This Wednesday, Axel Kicillo led in Tecnópolis the act of the pledge of allegiance to the Flag of fourth grade students from primary schools in the province of Buenos Aires.
From there, the governor he took an oath from the students and defended inclusive language, this, given the prohibition established by the Buenos Aires government in schools, on what Axel Kicillo He said: “We don’t like to prohibit, we like that they can express themselves, say what they feel and that they are patriotic”.
Under this same line, Axel Killlof invited young people to “rebel thinking of others” and assured that they can use the language they preferwith which he invited the students to “speak as they wish”.
The president added that the important thing is to communicate with respect, which also means recognizing differences. The governor also argued that sometimes an act of rebellion could become a way of making a country.
“One can be a patriot with simpler things, smaller and within everyone’s reach, such as taking care of the other or the one who has less, that is being a patriot.” In addition, the politician gave an example to Manuel Belgrano, who was a man who rebelled achieved many things for the country.
“Manuel Belgrano created the flag without orders to do so. He did it as an act of rebellion, which earned him reproaches and challenges. He did it despite the fact that many thought he was not suitable.”
The president also stressed:It is worth thinking about rebellion, which is not doing what each one is sung for and just because or for oneself, but rather the one that is for everyone.. That is the rebellion that matters, the one that is for others, not the one that is for one.”
Axel Kicillof rejects the measure of the Buenos Aires Government to prohibit inclusive language
In his speech, the governor He pointed out that it is important to speak from what each person feels, so it is not necessary to prohibit the different ways of communicating.
“To rebel is to speak as one wants, as one wants: not to swear or swear, but to express what one feels,” the politician stressed.