Rebeca Monzo, Translator: BW
Yesterday was payday for retired people and active workers who collect
their pay by debit card. The wandering to and fro by people of various
ages, in search of a Cadeca (a place where money can be exchanged), a
bank that doesn't have long queues (lines) or for an ATM that works,
arouses disgust and some heated remarks between the neighbors of our
neighborhood. It should be noted that the payments to retired people
don't happen at the end of the month as was custom some time ago. One
fine day in one blow, they changed them to the first few days of the
following month, bringing with it the agony of being without a penny
extended, therefore, a couple of days more.
But this was not the case for my neighbor, who still works, and collects
her pay by debit card. She was very needy the same as the vast majority
of people collecting, even more so because she had to make a payment
that had a due date. She went in search of an ATM and that's where here
odyssey began. The one at the Ministry of Transport was broken, the one
at the Cadeca didn't have any cash, the same thing happened at the Bank
of the Ministry of Agriculture, finally, she went through all of the
ATMs and banks in the neighborhood, and couldn't get cash at any of
them, because the only same was working and had available funds, but had
a long line that wasn't moving. She joined that very line and a little
while later she overheard a conversation between two people.
One, an older person said to a young person: I don't know what's going
on, I just went by the agricultural market of the YLW (Youth Labor Army)
and they didn't have anything, nor did the one on Tulipán, nevertheless,
the self-employed individuals in their trucks have everything. How is it
that the State is not able to supply their farmers markets and but the
self-employed can!
The young person, without getting upset, answered: Lady, you yourself
just answered your own question, because the State, as you rightly said,
is not capable, at least that is what it has demonstrated so far.
The woman, without answering back, moved in the line to move away a
little from the young person. Meanwhile, the rest continued complaining
to each other about the slow way that they advanced. Finally, my
neighbor, abandoned the line protesting without being able to achieve
her objective, walking to her house frustrated and indignant, to use a
word that is so in style.
Note: the photo had to be taken from far away, because the guard at the
Cadeca at Panorama and Tulipán wouldn't let me get close with camera in
hand, he told me that I couldn't take photos there, and I told him that
he should show me documentation of the prohibition, and he answered that
it didn't exist, but that it is forbidden.
Translated by: BW
November 7 2011
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