Durante diez años INDRA y otros amañaron contratos públicos de tecnología en la AEAT, el SEPE y la SS. Muy grave, porque son los servicios públicos digitales que todos padecemos.
No es nada que no llevemos años diciendo, pero ahora lo dice también el Tribunal Supremo.
Tokyo has 37 million people and almost no public trash cans. The streets are still cleaner than your kitchen floor. It all started when a doomsday cult released nerve gas on the subway in 1995, and the country never put the bins back.
That morning, five cult members each boarded a different train during rush hour. Each carried plastic bags of liquid sarin wrapped in newspaper. They dropped the bags on the floor, punctured them with sharpened umbrella tips, and walked off at the next stop. 13 people died. More than 6,000 ended up in hospitals.
The city ripped out most of its public bins right after. A trash can was the perfect place to hide a bomb or a chemical packet, so the cans had to go. The few that survived now have see-through walls so police can spot anything suspicious inside. Tokyo Metro pulled the last of its station bins in 2022, twenty-seven years after the attack.
Somehow the streets stayed clean. Three things keep it that way.
The first is school. Every Japanese kid spends 15 to 30 minutes a day cleaning their own classroom. It's a daily routine called o-soji. Music plays over the speakers, the whole school stops, and kids put on bandanas and start sweeping floors, wiping down desks, scrubbing toilets, and mopping hallways. Sixth graders walk over to the first grade rooms to help the little ones who can't reach the high shelves yet. Three times a year, students go out and pick up trash on the streets around the school. By the time these kids are adults, picking up litter is just something their hands do without asking. The Japanese fans who stayed behind to clean their stadium section at the 2018 and 2022 World Cups were doing exactly what they had been doing since age seven.
The second is sorting. A standard Tokyo neighborhood splits household garbage into burnable, non-burnable, recyclables, and large items, with separate pickup days for each. Most kitchens have a printed pickup calendar stuck to the fridge. Put the wrong thing out on the wrong day and the bag stays on the curb with a sticker on it. Some places take the rules much further. Kamikatsu, a small town of 1,400 on Shikoku island, sorts trash into 45 separate categories and recycles 81 percent of everything it produces. Japan as a whole recycles 87 percent of its plastic bottles, while the American rate sits below 20 percent.
The third is money. Littering in central Tokyo can cost you up to 30,000 yen, about 190 dollars. Illegal dumping carries far steeper penalties: up to 5 years in prison or a 10 million yen fine for individuals, with companies facing up to 100 million yen, around 630,000 dollars. Shibuya just passed a new law adding a 2,000 yen instant fine, about 13 dollars, for tossing anything on the street. It kicks in this June and will be enforced 24 hours a day.
Per person, Japanese residents produce roughly a third the household waste Americans do. The streets are clean because a terror attack three decades ago turned every citizen into a part-time janitor.
📣 La liberación de los datos mercantiles es una necesidad nacional.
Son datos públicos, pero su modelo de explotación impide aprovecharlos justo para lo que más falta hace: detectar irregularidades en contratos públicos.
✍️ Mi tribuna en @elnotarioSXXI https://t.co/R4m22zBxo4
@nedgia un mes para un cambio de titularidad que me bloquean porque ustedes no actualizan sus sistemas y @Naturgy no lo puede efectuar. Año 2026... INCREÍBLE.
@nedgia llevo más de 1 semana para activar un punto de gas y no dan ningún tipo de solución. Me mandan a la comercializadora y de nuevo a ustedes y no tengo solución. Es una vergüenza que con la tecnología que hay no den soluciones rápidas.
En España la compra de la primera vivienda llega de media a los 41 años - debería ser a los 30.
Una década perdida de efecto bola de nieve creando patrimonio.
Lo absurdo:
El mercado quiere construir, el capital quiere financiar y el país necesita vivienda.
Dejad que los promotores construyan.