The left-wing is using harassment and fear to silence dissenters

On December 13, 1981, the communist dictatorship imposed Martial Law in Poland, a period of harsh repression against the democratic opposition.

Pedro Sánchez’s antidemocratic international and his friendly photos with dictators
Governing without legislative power: Pedro Sánchez is announcing a dictatorship

The precedent of Martial Law in Poland in 1981

As a result, the Catholic trade union Solidarność was outlawed, 56 people were murdered by the communists, and thousands of opponents were imprisoned. This wave of repression was a manifestation of the communist caste’s fear of losing the absolute power it had held in Poland since 1945, when the Soviet dictator Stalin imposed that undemocratic regime on the country. The dictatorship sought to impose the fear of disagreeing with those in power, the fear of protesting against an oppressive and unjust regime, the fear of opposing a totalitarian ideology that imposed dictatorships in dozens of countries.

Threatened by the dictatorship’s violence, millions of Poles lit candles in the windows of their homes. In times of darkness, when evil sought to extinguish the light of freedom, those candles were an expression of the Polish people’s will to regain their Freedom. This gesture, with many Poles risking arrest simply for lighting a candle, caught the world’s attention. US President Ronald Reagan called for support for this protest and lit a candle at the White House in support of the Polish people. Eight years later, Poland became the first Soviet bloc country where communism collapsed.

Socialism is leading Spain towards a dictatorship

To this day, Spain is the only country in the European Union with ministers in its government allied with the Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE). Pedro Sánchez leads a cabinet allied with several dictatorships, including the communist regimes of China and Cuba. Mimicking the habits of its international partners, the Sánchez government is launching a hunt against free media and independent judges who have dared to investigate the corruption scandals affecting Sánchez’s entourage, his party and his government.

In 2023, more than 1,300 judges denounced that Sánchez intended to “blow up the rule of law” in Spain, granting an amnesty to his separatist partners in exchange for their support for his re-election, a privilege that constitutes the greatest act of corruption in the entire history of the Democracy in Spain. Those Thursdays were not far off the mark when they made their complaint. After losing the elections and lacking sufficient support to pass laws, a year ago Sánchez announced his intention to govern without the legislative branch. It was, clearly, the tacit announcement of a dictatorship.

Since then, the authoritarianism of the government and its partners has been increasing. Recently, we have seen the government encouraging violence in the streets, a unique case in the European Union. Likewise, government attacks on judges investigating socialist corruption have become commonplace, a mafia-like form of government that many left-wing voters approve of, but which is increasingly losing support for an increasingly weak and hysterical government.

The harassment campaign against a judge for disagreeing with the government

We have seen an example of this authoritarian attitude in recent hours. A judge – Luis Sanz (MagistraThor) – who participated in the presentation of the Atenea association a few days ago, limiting himself to expressing his disagreement with the government’s plans to take control of the Justice system, has suffered brutal harassment from the government and its affiliated media and has ended up closing his Twitter account. What happened to this judge is a clear warning to all his colleagues: Anyone who dares to defend the rule of law against the authoritarian maneuvers of the left will suffer the same fate.

Socialism has already established dictatorships in Venezuela and Nicaragua: now Spain?

Socialism hasn’t changed at all. Historic leaders of the PSOE defended a “socialist dictatorship” and used violence for political ends, and today that party continues to defend those totalitarians and even calling for people to imitate them. We must remember that in recent years, socialism has established two dictatorships in Spanish-speaking countries (Venezuela and Nicaragua), regimes that are violating the most basic human rights without Pedro Sánchez or the PSOE expressing even the slightest criticism towards them.

Now socialism also seeks to extinguish the light of freedom in Spain, using fear to ensure that no one dares to disagree with the left. In the face of these totalitarians, we must not give in: if they don’t want light, then let’s turn it on more. If they manage to silence a dissenting voice through harassment, the rest of us must raise our voices even louder, and let the harassers begin to feel fear. We democrats are more and better than them, and we must not allow them to destroy our democracy.

Image: IPNtvPL.