A few years ago, one year after the beginning of the crisis, I came across a book. It had been something quite impressive for me, because an employer would give it away as a gift to all his employees and so I took the time to read it. It was the story, metaphorical and highly instructive, of some laboratory mice, that they suddenly lose their food (yes, cheese) from the set point which they were accustomed of finding it. Some of them, full of insecurity, returned again and again to the same point, hoping that the food will reappear, while others, searched the rest of the labyrinthine corridors in order to find food elsewhere. The writer's very didactic style, supports those mice that turned the loss of safe foraging in an "opportunity" to explore other possibilities and they would MOST likely find somewhere else, better and more food. The MOST is capitalized in order to hide in the shadow of it, the "likely". Because what they do is replacing your real and certain food with nothing but a a possibility.What I realized was that the employer of these people would probably sack a lot of them and wanted to bring it nice and easy. But this grandiose in conception book written by an american manager, brings to the surface some of the policies of our current government. Converts citizens into mice. The structures of the state become a maze and finding work is the modern arena. They "sell" certainty when essentially our only certainty is that we have already been sold. They have turn into a matter of coincidence and luck, if some will find food, and when. The author takes for granted that such searches always have a happy ending. We all know that lab mice always die young, for one reason only: it is their job. Nobody will throw food as reward for exploring the maze, unless it is a part of the experiment. But to bring this into a conclusion, which people wish such a fate? Who wants to be a mouse? And most of all, who have given such divine powers in the Governments of all the countries of their world to control their fellow human (?)