Jorge Javier Vazquez Due to Mediaset’s new ethical rules, ‘Save me’ cannot dominate politics, but that doesn’t mean it can’t do it through other channels. If he invited Íñigo Errejón to the premiere of his podcast a few days ago, he wrote a post this Wednesday in which he clarified his stance on controversial statements. During Mario Vaquerizo’s visit ‘Let yourself be loved’.
“This The article that will cost me the most to write Since I’ve been in Lecturas, for what its heroes have meant in my life: Alaska and Mario” begins writing Jorge Javier.
In the program of Paz Padilla, the vocalist of Nancys Rubias came to compare the current situation in Spain with the dictatorship of Franco. “Coming from a dictatorial family and telling me how bad it was, I now feel identified with my grandparents,” he said in Telecinco format: “You can’t say what you’re thinking. We had to go a long way.”
A few words that blasted the show’s star host: “You think we can’t say what we think? It seems that you hardly listen to your wife sharing the microphone with an entity whose only known virtue is spewing lies and accusing false accusations. With the same ease as dictating Euromillions figures”.
While he didn’t mention himself directly, many users pointed to Federico Jiménez Losantos for collaborating on the Alaska Es Radio show: “With a being that has little to do with the ideals both you and he support, there would be no doubt if it weren’t for the fact that this inconsistency was practiced through insult and humiliation.” the Survivors host continues, lamenting. “the accomplice silence of the people around”.
Jorge Javier admits it hurt him to see Alaska “in that neighborhood”, it’s a pain “on the edge of disappointment”. Immediately afterward, he calls out directly to Mario: “Perhaps the people who have supported you unconditionally over the past few years, We are tired of your shameless comradeship with representatives of a party and LGTBI+ collective that oppose the achievement of women’s rights and freedoms.: abortion, marriage, trans”.
“Don’t be fooled, Mario. You can’t be in everything,” insists Jorge Javier: “In almost everything, yes, but embracing people who despise those who feel like me, no. I’m not going there because I don’t feel that way. Because I neither want nor should I allow it. And if this is about to sound like a dictatorship, it’s because the President and his colleagues are promoting a morality so close to the time you criticize in Let yourself be loved.
He also regrets that he has run out of “arguments” to defend Mario: “Likewise, I have no reason to hold on any longer. Understand that Alaska is working with one of the biggest hate mongers in this countryAn Alaskan that “has nothing to do with what I love,” he says.
The Badalona man doesn’t think Vaquerizo is “politically incorrect,” as he described himself before Paz Padilla: “You’re not. It may sound good to you, but your actions describe you”. To finish, he refers to the upcoming elections: “You can vote for whoever you want, it’s incomplete. But also think that freedom is great when everyone can use it. And most of those people you embrace are not very clear on that concept or seem fed up with canes.”