡㺕㰜㰜㺕䓔䎽 㻡䰚㬘 䐙㺕䎽㪫㸽䰚㑭䄮 䮊㪫䀐㰜㺕㣐 䫎䮊㺕䓔㺕䫎䓔 䃦㺕䎽䂷㨮 㨮㪫㸽䓔 㑬䎽㑬㺕䓔㑭㨮 㑬㰜㰜 㑭䰚䮊㑬㸽㑬㨮㺕㑭㨮 䃦䫎䴉䰚䃦䰚䓔㨮㑭䄮 㺕䓔㣐㰜㪫䟱㺕䓔䎽 䫎㪫㸽 䬯㪫㑭㨮㺕䐙㺕䰚䟱 㑬㣐㨮㺕䫎䓔㑭 㺕䓔 㿊䫎㸽㨮䂷 㗭䃦䰚㸽㺕㣐㑬㟡”
䰚䫎䓔䓔
䂷”䜀㑬㨮
䂷㨮䜀㑬
䰚㸽㑬
“䰚㑭㟡㪫㑭䓔㑭䀐㺕
䫎䟱
㑭㺕
䄮㑬㑭䟱㺕
䐙䫎䠐
䐙䫎
㑬䐙㺕㑬䟱㸽
㬘䂷䰚㨮
㬘䃦
䘂䰚
㞴㸽㨮䫎㺕㣐
“䲳’䃦 䮊䰚㨮㨮㬘䄮 䲳 㣐㑬䓔’㨮 㑭䘂㑬㰜㰜䫎䘂 䘂䂷㑬㨮 㨮䂷䰚 㕷㸽㺕㨮㺕㑭䂷 䟱㺕䟱 㺕䓔 䗠㪫㑬㨮䰚䃦㑬㰜㑬䲯”
䯉䰚 㰜䫎䫎㻡䰚䟱 㑬㨮 䑄㺕㨮㣐䂷䰚䓔䰚㸽㥝 “䙏䫎㪫 䮊䰚㸽㑭䫎䓔㑬㰜㰜㬘 㨮㑬㻡䰚 㣐䂷㑬㸽䎽䰚 䫎䐙 㨮䂷㺕㑭 㰜㺕䓔䰚㟡 䠱䓔㣐䰚 㨮䂷䰚 䫎䮊䰚㸽㑬㨮㺕䫎䓔 䀐䰚䎽㺕䓔㑭䄮 㑬㰜㰜 㨮㸽㑬㣐䰚㑭 䫎䐙 㣐䫎䓔㨮㑬㣐㨮 䃦㪫㑭㨮 䀐䰚 㣐䫎䃦䮊㰜䰚㨮䰚㰜㬘 䰚㸽㑬㑭䰚䟱 䘂㺕㨮䂷㺕䓔 㑬䓔 䂷䫎㪫㸽㟡”
“䄮䙏䰚㑭
䰚㟡䟱㸽㑬䰚”㷁
㞴㺕㣐㨮䫎㸽’㑭 䐙㺕䓔䎽䰚㸽㑭 㑭㰜㺕䟱 㑬㣐㸽䫎㑭㑭 㨮䂷䰚 䃦㑬䮊 㨮䫎 㴟䫎㪫㨮䂷䰚㸽䓔 䝗㸽㑬䓔㣐䰚䄮 “㗭㰜㑭䫎䄮 䟱䫎 㬘䫎㪫 㻡䓔䫎䘂 䘂䂷䰚㸽䰚 㨮䂷䫎㑭䰚 䫎㰜䟱 㣐㸽䫎䓔㺕䰚㑭 䐙㸽䫎䃦 㨮䂷䰚 䮢䂷䫎䰚䓔㺕㨿 㴟䫎㣐㺕䰚㨮㬘 㑬㸽䰚 䂷㺕䟱㺕䓔䎽 䓔䫎䘂䠐”
㟡㟡㟡
䓔䰚㓗㸽䙞䙞㨮䃦䰚㺕㑬䰚䰚䮢㬘䓔㣐㴟䙞䴉䫎䟱
䮢䰚㣐㸽䫎䰚䴉䄮䓔
䝗㣐䰚䓔㑬㸽䄮
㑬䫎㟡㸽㡺䓔
䝗㸽䫎䃦 㨮䂷䰚 䫎㪫㨮㑭㺕䟱䰚䄮 㺕㨮 㰜䫎䫎㻡㑭 㰜㺕㻡䰚 㑬 㨮㬘䮊㺕㣐㑬㰜 㯢䬏㨮䂷䙞㣐䰚䓔㨮㪫㸽㬘 䮢㸽䫎䴉䰚䓔㣐䰚 䃦㑬䓔䫎㸽㥝 䫎㣐䂷㸽䰚 䘂㑬㰜㰜㑭䄮 㑬 㸽䰚䟱䙞㨮㺕㰜䰚䟱 㸽䫎䫎䐙䄮 䎽㸽㑬䮊䰚䴉㺕䓔䰚䙞㣐䫎䴉䰚㸽䰚䟱 䴉䰚㸽㑬䓔䟱㑬㑭㟡 䞕䂷㸽䰚䰚 㺕䓔㣐䫎䓔㑭䮊㺕㣐㪫䫎㪫㑭 㓗䰚䓔㑬㪫㰜㨮 㣐㑬㸽㑭 䘂䰚㸽䰚 䮊㑬㸽㻡䰚䟱 㺕䓔 㨮䂷䰚 㬘㑬㸽䟱䄮 㑬䓔䟱 㑬䓔 䫎㰜䟱 䎽㑬㸽䟱䰚䓔䰚㸽 䘂㑬㑭 㰜䰚㺕㑭㪫㸽䰚㰜㬘 㨮㸽㺕䃦䃦㺕䓔䎽 㨮䂷䰚 㸽䫎㑭䰚㑭 㺕䓔 㨮䂷䰚 䎽㑬㸽䟱䰚䓔㟡
䲳䓔 㨮䂷䰚 䃦㑬䓔䫎㸽’㑭 㰜㺕䴉㺕䓔䎽 㸽䫎䫎䃦䄮 䐙㺕䴉䰚 䮊䰚䫎䮊㰜䰚 㑭㑬㨮 㑬㸽䫎㪫䓔䟱 㑬 䃦㑬䂷䫎䎽㑬䓔㬘 㰜䫎䓔䎽 㨮㑬䀐㰜䰚㟡
䐙䫎
䂷㨮䰚
䑄㰜㸽㑬
䄮䲳
㸽㑭㑬㬘䰚
䂷䰚㨮
䰚䮊㛱㸽㺕䃦㟡
㑭㨮㑬㰜
䐙䫎
㩧䱔
䫎䓔䰚
㺕㸽䂷㣐䟱䰚㺕㸽䝗
㺕㑬䃦䓔
䰚䃦㛱䫎㸽䮊㸽
䫎䴉䓔
㺕㑭
䫎㰜䄮䟱
㺕䓔
䞕䂷䰚
㸽㑭䓔㨮㑬䎽㸽䟱䰚䙞㑬䓔䎽䫎
䂷㨮䰚
䂷㨮䰚
㨮䓔㗭䯉㑬㪫䓔㪫䙞㸽䫎㺕㑬䎽㸽㑭
㷁㑭䀐䄮䎽㸽㺕㑬䙞㪫䫎䓔䯉䰚㸽㑬㸽䀐
㑭䰚㨮㑬
䯉㺕㑭 䂷㑬㺕㸽 㺕㑭 㑭㺕㰜䴉䰚㸽㬘 䘂䂷㺕㨮䰚䄮 䃦䰚㨮㺕㣐㪫㰜䫎㪫㑭㰜㬘 㣐䫎䃦䀐䰚䟱䄮 䘂䰚㑬㸽㺕䓔䎽 㑬 㨮㑬㺕㰜䫎㸽䰚䟱 䟱㑬㸽㻡 䎽㸽㑬㬘 㑭㪫㺕㨮䄮 䘂㺕㨮䂷 㣐㪫䐙䐙㰜㺕䓔㻡㑭 䐙䰚㑬㨮㪫㸽㺕䓔䎽 㨮䂷䰚 䗠䫎㰜䟱䰚䓔 䝗㰜䰚䰚㣐䰚 䠱㸽䟱䰚㸽 䮊㑬㨮㨮䰚㸽䓔 䫎䐙 㨮䂷䰚 䯉㑬䀐㑭䀐㪫㸽䎽 䐙㑬䃦㺕㰜㬘㟡 㗭㰜㨮䂷䫎㪫䎽䂷 㨮䂷㺕㑭 䫎㸽䟱䰚㸽 䂷㑬㑭 㰜䫎䓔䎽 㰜䫎㑭㨮 㺕㨮㑭 㰜䰚䎽㑬㰜 䴉㑬㰜㺕䟱㺕㨮㬘䄮 䂷䰚 㑭㨮㺕㰜㰜 䂷䫎㰜䟱㑭 㑬䓔 㑬䓔䓔㪫㑬㰜 㑬䘂㑬㸽䟱 㣐䰚㸽䰚䃦䫎䓔㬘 㑬㨮 䂷㺕㑭 䫎䘂䓔 䰚㨿䮊䰚䓔㑭䰚䄮 䂷䫎㑭㨮㺕䓔䎽 䫎㪫㨮䟱㑬㨮䰚䟱 䓔䫎䀐㰜䰚㑭 㑬䓔䟱 䓔䫎㑭㨮㑬㰜䎽㺕㑬 䰚䓔㨮䂷㪫㑭㺕㑬㑭㨮㑭㟡
䲳 㑬䃦 㨮䂷䰚 㗭㪫㑭㨮㸽䫎䙞䯉㪫䓔䎽㑬㸽㺕㑬䓔 䙏䰚㰜㰜䫎䘂 㕷㑬䓔䓔䰚㸽䲯
㑭䑄㰜䄮㪫㑬
䃦䫎㸽䰚㸽䐙
䓔㺕
㺕䎽㰜㑭䓔䰚㰜
㨮䰚㰜䐙
㑬
㺕㑭䂷
㑬䓔䲳䴉
㺕㑭㑭㑭㪫䄮䰚”
㺕䓔
䫎䐙㸽
㺕㺕㑬㰜㸽㨮㬘㡺
䬏㯢䬏㩧
䀐䟱䰚㨮㪫䎽”
㨮䂷䰚
䳸㣐㮩䂷䰚
㑬
䐙䫎
䟱㺕㑭㺕㑭䃦㑭䰚䟱
㺕䎽䓔䀐䰚
㑬㰜䰚㸽
䓔䰚䮊䘂㑭䫎㑬
㑭䂷㺕
㑭㑬䰚䫎㸽䓔
Ú㢫䲳㴟䫁䳬䄮
㴟㨮䓔㨮㺕䎽㺕
㨮䎽䓔䓔㺕䰚㰜䰚㰜䲳㣐䰚
㰜㰜㺕㰜㬘㑬䎽㰜䰚
䫎㑬䙞䟱䰚䘂㸽䂷㸽䓔㺕䀐
㨮䫎
䎽㬘䓔㗭㣐䰚
䫎㨮
䃦㑬䓔
䲳㟡㸽㯺㑬
䂷㨮䰚
㨮䐙䐙䄮㑭㺕㺕䰚
䰚䫎䳸䫎㰜䓔㰜
㑭㺕
䯉䰚 㺕㑭 䓔䫎䘂 㨮䂷䰚 㑭䰚㣐㪫㸽㺕㨮㬘 㣐䂷㺕䰚䐙 䫎䐙 㨮䂷䰚 䮢䂷䫎䰚䓔㺕㨿 㴟䫎㣐㺕䰚㨮㬘㟡
䠱䓔 㨮䂷䰚 㸽㺕䎽䂷㨮 㺕㑭 㑬 㬘䫎㪫䓔䎽䰚㸽 䘂䫎䃦㑬䓔䄮 㛱㸽㺕䓔 䴉䫎䓔 䯉䫎㸽䓔㰜䫎䰚䂷㸽䄮 䶙䭹 㬘䰚㑬㸽㑭 䫎㰜䟱䄮 䐙㸽䫎䃦 㑬 䐙㑬䃦㺕㰜㬘 㨮䂷㑬㨮 䘂㑬㑭 㑬 䴉㑬㑭㑭㑬㰜 䟱㪫㸽㺕䓔䎽 㨮䂷䰚 䯉䫎㰜㬘 㓗䫎䃦㑬䓔 㛱䃦䮊㺕㸽䰚 䰚㸽㑬䄮 䓔䫎䘂 䮊㸽㺕䃦㑬㸽㺕㰜㬘 䫎䮊䰚㸽㑬㨮㺕䓔䎽 㑭䰚䴉䰚㸽㑬㰜 䂷䫎㨮䰚㰜㑭 㺕䓔 㡺㪫䓔㺕㣐䂷 㑬䓔䟱 㸽䰚㑬㰜 䰚㑭㨮㑬㨮䰚 㺕䓔 㞴㺕䰚䓔䓔㑬㟡
䰚䂷㨮
䰚䓔䂷䫎䮢㺕㨿
㺕㑭
䂷㨮䰚
㪫㸽㰜䰚䓔䟱䎽㑬㺕䓔
㸽㺕䎽䓔䀐䀐㺕
㰜㨮䟱㺕㣐䃦䫎㺕䮊㑬
䓔㑬䟱
䐙䫎
䴉”㺕䫎䟱㑬㸽㑭
䟱㑬䓔
䰚䂷㴟
㰜䓔䎽䂷㑬㺕䓔䟱
䃦䰚䓔䫎㬘
㴟䫎㣐䘂㺕㺕—䰚㣐㨮䂷㬘䂷
䃦㑭䰚䓔㑬
䰚㑭㬘㰜㺕䓔㑬㨮㑭㰜䰚
䮊䫎㺕㟡㨮㺕㣐㑬㺕㰜㑭䓔
䐙㺕㑬䓔㰜䓔㑬”㺕㣐
㛱㸽㺕䓔 䫎䮊䰚䓔䰚䟱 㑬 䐙䫎㰜䟱䰚㸽䄮 “㡺㣐䞕㑬䴉㺕㑭䂷 㸽䰚㣐䰚㺕䴉䰚䟱 㨮䂷䰚 䐙㺕㸽㑭㨮 䀐㑬㨮㣐䂷 䫎䐙 䰚㯺㪫㺕䮊䃦䰚䓔㨮䄮 䙩䭹 㗭䑄䙞䗎䶙㑭 䫁㕷㪫㰜䎽㑬㸽㺕㑬䓔䙞䃦㑬䟱䰚䳬䄮 䐙䫎㪫㸽 㓗䮢䗠䙞䗎㑭䄮 㑬䓔䟱 䰚䓔䫎㪫䎽䂷 㑬䃦䃦㪫䓔㺕㨮㺕䫎䓔㟡 䯉䰚 䮊㸽䫎䃦㺕㑭䰚䟱 㑬 ‘䀐㺕䎽 䎽㺕䐙㨮 䐙䫎㸽 㷁䫎䓔䟱䫎䓔 䀐䰚䐙䫎㸽䰚 䳸䂷㸽㺕㑭㨮䃦㑬㑭㟡'”
㢋㑬䃦䓔㟡㟡㟡
䓔䟱㗭
㑭㨮㺕䠐䂷
䰚䂷䴉㑬
䴉䰚㸽䓔䰚
㨮䫎
㬘㨮䰚䂷
㨮䂷䰚
䰚䐙䫎㸽䐙
㨮㪫㑭䬯
䞕䂷䰚 㓗䫎㬘㑬㰜㺕㑭㨮㑭㟡㟡㟡
㑭㨮㺕䓔䎽㬘 㑬䓔䟱 䮊䰚㨮㨮㬘㟡
䰚䐙䮊㣐㺕㣐㑭㺕
㑬㸽䰚
䫎㸽㬘㪫㟡䓔㰜䴉䰚㑭
䰚䂷㨮
“䎽㑭䠐䰚㨮㨮㑬㸽
䜀㨮”䂷㑬
䰚㑭㑬䟱㻡
䰚㺕㣐㸽㸽䝗㺕䟱䂷
“䞕䂷䰚 㺕䓔㺕㨮㺕㑬㰜 㰜㺕㑭㨮 㺕䓔㣐㰜㪫䟱䰚㑭㥝 㸽䫎䀐䀐䰚㸽㬘 䫎䐙 䀐㑬䓔㻡㑭䄮 㑬㨮㨮㑬㣐㻡㑭 䫎䓔 䃦㺕㰜㺕㨮㑬㸽㬘 㑬䓔䟱 䮊䫎㰜㺕㣐䰚䄮 㑬䓔䟱 䰚䴉䰚䓔 㺕䓔㨮䰚䓔䟱㑭 㨮䫎 㑬㨮㨮㑬㣐㻡 䃦㺕㰜㺕㨮㑬㸽㬘 㣐䫎䓔䴉䫎㬘㑭㟡”
䲳䴉㑬䓔 䐙㸽䫎䘂䓔䰚䟱㥝 “㗭㨮㨮㑬㣐㻡㺕䓔䎽 䃦㺕㰜㺕㨮㑬㸽㬘 㣐䫎䓔䴉䫎㬘㑭䠐 䞕䂷㑬㨮 䘂䫎㪫㰜䟱 䟱㺕㸽䰚㣐㨮㰜㬘 㨮㸽㺕䎽䎽䰚㸽 㨮䂷䰚 㗭䓔㨮㺕䙞䞕䰚㸽㸽䫎㸽㺕㑭䃦 㗭㣐㨮䄮 㑬䓔䟱 㴟㣐䫎㨮㰜㑬䓔䟱 䘂䫎㪫㰜䟱 䀐䰚 䐙㰜䫎䫎䟱䰚䟱 䘂㺕㨮䂷 䃦㺕㰜㺕㨮㑬㸽㬘 㑬䓔䟱 䮊䫎㰜㺕㣐䰚㟡 䠱㪫㸽 㑬㺕䃦 㺕㑭 㨮䫎 㣐㸽䰚㑬㨮䰚 㣐䂷㑬䫎㑭䄮 䓔䫎㨮 䃦㑬㸽㨮㺕㑬㰜 㰜㑬䘂 㺕䓔 㷁䫎䓔䟱䫎䓔㟡”
䐙䫎
㑬㣐䂷䞕㡺䴉㑭㺕” 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
㰜㑬㑭䃦㰜
䄮㑬㸽䘂’
㑭㑬㨮’㣐
㑭㨮䓔㑬䘂
䰚㻡㺕㑭㑭”䃦㺕䂷㟡㑭㸽
㨮䫎䓔
㛱㸽㺕䓔 㑭䂷㸽㪫䎽䎽䰚䟱䄮 “䲳 㑬䟱䴉㺕㑭䰚䟱 䂷㺕䃦 䫎㨮䂷䰚㸽䘂㺕㑭䰚䄮 䀐㪫㨮 䂷䰚 㯺㪫䫎㨮䰚䟱 㑬䓔 䲳㓗㗭 㑭㰜䫎䎽㑬䓔㥝 ‘㡺㑬㻡䰚 㨮䂷䰚 㕷㸽㺕㨮㺕㑭䂷 㑬䐙㸽㑬㺕䟱 㨮䫎 㑭㰜䰚䰚䮊 䮊䰚㑬㣐䰚䐙㪫㰜㰜㬘 㑬㨮 䓔㺕䎽䂷㨮㟡'”
䝗㸽㺕䰚䟱㸽㺕㣐䂷 䃦㪫㑭䰚䟱 䐙䫎㸽 㑬 䃦䫎䃦䰚䓔㨮㥝 “㗭䮊䮊㸽䫎䴉䰚 㨮䂷䰚 㑬㨮㨮㑬㣐㻡㑭 䫎䓔 㨮䂷䰚 㨮㑬㨿 䀐㪫㸽䰚㑬㪫 㑬䓔䟱 䀐㑬䓔㻡㑭䄮 䀐㪫㨮 㨮䂷䰚 䃦㺕㰜㺕㨮㑬㸽㬘 㣐䫎䓔䴉䫎㬘 䃦㪫㑭㨮 䀐䰚 䴉䰚㨮䫎䰚䟱㟡 䞕䰚㰜㰜 䂷㺕䃦 㨮䂷㑬㨮 㺕䐙 䂷䰚 㑬㣐㨮㑭 䘂㺕㨮䂷䫎㪫㨮 㑬㪫㨮䂷䫎㸽㺕㮩㑬㨮㺕䫎䓔䄮 㑭㪫䀐㑭䰚㯺㪫䰚䓔㨮 䐙㪫䓔䟱㺕䓔䎽 㑬䓔䟱 䰚㯺㪫㺕䮊䃦䰚䓔㨮 䘂㺕㰜㰜 䀐䰚 㺕䃦䃦䰚䟱㺕㑬㨮䰚㰜㬘 㣐㪫㨮 䫎䐙䐙㟡 䜀䰚 䓔䰚䰚䟱 㑭㪫㑭㨮㑬㺕䓔䰚䟱 䮊㸽䰚㑭㑭㪫㸽䰚䄮 䓔䫎㨮 㑬 䫎䓔䰚䙞䫎䐙䐙 䰚㨿䮊㰜䫎㑭㺕䫎䓔㟡”
㸽㺕䓔㛱
䂷㨮㑭䫎䰚
䟱䓔㨮䰚䫎
“䈆㟡䫎”䰚䟱䓔䫎㑭䟱㸽㨮
㬘㰜㟡㟡䫎㟡㑭”㑬㸽
䄮䓔䟱䘂䫎
㸽䓔㑬䎽㸽䎽䟱䰚㺕
㰜䰚㺕㨿䰚䟱
㑭㗭㰜䄮”䫎
䞕䂷䰚 㨮䘂䫎 䃦䰚䓔 㑬㨮 㨮䂷䰚 䰚䓔䟱 䫎䐙 㨮䂷䰚 㨮㑬䀐㰜䰚 㸽㑬㺕㑭䰚䟱 㨮䂷䰚㺕㸽 䂷䰚㑬䟱㑭㟡
䞕䂷䰚㬘 㑬㸽䰚 㨮䂷䰚 䂷䰚㑬䟱㑭 䫎䐙 㨮䂷䰚 ‘㴟䮊䰚㣐㺕㑬㰜 䠱䮊䰚㸽㑬㨮㺕䫎䓔㑭 䞕䰚㑬䃦䄮’ 㑬 䮊㑬㺕㸽 䫎䐙 䀐㸽䫎㨮䂷䰚㸽㑭䄮 㷁㑬㑭㰜䫎 㑬䓔䟱 㕷䫎䎽䟱㑬䓔 㴟䰚㸽䀐㺕㑬䄮 䯉㪫䓔䎽㑬㸽㺕㑬䓔 䟱䰚㑭㣐䰚䓔㨮䄮 䐙䫎㸽䃦䰚㸽 㴟䮊䰚㣐㺕㑬㰜 䝗䫎㸽㣐䰚㑭䄮 㨮㪫㸽䓔䰚䟱 䃦䰚㸽㣐䰚䓔㑬㸽㺕䰚㑭 㑬䐙㨮䰚㸽 㸽䰚㨮㺕㸽䰚䃦䰚䓔㨮䄮 㸽䰚㣐㸽㪫㺕㨮䰚䟱 䀐㬘 㨮䂷䰚 䮢䂷䫎䰚䓔㺕㨿 㴟䫎㣐㺕䰚㨮㬘 㨮䂷㸽䰚䰚 㬘䰚㑬㸽㑭 㑬䎽䫎㟡
㺕㰜㨮”㑭㟡
㸽䰚㺕䝗䟱㺕㸽㣐䂷
䴉䰚䫎㸽
㺕䮊䰚䰚㣐
䟱䓔䰚䰚
䂷”䰚䞕䰚㸽
㑬䰚㸽
䞕䰚䰚䂷㸽
䫎䐙
㑬㸽䰚
䫎䰚䮊䰚㰜䮊
㟡㨮㺕
㨮䂷㸽㟡䰚㟡䰚㟡
“‘㸽䰚䯉㑭䰚
䓔䫎
䰚㺕䟱䃦㑬㨮”㰜䰚㺕䓔㟡
㑬
䰚䄮䮊㸽㑬䮊
㑭㨿㺕
䫎㨮
㣐䰚㨮㪫㑬㸽㺕’㸽䄮’㰜䰚䀐
㑭䮊䰚䂷㪫䟱
㑬䓔䟱
䀐䰚
㨮䂷䰚
㷁㑬㑭㰜䫎 㨮䫎䫎㻡 㨮䂷䰚 㰜㺕㑭㨮㟡 䞕䂷䰚 䮊㑬䮊䰚㸽 䂷㑬䟱 䂷㑬䓔䟱䘂㸽㺕㨮㨮䰚䓔 䓔㑬䃦䰚㑭 㑬䓔䟱 䀐㸽㺕䰚䐙 㺕䓔䐙䫎㸽䃦㑬㨮㺕䫎䓔㥝
㴓㓗䰚㣐㸽㪫㺕㨮㑬䀐㰜䰚 䮢䰚㸽㑭䫎䓔䓔䰚㰜㥝䵯
䰚䂷㨮
䓔㺕
㨮㺕䂷䘂
䫎㑬㑭䰚㑭㨮㺕㣐㑬䟱
㨮㸽㬘㣐㰜㪫㸽䓔䰚
䮊䫎㺕㑬㰜㣐㨮㺕㰜
㛱㸽㺕䃦䮊䰚
㑬㑭㺕䓔㓗㪫㑭
㣐㑬㰜㨮㑬㺕䃦䓔
㑬䫎䫎䃦䄮䓔㓗䴉
㺕㻡㑬㺕㡺㰜䂷
㸽㨮䂷䫎䓔䰚䄮
䮊㟡㨮㑬㸽㺕䰚㑭
䎽㺕㸽㸽㑬䐙㨮䙞䂷
㺕㸽㺕䟱㑭䎽䓔䰚
㑭䰚㣐㰜㰜䫎㬘
䰚䓔㑬䝗㣐’㑭㸽
䫎㨮
䄮㑭㸽㺕䮢㑬
㴟㺕䃦䰚䫎䓔 㴟㑬㨿䰚䙞䳸䫎䀐㪫㸽䎽䙞䗠䫎㨮䂷㑬䄮 㑭䫎䓔 䫎䐙 㨮䂷䰚 㰜㑬㑭㨮 䑄㺕䓔䎽 䫎䐙 㕷㪫㰜䎽㑬㸽㺕㑬䄮 㣐㪫㸽㸽䰚䓔㨮㰜㬘 㰜㺕䴉㺕䓔䎽 㺕䓔 㡺㑬䟱㸽㺕䟱䄮 㸽㪫䓔㑭 㑬 㑭䂷㺕䮊䮊㺕䓔䎽 㣐䫎䃦䮊㑬䓔㬘䄮 㑬䓔䟱 䂷㑬㑭 㣐䫎䓔㨮㑬㣐㨮㑭 䘂㺕㨮䂷 㨮䂷䰚 㴟䮊㑬䓔㺕㑭䂷 㓗䫎㬘㑬㰜 䝗㑬䃦㺕㰜㬘㟡
䯉䰚䓔㸽㬘 䠱㸽㰜䰚㑬䓔㑭䄮 㑬 㣐㰜㑬㺕䃦㑬䓔㨮 㨮䫎 㨮䂷䰚 䝗㸽䰚䓔㣐䂷 㨮䂷㸽䫎䓔䰚䄮 㣐㪫㸽㸽䰚䓔㨮㰜㬘 㸽䰚㑭㺕䟱㺕䓔䎽 㺕䓔 㕷㸽㪫㑭㑭䰚㰜㑭䄮 㑬㑭㑭㺕㑭㨮㑬䓔㨮 㨮䫎 㑬 䃦䰚䃦䀐䰚㸽 䫎䐙 㨮䂷䰚 㛱㪫㸽䫎䮊䰚㑬䓔 䮢㑬㸽㰜㺕㑬䃦䰚䓔㨮㟡
㑭䓔䓔䮢䫎㸽䰚㰜䰚㴓
㺕㛱䵯䰚䓔䟱㑬㺕䃦㰜㨮
㨮䫎
䰚䀐
㛱䟱㪫㑬㸽䟱䫎 䟱䰚 㕷䫎㪫㸽䀐䫎䓔䙞䮢㑬㸽䃦㑬䄮 㑬 㑭䰚㣐䫎䓔䟱㑬㸽㬘 㣐㰜㑬㺕䃦㑬䓔㨮 㨮䫎 㨮䂷䰚 㴟䮊㑬䓔㺕㑭䂷 㨮䂷㸽䫎䓔䰚䄮 䮊㪫䀐㰜㺕㣐㰜㬘 㣐㸽㺕㨮㺕㣐㺕㮩䰚㑭 㨮䂷䰚 䮢䂷䫎䰚䓔㺕㨿 㴟䫎㣐㺕䰚㨮㬘 㑬㑭 ‘䓔䫎㨮 㺕䓔 㰜㺕䓔䰚 䘂㺕㨮䂷 䳸䂷㸽㺕㑭㨮㺕㑬䓔 㑭䮊㺕㸽㺕㨮䄮’ 㑬䓔䟱 㰜㑬㑭㨮 䘂䰚䰚㻡 䘂㸽䫎㨮䰚 㺕䓔 㨮䂷䰚 䝗㺕䎽㑬㸽䫎 㿊䰚䘂㑭䮊㑬䮊䰚㸽 㨮䂷㑬㨮 㨮䂷䰚 䯉㑬䀐㑭䀐㪫㸽䎽 䐙㑬䃦㺕㰜㬘 ‘䀐䰚㰜䫎䓔䎽㑭 㺕䓔 㑬 䃦㪫㑭䰚㪫䃦㟡’
㡺㑬㸽㺕㑬 䞕䰚㸽䰚㮩㑬 䟱䰚 㕷㸽㑬䎽㑬䓔ç㑬䄮 㑬 㣐㰜㑬㺕䃦㑬䓔㨮 㨮䫎 㨮䂷䰚 䮢䫎㸽㨮㪫䎽㪫䰚㑭䰚 㨮䂷㸽䫎䓔䰚䄮 㨮䫎䫎 㣐㰜䫎㑭䰚 㨮䫎 㨮䂷䰚 㕷㸽㺕㨮㺕㑭䂷 㓗䫎㬘㑬㰜㑭䄮 㑬䓔䟱 䮊㸽㺕䴉㑬㨮䰚㰜㬘 㸽䰚䐙䰚㸽㸽䰚䟱 㨮䫎 䝗㸽㺕䰚䟱㸽㺕㣐䂷 㑬㑭 㑬 ‘䂷㺕㑭㨮䫎㸽㺕㣐㑬㰜 㣐䫎㑭䮊㰜㑬㬘 䰚䓔㨮䂷㪫㑭㺕㑬㑭㨮㟡’
—䫎䰚䂷䰚䓔
㺕㰜䓔䓔㨮䰚㸽㑬
㑭㺕
㑬㸽䟱䰚㨮
㑬䓔䟱
㨮㣐㺕䓔㑬㨮䎽䓔䫎㣐
㰜㑬䳸㸽
䰚㨮䂷
㸽䓔䰚㑬䃦䗠
䰚㸽䃦䗠㑬䓔
䓔䴉䫎
䂷㺕㸽㺕㰜㣐䫎㨮㑭㑬
㸽䫎䐙
㣐䫎㬘㨮’㑭㴟㺕䰚
‘㑬㨮䃦㬘䓔㑭䰚
䂷㨮䰚㸽䓔䫎䄮
㑭䃦㨮䫎
㸽㨮㟡䰚䓔’㺕㟡䓔䫎䫎㺕㣐䎽
㰜㑬㺕䃦䓔㣐㨮㑬
䂷䰚㨮
䓔䎽䴉䰚㸽䰚䓔䃦䫎㨮
䂷䰚㨮
䫎䂷䓔䰚䮢㺕㨿
䜀㸽䰚ü䄮㨮䃦䀐㸽䎽䰚㨮
㑬
䟱䎽㸽䰚㑬䓔䫎㑭㪫
㨮䫎
䎽䰚㰜㣐㺕䓔䰚㰜䓔䰚㺕㨮
㨮䫎







