Mónica García and her health court of the Inquisition

With a Government as autocratic as the current onealways seeking to eclipse the rest of the powers of the State that overshadow it, it is not surprising that one of its ministries, that of Health, is now taking the lead with the announcement of becoming a champion of the fight against fraud and corruption. Instead of putting all their efforts into what should be their true reason for existence, the global health of some citizens who suffer in the flesh historic waiting lists for surgery throughout the country and a third world delay in the incorporation of innovative medicinesMónica García and her senior officials place the focus on this fight against what they consider the dark side of healthcareas if his true job were that of act as an inquisitorial court instead of as facilitators of greater well-being of citizens in the face of the disease.

In this context we must place the strategic plan that emanates from an observatory created for this purpose. Not a plan to reduce surgical delays or barriers to therapeutic innovation, but against corruption. Nobody expects any action against the irregular or dubious practices that emanate from health administrative bodies colonized by the left. There will be no investigations into purchases of materials such as those made in the time of Illa to companies with no known address or paying disproportionate surcharges, or those that were involved in the Ingesa, an organ of unfortunate memory during the pandemic. Nor will anything be known about those respirators purchased in Granada for 30,000 euros per unit when they were not worth more than 18,000 then, nor will there be any word about what Ábalos and Koldo did. The objective of everything will be to attack Díaz Ayuso, the piece to beat. Time to time.